[The Dark Forest by Hugh Walpole]@TWC D-Link book
The Dark Forest

CHAPTER II
9/52

It was here, on passing the first houses of the village, that I felt the heat to be almost unbearable; it seemed strange to me, I remember, that they (whoever "they" were), having so many trees here, a forest that stretched many miles behind them, should have chosen to pitch their village upon the only exposed and torrid bit of ground that they could find.

Behind us was the forest, in front of us also the forest, but here, how the sun blazed down on the roofs and little blown patches of garden, how it glared in through the broken windows, and penetrated into the darkest corners of the desolate rooms! Poor N----! In the second month of the war it had been shelled and many of the houses destroyed.

The buildings that remained seemed to have given up the struggle and abandoned themselves to inevitable degradation.

Moreover, down the principal street, at every other door there hung the sinister black flag, a piece of dirty black cloth fastened to a stick, and upon the filthy wall was scrawled in Russian "cholera." Dead, indeed, under the appalling heat of the morning the whole place lay.

No one was to be seen until we neared the ruins of what had once been a little town-hall or meeting-place, a procession turned the corner--a procession of a peasant with a tall lighted candle, another peasant with a tattered banner, a priest in soiled silk, a coffin of white wood on a haycart, and four or five white-faced and apathetic women.


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