Barclay of the Guides
195 pages
English

Barclay of the Guides

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195 pages
English
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Publié le 08 décembre 2010
Nombre de lectures 39
Langue English

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The Project Gutenberg EBook of Barclay of the Guides, by Herbert Strang This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org Title: Barclay of the Guides Author: Herbert Strang Release Date: April 23, 2010 [EBook #32102] Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BARCLAY OF THE GUIDES *** Produced by Chris Curnow, Lindy Walsh, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net BARCLAY OF THE GUIDES BY HERBERT STRANG HUMPHREY MILFORD OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS LONDON Copyright 1908 in the United States of America REPRINTED 1924 IN GREAT BRITAIN BY R. CLAY AND SONS, LTD., BUNGAY, SUFFOLK. PREFACE The great Mutiny embraced so wide an area, in which momentous events happened almost simultaneously in places far apart, that it seemed advisable to confine the historical background of this story to the siege of Delhi, the city which was the heart of the rebellion. In regard to the historical persons introduced, care has been taken to adhere as closely as possible to facts; and, where the romancer's licence must needs put words into their mouths, to conform to probability and their known characters. If the boys who read these pages should care to know more of the great men of whom they get glimpses, they will find a store of good things in Lumsden of the Guides , by Sir Peter Lumsden and George R. Elsmie; the Memoirs of Sir Henry Daly , by Major H. Daly; A Leader of Light Horse (Hodson), and the Life of John Nicholson , both by Lieut.-Colonel Trotter. The history of the Mutiny, as related in the pages of Kaye and Malleson, will never lose its fascination. H ERBERT STRANG CONTENTS PREFACE CHAPTER THE FIRST THE R AID CHAPTER THE SECOND THE MAKING OF A PATHAN CHAPTER THE THIRD SKY-HIGH CHAPTER THE FOURTH THE R ETURN OF SHERDIL CHAPTER THE FIFTH R EPRISALS CHAPTER THE SIXTH IN THE N ETS CHAPTER THE SEVENTH JAN LARRENS CHAPTER THE EIGHTH A C OMPETITION WALLAH CHAPTER THE NINTH A FAKIR CHAPTER THE TENTH THE D ELHI R OAD CHAPTER THE ELEVENTH THE MISSY SAHIB CHAPTER THE TWELFTH BLUFF CHAPTER THE THIRTEENTH SOME LATHI-WALLAHS AND A C AMEL CHAPTER THE FOURTEENTH KALUJA D ASS, KHANSAMAN CHAPTER THE FIFTEENTH WITHIN THE GATES CHAPTER THE SIXTEENTH THE C OMING OF BAKHT KHAN CHAPTER THE SEVENTEENTH THE D OCTOR'S D IVAN CHAPTER THE EIGHTEENTH THE SPOILERS SPOILED CHAPTER THE NINETEENTH ASADULLAH CHAPTER THE TWENTIETH WOLF AND JACKAL CHAPTER THE TWENTY-FIRST MASTER AND SERVANT CHAPTER THE TWENTY-SECOND THE FIGHT OF BAKR-ID CHAPTER THE TWENTY-THIRD ORDEAL CHAPTER THE TWENTY-FOURTH N IKALSAIN CHAPTER THE TWENTY-FIFTH THE STORMING OF D ELHI CHAPTER THE TWENTY-SIXTH EIGHTY TO ONE CHAPTER THE TWENTY-SEVENTH D UTY EPILOGUE GLOSSARY THE BOY'S NEW LIBRARY CHAPTER THE FIRST The Raid Ahmed, son of Rahmut Khan, chief of the village of Shagpur, was making his lonely way through the hills some three miles above his home. He could see the walled village perched on a little tract of grassy land just where the base of the hills met the sandy plain. It was two thousand feet or more below him, and he could almost count the flat-topped houses clustered beyond his father's tower, which, though actually it rose to some height above them, dominating them, and affording an outlook over miles and miles of the plain, yet appeared to Ahmed, at his present altitude, merely a patch in the general level. Between him and the village lay three miles of grey rugged hill country, scarred with watercourses, and almost void of vegetation. A mile away, indeed, there was a long stretch of woodland, lying like a great green smudge upon the monotony of grey. It was a patch of irregular shape, narrowing here, broadening there, filling a valley which bent round towards the village. Ahmed was accustomed to shoot there occasionally, but he preferred the more exciting and more dangerous sport of hunting on the hills, where he might stalk his quarry from crag to crag, leaping ravines, swarming up abrupt and precipitous cliffs, always in peril of a fall that might break his limbs even if it did not crash the life out of him. For Ahmed was of a daring disposition, fearless, undauntable, yet possessed of a certain coolness of judgment by which he had hitherto brought himself unscathed through sixteen years of adventurous boyhood. He was a tall, slim, lissom fellow, with very black hair and a swarthy skin, which set off the spotless white of his turban. He wore the loose frock and baggy trousers of the country. Yet one observing him would have marked certain differences between his features and those of the Pathans among whom he dwelt. His nose was arched, but it was thinner than was usual among his countrymen. His lips were not so thick as theirs, nor was his mouth so large, and his eyes, instead of coal-black, were of a curious steely-grey. And any one who saw him bathing with the lads of his village (itself a strange pastime, for the hill-men have no great partiality for water) would have been struck by the paleness of his skin where it was protected from the sun and the weather. The observer's conclusion would probably have been that Ahmed was a Pathan of a particularly refined type, and in all likelihood an offshoot of some noble family which time's vicissitudes had reduced. Ahmed stood for a few moments looking down at Shagpur, then turned to pursue his way. He had a fowling-piece slung at his back; his intention was to ascend the hills for perhaps another thousand feet, to a spot where he would probably come upon a small herd of black-buck. But he had not mounted far from the place at which he had paused when he halted again, and, putting his left hand above his eyes to shield them from the sun's rays, gazed steadily in a direction away from the village. Below him the plain stretched for many miles, bare and desolate, though when the rains came by and by it would be clothed with verdure. Scarcely a tree broke its level, and so parched was it now that no beast could have found sustenance there. But far away Ahmed's keen eye had descried what appeared to be a speck upon the horizon, and he watched it intently. There was nothing unusual in the sight itself. Many a time he had seen just such a
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