David Crockett
AMERICAN PIONEERS AND PATRIOTS. DAVID CROCKETT: HIS LIFE AND ADVENTURES BY JOHN S. C. ABBOTT ILLUSTRATED. PREFACE.
some virginal passion as big and fresh as the new-born day. He crossed
to the window and looked out upon the dormant city. The morning light
was just beginning to wash out the dark and to sketch in the outlines
of buildings and the gray path of the road between them. He watched
the new creation of a world. Around him lay a million souls ready to
people it--ready to seize it and make it a part of themselves. In a
few hours that dim street would be a bridge over which tens of
thousands of people would pass to sorrow, to joy; to poverty, to
riches; to hate, to love; to death, to life. That was a drama worth
looking at. He must get out and rub shoulders with those who were
playing their parts. He, too, must play his part in it.
He descended to the office and left instructions with the night clerk
to insist upon a message from whoever might call him up. He would be
back, he said, in an hour. He had not walked long before he found the
city gently astir with life. Passing cars were soon well filled,
traffic fretted the streets lately so quiet, while yawning pedestrians
reminded him that there were still those who slept. At the end of
thirty minutes more of brisk walking, the sky had melted through the
entire gamut of colors, and finally settled into a blinding golden
blue. A newsboy clicking out of space like a locust, shouted "Extra!"
Donaldson gave little heed to the cry until he heard the word
"Riverside," and caught the blatant headlines, "Another robbery." With
an interest growing out of Saul's connection with the case, he skimmed
through the story.
AMERICAN PIONEERS AND PATRIOTS. DAVID CROCKETT: HIS LIFE AND ADVENTURES BY JOHN S. C. ABBOTT ILLUSTRATED. PREFACE.