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clothes on?" "I'll get you out, my boy; and then at least you will be able to move about a little." I heard him shovelling at the snow with his hands and feet. "I have got to the corner of the stack, and as well as I can judge you must be just round it," he said. "Your voice is close to me," I answered. "I've got a hold of one of the mare's ears," he said next. "I won't try to get her out until I get you off her." I put out my hand, and felt along the mare's neck. What a joy it was to catch my father's hand through the darkness and the snow! He grasped mine and drew me towards him, then got me by the arm and began dragging me through the snow. The mare began plunging again, and by her struggles rather assisted my father. In a few moments he had me in his arms. "Thank God!" he said, as he set me down against the peat-stack. "Stand there. A little farther. Keep well off for fear she hurt you. She must fight her way out now." He went back to the mare, and went on clearing away the snow. Then I could hear him patting and encouraging her. Next I heard a great blowing and scrambling, and at last a snort and the thunder of hoofs. "Woa! woa! Gently! gently!--She's off!" cried my father. Her mother gave one snort, and away she went, thundering after her. But their sounds were soon quenched in the snow. "There's a business!" said my father. "I'm afraid the poor things will only go farther to fare the worse. We are as well without them, however; and if they should find their way home, so much the better for us. They might have kept us a little warmer though. We must fight the cold as we best can for the rest of the night, for it would only be folly to leave the spot before it is light enough to see where we are going." It came into my mind suddenly how I had burrowed in the straw to hide myself after running from Dame Shand's. But whether that or the thought of burrowing in the peat-stack came first, I cannot tell. I turned and felt whether I could draw out a peat. With a little loosening I succeeded. "Father," I said, "couldn't we make a hole in the peat-stalk, and build ourselves in?" "A capital idea, my boy!" he answered, with a gladness in his voice which I venture to attribute in part to his satisfaction at finding that I had some practical sense in me. "We'll try it at once." "I've got two or three out already," I said, for I had gone on pulling, and it was easy enough after one had been s
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