FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   5088   5089   5090   5091   5092   5093   5094   5095   5096   5097   5098   5099   5100   5101   5102   5103   5104   5105   5106   5107   5108   5109   5110   5111   5112  
5113   5114   5115   5116   5117   5118   5119   5120   5121   5122   5123   5124   5125   5126   5127   5128   5129   5130   5131   5132   5133   5134   5135   5136   5137   >>   >|  
g the bear and buffalo. The estate you have inherited is not binding on you. You can realise it, and begin by taking over two or three hundred picked Irish and English--have both races capable of handling spade and musket; purchasing some thousands of acres to establish a legal footing there. 'You increase your colony from the mother country in the ratio of your prosperity, until your power is respected, and there is a necessity for the extension of your territory. When you are feared you will be on your mettle. They will favour you with provocation. I should not doubt the result, supposing myself to have under my sole command a trained body of men of English blood--and Irish.' 'Owners of the soil,' rejoined Patrick, much marvelling. 'Undoubtedly, owners of the soil, but owing you service.' 'They fight sir' 'It is hardly to be specified in the calculation, knowing them. Soldiery who have served their term, particularly old artillerymen, would be my choice: young fellows and boys among them. Women would have to be taken. Half-breeds are the ruin of colonists. Our men are born for conquest. We were conquerors here, and it is want of action and going physically forward that makes us a rusty people. There are--Mr. Adister's intonation told of his proposing a wretched alternative,--'the Pacific Islands, but they will soon be snapped up by the European and North American Governments, and a single one of them does not offer space. It would require money and a navy.' He mused. 'South America is the quarter I should decide for, as a young man. You are a judge of horses; you ride well; you would have splendid pastures over there; you might raise a famous breed. The air is fine; it would suit our English stock. We are on ground, Mr. O'Donnell, which my forefathers contested sharply and did not yield.' 'The owners of the soil had to do that,' said Patrick. 'I can show the same in my country, with a difference.' 'Considerably to your benefit.' 'Everything has been crushed there barring the contrary opinion.' 'I could expect such a remark from a rebel.' 'I'm only interpreting the people, sir.' 'Jump out of that tinder-box as soon as you can.' 'When I was in South America, it astonished me that no Englishman had cast an eye on so inviting a land. Australia is not comparable with it. And where colonisations have begun without system, and without hard fighting to teach the settlers to value good leadership and
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   5088   5089   5090   5091   5092   5093   5094   5095   5096   5097   5098   5099   5100   5101   5102   5103   5104   5105   5106   5107   5108   5109   5110   5111   5112  
5113   5114   5115   5116   5117   5118   5119   5120   5121   5122   5123   5124   5125   5126   5127   5128   5129   5130   5131   5132   5133   5134   5135   5136   5137   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

English

 

country

 
people
 

America

 

Patrick

 

owners

 

horses

 
ground
 
quarter
 

decide


system

 

splendid

 

famous

 

pastures

 

fighting

 

European

 
American
 

snapped

 

Pacific

 
Islands

leadership

 

Governments

 
settlers
 
require
 
single
 

colonisations

 

Englishman

 
opinion
 

contrary

 

crushed


barring
 

expect

 

interpreting

 

tinder

 
astonished
 

remark

 

alternative

 

sharply

 

contested

 
comparable

Donnell

 

forefathers

 

Australia

 
Considerably
 
benefit
 

Everything

 
inviting
 
difference
 

respected

 

necessity