The Last Man eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 624 pages of information about The Last Man.
Related Topics

The Last Man eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 624 pages of information about The Last Man.

As he spoke, he knelt on the ground, and raised in his arms a man from whose side the warm tide of life gushed—­the poor wretch gasped—­so still had either host become, that his moans were distinctly heard, and every heart, late fiercely bent on universal massacre, now beat anxiously in hope and fear for the fate of this one man.  Adrian tore off his military scarf and bound it round the sufferer—­it was too late—­the man heaved a deep sigh, his head fell back, his limbs lost their sustaining power.—­ “He is dead!” said Adrian, as the corpse fell from his arms on the ground, and he bowed his head in sorrow and awe.  The fate of the world seemed bound up in the death of this single man.  On either side the bands threw down their arms, even the veterans wept, and our party held out their hands to their foes, while a gush of love and deepest amity filled every heart.  The two forces mingling, unarmed and hand in hand, talking only how each might assist the other, the adversaries conjoined; each repenting, the one side their former cruelties, the other their late violence, they obeyed the orders of the General to proceed towards London.

Adrian was obliged to exert his utmost prudence, first to allay the discord, and then to provide for the multitude of the invaders.  They were marched to various parts of the southern counties, quartered in deserted villages,—­a part were sent back to their own island, while the season of winter so far revived our energy, that the passes of the country were defended, and any increase of numbers prohibited.

On this occasion Adrian and Idris met after a separation of nearly a year.  Adrian had been occupied in fulfilling a laborious and painful task.  He had been familiar with every species of human misery, and had for ever found his powers inadequate, his aid of small avail.  Yet the purpose of his soul, his energy and ardent resolution, prevented any re-action of sorrow.  He seemed born anew, and virtue, more potent than Medean alchemy, endued him with health and strength.  Idris hardly recognized the fragile being, whose form had seemed to bend even to the summer breeze, in the energetic man, whose very excess of sensibility rendered him more capable of fulfilling his station of pilot in storm-tossed England.

It was not thus with Idris.  She was uncomplaining; but the very soul of fear had taken its seat in her heart.  She had grown thin and pale, her eyes filled with involuntary tears, her voice was broken and low.  She tried to throw a veil over the change which she knew her brother must observe in her, but the effort was ineffectual; and when alone with him, with a burst of irrepressible grief she gave vent to her apprehensions and sorrow.  She described in vivid terms the ceaseless care that with still renewing hunger ate into her soul; she compared this gnawing of sleepless expectation of evil, to the vulture that fed on the heart of Prometheus; under the influence of this eternal excitement, and of the interminable

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Last Man from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.