lace glare of every day, he saw it was
a man.
The man was moving painfully, lifting each foot with an appearance of
great effort, stumbling, staggering sideways from time to time as though
in extreme weakness. Once he fell. Then he recovered the upright as
though necklaced with great weights. His hands were empty of weapons. In
the uncertainty of his movements he gradually approached.
Now Dick could see the great emaciation of his features. The bones of
his cheeks seemed to press through his skin, which was leathery and
scabbed and cracked to the raw from much frosting. His lips drew tight
across his teeth, which grinned in the face of exhaustion like the
travesty of laughter on a skull. His eyes were lost in the caverns of
their sockets. His thin nostrils were wide, and through them and through
the parted lips the breath came and went in strong, rasping gasps,
audible even at this distance of two hundred paces. One live thing this
wreck of a man expressed. His forces were near their end, but such of
them as remained were concentrated in a determination to go on. He
moved painfully, but he moved; he staggered, but he always recovered; he
fell, and it was a terrible labour to rise, but always he rose and went
on.
Dick Herron, sitting there with the dead girl across his knees, watched
the man with a strange, detached curiosity. His mind had slipped back
into its hazes. The world of phantasms had resumed its sway. He was
seeing in this struggling figure a vision of himself as he had been, the
self he had transcended now, and would never again resume. Just so he
had battled, bringing to the occasion every last resource of the human
spirit, tearing from the deeps of his nature the roots where life
germinated and throwing them recklessly before the footsteps of his
endeavour, emptying himself, wringing himself to a dry, fibrous husk of
a man that his Way might be completed. His lips parted with a sigh of
relief that this was all over. He was as an old man whose life, for good
or ill, success or failure, is done, and who looks from the serenity of
age on those who have still their youth to spend, their years to dole
out day by day, painfully, in the intense anxiety of the moral purpose,
as the price of life. In a spell of mysticism he sat there waiting.
The man plodded on, led by some compelling fate, to the one spot in the
white immensity where were living creatures. When he had approached to
within fifty paces, Dick
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