FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33  
34   >>  
is suspicions. Nevertheless, he went on rowing towards the frigate. M. Marouin seeing him disappear in the distance, left his brother on the beach, and bowing once more to the king, returned to the house to calm his wife's anxieties and to take the repose of which he was in much need. Two hours later he was awakened. His house was to be searched in its turn by soldiers. They searched every nook and corner without finding a trace of the king. Just as they were getting desperate, the brother came in; Maroum smiled at him; believing the king to be safe, but by the new-comer's expression he saw that some fresh misfortune was in the wind. In the first moment's respite given him by his visitors he went up to his brother. "Well," he said, "I hope the king is on board?" "The king is fifty yards away, hidden in the outhouse." "Why did he come back?" "The fisherman pretended he was afraid of a sudden squall, and refused to take him off to the brig." "The scoundrel!" The soldiers came in again. They spent the night in fruitless searching about the house and buildings; several times they passed within a few steps of the king, and he could hear their threats and imprecations. At last, half an hour before dawn, they went away. Marouin watched them go, and when they were out of sight he ran to the king. He found him lying in a corner, a pistol clutched in each hand. The unhappy man had been overcome by fatigue and had fallen asleep. Marouin hesitated a moment to bring him back to his wandering, tormented life, but there was not a minute to lose. He woke him. They went down to the beach at once. A morning mist lay over the sea. They could not see anything two hundred yards ahead. They were obliged to wait. At last the first sunbeams began to pierce this nocturnal mist. It slowly dispersed, gliding over the sea as clouds move in the sky. The king's hungry eye roved over the tossing waters before him, but he saw nothing, yet he could not banish the hope that somewhere behind that moving curtain he would find his refuge. Little by little the horizon came into view; light wreaths of mist, like smoke, still floated about the surface of the water, and in each of them the king thought he recognised the white sails of his vessel. The last gradually vanished, the sea was revealed in all its immensity, it was deserted. Not daring to delay any longer, the ship had sailed away in the night. "So," said the king, "the die is c
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33  
34   >>  



Top keywords:

Marouin

 

brother

 

soldiers

 
corner
 

moment

 

searched

 

pierce

 
unhappy
 

sunbeams

 

fatigue


overcome

 

slowly

 
dispersed
 

nocturnal

 

obliged

 
morning
 

tormented

 

minute

 

gliding

 

wandering


fallen
 

hundred

 
hesitated
 

asleep

 

curtain

 

gradually

 

vessel

 

vanished

 
revealed
 

surface


floated
 

thought

 

recognised

 

immensity

 
sailed
 

longer

 

deserted

 

daring

 
banish
 

waters


tossing

 

hungry

 

moving

 

clutched

 
wreaths
 

horizon

 

refuge

 

Little

 
clouds
 

passed