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A Man and a Woman by Stanley Waterloo
page 19 of 220 (08%)
of them was rather proud of something. But he said nothing to his son
about it. That would, in its full consideration, have involved a
licking of somebody for disobedience of orders. It was a good thing
for the bereaved song-sparrows, though. Older heads than that of the
boy were now considerate of their welfare. Lucky sparrows were they!

As for the youth, he had, that night, queer dreams, which he remembered
all his life. He was battling with the snakes again, and the fortunes
of war shifted, and there was much trouble until daylight. Then, with
the sun breaking in a blaze upon the clearing, with the ground and
trees flashing forth illuminated dew-drops, with a clangor of thousands
of melodious bird-voices--even the bereaved father song-sparrow was
singing--he was his own large self again, and went forth conquering and
to conquer. He found the murdered nestling stranded down the creek,
and buried it with ceremony. He found both dead invaders, and punched
their foul bodies with a long stick. And he wished a bear would come
and try to take a pig!

This was the boy. This was the field he grew in, the nature of his
emergence into active entity, and this may illustrate somewhat his
unconscious bent as influenced by early surroundings, while showing
some of the fixed features of heredity, for he came of a battling race.




CHAPTER IV.

GROWING UP WITH THE COUNTRY.

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