[Mr. Isaacs by F. Marion Crawford]@TWC D-Link bookMr. Isaacs CHAPTER VII 21/46
The flush had left his face and given place to a perfect paleness, and his eyes shone like coals of fire as he looked upward in pronouncing the last words.
I said to myself that there was a strong element of religious exaltation in all Asiatics, and put his excitement down to this cause.
His religion was a very beautiful and real thing to him, ever present in his life, and I mused on the future of the man, with his great endowments, his exquisite sensitiveness, and his high view of his obligations to his fellows.
I am not a worshipper of heroes, but I felt that, for the first time in my life, I was intimate with a man who was ready to stand in the breach and to die for what he thought and believed to be right.
After a pause of some minutes, during which we had ridden beyond the last straggling bungalows of the town, he spoke again, quietly, his temporary excitement having subsided. "I feel very strongly about these things," he said, and then stopped short. "I can see you do, and I honour you for it.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|