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The Sphinx Apple

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✒ Author
📖 Pages31
⏰ Reading time 1 hour
💡 Originally published1903
🌏 Original language English
📌 Type Stories
📌 Genres Realism, Ironic

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Twenty miles out from Paradise, and fifteen miles short of Sunrise City, Bildad Rose, the stage-driver, stopped his team.
A furious snow had been falling all day.
Eight inches it measured now, on a level. The remainder of the road was not without peril in daylight, creeping along the ribs of a bijou range of ragged mountains.
Now, when both snow and night masked its dangers, further travel was not to be thought of, said Bildad Rose.
So he pulled up his four stout horses, and delivered to his five passengers oral deductions of his wisdom.
Judge Menefee, to whom men granted leadership and the initiatory as upon a silver salver, sprang from the coach at once.
Four of his fellow-passengers followed, inspired by his example, ready to explore, to objurgate, to resist, to submit, to proceed, according as their prime factor might be inclined to sway them.
The fifth passenger, a young woman, remained in the coach.
Bildad had halted upon the shoulder of the first mountain spur.
Two rail-fences, ragged-black, hemmed the road.
Fifty yards above the upper fence, showing a dark blot in the white drifts, stood a small house.
Upon this house descended — or rather ascended — Judge Menefee and his cohorts with boyish whoops born of the snow and stress.
They called; they pounded at window and door.
At the inhospitable silence they waxed restive; they assaulted and forced the pregnable barriers, and invaded the premises.
The watchers from the coach heard stumblings and shoutings from the interior of the ravaged house.
Before long a light within flickered, glowed, flamed high and bright and cheerful.
Then came running back through the driving flakes the exuberant explorers.
More deeply pitched than the clarion — even orchestral in volume — the voice of Judge Menefee proclaimed the succour that lay in apposition with their state of travail.
The one room of the house was uninhabited, he said, and bare of furniture; but it contained a great fireplace, and they had discovered an ample store of chopped wood in a lean-to at the rear.
Housing and warmth against the shivering night were thus assured.
For the placation of Bildad Rose there was news of a stable, not ruined beyond service, with hay in a loft, near the house.
"Gentlemen," cried Bildad Rose from his seat, swathed in coats and robes, "tear me down two panels of that fence, so I can drive in.
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Download the free e-book by O. Henry, «The Sphinx Apple» , in English. You can also print the text of the book. For this, the PDF and DOC formats are suitable.

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