Читать книгу The Advanced-Guard онлайн

1 страница из 87


Sydney C. Grier

The Advanced-Guard


Published by Good Press, 2021

goodpress@okpublishing.info

EAN 4066338064424

Table of Contents

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

ssss1

CHAPTER I.

LADY HAIGH’S KIND INTENTIONS.

ssss1

Fifty years ago the great port of Bab-us-Sahel was in its infancy. The modern ranges of wharfs and breakwaters were represented by a single half-finished pier, and vessels still discharged their passengers and cargo a mile from shore, to the imminent peril of life and property. The province of Khemistan had only recently come under British rule, by an operation which was variously described as “the most shameless piece of iniquity ever perpetrated,” and “the inevitable working of the laws of right and justice”; and the iron-willed, iron-handed old soldier who had perpetrated the iniquity and superintended the working of the laws was determined to open up the country from the river to the desert and beyond. His enemies were numerous and loud-voiced and near at hand; his friends, with the exception of his own subordinates, few and far away; but he had one advantage more common in those days than these, a practically free hand. Under “the execrable tyranny of a military despotism,” the labour of pacification and the construction of public works went on simultaneously, and although the Bombay papers shrieked themselves hoarse in denouncing Sir Henry Lennox, and danced war-dances over his presumably prostrate form, no one in Khemistan was a penny the worse—a fact which did not tend to mollify the angry passions concerned.

Правообладателям