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قراءة كتاب Kazan

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‏اللغة: English
Kazan

Kazan

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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Kazan

By James Oliver Curwood

Author of
The Danger Trail, Etc.

Illustrated by
Gayle Hoskins and Frank Hoffman

New York
Grosset & Dunlap Publishers

Copyright 1914
The Bobbs-Merrill Company

WRITTEN FOR AND ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED IN THE RED BOOK MAGAZINE

Contents

  1. The Miracle
  2. Into The North
  3. Mccready Pays The Debt
  4. Free From Bonds
  5. The Fight In The Snow
  6. Joan
  7. Out Of The Blizzard
  8. The Great Change
  9. The Tragedy On Sun Rock
  10. The Days Of Fire
  11. Always Two By Two
  12. The Red Death
  13. The Trail Of Hunger
  14. The Right Of Fang
  15. A Fight Under The Stars
  16. The Call
  17. His Son
  18. The Education Of Ba-Ree
  19. The Usurpers
  20. A Feud In The Wilderness
  21. A Shot On The Sand-Bar
  22. Sandy'S Method
  23. Professor Mcgill
  24. Alone In Darkness
  25. The Last Of Mctrigger
  26. An Empty World
  27. The Call Of Sun Rock

Chapter I

The Miracle

Kazan lay mute and motionless, his gray nose between his forepaws, his eyes half closed. A rock could have appeared scarcely less lifeless than he; not a muscle twitched; not a hair moved; not an eyelid quivered. Yet every drop of the wild blood in his splendid body was racing in a ferment of excitement that Kazan had never before experienced; every nerve and fiber of his wonderful muscles was tense as steel wire. Quarter-strain wolf, three-quarters "husky," he had lived the four years of his life in the wilderness. He had felt the pangs of starvation. He knew what it meant to freeze. He had listened to the wailing winds of the long Arctic night over the barrens. He had heard the thunder of the torrent and the cataract, and had cowered under the mighty crash of the storm. His throat and sides were scarred by battle, and his eyes were red with the blister of the snows. He was called Kazan, the Wild Dog, because he was a giant among his kind and as fearless, even, as the men who drove him through the perils of a frozen world.

He had never known fear—until now. He had never felt in him before the desire to run—not even on that terrible day in the forest when he had fought and killed the big gray lynx. He did not know what it was that frightened him, but he knew that he was in another world, and that many things in it startled and alarmed him. It was his first glimpse of civilization. He wished that his master would come back into the strange room where he had left him. It was a room filled with hideous things. There were great human faces on the wall, but they did not move or speak, but stared at him in a way he had never seen people look before. He remembered having looked on a master who lay very quiet and very cold in the snow, and he had sat back on his haunches and wailed forth the death song; but these people on the walls looked alive, and yet seemed dead.

Suddenly Kazan lifted his ears a little. He heard steps, then low voices. One of them was his master's voice. But the other—it sent a little tremor through him! Once, so long ago that it must have been in his puppyhood days, he seemed to have had a dream of a laugh that was like the girl's laugh—a laugh that was all at once filled with a wonderful happiness, the thrill of a wonderful love, and a sweetness that made Kazan lift his head as they came in. He looked straight at them, his red eyes gleaming. At once he knew that she must be dear to his master, for his master's arm was about her. In the glow of the light he saw that her hair was very bright, and that there was the color of the crimson bakneesh vine in her face and the blue of the bakneesh flower in her shining eyes. Suddenly she saw him, and with a little cry darted toward him.

"Stop!" shouted the man. "He's dangerous! Kazan—"

She was on her knees beside him, all fluffy and sweet and

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