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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Going of the White Swan, by Gilbert Parker
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Going of the White Swan
+
+Author: Gilbert Parker
+
+Release Date: September 18, 2005 [EBook #16716]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GOING OF THE WHITE SWAN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Janet Keller, Janet Blenkinship and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE GOING OF THE WHITE SWAN
+
+[Illustration]
+
+[Illustration]
+
+[Illustration: "'No, no--this!' the priest said." (p 56)]
+
+
+
+
+ THE GOING OF THE WHITE SWAN
+
+ BY
+
+ GILBERT PARKER
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ NEW YORK
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
+ MCMXII
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ Copyright, 1912, by
+
+ GILBERT PARKER
+
+ Copyright, 1895, by Charles Scribner's Sons
+ Copyright, 1895, by Stone and Kimball
+ Copyright, 1898, by The Macmillan Company
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+THE GOING OF THE WHITE SWAN
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+I
+
+
+"Why don't she come back, father?"
+
+The man shook his head, his hand fumbled with the wolfskin robe covering
+the child, and he made no reply.
+
+"She'd come if she knew I was hurted, wouldn't she?"
+
+The father nodded, and then turned restlessly toward the door, as though
+expecting some one. The look was troubled, and the pipe he held was not
+alight, though he made a pretense of smoking.
+
+"Suppose the wildcat had got me, she'd be sorry when she comes, wouldn't
+she?"
+
+There was no reply yet, save by gesture, the language of primitive man;
+but the big body shivered a little, and the uncouth hand felt for a
+place in the bed where the lad's knee made a lump under the robe. He
+felt the little heap tenderly, but the child winced.
+
+"S-sh, but that hurts! This wolfskin's most too much on me, isn't it,
+father?"
+
+The man softly, yet awkwardly, lifted the robe, folded it back, and
+slowly uncovered the knee. The leg was worn away almost to skin and
+bone, but the knee itself was swollen with inflammation. He bathed it
+with some water, mixed with vinegar and herbs, then drew down the
+deer-skin shirt, and did the same with the child's shoulder. Both
+shoulder and knee bore the marks of teeth,--where a huge wildcat had
+made havoc--and the body had long red scratches.
+
+Presently the man shook his head sorrowfully, and covered up the small
+disfigured frame again, but this time with a tanned skin of the caribou.
+The flames of the huge wood-fire dashed the walls and floor with a
+velvety red and black, and the large iron kettle, bought of the Company
+at Fort Sacrament, puffed out geysers of steam.
+
+The place was a low hut with parchment windows and rough mud-mortar
+lumped between the logs. Skins hung along two sides, with bullet-holes
+and knife-holes showing: of the great gray wolf, the red puma, the
+bronze hill-lion, the beaver, the bear, and the sable; and in one corner
+was a huge pile of them. Bare of the usual comforts as the room was, it
+had a sort of refinement also, joined to an inexpressible loneliness,
+you could scarce have told how or why.
+
+"Father," said the boy, his face pinched with pain for a moment, "it
+hurts so, all over, every once in a while."
+
+His fingers caressed the leg just below the knee.
+
+"Father," he suddenly added, "what does it mean when you hear a bird
+sing in the middle of the night?"
+
+The woodsman looked down anxiously into the boy's face. "It hasn't no
+meaning, Dominique. There ain't such a thing on the Labrador Heights as
+a bird singin' in the night. That's only in warm countries where there's
+nightingales. So--_bien sur!_"
+
+The boy had a wise, dreamy, speculative look.
+
+"Well, I guess it was a nightingale--it didn't sing like any I ever
+heard."
+
+The look of nervousness deepened in the woodman's face. "What did it
+sing like, Dominique?"
+
+"So it made you shiver. You wanted it to go on, and yet you didn't want
+it. It was pretty, but you felt as if something was going to snap inside
+of you."
+
+"When did you hear it, my son?"
+
+"Twice last night--and--and I guess it was Sunday the other time. I
+don't know, for there hasn't been no Sunday up here since mother went
+away--has there?"
+
+"Mebbe not."
+
+The veins were beating like live cords in the man's throat and at his
+temples.
+
+"'Twas just the same as Father Corraine bein' here, when mother had
+Sunday, wasn't it?"
+
+The man made no reply; but a gloom drew down his forehead, and his lips
+doubled in as though he endured physical pain. He got to his feet and
+paced the floor. For weeks he had listened to the same kind of talk from
+this wounded, and, as he thought, dying son, and he was getting less and
+less able to bear it. The boy at nine years of age was, in manner of
+speech, the merest child, but his thoughts were sometimes large and
+wise. The only white child within a compass of a hundred miles or so;
+the lonely life of the hills and plains, so austere in winter, so melted
+to a sober joy in summer; listening to the talk of his elders at
+camp-fires and on the hunting-trail, when, even as an infant almost, he
+was swung in a blanket from a tree or was packed in the torch-crane of a
+canoe; and more than all, the care of a good, loving--if
+passionate--little mother: all these had made him far wiser than his
+years. He had been hours upon hours each day alone with the birds, and
+squirrels, and wild animals, and something of the keen scent and
+instinct of the animal world had entered into his body and brain, so
+that he felt what he could not understand.
+
+He saw that he had worried his father, and it troubled him. He thought
+of something.
+
+"Daddy," he said, "let me have it."
+
+A smile struggled for life in the hunter's face, as he turned to the
+wall and took down the skin of a silver fox. He held it on his palm for
+a moment, looking at it in an interested, satisfied way, then he brought
+it over and put it into the child's hands; and the smile now shaped
+itself, as he saw an eager pale face buried in the soft fur.
+
+"Good! good!" he said involuntarily.
+
+"_Bon! bon!_" said the boy's voice from the fur, in the language of his
+mother, who added a strain of Indian blood to her French ancestry.
+
+The two sat there, the man half-kneeling on the low bed, and stroking
+the fur very gently. It could scarcely be thought that such pride should
+be spent on a little pelt, by a mere backwoodsman and his nine-year-old
+son. One has seen a woman fingering a splendid necklace, her eyes
+fascinated by the bunch of warm, deep jewels--a light not of mere
+vanity, or hunger, or avarice in her face--only the love of the
+beautiful thing. But this was an animal's skin. Did they feel the
+animal underneath it yet, giving it beauty, life, glory?
+
+The silver-fox skin is the prize of the north, and this one was of the
+boy's own harvesting. While his father was away he saw the fox creeping
+by the hut. The joy of the hunter seized him, and guided his eye over
+the sights of his father's rifle as he rested the barrel on the
+windowsill, and the animal was his! Now his finger ran into the hole
+made by the bullet, and he gave a little laugh of modest triumph.
+Minutes passed as they studied, felt, and admired the skin, the hunter
+proud of his son, the son alive with a primitive passion, which inflicts
+suffering to get the beautiful thing. Perhaps the tenderness as well as
+the wild passion of the animal gets into the hunter's blood, and tips
+his fingers at times with an exquisite kindness--as one has noted in a
+lion fondling her young, or in tigers as they sport upon the sands of
+the desert. This boy had seen his father shoot a splendid moose, and, as
+it lay dying, drop down and kiss it in the neck for sheer love of its
+handsomeness. Death is no insult. It is the law of the primitive
+world--war, and love in war.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+II
+
+
+They sat there for a long time, not speaking, each busy in his own way:
+the boy full of imaginings, strange, half-heathen, half-angelic
+feelings; the man roaming in that savage, romantic, superstitious
+atmosphere which belongs to the north, and to the north alone. At last
+the boy lay back on his pillow, his finger still in the bullet-hole of
+the pelt. His eyes closed, and he seemed about to fall asleep, but
+presently looked up and whispered: "I haven't said my prayers, have I?"
+
+The father shook his head in a sort of rude confusion.
+
+"I can pray out loud if I want to, can't I?"
+
+"Of course, Dominique." The man shrank a little.
+
+"I forget a good many times, but I know one all right, for I said it
+when the bird was singing. It isn't one out of the book Father Corraine
+sent mother by Pretty Pierre; it's one she taught me out of her own
+head. P'r'aps I'd better say it."
+
+"P'r'aps, if you want to." The voice was husky.
+
+The boy began:
+
+"O Bon Jésu, who died to save us from our sins, and to lead us to Thy
+country, where there is no cold, nor hunger, nor thirst, and where no
+one is afraid, listen to Thy child.... When the great winds and rains
+come down from the hills, do not let the floods drown us, nor the woods
+cover us, nor the snow-slide bury us, and do not let the prairie-fires
+burn us. Keep wild beasts from killing us in our sleep, and give us good
+hearts that we may not kill them in anger."
+
+His finger twisted involuntarily into the bullet-hole in the pelt, and
+he paused a moment.
+
+"Keep us from getting lost, O Bon Jésu."
+
+Again there was a pause, his eyes opened wide, and he said:
+
+"Do you think mother's lost, father?"
+
+A heavy broken breath came from the father, and he replied haltingly:
+"Mebbe--mebbe so."
+
+Dominique's eyes closed again. "I'll make up some," he said slowly: "And
+if mother's lost, O Bon Jésu, bring her back again to us, for
+everything's going wrong."
+
+Again he paused, then went on with the prayer as it had been taught him.
+
+"Teach us to hear Thee whenever Thou callest, and to see Thee when Thou
+visitest us, and let the blessed Mary and all the saints speak often to
+Thee for us. O Christ, hear us. Lord have mercy upon us. Christ, have
+mercy upon us. Amen."
+
+Making the sign of the cross, he lay back, and said: "I'll go to sleep
+now, I guess."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+III
+
+
+The man sat for a long time looking at the pale, shining face, at the
+blue veins showing painfully dark on the temples and forehead, at the
+firm little white hand, which was as brown as a butternut a few weeks
+before. The longer he sat, the deeper did his misery sink into his soul.
+His wife had gone he knew not where, his child was wasting to death, and
+he had for his sorrows no inner consolation. He had ever had that touch
+of mystical imagination inseparable from the far north, yet he had none
+of that religious belief which swallowed up natural awe and turned it to
+the refining of life, and to the advantage of a man's soul. Now it was
+forced in upon him that his child was wiser than himself; wiser and
+safer. His life had been spent in the wastes, with rough deeds and
+rugged habits, and a youth of hardship, danger, and almost savage
+endurance had given him a half-barbarian temperament, which could strike
+an angry blow at one moment and fondle to death at the next.
+
+When he married sweet Lucette Barbond his religion reached little
+farther than a belief in the Scarlet Hunter of the Kimash Hills and
+those voices that could be heard calling in the night, till their time
+of sleep be past and they should rise and reconquer the north.
+
+Not even Father Corraine, whose ways were like those of his Master,
+could ever bring him to a more definite faith. His wife had at first
+striven with him, mourning yet loving. Sometimes the savage in him had
+broken out over the little creature, merely because barbaric tyranny was
+in him--torture followed by the passionate kiss. But how was she
+philosopher enough to understand the cause!
+
+When she fled from their hut one bitter day, as he roared some wild
+words at her, it was because her nerves had all been shaken from
+threatened death by wild beasts, (of this he did not know) and his
+violence drove her mad. She had run out of the house, and on, and on,
+and on--and she had never come back. That was weeks ago, and there had
+been no word nor sign of her since. The man was now busy with it all, in
+a slow, cumbrous way. A nature more to be touched by things seen than by
+things told, his mind was being awakened in a massive kind of fashion.
+He was viewing this crisis of his life as one sees a human face in the
+wide searching light of a great fire. He was restless, but he held
+himself still by a strong effort, not wishing to disturb the little
+sleeper. His eyes seemed to retreat farther and farther back under his
+shaggy brows.
+
+The great logs in the chimney burned brilliantly, and a brass crucifix
+over the child's head now and again reflected soft little flashes of
+light. This caught the hunter's eye. Presently there grew up in him a
+vague kind of hope that, somehow, this symbol would bring him luck--that
+was the way he put it to himself. He had felt this--and something
+more--when Dominique prayed. Somehow, Dominique's prayer was the only
+one he had ever heard that had gone home to him, had opened up the big
+sluices of his nature, and let the light of God flood in. No, there was
+another: the one Lucette made on the day that they were married, when a
+wonderful timid reverence played through his hungry love for her.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+IV
+
+
+Hours passed. All at once, without any other motion or gesture, the
+boy's eyes opened wide with a strange, intense look.
+
+"Father," he said slowly, and in a kind of dream, "when you hear a sweet
+horn blow at night, is it the Scarlet Hunter calling?"
+
+"P'r'aps. Why, Dominique?" He made up his mind to humor the boy, though
+it gave him strange aching forebodings. He had seen grown men and women
+with these fancies--and they had died.
+
+"I heard one blowing just now, and the sounds seemed to wave over my
+head. P'r'aps he's calling some one that's lost."
+
+"Mebbe."
+
+"And I heard a voice singing--it wasn't a bird to-night."
+
+"There was no voice, Dominique."
+
+"Yes, yes." There was something fine in the grave, courteous certainty
+of the lad. "I waked, and you were sitting there thinking, and I shut my
+eyes again, and I heard the voice. I remember the tune and the words."
+
+"What were the words?" In spite of himself the hunter felt awed.
+
+"I've heard mother sing them, or something most like them:
+
+ "'Why does the fire no longer burn?
+ (I am so lonely.)
+ Why does the tent-door swing outward?
+ (I have no home.)
+ Oh, let me breathe hard in your face!
+ (I am so lonely.)
+ Oh, why do you shut your eyes to me?
+ (I have no home.)'"
+
+The boy paused.
+
+"Was that all, Dominique?"
+
+"No, not all."
+
+ "'Let us make friends with the stars;
+ (I am so lonely.)
+ Give me your hand, I will hold it.
+ (I have no home.)
+ Let us go hunting together.
+ (I am so lonely.)
+ We will sleep at God's camp to-night.
+ (I have no home.)'"
+
+Dominique did not sing, but recited the words with a sort of chanting
+inflection.
+
+"What does it mean when you hear a voice like that, father?"
+
+"I don't know. Who told--your mother--the song?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know. I suppose she just made them up--she and God....
+There! There it is again? Don't you hear it--don't you hear it, daddy?"
+
+"No, Dominique, it's only the kettle singing."
+
+"A kettle isn't a voice. Daddy--" He paused a little, then went on,
+hesitatingly: "I saw a white swan fly through the door over your
+shoulder when you came in to-night."
+
+"No, no, Dominique, it was a flurry of snow blowing over my shoulder."
+
+"But it looked at me with two shining eyes."
+
+"That was two stars shining through the door, my son."
+
+"How could there be snow flying and stars shining, too, father?"
+
+"It was just drift-snow on a light wind, but the stars were shining
+above, Dominique."
+
+The man's voice was anxious and unconvincing, his eyes had a hungry,
+haunted look. The legend of the White Swan had to do with the passing of
+a human soul. The Swan had come in--would it go out alone? He touched
+the boy's hand--it was hot with fever; he felt the pulse--it ran high;
+he watched the face--it had a glowing light. Something stirred within
+him, and passed like a wave to the farthest course of his being. Through
+his misery he had touched the garment of the Master of Souls. As though
+a voice said to him there, "_Some one hath touched me_," he got to his
+feet, and, with a sudden blind humility, lit two candles, and placed
+them on a shelf in a corner before a porcelain figure of the Virgin, as
+he had seen his wife do. Then he picked a small handful of fresh spruce
+twigs from a branch over the chimney, and laid them beside the candles.
+After a short pause he came slowly to the head of the boy's bed. Very
+solemnly he touched the foot of the Christ on the cross with the tips of
+his fingers, and brought them to his lips with an indescribable
+reverence. After a moment, standing with eyes fixed on the face of the
+crucified figure, he said, in a shaking voice:
+
+"_Pardon, bon Jésu! Sauves mon enfant! Ne me laissez pas seul!_"
+
+The boy looked up with eyes again grown unnaturally heavy, and said:
+
+"Amen!... _Bon Jésu!... Encore! Encore, mon père!_"
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+V
+
+
+The boy slept. The father stood still by the bed for a time, but at last
+slowly turned and went toward the fire.
+
+Outside, two figures were approaching the hut--a man and a woman; yet at
+first glance the man might easily have been taken for a woman, because
+of his clean-shaven face, of the long black robe which he wore, and
+because his hair fell loose on his shoulders.
+
+"Have patience, my daughter," said the man. "Do not enter till I call
+you. But stand close to the door, if you will, and hear all."
+
+So saying he raised his hand as in a kind of benediction, passed to the
+door, and, after tapping very softly, opened it, entered, and closed it
+behind him--not so quickly, however, but that the woman caught a glimpse
+of the father and the boy. In her eyes there was the divine look of
+motherhood.
+
+"Peace be to this house!" said the man gently, as he stepped forward
+from the door.
+
+The father, startled, turned shrinkingly on him, as though he had seen a
+spirit.
+
+"_M'sieu' le curé!_" he said in French, with an accent much poorer than
+that of the priest, or even of his own son. He had learned French from
+his wife; he himself was English.
+
+The priest's quick eye had taken in the lighted candles at the little
+shrine, even as he saw the painfully changed aspect of the man.
+
+"The wife and child, Bagot?" he asked, looking round. "Ah, the boy!" he
+added, and going toward the bed, continued, presently, in a low voice:
+"Dominique is ill?"
+
+Bagot nodded, and then answered: "A wildcat and then fever, Father
+Corraine."
+
+The priest felt the boy's pulse softly, then with a close personal look
+he spoke hardly above his breath, yet distinctly, too:
+
+"Your wife, Bagot?"
+
+"She is not here, m'sieu'." The voice was low and gloomy.
+
+"Where is she, Bagot?"
+
+"I do not know, m'sieu'."
+
+"When did you see her last?"
+
+"Four weeks ago, m'sieu'."
+
+"That was September, this is October--winter. On the ranches they let
+their cattle loose upon the plains in winter, knowing not where they go,
+yet looking for them to return in the spring. But a woman--a woman and a
+wife--is different.... Bagot, you have been a rough, hard man, and you
+have been a stranger to your God, but I thought you loved your wife and
+child!"
+
+The hunter's hands clenched, and a wicked light flashed up into his
+eyes; but the calm, benignant gaze of the other cooled the tempest in
+his veins. The priest sat down on the couch where the child lay, and
+took the fevered hand in his own.
+
+"Stay where you are, Bagot, just there where you are, and tell me what
+your trouble is, and why your wife is not here.... Say all honestly--by
+the name of the Christ!" he added, lifting up an iron crucifix that hung
+on his breast.
+
+Bagot sat down on a bench near the fireplace, the light playing on his
+bronzed, powerful face, his eyes shining beneath his heavy brows like
+two coals. After a moment he began:
+
+"I don't know how it started. I'd lost a lot of pelts--stolen they were,
+down on the Child o' Sin River. Well, she was hasty and nervous, like as
+not--she always was brisker and more sudden than I am. I--I laid my
+powder-horn and whiskey-flash--up there!"
+
+He pointed to the little shrine of the Virgin, where now his candles
+were burning. The priest's grave eyes did not change expression at all,
+but looked out wisely, as though he understood everything before it was
+told.
+
+Bagot continued: "I didn't notice it, but she had put some flowers
+there. She said something with an edge, her face all snapping angry,
+threw the things down, and called me a heathen and a wicked heretic--and
+I don't say now but she'd a right to do it. But I let out then, for them
+stolen pelts was rasping me on the raw. I said something pretty rough,
+and made as if I was goin' to break her in two--just fetched up my
+hands, and went like this!--"
+
+With a singular simplicity he made a wild gesture with his hands, and an
+animal-like snarl came from his throat. Then he looked at the priest
+with the honest intensity of a boy.
+
+"Yes, that was what you _did_--what was it you _said_ which was 'pretty
+rough'?"
+
+There was a slight hesitation, then came the reply:
+
+"I said there was enough powder spilt on the floor to kill all the
+priests in heaven."
+
+A fire suddenly shot up into Father Corraine's face, and his lips
+tightened for an instant, but presently he was as before, and he said:
+
+"How that will face you one day, Bagot! Go on. What else?"
+
+Sweat began to break out on Bagot's face, and he spoke as though he were
+carrying a heavy weight on his shoulders, low and brokenly.
+
+"Then I said, 'And if virgins has it so fine, why didn't you stay
+one?'"
+
+"Blasphemer!" said the priest in a stern, reproachful voice, his face
+turning a little pale, and he brought the crucifix to his lips. "To the
+mother of your child--shame! What more?"
+
+"She threw up her hands to her ears with a wild cry, ran out of the
+house, down the hills, and away. I went to the door and watched her as
+long as I could see her, and waited for her to come back--but she never
+did. I've hunted and hunted, but I can't find her." Then, with a sudden
+thought, "Do you know anything of her, m'sieu'?"
+
+The priest appeared not to hear the question. Turning for a moment
+toward the boy, who now was in a deep sleep, he looked at him intently.
+Presently he spoke.
+
+"Ever since I married you and Lucette Barbond you have stood in the way
+of her duty, Bagot. How well I remember that first day when you knelt
+before me! Was ever so sweet and good a girl--with her golden eyes and
+the look of summer in her face, and her heart all pure! Nothing had
+spoiled her--you cannot spoil such women--God is in their hearts. But
+you, what have you cared? One day you would fondle her, and the next you
+were a savage--and she, so gentle, so gentle all the time. Then, for her
+religion and the faith of her child--she has fought for it, prayed for
+it, suffered for it. You thought you had no need of religion, for you
+had so much happiness, which you did not deserve--that was it. But
+she--with all a woman suffers, how can she bear life--and man--without
+God? No, it is not possible. And you thought you and your few
+superstitions were enough for her.--Ah, poor fool! She should worship
+you! So selfish, so small, for a man who knows in his heart how great
+God is. You did not love her."
+
+"By the Heaven above, yes!" said Bagot, half starting to his feet.
+
+"Ah, 'by the Heaven above,' no! nor the child. For true love is
+unselfish and patient, and where it is the stronger, it cares for the
+weaker; but it was your wife who was unselfish, patient, and cared for
+you. Every time she said an _ave_ she thought of you, and her every
+thanks to God had you therein. They know you well in heaven,
+Bagot--through your wife. Did you ever pray--ever since I married you to
+her?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"When?"
+
+"An hour or so ago."
+
+Once again the priest's eyes glanced towards the lighted candles.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+VI
+
+
+Presently he said: "You asked me if I had heard anything of your wife.
+Listen, and be patient while you listen.... Three weeks ago I was
+camping on the Sundust Plains, over against the Young Sky River. In the
+morning, as I was lighting a fire outside my tent, my young Cree Indian
+with me, I saw coming over the crest of a landwave, from the very lips
+of the sunrise, as it were, a band of Indians. I could not quite make
+them out. I hoisted my little flag on the tent, and they hurried on to
+me. I did not know the tribe--they had come from near Hudson's Bay. They
+spoke Chinook, and I could understand them. Well, as they came near, I
+saw that they had a woman with them."
+
+Bagot leaned forward, his body strained, every muscle tense. "A woman!"
+he said, as if breathing gave him sorrow--"my wife?"
+
+"Your wife."
+
+"Quick! Quick! Go on--oh, go on, m'sieu'--good father."
+
+"She fell at my feet, begging me to save her.... I waved her off."
+
+The sweat dropped from Bagot's forehead, a low growl broke from him, and
+he made such a motion as a lion might make at its prey.
+
+"You wouldn't--wouldn't save her--you coward!" He ground the words out.
+
+The priest raised his palm against the other's violence. "Hush!... She
+drew away, saying that God and man had deserted her.... We had
+breakfast, the chief and I. Afterwards, when the chief had eaten much
+and was in good humor, I asked him where he had got the woman. He said
+that he had found her on the plains--she had lost her way. I told him
+then that I wanted to buy her. He said to me. 'What does a priest want
+of a woman?' I said that I wished to give her back to her husband. He
+said that he had found her, and she was his, and that he would marry her
+when they reached the great camp of the tribe. I was patient. It would
+not do to make him angry. I wrote down on a piece of bark the things
+that I would give him for her: an order on the Company at Fort o' Sin
+for shot, blankets and beads. He said no."
+
+The priest paused. Bagot's face was all swimming with sweat, his body
+was rigid, but the veins of his neck knotted and twisted.
+
+"For the love of God go on!" he said hoarsely.
+
+"Yes, for the love of God. I have no money, I am poor, but the Company
+will always honor my orders, for I pay sometimes by the help of _le bon
+Jésu_. Well, I added some things to the list: a saddle, a rifle, and
+some flannel. But no, he would not. Once more I put many things down. It
+was a big bill--it would keep me poor for five years. To save your wife,
+John Bagot, you who drove her from your door, blaspheming and railing at
+such as I.... I offered the things, and told him that was all I could
+give. After a little he shook his head, and said that he must have the
+woman for his wife. I did not know what to add. I said, 'She is white,
+and the white people will never rest till they have killed you all, if
+you do this thing. The Company will track you down.' Then he said, 'The
+whites must catch me and fight me before they kill me.'... What was
+there to do?"
+
+Bagot came near to the priest, bending over him savagely:
+
+"You let her stay with them--you, with hands like a man!"
+
+"Hush," was the calm, reproving answer. "I was one man, they were
+twenty."
+
+"Where was your God to help you, then?"
+
+"Her God and mine was with me."
+
+Bagot's eyes blazed. "Why didn't you offer rum--rum? They'd have done it
+for that--one--five--ten kegs of rum!"
+
+He swayed to and fro in his excitement, yet their voices hardly rose
+above a hoarse whisper all the time.
+
+"You forget," answered the priest, "that it is against the law, and that
+as a priest of my order I am vowed to give no rum to an Indian."
+
+"A vow! A vow! Son of God! what is a vow beside a woman--my wife?"
+
+His misery and his rage were pitiful to see.
+
+"Perjure my soul! Offer rum! Break my vow in the face of the enemies of
+God's Church! What have you done for me that I should do this for you,
+John Bagot?"
+
+"Coward!" was the man's despairing cry, with a sudden threatening
+movement. "Christ himself would have broke a vow to save her."
+
+The grave, kind eyes of the priest met the other's fierce gaze, and
+quieted the wild storm that was about to break.
+
+"Who am I that I should teach my Master?" he said, solemnly. "What would
+you give Christ, Bagot, if He had saved her to you?"
+
+The man shook with grief, and tears rushed from his eyes, so suddenly
+and fully had a new emotion passed through him.
+
+"Give--give!" he cried, "I would give twenty years of my life!"
+
+The figure of the priest stretched up with gentle grandeur. Holding out
+the iron crucifix, he said: "On your knees and swear it, John Bagot!"
+
+There was something inspiring, commanding, in the voice and manner, and
+Bagot, with a new hope rushing through his veins, knelt and repeated his
+words.
+
+The priest turned to the door, and called, "Madame Lucette!"
+
+The boy, hearing, waked, and sat up in bed suddenly.
+
+"Mother! mother!" he cried, as the door flew open.
+
+The mother came to her husband's arms, laughing and weeping, and an
+instant afterwards was pouring out her love and anxiety over her child.
+
+Father Corraine now faced the man, and with a soft exaltation of voice
+and manner said:
+
+"John Bagot, in the name of Christ, I demand twenty years of your
+life--of love and obedience of God. I broke my vow; I perjured my soul;
+I bought your wife with ten kegs of rum."
+
+The tall hunter dropped again to his knees, and caught the priest's hand
+to kiss it.
+
+"No, no--this!" the priest said, and laid his iron crucifix against the
+other's lips.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+VII
+
+
+Dominique's voice came clearly through the room:
+
+"Mother, I saw the white swan fly away through the door when you came
+in."
+
+"My dear, my dear," she said, "there was no white swan." But she clasped
+the boy to her breast protectingly, and whispered an _ave_.
+
+"Peace be to this house," said the voice of the priest.
+
+And there was peace--for the child lived, and the man has loved, and has
+kept his vow, even unto this day.
+
+For the visions of the boy, who can know the divers ways in which God
+speaks to the children of men!
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+ NOVELS BY SIR GILBERT PARKER
+
+ The Going of the White Swan
+ The Seats of the Mighty
+ The Trail of the Sword
+ The Trespasser
+ The Translation of a Savage
+ Mrs. Falchion
+
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Going of the White Swan, by Gilbert Parker
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Going of the White Swan, by Gilbert Parker
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Going of the White Swan
+
+Author: Gilbert Parker
+
+Release Date: September 18, 2005 [EBook #16716]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GOING OF THE WHITE SWAN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Janet Keller, Janet Blenkinship and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<h1>THE GOING OF THE WHITE SWAN</h1>
+<p><a name="Page_-5" id="Page_-5"></a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-001.jpg" alt="The Cross" title="The Cross" /></div>
+
+<p><a name="Page_-4" id="Page_-4"></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_-3" id="Page_-3"></a></p><p><a name="Page_-2" id="Page_-2"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-004.jpg" alt="'No, no&mdash;this!' the priest said." title="'No, no&mdash;this!' the priest said." /></div>
+<p class='center'>"'No, no&mdash;this!' the priest said." <a href='#Page_54'>(p. 54)</a></p>
+
+
+<p><a name="Page_-1" id="Page_-1"></a></p>
+<h1>THE GOING OF<br />
+THE WHITE SWAN</h1>
+
+<h4>BY</h4>
+<h3>GILBERT PARKER</h3>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-005.jpg" alt="White Swan" title="White Swan" /></div>
+
+<p class='center'>NEW YORK<br />
+D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
+MCMXII<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_0" id="Page_0"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-006.jpg" alt="Head and Shoulder potrait" title="Head and Shoulder portrait" /></div>
+
+<p class='center'>
+<span class="smcap">Copyright</span>, 1912, <span class="smcap">by</span><br />
+<br />
+GILBERT PARKER<br />
+<br />
+Copyright, 1895, by Charles Scribner's Sons<br />
+Copyright, 1895, by Stone and Kimball<br />
+Copyright, 1898, by The Macmillan Company
+</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-002.jpg" alt="Madonna and child" title="Madonna and child" /></div>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="TABLE OF CONTENTS">
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#I">CHAPTER I.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#II">CHAPTER II.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#III">CHAPTER III.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#IV">CHAPTER IV.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#V">CHAPTER V.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#VI">CHAPTER VI.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1"></a><br /><br /></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h3>THE GOING OF THE WHITE SWAN</h3>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-007.jpg" alt="Snow scene" title="Snow scene" /><br /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="I" id="I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Why don't she come back, father?"</p>
+
+<p>The man shook his head, his hand fumbled with the wolfskin robe covering
+the child, and he made no reply.</p>
+
+<p>"She'd come if she knew I was hurted, wouldn't she?"</p>
+
+<p>The father nodded, and then turned restlessly toward the door, as though
+expecting some one. The look was troubled, and the pipe he held was not<a name="Page_2" id="Page_2"></a>
+alight, though he made a pretense of smoking.</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose the wildcat had got me, she'd be sorry when she comes, wouldn't
+she?"</p>
+
+<p>There was no reply yet, save by gesture, the language of primitive man;
+but the big body shivered a little, and the uncouth hand felt for a
+place in the bed where the lad's knee made a lump under the robe. He
+felt the little heap tenderly, but the child winced.</p>
+
+<p>"S-sh, but that hurts! This wolfskin's most too much on me, isn't it,
+father?"</p>
+
+<p>The man softly, yet awkwardly, lifted the robe, folded it back, and
+slowly uncovered the knee. The leg was worn away almost to skin and<a name="Page_3" id="Page_3"></a>
+bone, but the knee itself was swollen with inflammation. He bathed it
+with some water, mixed with vinegar and herbs, then drew down the
+deer-skin shirt, and did the same with the child's shoulder. Both
+shoulder and knee bore the marks of teeth,&mdash;where a huge wildcat had
+made havoc&mdash;and the body had long red scratches.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the man shook his head sorrowfully, and covered up the small
+disfigured frame again, but this time with a tanned skin of the caribou.
+The flames of the huge wood-fire dashed the walls and floor with a
+velvety red and black, and the large iron kettle, bought of the Company<a name="Page_4" id="Page_4"></a>
+at Fort Sacrament, puffed out geysers of steam.</p>
+
+<p>The place was a low hut with parchment windows and rough mud-mortar
+lumped between the logs. Skins hung along two sides, with bullet-holes
+and knife-holes showing: of the great gray wolf, the red puma, the
+bronze hill-lion, the beaver, the bear, and the sable; and in one corner
+was a huge pile of them. Bare of the usual comforts as the room was, it
+had a sort of refinement also, joined to an inexpressible loneliness,
+you could scarce have told how or why.</p>
+
+<p>"Father," said the boy, his face pinched with pain for a moment, "it
+<a name="Page_5" id="Page_5"></a>hurts so, all over, every once in a while."</p>
+
+<p>His fingers caressed the leg just below the knee.</p>
+
+<p>"Father," he suddenly added, "what does it mean when you hear a bird
+sing in the middle of the night?"</p>
+
+<p>The woodsman looked down anxiously into the boy's face. "It hasn't no
+meaning, Dominique. There ain't such a thing on the Labrador Heights as
+a bird singin' in the night. That's only in warm countries where there's
+nightingales. So&mdash;<i>bien sur</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>The boy had a wise, dreamy, speculative look.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I guess it was a nightin<a name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></a>gale&mdash;it didn't sing like any I ever
+heard."</p>
+
+<p>The look of nervousness deepened in the woodman's face. "What did it
+sing like, Dominique?"</p>
+
+<p>"So it made you shiver. You wanted it to go on, and yet you didn't want
+it. It was pretty, but you felt as if something was going to snap inside
+of you."</p>
+
+<p>"When did you hear it, my son?"</p>
+
+<p>"Twice last night&mdash;and&mdash;and I guess it was Sunday the other time. I
+don't know, for there hasn't been no Sunday up here since mother went
+away&mdash;has there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mebbe not."</p>
+
+<p>The veins were beating like live <a name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></a>cords in the man's throat and at his
+temples.</p>
+
+<p>"'Twas just the same as Father Corraine bein' here, when mother had
+Sunday, wasn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>The man made no reply; but a gloom drew down his forehead, and his lips
+doubled in as though he endured physical pain. He got to his feet and
+paced the floor. For weeks he had listened to the same kind of talk from
+this wounded, and, as he thought, dying son, and he was getting less and
+less able to bear it. The boy at nine years of age was, in manner of
+speech, the merest child, but his thoughts were sometimes large and
+wise. The only white <a name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></a>child within a compass of a hundred miles or so;
+the lonely life of the hills and plains, so austere in winter, so melted
+to a sober joy in summer; listening to the talk of his elders at
+camp-fires and on the hunting-trail, when, even as an infant almost, he
+was swung in a blanket from a tree or was packed in the torch-crane of a
+canoe; and more than all, the care of a good, loving&mdash;if
+passionate&mdash;little mother: all these had made him far wiser than his
+years. He had been hours upon hours each day alone with the birds, and
+squirrels, and wild animals, and something of the keen scent and
+instinct of the animal world had entered into his body and <a name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></a>brain, so
+that he felt what he could not understand.</p>
+
+<p>He saw that he had worried his father, and it troubled him. He thought
+of something.</p>
+
+<p>"Daddy," he said, "let me have it."</p>
+
+<p>A smile struggled for life in the hunter's face, as he turned to the
+wall and took down the skin of a silver fox. He held it on his palm for
+a moment, looking at it in an interested, satisfied way, then he brought
+it over and put it into the child's hands; and the smile now shaped
+itself, as he saw an eager pale face buried in the soft fur.</p>
+
+<p>"Good! good!" he said involuntarily.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></a>"<i>Bon! bon!</i>" said the boy's voice from the fur, in the language of his
+mother, who added a strain of Indian blood to her French ancestry.</p>
+
+<p>The two sat there, the man half-kneeling on the low bed, and stroking
+the fur very gently. It could scarcely be thought that such pride should
+be spent on a little pelt, by a mere backwoodsman and his nine-year-old
+son. One has seen a woman fingering a splendid necklace, her eyes
+fascinated by the bunch of warm, deep jewels&mdash;a light not of mere
+vanity, or hunger, or avarice in her face&mdash;only the love of the
+beautiful thing. But this was an animal's skin. Did they feel the
+<a name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></a>animal underneath it yet, giving it beauty, life, glory?</p>
+
+<p>The silver-fox skin is the prize of the north, and this one was of the
+boy's own harvesting. While his father was away he saw the fox creeping
+by the hut. The joy of the hunter seized him, and guided his eye over
+the sights of his father's rifle as he rested the barrel on the
+windowsill, and the animal was his! Now his finger ran into the hole
+made by the bullet, and he gave a little laugh of modest triumph.
+Minutes passed as they studied, felt, and admired the skin, the hunter
+proud of his son, the son alive with a primitive passion, which inflicts
+suffering to get the beautiful thing.<a name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></a> Perhaps the tenderness as well as
+the wild passion of the animal gets into the hunter's blood, and tips
+his fingers at times with an exquisite kindness&mdash;as one has noted in a
+lion fondling her young, or in tigers as they sport upon the sands of
+the desert. This boy had seen his father shoot a splendid moose, and, as
+it lay dying, drop down and kiss it in the neck for sheer love of its
+handsomeness. Death is no insult. It is the law of the primitive
+world&mdash;war, and love in war.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></a></p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-019.jpg" alt="Snow scene Chapter II header" title="Snow scene Chapter II header" /></div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="II" id="II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+
+
+<p>They sat there for a long time, not speaking, each busy in his own way:
+the boy full of imaginings, strange, half-heathen, half-angelic
+feelings; the man roaming in that savage, romantic, superstitious
+atmosphere which belongs to the north, and to the north alone. At last
+the boy lay back on his pillow, his finger still in the bullet-hole of
+the pelt. His eyes closed, and he seemed about to fall asleep, but
+presently looked up and whis<a name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></a>pered: "I haven't said my prayers, have I?"</p>
+
+<p>The father shook his head in a sort of rude confusion.</p>
+
+<p>"I can pray out loud if I want to, can't I?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, Dominique." The man shrank a little.</p>
+
+<p>"I forget a good many times, but I know one all right, for I said it
+when the bird was singing. It isn't one out of the book Father Corraine
+sent mother by Pretty Pierre; it's one she taught me out of her own
+head. P'r'aps I'd better say it."</p>
+
+<p>"P'r'aps, if you want to." The voice was husky.</p>
+
+<p>The boy began:</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></a>"O Bon J&eacute;su, who died to save us from our sins, and to lead us to Thy
+country, where there is no cold, nor hunger, nor thirst, and where no
+one is afraid, listen to Thy child.... When the great winds and rains
+come down from the hills, do not let the floods drown us, nor the woods
+cover us, nor the snow-slide bury us, and do not let the prairie-fires
+burn us. Keep wild beasts from killing us in our sleep, and give us good
+hearts that we may not kill them in anger."</p>
+
+<p>His finger twisted involuntarily into the bullet-hole in the pelt, and
+he paused a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep us from getting lost, O Bon J&eacute;su."</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></a>Again there was a pause, his eyes opened wide, and he said:</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think mother's lost, father?"</p>
+
+<p>A heavy broken breath came from the father, and he replied haltingly:
+"Mebbe&mdash;mebbe so."</p>
+
+<p>Dominique's eyes closed again. "I'll make up some," he said slowly: "And
+if mother's lost, O Bon J&eacute;su, bring her back again to us, for
+everything's going wrong."</p>
+
+<p>Again he paused, then went on with the prayer as it had been taught him.</p>
+
+<p>"Teach us to hear Thee whenever Thou callest, and to see Thee when Thou
+visitest us, and let the blessed Mary and all the saints speak often <a name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></a>to
+Thee for us. O Christ, hear us. Lord have mercy upon us. Christ, have
+mercy upon us. Amen."</p>
+
+<p>Making the sign of the cross, he lay back, and said: "I'll go to sleep
+now, I guess."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-023.jpg" alt="White Swan flying" title="White Swan flying" /></div>
+
+<p><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></a></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-024.jpg" alt="Snow scene chapter III header" title="Snow scene chapter III header" /></div>
+<h3><a name="III" id="III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+
+
+<p>The man sat for a long time looking at the pale, shining face, at the
+blue veins showing painfully dark on the temples and forehead, at the
+firm little white hand, which was as brown as a butternut a few weeks
+before. The longer he sat, the deeper did his misery sink into his soul.
+His wife had gone he knew not where, his child was wasting to death, and
+he had for his sorrows no inner consolation. He had ever had that touch
+of mystical imagination inseparable from the <a name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></a>far north, yet he had none
+of that religious belief which swallowed up natural awe and turned it to
+the refining of life, and to the advantage of a man's soul. Now it was
+forced in upon him that his child was wiser than himself; wiser and
+safer. His life had been spent in the wastes, with rough deeds and
+rugged habits, and a youth of hardship, danger, and almost savage
+endurance had given him a half-barbarian temperament, which could strike
+an angry blow at one moment and fondle to death at the next.</p>
+
+<p>When he married sweet Lucette Barbond his religion reached little
+farther than a belief in the Scarlet Hunter of the Kimash Hills and
+<a name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></a>those voices that could be heard calling in the night, till their time
+of sleep be past and they should rise and reconquer the north.</p>
+
+<p>Not even Father Corraine, whose ways were like those of his Master,
+could ever bring him to a more definite faith. His wife had at first
+striven with him, mourning yet loving. Sometimes the savage in him had
+broken out over the little creature, merely because barbaric tyranny was
+in him&mdash;torture followed by the passionate kiss. But how was she
+philosopher enough to understand the cause!</p>
+
+<p>When she fled from their hut one bitter day, as he roared some wild
+words at her, it was because her <a name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></a>nerves had all been shaken from
+threatened death by wild beasts, (of this he did not know) and his
+violence drove her mad. She had run out of the house, and on, and on,
+and on&mdash;and she had never come back. That was weeks ago, and there had
+been no word nor sign of her since. The man was now busy with it all, in
+a slow, cumbrous way. A nature more to be touched by things seen than by
+things told, his mind was being awakened in a massive kind of fashion.
+He was viewing this crisis of his life as one sees a human face in the
+wide searching light of a great fire. He was restless, but he held
+himself still by a strong effort, not wishing to disturb <a name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></a>the little
+sleeper. His eyes seemed to retreat farther and farther back under his
+shaggy brows.</p>
+
+<p>The great logs in the chimney burned brilliantly, and a brass crucifix
+over the child's head now and again reflected soft little flashes of
+light. This caught the hunter's eye. Presently there grew up in him a
+vague kind of hope that, somehow, this symbol would bring him luck&mdash;that
+was the way he put it to himself. He had felt this&mdash;and something
+more&mdash;when Dominique prayed. Somehow, Dominique's prayer was the only
+one he had ever heard that had gone home to him, had opened up the big
+sluices of his nature, and let the light of God flood <a name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></a>in. No, there was
+another: the one Lucette made on the day that they were married, when a
+wonderful timid reverence played through his hungry love for her.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-029.jpg" alt="window" title="window" /></div>
+
+<p><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></a></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-006.jpg" alt="Chapter IV header" title="Chapter IV header" /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="IV" id="IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Hours passed. All at once, without any other motion or gesture, the
+boy's eyes opened wide with a strange, intense look.</p>
+
+<p>"Father," he said slowly, and in a kind of dream, "when you hear a sweet
+horn blow at night, is it the Scarlet Hunter calling?"</p>
+
+<p>"P'r'aps. Why, Dominique?"<a name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></a> He made up his mind to humor the boy, though
+it gave him strange aching forebodings. He had seen grown men and women
+with these fancies&mdash;and they had died.</p>
+
+<p>"I heard one blowing just now, and the sounds seemed to wave over my
+head. P'r'aps he's calling some one that's lost."</p>
+
+<p>"Mebbe."</p>
+
+<p>"And I heard a voice singing&mdash;it wasn't a bird to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"There was no voice, Dominique."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes." There was something fine in the grave, courteous certainty
+of the lad. "I waked, and you were sitting there thinking, and I shut my
+eyes again, and I heard <a name="Page_26" id="Page_26"></a>the voice. I remember the tune and the words."</p>
+
+<p>"What were the words?" In spite of himself the hunter felt awed.</p>
+
+<p>"I've heard mother sing them, or something most like them:<br /><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"'Why does the fire no longer burn?</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">(I am so lonely.)</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Why does the tent-door swing outward?</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">(I have no home.)</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Oh, let me breathe hard in your face!</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">(I am so lonely.)</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Oh, why do you shut your eyes to me?</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">(I have no home.)'"</span><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The boy paused.</p>
+
+<p>"Was that all, Dominique?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, not all."<br /><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"'Let us make friends with the stars;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">(I am so lonely.)</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Give me your hand, I will hold it.</span><br /><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27"></a>
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">(I have no home.)</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Let us go hunting together.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">(I am so lonely.)</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">We will sleep at God's camp to-night.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">(I have no home.)'"</span><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dominique did not sing, but recited the words with a sort of chanting
+inflection.</p>
+
+<p>"What does it mean when you hear a voice like that, father?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know. Who told&mdash;your mother&mdash;the song?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't know. I suppose she just made them up&mdash;she and God....
+There! There it is again? Don't you hear it&mdash;don't you hear it, daddy?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Dominique, it's only the kettle singing."</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></a>"A kettle isn't a voice. Daddy&mdash;" He paused a little, then went on,
+hesitatingly: "I saw a white swan fly through the door over your
+shoulder when you came in to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, Dominique, it was a flurry of snow blowing over my shoulder."</p>
+
+<p>"But it looked at me with two shining eyes."</p>
+
+<p>"That was two stars shining through the door, my son."</p>
+
+<p>"How could there be snow flying and stars shining, too, father?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was just drift-snow on a light wind, but the stars were shining
+above, Dominique."</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></a>The man's voice was anxious and unconvincing, his eyes had a hungry,
+haunted look. The legend of the White Swan had to do with the passing of
+a human soul. The Swan had come in&mdash;would it go out alone? He touched
+the boy's hand&mdash;it was hot with fever; he felt the pulse&mdash;it ran high;
+he watched the face&mdash;it had a glowing light. Something stirred within
+him, and passed like a wave to the farthest course of his being. Through
+his misery he had touched the garment of the Master of Souls. As though
+a voice said to him there, "<i>Some one hath touched me</i>," he got to his
+feet, and, with a sudden blind humility, lit two <a name="Page_30" id="Page_30"></a>candles, and placed
+them on a shelf in a corner before a porcelain figure of the Virgin, as
+he had seen his wife do. Then he picked a small handful of fresh spruce
+twigs from a branch over the chimney, and laid them beside the candles.
+After a short pause he came slowly to the head of the boy's bed. Very
+solemnly he touched the foot of the Christ on the cross with the tips of
+his fingers, and brought them to his lips with an indescribable
+reverence. After a moment, standing with eyes fixed on the face of the
+crucified figure, he said, in a shaking voice:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Pardon, bon J&eacute;su! Sauves mon enfant! Ne me laissez pas seul!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>The boy looked up with eyes <a name="Page_31" id="Page_31"></a>again grown unnaturally heavy, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Amen!... <i>Bon J&eacute;su!... Encore! Encore, mon p&egrave;re!</i>"</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-037.jpg" alt="Madonna and child" title="Madonna and child" /></div>
+
+<p><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></a></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-038.jpg" alt="Snow scene Chapter V header" title="Snow scene Chapter V header" /></div>
+<h3><a name="V" id="V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+
+
+<p>The boy slept. The father stood still by the bed for a time, but at last
+slowly turned and went toward the fire.</p>
+
+<p>Outside, two figures were approaching the hut&mdash;a man and a woman; yet at
+first glance the man might easily have been taken for a woman, because
+of his clean-shaven face, of the long black robe which he wore, and
+because his hair fell loose on his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Have patience, my daughter,"<a name="Page_33" id="Page_33"></a> said the man. "Do not enter till I call
+you. But stand close to the door, if you will, and hear all."</p>
+
+<p>So saying he raised his hand as in a kind of benediction, passed to the
+door, and, after tapping very softly, opened it, entered, and closed it
+behind him&mdash;not so quickly, however, but that the woman caught a glimpse
+of the father and the boy. In her eyes there was the divine look of
+motherhood.</p>
+
+<p>"Peace be to this house!" said the man gently, as he stepped forward
+from the door.</p>
+
+<p>The father, startled, turned shrinkingly on him, as though he had seen a
+spirit.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>M'sieu' le cur&eacute;!</i>" he said in<a name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></a> French, with an accent much poorer than
+that of the priest, or even of his own son. He had learned French from
+his wife; he himself was English.</p>
+
+<p>The priest's quick eye had taken in the lighted candles at the little
+shrine, even as he saw the painfully changed aspect of the man.</p>
+
+<p>"The wife and child, Bagot?" he asked, looking round. "Ah, the boy!" he
+added, and going toward the bed, continued, presently, in a low voice:
+"Dominique is ill?"</p>
+
+<p>Bagot nodded, and then answered: "A wildcat and then fever, Father
+Corraine."</p>
+
+<p>The priest felt the boy's pulse softly, then with a close personal <a name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></a>look
+he spoke hardly above his breath, yet distinctly, too:</p>
+
+<p>"Your wife, Bagot?"</p>
+
+<p>"She is not here, m'sieu'." The voice was low and gloomy.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is she, Bagot?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know, m'sieu'."</p>
+
+<p>"When did you see her last?"</p>
+
+<p>"Four weeks ago, m'sieu'."</p>
+
+<p>"That was September, this is October&mdash;winter. On the ranches they let
+their cattle loose upon the plains in winter, knowing not where they go,
+yet looking for them to return in the spring. But a woman&mdash;a woman and a
+wife&mdash;is different.... Bagot, you have been a rough, hard man, and you
+have been a stranger to your God, but I thought <a name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></a>you loved your wife and
+child!"</p>
+
+<p>The hunter's hands clenched, and a wicked light flashed up into his
+eyes; but the calm, benignant gaze of the other cooled the tempest in
+his veins. The priest sat down on the couch where the child lay, and
+took the fevered hand in his own.</p>
+
+<p>"Stay where you are, Bagot, just there where you are, and tell me what
+your trouble is, and why your wife is not here.... Say all honestly&mdash;by
+the name of the Christ!" he added, lifting up an iron crucifix that hung
+on his breast.</p>
+
+<p>Bagot sat down on a bench near the fireplace, the light playing on his
+bronzed, powerful face, his eyes shining beneath his heavy brows like
+<a name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></a>two coals. After a moment he began:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know how it started. I'd lost a lot of pelts&mdash;stolen they were,
+down on the Child o' Sin River. Well, she was hasty and nervous, like as
+not&mdash;she always was brisker and more sudden than I am. I&mdash;I laid my
+powder-horn and whiskey-flash&mdash;up there!"</p>
+
+<p>He pointed to the little shrine of the Virgin, where now his candles
+were burning. The priest's grave eyes did not change expression at all,
+but looked out wisely, as though he understood everything before it was
+told.</p>
+
+<p>Bagot continued: "I didn't notice it, but she had put some flowers
+<a name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></a>there. She said something with an edge, her face all snapping angry,
+threw the things down, and called me a heathen and a wicked heretic&mdash;and
+I don't say now but she'd a right to do it. But I let out then, for them
+stolen pelts was rasping me on the raw. I said something pretty rough,
+and made as if I was goin' to break her in two&mdash;just fetched up my
+hands, and went like this!&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>With a singular simplicity he made a wild gesture with his hands, and an
+animal-like snarl came from his throat. Then he looked at the priest
+with the honest intensity of a boy.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that was what you <i>did</i>&mdash;<a name="Page_39" id="Page_39"></a>what was it you <i>said</i> which was 'pretty
+rough'?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a slight hesitation, then came the reply:</p>
+
+<p>"I said there was enough powder spilt on the floor to kill all the
+priests in heaven."</p>
+
+<p>A fire suddenly shot up into Father Corraine's face, and his lips
+tightened for an instant, but presently he was as before, and he said:</p>
+
+<p>"How that will face you one day, Bagot! Go on. What else?"</p>
+
+<p>Sweat began to break out on Bagot's face, and he spoke as though he were
+carrying a heavy weight on his shoulders, low and brokenly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I said, 'And if virgins has <a name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></a>it so fine, why didn't you stay
+one?'"</p>
+
+<p>"Blasphemer!" said the priest in a stern, reproachful voice, his face
+turning a little pale, and he brought the crucifix to his lips. "To the
+mother of your child&mdash;shame! What more?"</p>
+
+<p>"She threw up her hands to her ears with a wild cry, ran out of the
+house, down the hills, and away. I went to the door and watched her as
+long as I could see her, and waited for her to come back&mdash;but she never
+did. I've hunted and hunted, but I can't find her." Then, with a sudden
+thought, "Do you know anything of her, m'sieu'?"</p>
+
+<p>The priest appeared not to hear <a name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></a>the question. Turning for a moment
+toward the boy, who now was in a deep sleep, he looked at him intently.
+Presently he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Ever since I married you and Lucette Barbond you have stood in the way
+of her duty, Bagot. How well I remember that first day when you knelt
+before me! Was ever so sweet and good a girl&mdash;with her golden eyes and
+the look of summer in her face, and her heart all pure! Nothing had
+spoiled her&mdash;you cannot spoil such women&mdash;God is in their hearts. But
+you, what have you cared? One day you would fondle her, and the next you
+were a savage&mdash;and she, so gentle, so gentle all the time. Then, for her
+<a name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></a>religion and the faith of her child&mdash;she has fought for it, prayed for
+it, suffered for it. You thought you had no need of religion, for you
+had so much happiness, which you did not deserve&mdash;that was it. But
+she&mdash;with all a woman suffers, how can she bear life&mdash;and man&mdash;without
+God? No, it is not possible. And you thought you and your few
+superstitions were enough for her.&mdash;Ah, poor fool! She should worship
+you! So selfish, so small, for a man who knows in his heart how great
+God is. You did not love her."</p>
+
+<p>"By the Heaven above, yes!" said Bagot, half starting to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, 'by the Heaven above,' no! nor the child. For true love is
+un<a name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></a>selfish and patient, and where it is the stronger, it cares for the
+weaker; but it was your wife who was unselfish, patient, and cared for
+you. Every time she said an <i>ave</i> she thought of you, and her every
+thanks to God had you therein. They know you well in heaven,
+Bagot&mdash;through your wife. Did you ever pray&mdash;ever since I married you to
+her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"When?"</p>
+
+<p>"An hour or so ago."</p>
+
+<p>Once again the priest's eyes glanced towards the lighted candles.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></a></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-050.jpg" alt="CHAPTER VI HEADER" title="CHAPTER VI HEADER" /></div>
+
+<h3><a name="VI" id="VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Presently he said: "You asked me if I had heard anything of your wife.
+Listen, and be patient while you listen.... Three weeks ago I was
+camping on the Sundust Plains, over against the Young Sky River. In the
+morning, as I was lighting a fire outside my tent, my young Cree Indian
+with me, I saw coming over the crest of <a name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></a>a landwave, from the very lips
+of the sunrise, as it were, a band of Indians. I could not quite make
+them out. I hoisted my little flag on the tent, and they hurried on to
+me. I did not know the tribe&mdash;they had come from near Hudson's Bay. They
+spoke Chinook, and I could understand them. Well, as they came near, I
+saw that they had a woman with them."</p>
+
+<p>Bagot leaned forward, his body strained, every muscle tense. "A woman!"
+he said, as if breathing gave him sorrow&mdash;"my wife?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your wife."</p>
+
+<p>"Quick! Quick! Go on&mdash;oh, go on, m'sieu'&mdash;good father."</p>
+
+<p>"She fell at my feet, begging <a name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></a>me to save her.... I waved her off."</p>
+
+<p>The sweat dropped from Bagot's forehead, a low growl broke from him, and
+he made such a motion as a lion might make at its prey.</p>
+
+<p>"You wouldn't&mdash;wouldn't save her&mdash;you coward!" He ground the words out.</p>
+
+<p>The priest raised his palm against the other's violence. "Hush!... She
+drew away, saying that God and man had deserted her.... We had
+breakfast, the chief and I. Afterwards, when the chief had eaten much
+and was in good humor, I asked him where he had got the woman. He said
+that he had found her on the plains&mdash;she had lost <a name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></a>her way. I told him
+then that I wanted to buy her. He said to me. 'What does a priest want
+of a woman?' I said that I wished to give her back to her husband. He
+said that he had found her, and she was his, and that he would marry her
+when they reached the great camp of the tribe. I was patient. It would
+not do to make him angry. I wrote down on a piece of bark the things
+that I would give him for her: an order on the Company at Fort o' Sin
+for shot, blankets and beads. He said no."</p>
+
+<p>The priest paused. Bagot's face was all swimming with sweat, his body
+was rigid, but the veins of his neck knotted and twisted.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></a>"For the love of God go on!" he said hoarsely.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, for the love of God. I have no money, I am poor, but the Company
+will always honor my orders, for I pay sometimes by the help of <i>le bon
+J&eacute;su</i>. Well, I added some things to the list: a saddle, a rifle, and
+some flannel. But no, he would not. Once more I put many things down. It
+was a big bill&mdash;it would keep me poor for five years. To save your wife,
+John Bagot, you who drove her from your door, blaspheming and railing at
+such as I.... I offered the things, and told him that was all I could
+give. After a little he shook his head, and said that he must have the
+<a name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></a>woman for his wife. I did not know what to add. I said, 'She is white,
+and the white people will never rest till they have killed you all, if
+you do this thing. The Company will track you down.' Then he said, 'The
+whites must catch me and fight me before they kill me.'... What was
+there to do?"</p>
+
+<p>Bagot came near to the priest, bending over him savagely:</p>
+
+<p>"You let her stay with them&mdash;you, with hands like a man!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush," was the calm, reproving answer. "I was one man, they were
+twenty."</p>
+
+<p>"Where was your God to help you, then?"</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></a>"Her God and mine was with me."</p>
+
+<p>Bagot's eyes blazed. "Why didn't you offer rum&mdash;rum? They'd have done it
+for that&mdash;one&mdash;five&mdash;ten kegs of rum!"</p>
+
+<p>He swayed to and fro in his excitement, yet their voices hardly rose
+above a hoarse whisper all the time.</p>
+
+<p>"You forget," answered the priest, "that it is against the law, and that
+as a priest of my order I am vowed to give no rum to an Indian."</p>
+
+<p>"A vow! A vow! Son of God! what is a vow beside a woman&mdash;my wife?"</p>
+
+<p>His misery and his rage were pitiful to see.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></a>"Perjure my soul! Offer rum! Break my vow in the face of the enemies of
+God's Church! What have you done for me that I should do this for you,
+John Bagot?"</p>
+
+<p>"Coward!" was the man's despairing cry, with a sudden threatening
+movement. "Christ himself would have broke a vow to save her."</p>
+
+<p>The grave, kind eyes of the priest met the other's fierce gaze, and
+quieted the wild storm that was about to break.</p>
+
+<p>"Who am I that I should teach my Master?" he said, solemnly. "What would
+you give Christ, Bagot, if He had saved her to you?"</p>
+
+<p>The man shook with grief, and tears rushed from his eyes, so sud<a name="Page_52" id="Page_52"></a>denly
+and fully had a new emotion passed through him.</p>
+
+<p>"Give&mdash;give!" he cried, "I would give twenty years of my life!"</p>
+
+<p>The figure of the priest stretched up with gentle grandeur. Holding out
+the iron crucifix, he said: "On your knees and swear it, John Bagot!"</p>
+
+<p>There was something inspiring, commanding, in the voice and manner, and
+Bagot, with a new hope rushing through his veins, knelt and repeated his
+words.</p>
+
+<p>The priest turned to the door, and called, "Madame Lucette!"</p>
+
+<p>The boy, hearing, waked, and sat up in bed suddenly.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></a>"Mother! mother!" he cried, as the door flew open.</p>
+
+<p>The mother came to her husband's arms, laughing and weeping, and an
+instant afterwards was pouring out her love and anxiety over her child.</p>
+
+<p>Father Corraine now faced the man, and with a soft exaltation of voice
+and manner said:</p>
+
+<p>"John Bagot, in the name of Christ, I demand twenty years of your
+life&mdash;of love and obedience of God. I broke my vow; I perjured my soul;
+I bought your wife with ten kegs of rum."</p>
+
+<p>The tall hunter dropped again to his knees, and caught the priest's hand
+to kiss it.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></a>"No, no&mdash;this!" the priest said, and laid his iron crucifix against the
+other's lips.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-060.jpg" alt="Lighted candle" title="Lighted candle" /></div>
+
+<p><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></a></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus-061.jpg" alt="Mother at the bedside" title="Mother at the bedside" /></div>
+<h3><a name="VII" id="VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Dominique's voice came clearly through the room:</p>
+
+<p>"Mother, I saw the white swan fly away through the door when you came
+in."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, my dear," she said, "there was no white swan." But she clasped
+the boy to her breast protectingly, and whispered an <i>ave</i>.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></a>"Peace be to this house," said the voice of the priest.</p>
+
+<p>And there was peace&mdash;for the child lived, and the man has loved, and has
+kept his vow, even unto this day.</p>
+
+<p>For the visions of the boy, who can know the divers ways in which God
+speaks to the children of men!<br /><br /></p>
+
+<h3>THE END<br /><br /><br /></h3>
+
+<p><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></a><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></a><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></a></p>
+
+<h3>NOVELS BY SIR GILBERT PARKER</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Novels by Sir Gilbert Parker">
+<tr><td align='left'>The Going of the White Swan</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Seats of the Mighty</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Trail of the Sword</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Trespasser</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Translation of a Savage</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Mrs. Falchion<br /><br /><br /></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p class='center'>D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Going of the White Swan, by Gilbert Parker
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Going of the White Swan, by Gilbert Parker
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Going of the White Swan
+
+Author: Gilbert Parker
+
+Release Date: September 18, 2005 [EBook #16716]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GOING OF THE WHITE SWAN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Janet Keller, Janet Blenkinship and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE GOING OF THE WHITE SWAN
+
+[Illustration]
+
+[Illustration]
+
+[Illustration: "'No, no--this!' the priest said." (p 56)]
+
+
+
+
+ THE GOING OF THE WHITE SWAN
+
+ BY
+
+ GILBERT PARKER
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ NEW YORK
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
+ MCMXII
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ Copyright, 1912, by
+
+ GILBERT PARKER
+
+ Copyright, 1895, by Charles Scribner's Sons
+ Copyright, 1895, by Stone and Kimball
+ Copyright, 1898, by The Macmillan Company
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+THE GOING OF THE WHITE SWAN
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+I
+
+
+"Why don't she come back, father?"
+
+The man shook his head, his hand fumbled with the wolfskin robe covering
+the child, and he made no reply.
+
+"She'd come if she knew I was hurted, wouldn't she?"
+
+The father nodded, and then turned restlessly toward the door, as though
+expecting some one. The look was troubled, and the pipe he held was not
+alight, though he made a pretense of smoking.
+
+"Suppose the wildcat had got me, she'd be sorry when she comes, wouldn't
+she?"
+
+There was no reply yet, save by gesture, the language of primitive man;
+but the big body shivered a little, and the uncouth hand felt for a
+place in the bed where the lad's knee made a lump under the robe. He
+felt the little heap tenderly, but the child winced.
+
+"S-sh, but that hurts! This wolfskin's most too much on me, isn't it,
+father?"
+
+The man softly, yet awkwardly, lifted the robe, folded it back, and
+slowly uncovered the knee. The leg was worn away almost to skin and
+bone, but the knee itself was swollen with inflammation. He bathed it
+with some water, mixed with vinegar and herbs, then drew down the
+deer-skin shirt, and did the same with the child's shoulder. Both
+shoulder and knee bore the marks of teeth,--where a huge wildcat had
+made havoc--and the body had long red scratches.
+
+Presently the man shook his head sorrowfully, and covered up the small
+disfigured frame again, but this time with a tanned skin of the caribou.
+The flames of the huge wood-fire dashed the walls and floor with a
+velvety red and black, and the large iron kettle, bought of the Company
+at Fort Sacrament, puffed out geysers of steam.
+
+The place was a low hut with parchment windows and rough mud-mortar
+lumped between the logs. Skins hung along two sides, with bullet-holes
+and knife-holes showing: of the great gray wolf, the red puma, the
+bronze hill-lion, the beaver, the bear, and the sable; and in one corner
+was a huge pile of them. Bare of the usual comforts as the room was, it
+had a sort of refinement also, joined to an inexpressible loneliness,
+you could scarce have told how or why.
+
+"Father," said the boy, his face pinched with pain for a moment, "it
+hurts so, all over, every once in a while."
+
+His fingers caressed the leg just below the knee.
+
+"Father," he suddenly added, "what does it mean when you hear a bird
+sing in the middle of the night?"
+
+The woodsman looked down anxiously into the boy's face. "It hasn't no
+meaning, Dominique. There ain't such a thing on the Labrador Heights as
+a bird singin' in the night. That's only in warm countries where there's
+nightingales. So--_bien sur!_"
+
+The boy had a wise, dreamy, speculative look.
+
+"Well, I guess it was a nightingale--it didn't sing like any I ever
+heard."
+
+The look of nervousness deepened in the woodman's face. "What did it
+sing like, Dominique?"
+
+"So it made you shiver. You wanted it to go on, and yet you didn't want
+it. It was pretty, but you felt as if something was going to snap inside
+of you."
+
+"When did you hear it, my son?"
+
+"Twice last night--and--and I guess it was Sunday the other time. I
+don't know, for there hasn't been no Sunday up here since mother went
+away--has there?"
+
+"Mebbe not."
+
+The veins were beating like live cords in the man's throat and at his
+temples.
+
+"'Twas just the same as Father Corraine bein' here, when mother had
+Sunday, wasn't it?"
+
+The man made no reply; but a gloom drew down his forehead, and his lips
+doubled in as though he endured physical pain. He got to his feet and
+paced the floor. For weeks he had listened to the same kind of talk from
+this wounded, and, as he thought, dying son, and he was getting less and
+less able to bear it. The boy at nine years of age was, in manner of
+speech, the merest child, but his thoughts were sometimes large and
+wise. The only white child within a compass of a hundred miles or so;
+the lonely life of the hills and plains, so austere in winter, so melted
+to a sober joy in summer; listening to the talk of his elders at
+camp-fires and on the hunting-trail, when, even as an infant almost, he
+was swung in a blanket from a tree or was packed in the torch-crane of a
+canoe; and more than all, the care of a good, loving--if
+passionate--little mother: all these had made him far wiser than his
+years. He had been hours upon hours each day alone with the birds, and
+squirrels, and wild animals, and something of the keen scent and
+instinct of the animal world had entered into his body and brain, so
+that he felt what he could not understand.
+
+He saw that he had worried his father, and it troubled him. He thought
+of something.
+
+"Daddy," he said, "let me have it."
+
+A smile struggled for life in the hunter's face, as he turned to the
+wall and took down the skin of a silver fox. He held it on his palm for
+a moment, looking at it in an interested, satisfied way, then he brought
+it over and put it into the child's hands; and the smile now shaped
+itself, as he saw an eager pale face buried in the soft fur.
+
+"Good! good!" he said involuntarily.
+
+"_Bon! bon!_" said the boy's voice from the fur, in the language of his
+mother, who added a strain of Indian blood to her French ancestry.
+
+The two sat there, the man half-kneeling on the low bed, and stroking
+the fur very gently. It could scarcely be thought that such pride should
+be spent on a little pelt, by a mere backwoodsman and his nine-year-old
+son. One has seen a woman fingering a splendid necklace, her eyes
+fascinated by the bunch of warm, deep jewels--a light not of mere
+vanity, or hunger, or avarice in her face--only the love of the
+beautiful thing. But this was an animal's skin. Did they feel the
+animal underneath it yet, giving it beauty, life, glory?
+
+The silver-fox skin is the prize of the north, and this one was of the
+boy's own harvesting. While his father was away he saw the fox creeping
+by the hut. The joy of the hunter seized him, and guided his eye over
+the sights of his father's rifle as he rested the barrel on the
+windowsill, and the animal was his! Now his finger ran into the hole
+made by the bullet, and he gave a little laugh of modest triumph.
+Minutes passed as they studied, felt, and admired the skin, the hunter
+proud of his son, the son alive with a primitive passion, which inflicts
+suffering to get the beautiful thing. Perhaps the tenderness as well as
+the wild passion of the animal gets into the hunter's blood, and tips
+his fingers at times with an exquisite kindness--as one has noted in a
+lion fondling her young, or in tigers as they sport upon the sands of
+the desert. This boy had seen his father shoot a splendid moose, and, as
+it lay dying, drop down and kiss it in the neck for sheer love of its
+handsomeness. Death is no insult. It is the law of the primitive
+world--war, and love in war.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+II
+
+
+They sat there for a long time, not speaking, each busy in his own way:
+the boy full of imaginings, strange, half-heathen, half-angelic
+feelings; the man roaming in that savage, romantic, superstitious
+atmosphere which belongs to the north, and to the north alone. At last
+the boy lay back on his pillow, his finger still in the bullet-hole of
+the pelt. His eyes closed, and he seemed about to fall asleep, but
+presently looked up and whispered: "I haven't said my prayers, have I?"
+
+The father shook his head in a sort of rude confusion.
+
+"I can pray out loud if I want to, can't I?"
+
+"Of course, Dominique." The man shrank a little.
+
+"I forget a good many times, but I know one all right, for I said it
+when the bird was singing. It isn't one out of the book Father Corraine
+sent mother by Pretty Pierre; it's one she taught me out of her own
+head. P'r'aps I'd better say it."
+
+"P'r'aps, if you want to." The voice was husky.
+
+The boy began:
+
+"O Bon Jesu, who died to save us from our sins, and to lead us to Thy
+country, where there is no cold, nor hunger, nor thirst, and where no
+one is afraid, listen to Thy child.... When the great winds and rains
+come down from the hills, do not let the floods drown us, nor the woods
+cover us, nor the snow-slide bury us, and do not let the prairie-fires
+burn us. Keep wild beasts from killing us in our sleep, and give us good
+hearts that we may not kill them in anger."
+
+His finger twisted involuntarily into the bullet-hole in the pelt, and
+he paused a moment.
+
+"Keep us from getting lost, O Bon Jesu."
+
+Again there was a pause, his eyes opened wide, and he said:
+
+"Do you think mother's lost, father?"
+
+A heavy broken breath came from the father, and he replied haltingly:
+"Mebbe--mebbe so."
+
+Dominique's eyes closed again. "I'll make up some," he said slowly: "And
+if mother's lost, O Bon Jesu, bring her back again to us, for
+everything's going wrong."
+
+Again he paused, then went on with the prayer as it had been taught him.
+
+"Teach us to hear Thee whenever Thou callest, and to see Thee when Thou
+visitest us, and let the blessed Mary and all the saints speak often to
+Thee for us. O Christ, hear us. Lord have mercy upon us. Christ, have
+mercy upon us. Amen."
+
+Making the sign of the cross, he lay back, and said: "I'll go to sleep
+now, I guess."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+III
+
+
+The man sat for a long time looking at the pale, shining face, at the
+blue veins showing painfully dark on the temples and forehead, at the
+firm little white hand, which was as brown as a butternut a few weeks
+before. The longer he sat, the deeper did his misery sink into his soul.
+His wife had gone he knew not where, his child was wasting to death, and
+he had for his sorrows no inner consolation. He had ever had that touch
+of mystical imagination inseparable from the far north, yet he had none
+of that religious belief which swallowed up natural awe and turned it to
+the refining of life, and to the advantage of a man's soul. Now it was
+forced in upon him that his child was wiser than himself; wiser and
+safer. His life had been spent in the wastes, with rough deeds and
+rugged habits, and a youth of hardship, danger, and almost savage
+endurance had given him a half-barbarian temperament, which could strike
+an angry blow at one moment and fondle to death at the next.
+
+When he married sweet Lucette Barbond his religion reached little
+farther than a belief in the Scarlet Hunter of the Kimash Hills and
+those voices that could be heard calling in the night, till their time
+of sleep be past and they should rise and reconquer the north.
+
+Not even Father Corraine, whose ways were like those of his Master,
+could ever bring him to a more definite faith. His wife had at first
+striven with him, mourning yet loving. Sometimes the savage in him had
+broken out over the little creature, merely because barbaric tyranny was
+in him--torture followed by the passionate kiss. But how was she
+philosopher enough to understand the cause!
+
+When she fled from their hut one bitter day, as he roared some wild
+words at her, it was because her nerves had all been shaken from
+threatened death by wild beasts, (of this he did not know) and his
+violence drove her mad. She had run out of the house, and on, and on,
+and on--and she had never come back. That was weeks ago, and there had
+been no word nor sign of her since. The man was now busy with it all, in
+a slow, cumbrous way. A nature more to be touched by things seen than by
+things told, his mind was being awakened in a massive kind of fashion.
+He was viewing this crisis of his life as one sees a human face in the
+wide searching light of a great fire. He was restless, but he held
+himself still by a strong effort, not wishing to disturb the little
+sleeper. His eyes seemed to retreat farther and farther back under his
+shaggy brows.
+
+The great logs in the chimney burned brilliantly, and a brass crucifix
+over the child's head now and again reflected soft little flashes of
+light. This caught the hunter's eye. Presently there grew up in him a
+vague kind of hope that, somehow, this symbol would bring him luck--that
+was the way he put it to himself. He had felt this--and something
+more--when Dominique prayed. Somehow, Dominique's prayer was the only
+one he had ever heard that had gone home to him, had opened up the big
+sluices of his nature, and let the light of God flood in. No, there was
+another: the one Lucette made on the day that they were married, when a
+wonderful timid reverence played through his hungry love for her.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+IV
+
+
+Hours passed. All at once, without any other motion or gesture, the
+boy's eyes opened wide with a strange, intense look.
+
+"Father," he said slowly, and in a kind of dream, "when you hear a sweet
+horn blow at night, is it the Scarlet Hunter calling?"
+
+"P'r'aps. Why, Dominique?" He made up his mind to humor the boy, though
+it gave him strange aching forebodings. He had seen grown men and women
+with these fancies--and they had died.
+
+"I heard one blowing just now, and the sounds seemed to wave over my
+head. P'r'aps he's calling some one that's lost."
+
+"Mebbe."
+
+"And I heard a voice singing--it wasn't a bird to-night."
+
+"There was no voice, Dominique."
+
+"Yes, yes." There was something fine in the grave, courteous certainty
+of the lad. "I waked, and you were sitting there thinking, and I shut my
+eyes again, and I heard the voice. I remember the tune and the words."
+
+"What were the words?" In spite of himself the hunter felt awed.
+
+"I've heard mother sing them, or something most like them:
+
+ "'Why does the fire no longer burn?
+ (I am so lonely.)
+ Why does the tent-door swing outward?
+ (I have no home.)
+ Oh, let me breathe hard in your face!
+ (I am so lonely.)
+ Oh, why do you shut your eyes to me?
+ (I have no home.)'"
+
+The boy paused.
+
+"Was that all, Dominique?"
+
+"No, not all."
+
+ "'Let us make friends with the stars;
+ (I am so lonely.)
+ Give me your hand, I will hold it.
+ (I have no home.)
+ Let us go hunting together.
+ (I am so lonely.)
+ We will sleep at God's camp to-night.
+ (I have no home.)'"
+
+Dominique did not sing, but recited the words with a sort of chanting
+inflection.
+
+"What does it mean when you hear a voice like that, father?"
+
+"I don't know. Who told--your mother--the song?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know. I suppose she just made them up--she and God....
+There! There it is again? Don't you hear it--don't you hear it, daddy?"
+
+"No, Dominique, it's only the kettle singing."
+
+"A kettle isn't a voice. Daddy--" He paused a little, then went on,
+hesitatingly: "I saw a white swan fly through the door over your
+shoulder when you came in to-night."
+
+"No, no, Dominique, it was a flurry of snow blowing over my shoulder."
+
+"But it looked at me with two shining eyes."
+
+"That was two stars shining through the door, my son."
+
+"How could there be snow flying and stars shining, too, father?"
+
+"It was just drift-snow on a light wind, but the stars were shining
+above, Dominique."
+
+The man's voice was anxious and unconvincing, his eyes had a hungry,
+haunted look. The legend of the White Swan had to do with the passing of
+a human soul. The Swan had come in--would it go out alone? He touched
+the boy's hand--it was hot with fever; he felt the pulse--it ran high;
+he watched the face--it had a glowing light. Something stirred within
+him, and passed like a wave to the farthest course of his being. Through
+his misery he had touched the garment of the Master of Souls. As though
+a voice said to him there, "_Some one hath touched me_," he got to his
+feet, and, with a sudden blind humility, lit two candles, and placed
+them on a shelf in a corner before a porcelain figure of the Virgin, as
+he had seen his wife do. Then he picked a small handful of fresh spruce
+twigs from a branch over the chimney, and laid them beside the candles.
+After a short pause he came slowly to the head of the boy's bed. Very
+solemnly he touched the foot of the Christ on the cross with the tips of
+his fingers, and brought them to his lips with an indescribable
+reverence. After a moment, standing with eyes fixed on the face of the
+crucified figure, he said, in a shaking voice:
+
+"_Pardon, bon Jesu! Sauves mon enfant! Ne me laissez pas seul!_"
+
+The boy looked up with eyes again grown unnaturally heavy, and said:
+
+"Amen!... _Bon Jesu!... Encore! Encore, mon pere!_"
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+V
+
+
+The boy slept. The father stood still by the bed for a time, but at last
+slowly turned and went toward the fire.
+
+Outside, two figures were approaching the hut--a man and a woman; yet at
+first glance the man might easily have been taken for a woman, because
+of his clean-shaven face, of the long black robe which he wore, and
+because his hair fell loose on his shoulders.
+
+"Have patience, my daughter," said the man. "Do not enter till I call
+you. But stand close to the door, if you will, and hear all."
+
+So saying he raised his hand as in a kind of benediction, passed to the
+door, and, after tapping very softly, opened it, entered, and closed it
+behind him--not so quickly, however, but that the woman caught a glimpse
+of the father and the boy. In her eyes there was the divine look of
+motherhood.
+
+"Peace be to this house!" said the man gently, as he stepped forward
+from the door.
+
+The father, startled, turned shrinkingly on him, as though he had seen a
+spirit.
+
+"_M'sieu' le cure!_" he said in French, with an accent much poorer than
+that of the priest, or even of his own son. He had learned French from
+his wife; he himself was English.
+
+The priest's quick eye had taken in the lighted candles at the little
+shrine, even as he saw the painfully changed aspect of the man.
+
+"The wife and child, Bagot?" he asked, looking round. "Ah, the boy!" he
+added, and going toward the bed, continued, presently, in a low voice:
+"Dominique is ill?"
+
+Bagot nodded, and then answered: "A wildcat and then fever, Father
+Corraine."
+
+The priest felt the boy's pulse softly, then with a close personal look
+he spoke hardly above his breath, yet distinctly, too:
+
+"Your wife, Bagot?"
+
+"She is not here, m'sieu'." The voice was low and gloomy.
+
+"Where is she, Bagot?"
+
+"I do not know, m'sieu'."
+
+"When did you see her last?"
+
+"Four weeks ago, m'sieu'."
+
+"That was September, this is October--winter. On the ranches they let
+their cattle loose upon the plains in winter, knowing not where they go,
+yet looking for them to return in the spring. But a woman--a woman and a
+wife--is different.... Bagot, you have been a rough, hard man, and you
+have been a stranger to your God, but I thought you loved your wife and
+child!"
+
+The hunter's hands clenched, and a wicked light flashed up into his
+eyes; but the calm, benignant gaze of the other cooled the tempest in
+his veins. The priest sat down on the couch where the child lay, and
+took the fevered hand in his own.
+
+"Stay where you are, Bagot, just there where you are, and tell me what
+your trouble is, and why your wife is not here.... Say all honestly--by
+the name of the Christ!" he added, lifting up an iron crucifix that hung
+on his breast.
+
+Bagot sat down on a bench near the fireplace, the light playing on his
+bronzed, powerful face, his eyes shining beneath his heavy brows like
+two coals. After a moment he began:
+
+"I don't know how it started. I'd lost a lot of pelts--stolen they were,
+down on the Child o' Sin River. Well, she was hasty and nervous, like as
+not--she always was brisker and more sudden than I am. I--I laid my
+powder-horn and whiskey-flash--up there!"
+
+He pointed to the little shrine of the Virgin, where now his candles
+were burning. The priest's grave eyes did not change expression at all,
+but looked out wisely, as though he understood everything before it was
+told.
+
+Bagot continued: "I didn't notice it, but she had put some flowers
+there. She said something with an edge, her face all snapping angry,
+threw the things down, and called me a heathen and a wicked heretic--and
+I don't say now but she'd a right to do it. But I let out then, for them
+stolen pelts was rasping me on the raw. I said something pretty rough,
+and made as if I was goin' to break her in two--just fetched up my
+hands, and went like this!--"
+
+With a singular simplicity he made a wild gesture with his hands, and an
+animal-like snarl came from his throat. Then he looked at the priest
+with the honest intensity of a boy.
+
+"Yes, that was what you _did_--what was it you _said_ which was 'pretty
+rough'?"
+
+There was a slight hesitation, then came the reply:
+
+"I said there was enough powder spilt on the floor to kill all the
+priests in heaven."
+
+A fire suddenly shot up into Father Corraine's face, and his lips
+tightened for an instant, but presently he was as before, and he said:
+
+"How that will face you one day, Bagot! Go on. What else?"
+
+Sweat began to break out on Bagot's face, and he spoke as though he were
+carrying a heavy weight on his shoulders, low and brokenly.
+
+"Then I said, 'And if virgins has it so fine, why didn't you stay
+one?'"
+
+"Blasphemer!" said the priest in a stern, reproachful voice, his face
+turning a little pale, and he brought the crucifix to his lips. "To the
+mother of your child--shame! What more?"
+
+"She threw up her hands to her ears with a wild cry, ran out of the
+house, down the hills, and away. I went to the door and watched her as
+long as I could see her, and waited for her to come back--but she never
+did. I've hunted and hunted, but I can't find her." Then, with a sudden
+thought, "Do you know anything of her, m'sieu'?"
+
+The priest appeared not to hear the question. Turning for a moment
+toward the boy, who now was in a deep sleep, he looked at him intently.
+Presently he spoke.
+
+"Ever since I married you and Lucette Barbond you have stood in the way
+of her duty, Bagot. How well I remember that first day when you knelt
+before me! Was ever so sweet and good a girl--with her golden eyes and
+the look of summer in her face, and her heart all pure! Nothing had
+spoiled her--you cannot spoil such women--God is in their hearts. But
+you, what have you cared? One day you would fondle her, and the next you
+were a savage--and she, so gentle, so gentle all the time. Then, for her
+religion and the faith of her child--she has fought for it, prayed for
+it, suffered for it. You thought you had no need of religion, for you
+had so much happiness, which you did not deserve--that was it. But
+she--with all a woman suffers, how can she bear life--and man--without
+God? No, it is not possible. And you thought you and your few
+superstitions were enough for her.--Ah, poor fool! She should worship
+you! So selfish, so small, for a man who knows in his heart how great
+God is. You did not love her."
+
+"By the Heaven above, yes!" said Bagot, half starting to his feet.
+
+"Ah, 'by the Heaven above,' no! nor the child. For true love is
+unselfish and patient, and where it is the stronger, it cares for the
+weaker; but it was your wife who was unselfish, patient, and cared for
+you. Every time she said an _ave_ she thought of you, and her every
+thanks to God had you therein. They know you well in heaven,
+Bagot--through your wife. Did you ever pray--ever since I married you to
+her?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"When?"
+
+"An hour or so ago."
+
+Once again the priest's eyes glanced towards the lighted candles.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+VI
+
+
+Presently he said: "You asked me if I had heard anything of your wife.
+Listen, and be patient while you listen.... Three weeks ago I was
+camping on the Sundust Plains, over against the Young Sky River. In the
+morning, as I was lighting a fire outside my tent, my young Cree Indian
+with me, I saw coming over the crest of a landwave, from the very lips
+of the sunrise, as it were, a band of Indians. I could not quite make
+them out. I hoisted my little flag on the tent, and they hurried on to
+me. I did not know the tribe--they had come from near Hudson's Bay. They
+spoke Chinook, and I could understand them. Well, as they came near, I
+saw that they had a woman with them."
+
+Bagot leaned forward, his body strained, every muscle tense. "A woman!"
+he said, as if breathing gave him sorrow--"my wife?"
+
+"Your wife."
+
+"Quick! Quick! Go on--oh, go on, m'sieu'--good father."
+
+"She fell at my feet, begging me to save her.... I waved her off."
+
+The sweat dropped from Bagot's forehead, a low growl broke from him, and
+he made such a motion as a lion might make at its prey.
+
+"You wouldn't--wouldn't save her--you coward!" He ground the words out.
+
+The priest raised his palm against the other's violence. "Hush!... She
+drew away, saying that God and man had deserted her.... We had
+breakfast, the chief and I. Afterwards, when the chief had eaten much
+and was in good humor, I asked him where he had got the woman. He said
+that he had found her on the plains--she had lost her way. I told him
+then that I wanted to buy her. He said to me. 'What does a priest want
+of a woman?' I said that I wished to give her back to her husband. He
+said that he had found her, and she was his, and that he would marry her
+when they reached the great camp of the tribe. I was patient. It would
+not do to make him angry. I wrote down on a piece of bark the things
+that I would give him for her: an order on the Company at Fort o' Sin
+for shot, blankets and beads. He said no."
+
+The priest paused. Bagot's face was all swimming with sweat, his body
+was rigid, but the veins of his neck knotted and twisted.
+
+"For the love of God go on!" he said hoarsely.
+
+"Yes, for the love of God. I have no money, I am poor, but the Company
+will always honor my orders, for I pay sometimes by the help of _le bon
+Jesu_. Well, I added some things to the list: a saddle, a rifle, and
+some flannel. But no, he would not. Once more I put many things down. It
+was a big bill--it would keep me poor for five years. To save your wife,
+John Bagot, you who drove her from your door, blaspheming and railing at
+such as I.... I offered the things, and told him that was all I could
+give. After a little he shook his head, and said that he must have the
+woman for his wife. I did not know what to add. I said, 'She is white,
+and the white people will never rest till they have killed you all, if
+you do this thing. The Company will track you down.' Then he said, 'The
+whites must catch me and fight me before they kill me.'... What was
+there to do?"
+
+Bagot came near to the priest, bending over him savagely:
+
+"You let her stay with them--you, with hands like a man!"
+
+"Hush," was the calm, reproving answer. "I was one man, they were
+twenty."
+
+"Where was your God to help you, then?"
+
+"Her God and mine was with me."
+
+Bagot's eyes blazed. "Why didn't you offer rum--rum? They'd have done it
+for that--one--five--ten kegs of rum!"
+
+He swayed to and fro in his excitement, yet their voices hardly rose
+above a hoarse whisper all the time.
+
+"You forget," answered the priest, "that it is against the law, and that
+as a priest of my order I am vowed to give no rum to an Indian."
+
+"A vow! A vow! Son of God! what is a vow beside a woman--my wife?"
+
+His misery and his rage were pitiful to see.
+
+"Perjure my soul! Offer rum! Break my vow in the face of the enemies of
+God's Church! What have you done for me that I should do this for you,
+John Bagot?"
+
+"Coward!" was the man's despairing cry, with a sudden threatening
+movement. "Christ himself would have broke a vow to save her."
+
+The grave, kind eyes of the priest met the other's fierce gaze, and
+quieted the wild storm that was about to break.
+
+"Who am I that I should teach my Master?" he said, solemnly. "What would
+you give Christ, Bagot, if He had saved her to you?"
+
+The man shook with grief, and tears rushed from his eyes, so suddenly
+and fully had a new emotion passed through him.
+
+"Give--give!" he cried, "I would give twenty years of my life!"
+
+The figure of the priest stretched up with gentle grandeur. Holding out
+the iron crucifix, he said: "On your knees and swear it, John Bagot!"
+
+There was something inspiring, commanding, in the voice and manner, and
+Bagot, with a new hope rushing through his veins, knelt and repeated his
+words.
+
+The priest turned to the door, and called, "Madame Lucette!"
+
+The boy, hearing, waked, and sat up in bed suddenly.
+
+"Mother! mother!" he cried, as the door flew open.
+
+The mother came to her husband's arms, laughing and weeping, and an
+instant afterwards was pouring out her love and anxiety over her child.
+
+Father Corraine now faced the man, and with a soft exaltation of voice
+and manner said:
+
+"John Bagot, in the name of Christ, I demand twenty years of your
+life--of love and obedience of God. I broke my vow; I perjured my soul;
+I bought your wife with ten kegs of rum."
+
+The tall hunter dropped again to his knees, and caught the priest's hand
+to kiss it.
+
+"No, no--this!" the priest said, and laid his iron crucifix against the
+other's lips.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+VII
+
+
+Dominique's voice came clearly through the room:
+
+"Mother, I saw the white swan fly away through the door when you came
+in."
+
+"My dear, my dear," she said, "there was no white swan." But she clasped
+the boy to her breast protectingly, and whispered an _ave_.
+
+"Peace be to this house," said the voice of the priest.
+
+And there was peace--for the child lived, and the man has loved, and has
+kept his vow, even unto this day.
+
+For the visions of the boy, who can know the divers ways in which God
+speaks to the children of men!
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+ NOVELS BY SIR GILBERT PARKER
+
+ The Going of the White Swan
+ The Seats of the Mighty
+ The Trail of the Sword
+ The Trespasser
+ The Translation of a Savage
+ Mrs. Falchion
+
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Going of the White Swan, by Gilbert Parker
+
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