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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Call Of The Wild by Jack London
had been as dead and which had not moved during the long
months of frost. The sap was rising in the pines. The willows and
aspens were bursting out in young buds. Shrubs and vines were
putting on fresh garbs of green. Crickets sang in the nights, and in
the days all manner of creeping, crawling things rustled forth into
the sun. Partridges and woodpeckers were booming and knocking
in the forest. Squirrels were chattering, birds singing, and overhead
honked the wild-fowl driving up from the south in cunning
wedges that split the air.

From every hill slope came the trickle of running water, the music
of unseen fountains. All things were thawing, bending, snapping.
The Yukon was straining to break loose the ice that bound it down.
It ate away from beneath; the sun ate from above. Air-holes
formed, fissures sprang and spread apart, while thin sections of ice
fell through bodily into the river. And amid all this bursting,
rending, throbbing of awakening life, under the blazing sun and
through the soft-sighing breezes, like wayfarers to death, staggered
the two men, the woman, and the huskies.

With the dogs falling, Mercedes weeping and riding. Hal swearing
innocuously, and Charles’s eyes wistfully watering, they staggered
into John Thornton’s camp at the mouth of White River. When they
halted, the dogs dropped down as though they had all been struck
dead. Mercedes dried her eyes and looked at John Thornton.
Charles sat down on a log to rest. He sat down very slowly and
painstakingly what of his great stiffness. Hal did the talking. John
Thornton was whittling the last touches of an axe-handle he had
made from a stick of birch. He whittled and listened, gave
monosyllabic replies, and, when it was asked, terse advice. He
knew the breed, and he gave his advice in the certainty that it
would not be followed.

‘They told us up above that the bottom was dropping out of the
trail and that the best thing for us to do was to lay over,’ Hal said
in response to Thornton’s warning to take no more chances on the
rotten ice. ‘They told us we couldn’t make White River, and here
we are.’ This last with a sneering ring of triumph in it.

‘And they told you true,’ John Thornton answered. ‘The bottom’s
likely to drop out at any moment. Only fools, with the blind luck of
fools, could have made it. I tell you straight, I wouldn’t risk my
carcass on that ice for all the gold in Alaska.’ ‘That’s because you’re
not a fool, I suppose,’ said Hal. ‘All the same, we’ll go on to
Dawson.’ He uncoiled his whip. ‘Get up there, Buck! Hi! Get up
there! Mush on!’ Thornton went on whittling. It was idle, he knew,
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Call Of The Wild by Jack London



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