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together.
Now a gradual change took place in the looks of our salmon. In the sea
he was plump and round and silvery, with delicate teeth in a symmetrical
mouth. Now his silvery color disappeared, his skin grew slimy, and the
scales sank into it; his back grew black, and his sides turned red,--not
a healthy red, but a sort of hectic flush. He grew poor, and his back,
formerly as straight as need be, now developed an unpleasant hump at the
shoulders. His eyes--like those of all enthusiasts who forsake eating
and sleeping for some loftier aim--became dark and sunken. His
symmetrical jaws grew longer and longer, and meeting each other, as the
nose of an old man meets his chin, each had to turn aside to let the
other pass. His beautiful teeth grew longer and longer, and projected
from his mouth, giving him a savage and wolfish appearance, quite at
variance with his real disposition. For all the desires and ambitions of
his nature had become centered into one. We may not know what this one
was, but we know that it was a strong one; for it had led him on and
on,--past the nets and horrors of Astoria; past the dangerous Cascades;
past the spears of Indians; through the terrible flume of the Dalles,
where the mighty river is compressed between huge rocks into a channel
narrower than a village street; on past the meadows of Umatilla and the
wheat-fields of Walla Walla; on to where the great Snake River and the
Columbia join; on up the Snake River and its eastern branch, till at
last he reached the foot of the Bitter Root mountains in the Territory
of Idaho, nearly a thousand miles from the ocean which he had left in
April. With him still was the other salmon which had come with him
through the Cascades, handsomer and smaller than he, and, like him,
growing poor and ragged and tired.
At last, one October afternoon, our finny travelers came together to a
little clear brook, with a bottom of fine gravel, over which the water
was but a few inches deep. Our fish painfully worked his way to it; for
his tail was all frayed out, his muscles were sore, and his skin covered
with unsightly blotches. But his sunken eyes saw a ripple in the stream,
and under it a bed of little pebbles and sand. So there in the sand he
scooped out with his tail a smooth round place, and his companion came
and filled it with orange-colored eggs. Then our salmon came back again;
and softly covering the eggs, the work of their lives was done, and, in
the old
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