登陆注册
25635000000082

第82章

During, one of these retirements, there was grave danger of a native attack upon the camp. Colonel Long, the Chief of Staff, ventured, after some hesitation, to ignore the flag and hatchet, and to enter the forbidden tent. He found Gordon seated at a table, upon which were an open Bible and an open bottle of brandy. Long explained the circumstances, but could obtain no answer beyond the abrupt words--'You are commander of the camp'--and was obliged to retire, nonplussed, to deal with the situation as best he could. On the following morning, Gordon, cleanly shaven, and in the full-dress uniform of the Royal Engineers, entered Long's hut with his usual tripping step, exclaiming 'Old fellow, now don't be angry with me. I was very low last night.

Let's have a good breakfast--a little b. and s. Do you feel up to it?' And, with these veering moods and dangerous restoratives, there came an intensification of the queer and violent elements in the temper of the man.

His eccentricities grew upon him. He found it more and more uncomfortable to follow the ordinary course. Official routine was an agony to him. His caustic and satirical humour expressed itself in a style that astounded government departments. While he jibed at his superiors, his subordinates learned to dread the explosions of his wrath. There were moments when his passion became utterly ungovernable; and the gentle soldier of God, who had spent the day in quoting texts for the edification of his sister, would slap the face of his Arab aide-de-camp in a sudden access of fury, or set upon his Alsatian servant and kick him until he screamed.

At the end of three years, Gordon resigned his post in Equatoria, and prepared to return home. But again Providence intervened: the Khedive offered him, as an inducement to remain in the Egyptian service, a position of still higher consequence-- the Governor-Generalship of the whole Sudan; and Gordon once more took up his task. Another three years were passed in grappling with vast revolting provinces, with the ineradicable iniquities of the slave-trade, and with all the complications of weakness and corruption incident to an oriental administration extending over almost boundless tracts of savage territory which had never been effectively subdued. His headquarters were fixed in the palace at Khartoum; but there were various interludes in his government.

Once, when the Khedive's finances had become peculiarly embroiled, he summoned Gordon to Cairo to preside over a commission which should set matters to rights.

Gordon accepted the post, but soon found that his situation was untenable. He was between the devil and the deep sea-- between the unscrupulous cunning of the Egyptian Pashas, and the immeasurable immensity of the Khedive's debts to his European creditors. The Pashas were anxious to use him as a respectable mask for their own nefarious dealings; and the representatives of the European creditors, who looked upon him as an irresponsible intruder, were anxious simply to get rid of him as soon as they could. One of these representatives was Sir Evelyn Baring, whom Gordon now met for the first time. An immediate antagonism flashed out between the two men. But their hostility had no time to mature; for Gordon, baffled on all sides, and deserted even by the Khedive, precipitately returned to his Governor-Generalship. Whatever else Providence might have decreed, it had certainly not decided that he should be a financier.

His tastes and his talents were indeed of a very different kind.

In his absence, a rebellion had broken out in Darfur-- one of the vast outlying provinces of his government-- where a native chieftain, Zobeir, had erected, on a basis of slave-traffic, a dangerous military power. Zobeir himself had been lured to Cairo, where he was detained in a state of semi-captivity; but his son, Suleiman, ruled in his stead, and was now defying the Governor-General. Gordon determined upon a hazardous stroke. He mounted a camel, and rode, alone, in the blazing heat, across eighty-five miles of desert, to Suleiman's camp. His sudden apparition dumbfounded the rebels; his imperious bearing overawed them; he signified to them that in two days they must disarm and disperse; and the whole host obeyed. Gordon returned to Khartoum in triumph.

But he had not heard the last of Suleiman. Flying southwards from Darfur to the neighbouring province of Bahr-el-Ghazal, the young man was soon once more at the head of a formidable force. A prolonged campaign of extreme difficulty and danger followed.

Eventually, Gordon, summoned again to Cairo, was obliged to leave to Gessi the task of finally crushing the revolt. After a brilliant campaign, Gessi forced Suleiman to surrender, and then shot him as a rebel. The deed was to exercise a curious influence upon Gordon's fate.

Though Suleiman had been killed and his power broken, the slave-trade still flourished in the Sudan. Gordon's efforts to suppress it resembled the palliatives of an empiric treating the superficial symptoms of some profound constitutional disease. The root of the malady lay in the slave-markets of Cairo and Constantinople: the supply followed the demand. Gordon, after years of labour, might here and there stop up a spring or divert a tributary, but, somehow or other the waters would reach the river-bed. In the end, he himself came to recognise this. 'When you have got the ink that has soaked into blotting-paper out of it,' he said, 'then slavery will cease in these lands.' And yet he struggled desperately on; it was not for him to murmur. 'I feel my own weakness, and look to Him who is Almighty, and I leave the issue without inordinate care to Him.'

同类推荐
  • 耳新

    耳新

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 通天乐

    通天乐

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 心赋注

    心赋注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 黄庭内景玉经注

    黄庭内景玉经注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Armies of Labor

    The Armies of Labor

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 篡命修神

    篡命修神

    一本奇异的书,把宁远带进了一个奇异的世界!让宁远的命运彻底发生了改变。。。死亡手机卡,消失的棺木,嗜血取款机,死而复生的尸体,爬出镜子的恶魔,这里遍布着恐怖!偶然间偷窥到女神,迫于无奈当了一次电车痴汉,一不小心亲吻了谁的老婆?这里有美女有萝莉有人妻有御姐!金钱卡,艳遇卡,隐身卡,鱼肠剑,秦王虎符,魔幻宠物,拥有了这些你准备做什么?一个一个诡异的任务发布出来!!一次又一次的逃生成长!!是谁改了他的命,他又逆了谁的天!宁远该怎么逃脱险境,完成一次又一次的历练,最后修炼到巅峰!
  • 凰命嗜天:纨绔霸君妃

    凰命嗜天:纨绔霸君妃

    命运亲手将她推向死亡,又将她从深渊中挽救。再睁眼,已是异世。挨千刀的狗血剧情在她身上上演!相府不受宠的四小姐?哼,待老娘不好,分分钟碾碎你!敢和姐玩智商?姐让你和猪相爱相杀!渣男遍地开花,姐给你配朵白莲花!传说中的妖孽美男子?不,眼前这厮有点腹黑有点屌!
  • 我的专属甜心

    我的专属甜心

    季可可,女主,可爱范,吃货。有点小迷糊。慕容炎,男一,酷男,冷静,心只对季可可温柔。刈煜,男二,暖男,心只对季可可悸动。
  • 竹子成双

    竹子成双

    你是否还在这世间寻觅,等待下一次的相遇?你是否仍穿过风雨,只为了转身的一次回眸?呵,我知道,你就在这里。
  • 九灵帝

    九灵帝

    天生神胎,但却是天大的笑话!天才?废物?!既然天地让我出生,那我怎甘平凡?!我之决心,天地不可阻!就让我踏着累累白骨,走向那绝顶之巅!
  • 守护甜心之唯梦恋之美

    守护甜心之唯梦恋之美

    每一个转校生都妄想破坏亚梦和唯世的感情,先是清水月,再是上官婉儿,她们都爱唯世,都妄想得到唯世的爱,她们处处针对亚梦,可唯世的爱是专属的,专属于亚梦,他们的爱会进行到底吗?
  • 王蒙自传—九命七羊

    王蒙自传—九命七羊

    王蒙是八九十年代中国作家最具魅力的人物之一。他不像平民作家那么单一,也不似先锋派艺术家那么孤独、超然。他身上折射着太复杂的因素:政治的、文化的、艺术的……从五十年代的“右派”作家,到自我放逐于新疆维吾尔自治区;从新时期文学的精神突起,到上任文化部长的要职;从自动退居到逍遥地以写作为生,四十年的岁月沧桑,使他成为共和国文化变迁史的一个标本。《王蒙自传》记述了王蒙的传奇人生。本书为第三部,回忆了1989年至今王蒙的一些经历,其中包括推荐诺贝尔文学奖人选和推荐郭敬明加入中国作协等争议性的事件。
  • 我还在那里等你

    我还在那里等你

    不管是等她还是他,所回忆的青春都已不再。我们奔跑的脚步会让它们永远蒙尘没落
  • 暗红咏叹

    暗红咏叹

    北穹星,属第七星域沧岚-卫3。关于人类的起源,并不是这个星球的原生物种,而是从宇宙深处横渡而来的,所以由此猜测在浩瀚的宇宙中有那么一处人类起源的星球。红巢的由来,可能是人类来到这个星球的原因。这里是一个战场,只是在宇宙众多人类与红巢战争中不起眼的局域战场。关于北穹星亦或者说是沧岚-卫3,这个被主战场遗弃的原因,根据史诗战役记载推测,这可能是由于红巢势大被遗弃或者说是被忽略的行星。这一年,巨岩城泯灭。于灰烬中获得重生,前面道路永无止境。
  • 龙啸沧海

    龙啸沧海

    秦宇不是穿越者,却有个猥琐的穿越师父。秦宇不是废物,却有个废物老爸。师父,你都七老八十岁了还去万花楼啊……老爸老妈,抛弃我,你们会后悔的……雪儿妹妹,来抱个……这就是主角,一个从小父母不知所向,家族又不待见的少年,且看他如何踏上了一条传奇的强者之路……