The Hunted Outlaw | Page 3

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well shaped mouth, firm chin. His
blue eyes had a proud, fearless look. The schoolmarm had taught

Donald the three "R's"; he had read a little when he could spare the
money for books; and at the period we are now dealing with he was
looked up to by all in the village as a person of superior knowledge.
His youth and young manhood had been spent working upon his
father's farm. Latterly he had been working upon land which his father
had given him, in the hope that he would marry and settle down. He
had become restless. The village was beginning to look small, and he
asked himself with wonderment how he had been content in it so long.
The work was hard and thankless. Was this life? Was there nothing
beyond this? Was there not not a great world outside the forest? What
was this? Was it not stagnation? The woods--yes, the woods were
beautiful, but why was it they made him sad? Why was it that when the
sun set against the background of the purple line of trees, he felt a lump
in his throat? Why, when he walked along the roads in the summer
twilight, did the sweet silence oppress him? He could not tell. He knew
that he wanted away. He longed to be in the world of real men and
women, where joy and suffering, and the extremest force of passion
had active play.
Minnie was now a schoolmarm--neat and simple, and sweet. Her figure
was slender, and her hair a deep gold, parted simply in the centre,
brought over the temples in crisp waves, and wound into a single coil
behind. Her head was small and gracefully poised; her teeth as white as
milk, because they had never experienced the destructive effects of
confectionery; her cheeks, two roses in their first fresh bloom, because
she had been reared upon simple food; her figure, slight, supple and
well proportioned. She was eighteen. Her beautiful brown eyes wore a
sweetly serious look. She had thought as a woman. She was pious, but
somehow when she wandered through the woods, and noted how the
wild flowers smiled upon her, and listened to the birds as they shook
their very throats for joy, she could only think of the love, not the anger
of God. God was good. His purpose was loving. How warm and
beautiful and sweet was the sun! The sky was blue, and was there not
away beyond the blue a place where the tears that stained the cheek
down here would be all wiped away? Sorrow! Oh, yes, there was
sorrow here, and somehow, the dearest things we yearned for were
denied us. There were heavy burdens to bear, and life's contrasts were

agonizing, and faith staggered a little; but when Minnie went to the
woods with these thoughts, and looked into the timid eye of the violet,
she said to herself softly, "God is love."
A simple creature, you see, and not at all clever. I doubt if she had ever
heard of Herbert Spencer, much less read his works. If you had told that
she had been evolved from a jelly-fish, her brown eyes would only
have looked at you wonderingly. You would have conveyed nothing to
her.
I must tell you that Minnie was romantic. The woods had bred in her
the spirit of poetry. She loved during the holidays to go to the woods
with a book, and, seating herself at the foot of a tree, give herself up to
dreams--of happy, innocent love, and of calm life, without cloud,
blessed by the smile of heaven.

Love is a sudden, shy flame. Love is a blush which mounts to the cheek,
and then leaves it pale. Love is the trembling pressure of hands which,
for a delicious moment, meet by stealth. Love is sometimes the deep
drawn sigh, the languor that steeps the senses, the sudden trembling to
which no name can be given. Minnie was in love. The hero of her
childhood was the hero of her womanhood. She loved Donald modestly
but passionately; but she constantly said to herself in terror, "Oh,
Minnie, Minnie, you must take care; guard your secret; never betray
yourself."
CHAPTER V.
LOVE'S YOUNG DREAM.
"Oh, happy love, where love like this is found! Oh, heart-felt raptures,
bliss beyond compare! I've paced this weary mortal round, And sage
experience bids me this declare, If heaven a draught of heavenly
pleasure spare, One cordial in this melancholy vale, 'Tis when a
youthful, loving, modest pair In other's arms breathe out the tender tale,
Beneath the milk-white thorn that scents the evening gale."

Donald and Minnie had grown up together. They had shared in the
social life of the village. They had been to little
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