David Herbert Lawrence

light, and Ciccio with the bread and the valise. They could hear the

click of the ass and the ejaculations of Giovanni.

Pancrazio went back over the stream with the light. Alvina saw the

dim ass come up, wander uneasily to the stream, plant his fore legs,

and sniff the water, his nose right down.

"Er! Err!" cried Pancrazio, striking the beast on the flank.

But it only lifted its nose and turned aside. It would not take the

stream. Pancrazio seized the leading rope angrily and turned

upstream.

"Why were donkeys made! They are beasts without sense," his voice

floated angrily across the chill darkness.

Ciccio laughed. He and Alvina stood in the wide, stony river-bed, in

the strong starlight, watching the dim figures of the ass and the

men crawl upstream with the lantern.

Again the same performance, the white muzzle of the ass stooping

down to sniff the water suspiciously, his hind-quarters tilted up

with the load. Again the angry yells and blows from Pancrazio. And

the ass seemed to be taking the water. But no! After a long

deliberation he drew back. Angry language sounded through the

crystal air. The group with the lantern moved again upstream,

becoming smaller.

Alvina and Ciccio stood and watched. The lantern looked small up the

distance. But there--a clocking, shouting, splashing sound.

"He is going over," said Ciccio.

Pancrazio came hurrying back to the plank with the lantern.

"Oh the stupid beast! I could kill him!" cried he.

"Isn't he used to the water?" said Alvina.

"Yes, he is. But he won't go except where he thinks he will go. You

might kill him before he should go."

They picked their way across the river bed, to the wild scrub and

bushes of the farther side. There they waited for the ass, which

came up clicking over the boulders, led by the patient Giovanni. And

then they took a difficult, rocky track ascending between banks.

Alvina felt the uneven scramble a great effort. But she got up.

Again they waited for the ass. And then again they struck off to

the right, under some trees.

A house appeared dimly.

"Is that it?" said Alvina.

"No. It belongs to me. But that is not my house. A few steps

further. Now we are on my land."

They were treading a rough sort of grass-land--and still climbing.

It ended in a sudden little scramble between big stones, and

suddenly they were on the threshold of a quite important-looking

house: but it was all dark.

"Oh!" exclaimed Pancrazio, "they have done nothing that I told

them." He made queer noises of exasperation.

"What?" said Alvina.

"Neither made a fire nor anything. Wait a minute--"

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