Tramping on Life - An Autobiographical Narrative by Harry Kemp
page 39 of 737 (05%)
page 39 of 737 (05%)
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I brought these spiders home in a tin can and transferred them to some
empty fruit jars in the cellar, keeping them for some boyish reason or other, in pairs, and putting in flies for them. Aunt Millie came upon them and set up a scream that brought Uncle "Lan," as we called him, down to see what was the matter.... I took my beating in silence. I would no longer beg and plead for mercy. After he had finished, I lay across the sloping cellar door, lumpish and still, inwardly a shaking jelly of horror. I was wanting to die ... these successive humiliations seemed too great to live through. * * * * * The grey light of morning filtering in. Lan stood over my bed. "--want to go hunting with me to-day?... shootin' blackbirds?" "Yes, Uncle Lan," I assented, my mind divided between fear of him and eagerness to go. In the kitchen we ate some fried eggs and drank our coffee in silence. Then we trudged on through the dew-wet fields, drenched to the knees as if having waded through a brook. Lan bore his double-barrelled shotgun over his shoulder. He shot into a |
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