The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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together--one of them full of people. I said, "Just so--they are staring  
petrified at the remains."  
But when I got amongst that bunch, there sat Ida in her buggy and nobody  
hurt, not even the horse or the vehicle. Ida was pale but serene. As  
I came tearing down, she smiled back over her shoulder at me and  
said, "Well, we're alive yet, aren't we?" A miracle had been  
performed--nothing else.  
You see Lewis, the prodigious, humped upon his front seat, had been  
toiling up, on his load of manure; he saw the frantic horse plunging  
down the hill toward him, on a full gallop, throwing his heels as high  
as a man's head at every jump. So Lewis turned his team diagonally  
across the road just at the "turn," thus making a V with the fence--the  
running horse could not escape that, but must enter it. Then Lewis  
sprang to the ground and stood in this V. He gathered his vast strength,  
and with a perfect Creedmoor aim he seized the gray horse's bit as he  
plunged by and fetched him up standing!  
It was down hill, mind you. Ten feet further down hill neither Lewis  
nor any other man could have saved them, for they would have been on the  
abrupt "turn," then. But how this miracle was ever accomplished at  
all, by human strength, generalship and accuracy, is clean beyond my  
comprehension--and grows more so the more I go and examine the ground  
and try to believe it was actually done. I know one thing, well; if  
Lewis had missed his aim he would have been killed on the spot in the  
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