The Man Without a Country and Other Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 288 pages of information about The Man Without a Country and Other Tales.

The Man Without a Country and Other Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 288 pages of information about The Man Without a Country and Other Tales.

But the poets talked on unheeding.

The old chief knocked down a stack of lances; but the crash did not rouse them.  He was obliged himself to interrupt their eager converse.

“I am sorry to break in; but the night-horn has sounded to rest, and the guard will be round to inspect the posts.  I am sorry to hurry you away, sir,” he said to David.

David thanked him courteously.

“Welcome the coming, speed the parting guest,” said Homer, with a smile.

“We will all meet to-morrow.  And may to-night’s dreams be good omens!”

“If we dream at all,” said Homer again:—­

    “Without a sign his sword the brave man draws,
    And asks no omen but his country’s cause.”

They were all standing together, as he made this careless reply to the captain; and one of the young men drew him aside, and whispered that David was in arms against his country.

Homer was troubled that he had spoken as he did, But the young Jew looked little as if he needed sympathy.  He saw the doubt and regret which hung over their kindly faces; told them not to fear for him; singing, as he bade them good night, and with one of the Carmel-men walked home to his own outpost:—­

    “The Lord who delivered me from the paw of the lion,
    The Lord who delivered me from the paw of the bear,
      He will deliver me.”

And he smiled to think how his Carmelite companion would start, if he knew when first he used those words.

So they parted, as men who should meet on the morrow.

But God disposes.

David had left to-morrow’s dangers for to-morrow to care for.  It seemed to promise him that he must be in arms against Saul.  But, unlike us in our eagerness to anticipate our conflicts of duty, David waited.

And the Lord delivered him.  While they were singing by the brookside, the proud noblemen of the Philistine army had forced an interview with their king; and, in true native Philistine arrogance, insisted that “this Hebrew” and his men should be sent away.

With the light of morning the king sent for the minstrel, and courteously dismissed him, because “the princes of the Philistines have said, ‘He shall not go up with us to the battle.’”

So David marched his men to Ziklag.

And David and Homer never met on earth again.

    NOTE.—­This will be a proper place to print the following note,
    which I was obliged to write to a second cousin of Miss Dryasdust
    after she had read the MS. of the article above:—­

“DEAR MADAM:—­I thank you for your kind suggestion, in returning my paper, that it involves a piece of impossible history.  You inform me, that, according to the nomenclatured formulas and homophonic analogies of Professor Gouraud, of never-to-be-forgotten memory, “A NEEDLE is less useful for curing a DEAF HEAD, than for putting ear-rings into a Miss’s
Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Man Without a Country and Other Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.