登陆注册
25635400000078

第78章

THE "dromedary" of Egypt and Syria is not the two-humped animal described by that name in books of natural history, but is, in fact, of the same family as the camel, to which it stands in about the same relation as a racer to a cart-horse.

The fleetness and endurance of this creature are extraordinary. It is not usual to force him into a gallop, and I fancy from his make that it would be quite impossible for him to maintain that pace for any length of time; but the animal is on so large a scale, that the jog-trot at which he is generally ridden implies a progress of perhaps ten or twelve miles an hour, and this pace, it is said, he can keep up incessantly, without food, or water, or rest, for three whole days and nights.

Of the two dromedaries which I had obtained for this journey, I mounted one myself, and put Dthemetri on the other. My plan was to ride on with Dthemetri to Suez as rapidly as the fleetness of the beasts would allow, and to let Myserri (who was still weak from the effects of his late illness) come quietly on with the camels and baggage.

The trot of the dromedary is a pace terribly disagreeable to the rider, until he becomes a little accustomed to it; but after the first half-hour I so far schooled myself to this new exercise, that I felt capable of keeping it up (though not without aching limbs) for several hours together. Now, therefore, I was anxious to dart forward, and annihilate at once the whole space that divided me from the Red Sea.

Dthemetri, however, could not get on at all. Every attempt which he made to trot seemed to threaten the utter dislocation of his whole frame, and indeed I doubt whether any one of Dthemetri's age (nearly forty, I think), and unaccustomed to such exercise, could have borne it at all easily; besides, the dromedary which fell to his lot was evidently a very bad one; he every now and then came to a dead stop, and coolly knelt down, as though suggesting that the rider had better get off at once and abandon the attempt as one that was utterly hopeless.

When for the third or fourth time I saw Dthemetri thus planted, I lost my patience, and went on without him. For about two hours, I think, I advanced without once looking behind me. I then paused, and cast my eyes back to the western horizon. There was no sign of Dthemetri, nor of any other living creature. This I expected, for I knew that Imust have far out-distanced all my followers. I had ridden away from my party merely by way of gratifying my impatience, and with the intention of stopping as soon as I felt tired, until I was overtaken. I now observed, however (this I had not been able to do whilst advancing so rapidly), that the track which I had been following was seemingly the track of only one or two camels. I did not fear that I had diverged very largely from the true route, but still I could not feel any reasonable certainty that my party would follow any line of march within sight of me.

I had to consider, therefore, whether I should remain where Iwas, upon the chance of seeing my people come up, or whether I would push on alone, and find my way to Suez. I had now learned that I could not rely upon the continued guidance of any track, but I knew that (if maps were right) the point for which I was bound bore just due east of Cairo, and I thought that, although I might miss the line leading most directly to Suez, I could not well fail to find my way sooner or later to the Red Sea. The worst of it was that I had no provision of food or water with me, and already I was beginning to feel thirst. I deliberated for a minute, and then determined that I would abandon all hope of seeing my party again, in the Desert, and would push forward as rapidly as possible towards Suez.

It was not, I confess, without a sensation of awe that Iswept with my sight the vacant round of the horizon, and remembered that I was all alone, and unprovisioned in the midst of the arid waste; but this very awe gave tone and zest to the exultation with which I felt myself launched.

Hitherto, in all my wandering, I had been under the care of other people - sailors, Tatars, guides, and dragomen had watched over my welfare, but now at last I was here in this African desert, and I MYSELF, AND NO OTHER, HAD CHARGE OF MYLIFE. I liked the office well. I had the greasiest part of the day before me, a very fair dromedary, a fur pelisse, and a brace of pistols, but no bread and no water; for that Imust ride - and ride I did.

For several hours I urged forward my beast at a rapid though steady pace, but now the pangs of thirst began to torment me.

I did not relax my pace, however, and I had not suffered long when a moving object appeared in the distance before me. The intervening space was soon traversed, and I found myself approaching a Bedouin Arab mounted on a camel, attended by another Bedouin on foot. They stopped. I saw that, as usual, there hung from the pack-saddle of the camel a large skin water-flask, which seemed to be well filled. I steered my dromedary close up alongside of the mounted Bedouin, caused my beast to kneel down, then alighted, and keeping the end of the halter in my hand, went up to the mounted Bedouin without speaking, took hold of his water-flask, opened it, and drank long and deep from its leathern lips. Both of the Bedouins stood fast in amazement and mute horror; and really, if they had never happened to see an European before, the apparition was enough to startle them. To see for the first time a coat and a waistcoat, with the semblance of a white human head at the top, and for this ghastly figure to come swiftly out of the horizon upon a fleet dromedary, approach them silently and with a demoniacal smile, and drink a deep draught from their water-flask - this was enough to make the Bedouins stare a little; they, in fact, stared a great deal -not as Europeans stare, with a restless and puzzled expression of countenance, but with features all fixed and rigid, and with still, glassy eyes. Before they had time to get decomposed from their state of petrifaction I had remounted my dromedary, and was darting away towards the east.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天价娇妻:豪门总裁契约

    天价娇妻:豪门总裁契约

    一通电话,让她成功掉进圈套,家族的阴谋一下子将她打入婚姻的坟墓!婚后生活百态,小三小四不时来挑衅,她全身心应付!当婆婆领着大肚子的妹妹来到她面前时,当亲情和爱情共同背叛她时,她第一次痛哭出声!“姐姐,我和孝正交往了三年,而你和他才不过结婚一年,小三不是我,而是你才对!”妹妹捂着肚子,趾高气扬的炫耀:“而且姐姐,一年了你的肚子还没有动静,难道你是得了什么不孕症吗?”的确是不能孕,不过不是不孕症,而是——
  • 霾在深海里的猫

    霾在深海里的猫

    不是长篇,都是短篇言情,内容简洁绝不拖拉,希望各位读者大大喜欢。
  • 萌妻出没:总裁大人慢点吻

    萌妻出没:总裁大人慢点吻

    用300万买个“萌宠”,对方越泽来说,真心物美价廉。更何况这“萌宠”美丽乖巧又能干,还有个要做“复仇女神”的梦想。方越泽越看越爱,索性帮她扫清一切障碍,扶她坐上高位,教她做个大小姐,更准备让他从萌宠进阶到萌妻。就在漫天大雪中,他单膝跪地向她求婚,她却冷若冰霜地一把打落钻戒,“方越泽,其实我从没爱过你。他摇头不信。她魅惑一笑,顺势将一把短刀抵到了他的胸前,“你不信?那你相不相信,我会在这里杀了你?”温热的血浇在了她的手上,他却温柔地吻上她的指尖,“这么冷的天,刚好用我的血来暖热你的手。”
  • 品论语,学管理

    品论语,学管理

    本书把《论语》所蕴涵的管理智慧和管理哲学汇集起来,为现代企业家进行有效的经营管理提供宝贵的经验,同时它必然会在现代经济生活中产生越来越大的影响,教导我们用管理学的眼光去读《论语》,开辟出一条通往中国本土化管理的理想路径。
  • 万佛归宗

    万佛归宗

    人武初三境,地魄九重天,命魂锁七魄,觉魂通鬼神,生魂造化界,大道衍三千,破虚始神仙。
  • 鹿晗,你是否能原谅我

    鹿晗,你是否能原谅我

    我叫夏瑾妍,是一个......额,怎么说呢?算是一个开朗的女生吧,当然那是曾经,其实我很早就放弃了对于了解自己的性格,可是太痛吧,好像都麻木了
  • 凯源玺宇的神秘女友

    凯源玺宇的神秘女友

    四个中情重意的女生,一个冷漠,一个忽冷忽热,一个卖萌,可爱,另一个更是稀里糊涂,对于爱情,她们放的下手,和王源,王俊凯,易烊千玺,刘志宏又会发生什么呢?
  • 春秋霸业

    春秋霸业

    当天夜里,风势很大,大家都在呼呼大睡的时候,田风把他们叫了起来,吩咐这几十个人,去周边砍了些树,然后田风把这些树,拿刀截成一段段的,有从地上随意的捡起两块石头,搓呀搓的,众人都不知道田风要干什么,田风把手都搓的通红了,一会之后,突然一阵火光,烧在了被砍断的木条上。
  • 秦淮河的歌声

    秦淮河的歌声

    三十三离恨天怨气沉积,离天鬼王惊世一战,震动江湖。
  • 欧阳明传奇

    欧阳明传奇

    在第一卷《金峰禅寺》里,欧阳明的师母被“幽魂涧”的主人花如梦劫走了,他师傅独自前去营救。欧阳明决定去寻找师傅和师母,在小镇的客栈里,他遇见了刁蛮小姐叶明珠,随后两个人结伴而行,开始了一段惊心动魄、匪夷所思的冒险旅程。树上的巨蟒、背着手的丧尸、人形的岩层、两个人三个影子……等他们历尽千辛万苦到了“幽魂涧”,却发现……欢迎你和我一同走进欧阳明的传奇之旅!在此郑重承诺,自正式上传第一章起,至大结局,决不断更。