Day breaking on the edge of the Bluegrass and birds singing the dawn in.

Ten minutes swiftly along the sunrise and the world is changed: from

nervous exaltation of atmosphere to an air of balm and peace; from grim

hills to the rolling sweep of green slopes; from a high mist of thin

verdure to low wind-shaken banners of young leaves; from giant poplar to

white ash and sugar-tree; from log-cabin to homesteads of brick and

stone; from wood-thrush to meadow-lark; rhododendron to bluegrass; from

mountain to lowland, Crittenden was passing home.

He had been in the backwoods for more than a month, ostensibly to fish

and look at coal lands, but, really, to get away for a while, as his

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custom was, from his worse self to the better self that he was when he

was in the mountains--alone. As usual, he had gone in with bitterness

and, as usual, he had set his face homeward with but half a heart for

the old fight against fate and himself that seemed destined always to

end in defeat. At dusk, he heard the word of the outer world from the

lips of an old mountaineer at the foot of the Cumberland--the first

heard, except from his mother, for full thirty days--and the word

was--war. He smiled incredulously at the old fellow, but, unconsciously,

he pushed his horse on a little faster up the mountain, pushed him, as

the moon rose, aslant the breast of a mighty hill and, winding at a

gallop about the last downward turn of the snaky path, went at full

speed alongside the big gray wall that, above him, rose sheer a thousand

feet and, straight ahead, broke wildly and crumbled into historic

Cumberland Gap.

From a little knoll he saw the railway station in the

shadow of the wall, and, on one prong of a switch, his train panting

lazily; and, with a laugh, he pulled his horse down to a walk and then

to a dead stop--his face grave again and uplifted. Where his eyes rested

and plain in the moonlight was a rocky path winding upward--the old

Wilderness Trail that the Kentucky pioneers had worn with moccasined

feet more than a century before. He had seen it a hundred times

before--moved always; but it thrilled him now, and he rode on slowly,

looking up at it. His forefathers had helped blaze that trail. On one

side of that wall they had fought savage and Briton for a home and a

country, and on the other side they had done it again. Later, they had

fought the Mexican and in time they came to fight each other, for and

against the nation they had done so much to upbuild. It was even true

that a Crittenden had already given his life for the very cause that was

so tardily thrilling the nation now. Thus it had always been with his

people straight down the bloody national highway from Yorktown to

Appomattox, and if there was war, he thought proudly, as he swung from

his horse--thus it would now be with him.




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