d.
"Here is a poor fellow," cried the viewer, who was looking into a hollow
cut in the wall. Dick hoped that it might be his father or brother, but
it was a man he knew little about. He was alive, but hurt from having
been blown into the place where he was found, and appeared to have lost
his senses. He was carried to the foot of the shaft and placed in the
corve. Two other men crawled up on hearing the shout, but they were
very weak, and could only say that they believed all the rest were
killed.
The overseer told Dick that he might go up with them, but he begged so
hard to remain that he might look for his father, that two men were sent
instead.
While the overseer was securing the men in the corve, Dick once more
went along the main gallery. He had not gone far when he saw in a
hollow, a figure crouching down. It was that of his friend David Adams.
Was he alive? He lifted him up and carried him along in his arms
towards the shaft. Already he felt the choke-damp in his throat; he was
stumbling, too, with the weight of his burden. He felt that he could
not move another yard, for his knees were bending under him.
"Run, run to the shaft," he heard a voice say. "I'll take him on." It
was the viewer, who, throwing the body of young Adams over his
shoulders, seized Dick with the other hand and dragged him on. Their
companion had disappeared. In vain they shouted for him, while they
anxiously waited for the return of the corve to carry them up. To go
back into the passages already full of poisonous air, would have been
madness. Dick, notwithstanding, was eager to go back to try and find
his father and brother. Had not the viewer prevented him, he would have
made the attempt and perished. Even where they were, it was with
difficulty they breathed. Dick, as he looked at his friend's face, calm
and quiet, was afraid that he had lost him too. At last the corve came
down, and the viewer and Dick lifting in David's body, were drawn up.
Poor Mrs Adams was among those in the front surrounding the pit. She
at once knew her son, and clasping him in her arms, gave way to her
grief, calling him to come to life.
"Let the doctor see him, dame," said several voices. "May be he is not
so far gone as you think."
On this the surgeon stepped forward and had David carried out of the
crowd, who prevented him from breathing the fresh air, which, if a
person is not dead, is more likely than anything else to resto
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