Andivius Hedulio - Adventures of a Roman Nobleman in the Days of the Empire by Edward Lucas White
page 69 of 736 (09%)
page 69 of 736 (09%)
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"Begin it then, in the name of Hercules," Tanno urged him. "If it is what you herald we cannot have it too quickly." "When Hedulio and I were hardly more than boys," Hirnio began, "we bird- nested and fished and hunted and roamed the woods like any pair of country lads. Parts of our woodland hereabouts are wilder than anything on the Aemilian estate, and we liked the wildest parts best. I had an uncle at Amiternum and it happened that Hedulio's uncle allowed him to go with me once when my father visited his brother. My uncle had a farm high up in the mountains east of Amiternum and Hedulio and I there revelled in wildness wilder than anything hereabouts. We had no fear and ranged the hillsides, ravines and pine-woods eager and unafraid. "High up the mountains we blundered on a bear's den with two cubs in it. They were old enough to be playful and young enough not to be fierce or dangerous. I was for carrying them off, but Hedulio said that if the mother returned before we were well on our way home she would certainly catch us before we could reach a place of safety and we should certainly be killed. "'We had better stop playing with these fascinating little brutes,' he said, 'and be as far off as possible before she comes back.' "Just as he said it we heard twigs snapping, the crash of rent underbrush, and I looked up and saw the bear coming. "I had never seen a wild bear till then. She looked to me as big as a half grown calf, and as fat as a six-year-old sow. She came like a race-horse. Besides my instantaneous sense of her size, weight and speed, I saw only |
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