[Kim by Rudyard Kipling]@TWC D-Link book
Kim

CHAPTER 7
10/45

If he were very good, and passed the proper examinations, he would be earning thirty rupees a month at seventeen years old, and Colonel Creighton would see that he found suitable employment.
Kim pretended at first to understand perhaps one word in three of this talk.

Then the Colonel, seeing his mistake, turned to fluent and picturesque Urdu and Kim was contented.

No man could be a fool who knew the language so intimately, who moved so gently and silently, and whose eyes were so different from the dull fat eyes of other Sahibs.
'Yes, and thou must learn how to make pictures of roads and mountains and rivers, to carry these pictures in thine eye till a suitable time comes to set them upon paper.

Perhaps some day, when thou art a chain-man, I may say to thee when we are working together: "Go across those hills and see what lies beyond." Then one will say: "There are bad people living in those hills who will slay the chain-man if he be seen to look like a Sahib." What then ?' Kim thought.

Would it be safe to return the Colonel's lead?
'I would tell what that other man had said.' 'But if I answered: "I will give thee a hundred rupees for knowledge of what is behind those hills--for a picture of a river and a little news of what the people say in the villages there" ?' 'How can I tell?
I am only a boy.


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