University of Missouri College of Engineering - Shamrock Yearbook (Columbia, MO)

 - Class of 1916

Page 15 of 97

 

University of Missouri College of Engineering - Shamrock Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 15 of 97
Page 15 of 97



University of Missouri College of Engineering - Shamrock Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 14
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Page 15 text:

'i 1' ' I ' X S ... 'J A , t- fig-T: more of him than did his fellow men. They knew him for miles up and down that white finger of desolation, they knew the danger of his baits and his traps, they snarled and barked their hatred and defiance at the glow, of his lights on dark nights, they watched for him, sniffed for signs of him, and then blindly walked into his clever death traps. Oftentimes the howl of the gray wolf came rolling over the' icy ground and sent a shudder through his body. I-Ee knew what thati howl meant-hun- ger. . The foxes, the wolves, and justice Given! That was what this dead World was made up of-themg and him. He was killing-but they were winning. 'Slowly but surely they were breaking him down-they and the terrible icy loneliness. The loneliness he might have stood for many years. But they- were driving him mad. More and more he had come to dread their howling at night. That wasthe deadly com-bina- and the howling. In the laughed at himself for be- cowardg but at nights the moistened his brow, and tion-night daytime he ing such a cold sweat sometimes he screamed at the awfulness of it all. What kind of manner of man he had been, and of the strangeness of the life that he endured in the maddening lone- liness of that mystery cabin in the edge of the Barren, only one other man knew, and that was George Lewis, his former assistant, the only friend he had ever made during the time he had been in this wilderness. But two thousand miles south, George Lewis sat a small table in a brilliantly lighted and fashionable cafe. It was Fifteen 9 early in the summer, and Lewis had been down from the north not more than a month. The deep tan was on his face, and the tiny wind and snow lines crinkled at the corners of his eyes. He exuded the life of the big outdoors, as he sat opposite the pallid cheeked and weak-chested Bhrome, who would have given his millions to possess the red blood in the other's veins. Lewis had m-ade his strike,, while he was with the company. That day he had sold out to Bhrome for a hundred thousand, and he was filled with the flush of joy and triumph. Bhrome's eyes shone witha new sort of enthusiasm as he listened to this man's story of grim and fighting deter- mination that had led to the discovery of the gold mine away up in the moun- tains of the frozen north. He looked upon the other's strength, his bronzed face and the glory of achievement in his eyes, and a great and yearning hope- lessness burned like a dull fire in his breast. He envied him. He was no old- er than the other that sat opposite him on the other side of the table-yet a vast gulf lay between them. I-lie had his millions, the other with a flood of red blood coming and going in his body and his wonderful fortune of a hundred thousand. Bhrome leaned over the table and laughed. It was the laugh of a man who had grown tired of, life, in spite of his fortune. Only a few days before a famous specialist had warned him that the threads of his life were giving away -breaking one by one. He told this to his companion. He confessed to him with the strange glow in his eyes-a glow that was like a fire making a last

Page 14 text:

selves and give him a position that h might have the best that was, as the C Y had realized the capability, of the man u 'm, m Y h to command others, and that he had a ll of the details of the system at his finge tips. All of this they explained to hi they tried their best to make him se that they needed him and needed hi bad, they told him the salary they ha planned to give him. But he sadl shook his head, and told them that suc a thi Cf ' ' ' ng was impossible, they grew des- perate and offered him double their firs offer, and then finally four times. But he only refused and told them that his assistant, George Lewis, could handle the situation as well as he, and having delivered his final answer, he'turned and slowly walked from the office. Out- ' ewis and whispered some- I' e d 'C side he met L thing to him. That afternoon he dis- appeared from the communi one knew, no one tried to 1'ind out. As the disappearance of men was a common e people knew the ty, where no occurrence, for th law's arm was long and it's gripping iin- gers were always scratching and har- ' ey supposed that rowing the earth. Th this was the case with him and no one bothered to find out different, only his friend L ' ewis knew where he went to. Lewis had been very reluctant to see his friend go, for they had been to- gether ever since the road was a thing on paper. During their evenin ho g urs they had discussed and planned the next d 9 u ay s work. And many a pipe they had 11 way back to the Barrens with supplies for another period of loneliness on his sledge. No one recognized him but his friend Lewis, for a heavy red beard completely covered his face, and -his long thick hair completed the natural disguise. During his long exile he had set dead- falls and fox-baits along theledge of that long, slim finger of the Great Bar- ren which reaches out of the east into the country of the Great Bear, far to the west. The door of his sapling-built hut opened to the dark and chilling gray of the Arctic Circle, through. its one lonely window he could watch the sputter and play of the Northern Lights appier days, and listen to and dream of h the curious hissing purr of the Aurora which had grown to be a monotone in his ears. For six years, season after season, he came back with his load of furs, and the clerk at the trading post had written items something like the following in h t e cornpanyls books: March 17, Given came in toda Y with his furs. He left this after- noon with us usual supplies. Once before the clerk, when he had become ' curious, had added to the rec- ord: Strange why Given does not stay here overnight, and does not asso- ciate with any of us: Curious that he neverdrinks. ' ' Then what seemed the rnost strange Smqked together- of all was the fact that Justice Given A year had Passed' when he again had never asked for any mail durin all came to the Post, this time in the gray of these years, and no letter. had iver of the afternoon he drove in with his Come for him, dogs and his fursg for now he was a Th trapper. Night would see him on his . e Great Silent enveloped himand his mystery. Th ' e Yapplng foxes knew Foul-tee



Page 16 text:

' Y M?-f :QW 6 7 V 1-ig! Sl-zamrock :- 1916. fight against total extinguishment-that he would give up his fortune and.al1 that he had won for the other's good health. 'Tm ready to quit now, Lewis, I'm ready to quit-but my God, it's too late now. Which got Lewis to thinking and then he began to tell the story, as much of it as he knew, of Justice Given, his friend of the Great Silent. Lewis' voice was tuned with the winds and the forests. It rose above the low and monotonous hum about them. People at the two or three ad- joining tables might have heard his story, if they had listened. Within the immaculateness of his evening dress, Bhrome shivered, fearing that Lewis' voice might attract undue attention to them. But other people were absorbed in themselves. Lewis went on with his story, and at last, so clearly that it eas- ily 'reached the other tables, he spoke the name of justice Given. Then came the interruption, and with that interruption a strange and sudden upheaval in the life of George Lewis that was to mean more to him than the discovery of his gold mine. His eyes swept over Bhrome's shoulder, and there he saw a woman. She was stand- ing. A low, stifled cry had broken from her at the instant of his first glimpse of her, and as he looked, Lewis saw her lips form gaspingly the name he had spoken-justice Given! She was so near that Bhrome could have turned and touched her. Her eyes were like luminous fires as she stared at Lewis. Her face was strangely white. He could see her quiver, and catch her breath. And she was looking at him. For that one moment she had forgotten the presence of the others. Then a hand touched her arm. It was the hand of her elderly escort, in whose face were anxiety and wonder. The woman started and took her eyes from Lewis. With her escort she seated her- self at a table a few paces away, and for a few moments George could See she was fighting for composure, and that it cost her a struggle to keep her eyes from turning in his direction whileshe talked in a low voice with her compan- ion. . George's heart was pounding like a trip hammer. He knew that'she was and he knew when he had He forgot her. She was talking about him now, that she had cried out spoken Given's name. Bhrome as he looked at exquisite, even with that gray pallor that had come so suddenly to her cheeks. She was not young, as the age of youth is measured. Perhaps she was thirty or thirty-Eve. If some one had asked Lewis to describe her, he would have said that she was glorious. Yet her en- trance had caused no stir. Few had looked at her until she had uttered that cry. There were scores of women under the lights possessed of more spectacular beauty. Bhrome had partly turned in his seat, and now, with careful breeding, he faced his companion again. Do you know her? Lewis asked. Bhrome shook his head. No.,' Then he added: Did you see what made her cry out like that?', I believe so, said Lewis, and he turned purposely so that the four peo- ple at the next table might see him and hear him. I think that she sprained Tixt

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1916, pg 46


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