The Green Flag eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 280 pages of information about The Green Flag.

The Green Flag eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 280 pages of information about The Green Flag.
“Late last night, Mr. Brown, of Smither’s Farm, to the east of Hastings, perceived what he imagined to be an enormous dog worrying one of his sheep.  He shot the creature, which proves to be a grey Siberian wolf of the variety known as Lupus Giganticus.  It is supposed to have escaped from some travelling menagerie.

“That’s the story, gentlemen, and Wat Danbury stuck to his good resolutions, for the fright which he had cured him of all wish to run such a risk again; and he never touches anything stronger than lime-juice—­at least, he hadn’t before he left this part of the country, five years ago next Lady Day.”

THE THREE CORRESPONDENTS

There was only the one little feathery clump of dom palms in all that great wilderness of black rocks and orange sand.  It stood high on the bank, and below it the brown Nile swirled swiftly towards the Ambigole Cataract, fitting a little frill of foam round each of the boulders which studded its surface.  Above, out of a naked blue sky, the sun was beating down upon the sand, and up again from the sand under the brims of the pith-hats of the horsemen with the scorching glare of a blast-furnace.  It had risen so high that the shadows of the horses were no larger than themselves.

“Whew!” cried Mortimer, mopping his forehead, “you’d pay five shillings for this at the hummums.”

“Precisely,” said Scott.  “But you are not asked to ride twenty miles in a Turkish bath with a field-glass and a revolver, and a water-bottle and a whole Christmas-treeful of things dangling from you.  The hot-house at Kew is excellent as a conservatory, but not adapted for exhibitions upon the horizontal bar.  I vote for a camp in the palm-grove and a halt until evening.”

Mortimer rose on his stirrups and looked hard to the southward.  Everywhere were the same black burned rocks and deep orange sand.  At one spot only an intermittent line appeared to have been cut through the rugged spurs which ran down to the river.  It was the bed of the old railway, long destroyed by the Arabs, but now in process of reconstruction by the advancing Egyptians.  There was no other sign of man’s handiwork in all that desolate scene.

“It’s palm trees or nothing,” said Scott.

“Well, I suppose we must; and yet I grudge every hour until we catch the force up.  What would our editors say if we were late for the action?”

“My dear chap, an old bird like you doesn’t need to be told that no sane modern general would ever attack until the Press is up.”

“You don’t mean that?” said young Anerley.  “I thought we were looked upon as an unmitigated nuisance.”

“’Newspaper correspondents and travelling gentlemen, and all that tribe of useless drones’—­being an extract from Lord Wolseley’s ’Soldier’s Pocket-Book,’” cried Scott.  “We know all about that, Anerley;” and he winked behind his blue spectacles.  “If there was going to be a battle we should very soon have an escort of cavalry to hurry us up.  I’ve been in fifteen, and I never saw one where they had not arranged for a reporter’s table.”

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The Green Flag from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.