[Allan’s Wife by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link book
Allan’s Wife

CHAPTER VII
21/22

My father thinks that they are very ancient, for the people who live here now do not know how to lay one stone upon another, and these huts are so wonderfully constructed that, though they must have stood for ages, not a stone of them had fallen.

But I can show you the quarry where the marble was cut; it is close by and behind it is the entrance to an ancient mine, which my father thinks was a silver mine.
Perhaps the people who worked the mine built the marble huts.

The world is old, and no doubt plenty of people have lived in it and been forgotten."[*] [*] Kraals of a somewhat similar nature to those described by Mr.Quatermain have been discovered in the Marico district of the Transvaal, and an illustration of them is to be found in Mr.Anderson's "Twenty-five Years in a Waggon," vol.ii.p.

55.

Mr.Anderson says, "In this district are the ancient stone kraals mentioned in an early chapter; but it requires a fuller description to show that these extensive kraals must have been erected by a white race who understood building in stone and at right angles, with door-posts, lintels, and sills, and it required more than Kaffir skill to erect the stone huts, with stone circular roofs, beautifully formed and most substantially erected; strong enough, if not disturbed, to last a thousand years." -- Editor.
Then we rode on in silence.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books