thought-fully, and his right arm at long intervals raised for a gesture that seemed to put out of his way an invisible intruder.
ââI suppose you think I was going mad,â he began in a changed tone. âAnd well you may, if you remember I had lost my cap. The sun crept all the way from east to west over my bare head, but that day I could not come to any harm, I suppose. The sun could not make me madâ¦.â His right arm put aside the idea of madnessâ¦. âNeither could it kill meâ¦.â Again his arm repulsed a shadowâ¦. â That rested with me.â
ââDid it?â I said, inexpressibly amazed at this new turn, and I looked at him with the same sort of feeling I might be fairly conceived to experience had he, after spinning round on his heel, presented an altogether new face.
ââI didn't get brain fever, I did not drop dead either,â he went on. âI didn't bother myself at all about the sun over my head. I was thinking as coolly as any man that ever sat thinking in the shade. That greasy beast of a skipper poked his big cropped head from under the canvas and screwed his fishy eyes up at me. â Donnerwetter ! you will die,â he growled, and drew in like a turtle. I had seen him. I had heard him. He didn't interrupt me. I was thinking just then that I wouldn't.â
âHe tried to sound my thought with an attentive glance dropped on me in passing. âDo you mean to say you had been deliberating with yourself whether you would die?â I asked in as impenetrable a tone as I could command. He nodded without stopping. âYes, it had come to that as I sat there alone,â he said. He passed on a few steps to the imaginary end of his beat, and when he flung round to come back both his hands were thrust deep into his pockets. He stopped short in front of my chair and looked down. âDon't you believe it?â he inquired with tense curiosity. I was moved to make a solemn declaration of my readiness to believe implicitly anything he thought fit to tell me.â
XI
âHe heard me out with his head on one side, and I had another glimpse through a rent in the mist in which he moved and had his being. 1 The dim candle spluttered within the ball of glass, and that was all I had to see him by; at his back was the dark night with the clear stars, whose distant glitter disposed in retreating planes lured the eye into the depths of a greater darkness; and yet a mysterious light seemed to show me his boyish head, as if in that moment the youth within him had, for a moment, gleamed and expired. âYou are an awful good sort to listen like this,â he said. âIt does me good. You don't know what it is to me. You don'tâ⦠words seemed to fail him. It was a distinct glimpse. He was a youngster of the sort you like to see about you; of the sort you like to imagine yourself to have been; of the sort whose appearance claims the fellowship of these illusions you had thought gone out, extinct, cold, and which, as if rekindled at the approach of another flame, give a flutter deep, deep down somewhere, give a flutter of light⦠of heat!⦠Yes; I had a glimpse of him then,⦠and it was not the last of that kindâ¦. âYou don't know what it is for a fellow in my position to be believedâmake a clean breast of it to an elder man. It is so difficultâso awfully unfairâso hard to understand.â
âThe mists were closing again. I don't know how old I appeared to himâand how much wise? Not half as old as I felt just then; not half as uselessly wise as I knew myself to be. Surely in no other craft as in that of the sea do the hearts of those already launched to sink or swim go out so much to the youth on the brink, looking with shining eyes upon that glitter of the vast surface which is only a reflection of his own glances full of fire. There is such magnificent vagueness in the expectations that
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