FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2941   2942   2943   2944   2945   2946   2947   2948   2949   2950   2951   2952   2953   2954   2955   2956   2957   2958   2959   2960   2961   2962   2963   2964   2965  
2966   2967   2968   2969   2970   2971   2972   2973   2974   2975   2976   2977   2978   2979   2980   2981   2982   2983   2984   2985   2986   2987   2988   2989   2990   >>   >|  
herself for resistance, and he longed to spur her on to deal the first blow. Not a word had she uttered of surprise or anger, not a syllable of reproach had passed her lips. What was she thinking of, what was she plotting? The more startling and dangerous the better; the more bravely she bore herself, the more completely in the background might he leave the painful sense of fighting against a woman. Even heroes had boasted of a victory over Amazons. At last, at last!--She rose and went towards Hiram. He had been tied to the stake to which criminals were bound, and as an imploring glance from his honest eyes met hers, the spell that fettered her tongue was unloosed; she suddenly understood that she had not merely to protect herself, but to fulfil a solemn duty. With a few rapid steps she went up to the table at which her judges sat in a semi-circle, and leaning on it with her left hand, raised her right high in the air, exclaiming: "You are the victims of a cruel fraud; and I of an unparalleled and wicked trick, intended to bring me to ruin!--Look at that man at the stake. Does he look like a robber? A more honest and faithful servant never earned his freedom, and the gratitude Hiram owed to his master, my father, he has discharged to the daughter for whose sake he quitted his home, his wife and child. He followed me, an orphan, here into a strange land.--But that matters not to you.--Still, if you will hear the truth, the strict and whole. . . ." "Speak!" Orion put in; but she went on, addressing herself exclusively to Nilus, and his peers, and ignoring him completely: "Your president, the son of the Mukaukas, knows that, instead of the accused, I might, if I chose, be the accuser. But I scorn it--for love of his father, and because I am more high-minded than he. He will understand!--With regard to this particular emerald Hiram, my freedman, took it out of its setting last evening, under my eyes, with his knife; other persons besides us, thank God! have seen the setting, empty, on the chain to which it belonged. This afternoon it was still in the place to which some criminal hand afterwards found access, and attached that gem instead. That I have just now seen for the first time--I swear it by Christ's wounds. It is an exquisite work. Only a very rich man--the richest man here, can give away such a treasure, for whatever purpose he may have in view--to destroy an enemy let us say.--Gamaliel," and she turned to th
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2941   2942   2943   2944   2945   2946   2947   2948   2949   2950   2951   2952   2953   2954   2955   2956   2957   2958   2959   2960   2961   2962   2963   2964   2965  
2966   2967   2968   2969   2970   2971   2972   2973   2974   2975   2976   2977   2978   2979   2980   2981   2982   2983   2984   2985   2986   2987   2988   2989   2990   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

honest

 

setting

 

father

 

completely

 

minded

 

understand

 

accused

 
accuser
 
regard
 
evening

thinking

 

emerald

 

freedman

 

plotting

 

strict

 

strange

 

startling

 

matters

 
reproach
 

president


Mukaukas

 

ignoring

 

addressing

 
exclusively
 

persons

 

passed

 

richest

 

wounds

 
exquisite
 

treasure


Gamaliel

 

turned

 

destroy

 

purpose

 
Christ
 
belonged
 

afternoon

 

resistance

 

criminal

 

access


attached

 

orphan

 

tongue

 

fettered

 
unloosed
 

suddenly

 

understood

 

painful

 
protect
 

judges