[Queen Sheba’s Ring by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link book
Queen Sheba’s Ring

CHAPTER VII
7/22

Yes, although the priests have doomed him to sacrifice at the next feast of Harmac, he will try to spare him, which, perhaps, he can do by making him, like the Singer of Egypt, also a priest of Harmac, and thus dedicate forever to the god with whom, indeed, he says he had been familiar for thousands of years.
This is our message, O white men." Now, when I had translated the substance of this oration to Orme and Quick, for, as I saw by the quiver that passed through her at the Fung insults upon her tribe, Maqueda understood it, their tongues not differing greatly, Orme who, for the time at any rate, was almost himself again, said: "Tell these fellows to say to their Sultan that he is a good old boy, and that we thank him very much; also that we are sorry to have been obliged to kill so many of them in a way that he must have thought unsportsmanlike, but we had to do it, as we are sure he will understand, in order to save our skins.

Tell him also that, speaking personally, having sampled the Abati yonder and on our journey, I should like to accept his invitation.

But although, as yet, we have found no men among them, only, as he says, baboons, rock-rabbits, and boasters without a fight in them, we have"-- and here he bowed his bleeding head to Maqueda--"found a woman with a great heart.

Of her salt we have eaten, or are about to eat; to serve her we have come from far upon her camels, and, unless she should be pleased to accompany us, we cannot desert her." All of this I rendered faithfully, while every one, and especially Maqueda, listened with much attention.

When they had considered our words, the spokesman of the messengers replied to the effect that the motives of our decision were of a nature that commanded their entire respect and sympathy, especially as their people quite concurred in our estimate of the character of the Abati ruler, Child of Kings.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books