Tales of Three Hemispheres eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 94 pages of information about Tales of Three Hemispheres.

Tales of Three Hemispheres eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 94 pages of information about Tales of Three Hemispheres.

A flock of sheep came by me presently looking the same as ever, but the man who led them had a wild, strange look.  I spoke to him and he did not understand me.  Then I went down to the river to see if my boat was there and at the very spot where I had left it, in the mud (for the tide was low) I saw a half-buried piece of blackened wood that might have been part of a boat, but I could not tell.  I began to feel that I had missed the world.  It would be a strange thing to travel from far away to see London and not be able to find it among all the roads that lead there, but I seemed to have travelled in Time and to have missed it among the centuries.  And when as I wandered over the grassy hills I came on a wattled shrine that was thatched with straw and saw a lion in it more worn with time than even the Sphinx at Gizeh and when I knew it for one of the four in Trafalgar Square then I saw that I was stranded far away in the future with many centuries of treacherous years between me and anything that I had known.  And then I sat on the grass by the worn paws of the lion to think out what to do.  And I decided to go back through Go-by Street and, since there was nothing left to keep me any more to the fields we know, to offer myself as a servant in the palace of Singanee, and to see again the face of Saranoora and those famous, wonderful, amethystine dawns upon the abyss where the golden dragons play.  And I stayed no longer to look for remains of the ruins of London; for there is little pleasure in seeing wonderful things if there is no one at all to hear of them and to wonder.  So I returned at once to Go-by Street, the little row of huts, and saw no other record that London had been except that one stone lion.  I went to the right house this time.  It was very much altered and more like one of those huts that one sees on Salisbury plain than a shop in the city of London, but I found it by counting the houses in the street for it was still a row of houses though pavement and city were gone.  And it was still a shop.  A very different shop to the one I knew, but things were for sale there—­shepherd’s crooks, food, and rude axes.  And a man with long hair was there who was clad in skins.  I did not speak to him for I did not know his language.  He said to me something that sounded like “Everkike.”  It conveyed no meaning to me; but when he looked towards one of his buns, light suddenly dawned in my mind, and I knew that England was even England still and that still she was not conquered, and that though they had tired of London they still held to their land; for the words that the man had said were, “Av er kike,” and then I knew that that very language that was carried to distant lands by the old, triumphant cockney was spoken still in his birthplace and that neither his politics nor his enemies had destroyed him after all these thousand years.  I had always disliked the Cockney dialect—­and with the arrogance of the Irishman who hears from rich and poor

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Tales of Three Hemispheres from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.