您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
The Judgment House
book iv   Chapter XXXVIII. "Pheidippides"
Gilbert Parker
下载:The Judgment House.txt
本书全文检索:
       At dawn, when the veld breathes odours of a kind pungency and fragrance, which only those know who have made it their bed and friend, the end came to the man who had lain under the gun.
       "Pheidippides!" the dying Stafford said, with a grim touch of the humour which had ever been his. He was thinking of the Greek runner who brought the news of victory to Athens and fell dead as he told it.
       It almost seemed from the look on Stafford's face that, in very truth, he was laying aside the impedimenta of the long march and the battle, to carry the news to that army of the brave in Walhalla who had died for England before they knew that victory was hers.
       "Pheidippides," he repeated, and Rudyard Byng, whose eyes were so much upon the door, watching and waiting for some one to come, pressed his hand and said: "You know the best, Stafford. So many didn't. They had to go before they knew."
       "I have my luck," Stafford replied, but yet there was a wistful look in his face.
       His eyes slowly closed, and he lay so motionless that Al'mah and Rudyard thought he had gone. He scarcely seemed to notice when Al'mah took the hand that Rudyard had held, and the latter, with quick, noiseless steps, left the room.
       What Rudyard had been watching and waiting for was come.
       Jasmine was at the door. His message had brought her in time.
       "Is it dangerous?" she asked, with a face where tragedy had written self-control.
       "As bad as can be," he answered. "Go in and speak to him, Jasmine. It will help him."
       He opened the door softly. As Jasmine entered, Al'mah with a glance of pity and friendship at the face upon the bed, passed into another room.
       There was a cry in Jasmine's heart, but it did not reach her lips.
       She stole to the bed and laid her fingers upon the hand lying white and still upon the coverlet.
       At once the eyes of the dying man opened. This was a touch that would reach to the farthest borders of his being--would bring him back from the Immortal Gates. Through the mist of his senses he saw her. He half raised himself. She pillowed his head on her breast. He smiled. A light transfigured his face.
       "All's well," he said, with a long sigh, and his body sank slowly down.
       "Ian! Ian!" she cried, but she knew that he could not hear.
用户中心

本站图书检索

本书目录

book i
   Chapter I. The Jasmine Flower
   Chapter II. The Underground World
   Chapter III. A Daughter of Tyre
   Chapter IV. The Partners Meet
   Chapter V. A Woman Tells Her Story
   Chapter VI. Within the Power-House
book ii
   Chapter VII. Three Years Later
   Chapter VIII. "He Shall Not Treat Me So"
   Chapter IX. The Appian Way
   Chapter X. An Arrow Finds a Breast
   Chapter XI. In Wales, Where Jigger Plays His Part
   Chapter XII. The Key in the Lock
   Chapter XIII. "I Will Not Sing"
   Chapter XIV. The Baas
book iii
   Chapter XV. The World Well Lost
   Chapter XVI. The Coming of the Baas
   Chapter XVII. Is There No Help For These Things?
   Chapter XVIII. Landrassy's Last Stroke
   Chapter XIX. To-Morrow . . . Prepare!
   Chapter XX. The Furnace Door
   Chapter XXI. The Burning Fiery Furnace
   Chapter XXII. In Which Fellowes Goes a Journey
   Chapter XXIII. "More Was Lost at Mohacksfield"
   Chapter XXIV. One Who Came Searching
   Chapter XXV. Wherein the Lost is Found
   Chapter XXVI. Jasmine's Letter
   Chapter XXVII. Krool
   Chapter XXVIII. "The Battle Cry of Freedom"
book iv
   Chapter XXIX. The Menace of the Mountain
   Chapter XXX. "And Never the Twain Shall Meet!"
   Chapter XXXI. The Grey Horse and Its Rider
   Chapter XXXII. The World's Foundling
   Chapter XXXIII. "Alamachtig!"
   Chapter XXXIV. "The Alpine Fellow"
   Chapter XXXV. At Brinkwort's Farm
   Chapter XXXVI. Springs of Healing
   Chapter XXXVII. Under the Gun
   Chapter XXXVIII. "Pheidippides"
   Chapter XXXIX. "The Road is Clear"
Glossary