登陆注册
5200100000015

第15章

Captain Leo Frazer, age thirty and an Englishman, had a trick of looking Fate between the eyes with those black-fringed blue eyes of his, of accepting its gifts with gratitude, its occasional knocks with cheery optimism.At Rugby he had ultimately been captain of the school; at Oxford he had been of equal prowess in rowing and football.Since taking his degree, he had been a successful doctor in the intervals of time allowed him by his membership in one of the crack regiments at home.He had never seriously contemplated the possibility of active service; but Colenso had been too strong a pull upon him.Leaving some scores of sorrowing patients to bemoan him as already dead, he had promptly shipped for Cape Town.The year of grace nineteen hundred had found him on the scene at most of its exciting events.Where Fate refused to take him, he asserted his strong hand and took Fate, until that weary lady was forced to go hopping about the map of South Africa with the agility of a sand flea.

In battle, Frazer was always in the thickest spatter of bullets, where he bowed himself to the inevitable and lay prone, though with his face turned to one side to give free passage to the chaff which carried his comrades through so many grim hours.In the presence of danger, his humor never failed him.In those sorrowful hours which followed the cessation of firing, no man was in greater demand than he.Many a brave fellow had died with his hand shut fast over Frazer's long, slim fingers; many a man's first, awful moments in hospital had been soothed by the touch of those same firm, slim hands.And in the singsongs around the camp fire, or at the mess table, Frazer's voice was always heard, no matter how great the tumult of a moment before.

Like many another of his countrymen, Captain Frazer had learned lessons since he had left the ship at Cape Town, just a year before.

He had come out from England, trained to the inflexibly formal tactics of the British army.Again and again he had seen those tactics proved of no avail in the face of an invisible enemy and an almost inexpugnable country.He had learned the nerve-racking tension of being exposed to a storm of bullets that came apparently from nowhere to cut down the British lines as the hail cuts down the standing grain; he had learned the shock of seeing the level veldt, over which he was marching, burst into a line of fire at his very feet from a spot where it seemed that scarce a dozen men could lie in hiding, to say nothing of a dozen scores.He had learned that, under such fire, a man's first duty was to drop flat on his face, to push up a tiny breastwork of earth and to fire from behind that slender shelter.England could not afford to send her sons over seas for the sake of having them slaughtered by needless obedience to the laws of martial good form.Fighting a nation of hunters, they too must adopt the methods of the hunt.And, most of all, Captain Frazer had learned the imperative need of mounted riflemen.Two months before, while lying up at Durban until his wrist had healed from a Mauser bullet, he had come into close contact with the Marquis of Tullibardine.As a result of that contact, January had found Captain Frazer in Cape Town, ready to take command of the newly enlisted Scottish Horse.

Now, as he looked over his force at Piquetberg Road, he was congratulating himself that his men were fit for service, very fit.

Frazer knew something of men.Experience had assured him that these men were worth training and his months of service under the great Field Marshal had taught him that an officer could be a man among his men, yet lose not one jot of his dignity.Accordingly, Frazer set himself to the task in band.By the time he had been at Piquetberg Road for two days, he knew the name and face of every man in his squadron.A week later he could tell to a nicety which of his men were engaged to girls at home, which of them had heard of one Rudyard Kipling, and which of them could be counted upon in an emergency.The two latter counts Weldon filled absolutely.In regard to the first, Frazer permitted himself a moment of acute uneasiness.

It had been in a spirit of unmitigated joy that Frazer had met Ethel Dent in Cape Town, on the morning of New Year's day.In London he had known the girl just well enough to admire her intensely, not well enough, however, to have found out that she had any permanent connection with South Africa.His joy had lasted until the hour of his calling upon her, three days later; then it had received a sudden check.Ethel had been as cordial as ever; nevertheless, her talk had been full of the young Canadian whom he had met in the drive.Frazer was intensely human.After a year of separation he would have preferred to bound the talk by the experiences of their two selves.

As a natural consequence, he had developed a strong prejudice against Weldon; but Weldon, all unconsciously, had done much to remove that prejudice.Not every man could manage a crazy, bucking broncho in any such fashion as that; fewer still could come out of the scrimmage, unhurt, to bow to a young woman with a cordiality quite untinged with boyish bravado.That day at Maitland, Frazer had registered his mental approval of the long-legged, lean Canadian with his keen gray eyes and his wrists of bronze.He had registered a second note of approval, that first night at Piquetberg Road, when Weldon, with no unnecessary words, had contrived to impress upon the mind of his captain that he was to be included in the guard to cross the river.Totally obedient and respectful, Weldon nevertheless had given the impression of a man who intended to win his own way.

Moreover, the direction of that way appeared to be straight towards the front.

同类推荐
  • 少仪外传

    少仪外传

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 广博严净不退转轮经

    广博严净不退转轮经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 天则能禅师语录

    天则能禅师语录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 冲虚通妙侍宸王先生家语

    冲虚通妙侍宸王先生家语

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Sleeping-Car

    The Sleeping-Car

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 中本起经

    中本起经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 中国人民解放军军官军衔条例

    中国人民解放军军官军衔条例

    为加强法制宣传,迅速普及法律知识,服务于我国民主法制建设,多年来,中国民主法制出版社根据全国人大常委会每年定期审议通过、修订的法律,全品种、大规模的出版了全国人民代表大会常务委员会公报版的系列法律单行本。该套法律单行本经过最高立法机关即全国人民代表大会常务委员会的权威审定,法条内容准确无误,文本格式规范合理,多年来受到了社会各界广泛关注与好评。
  • 我所理解的北大精神

    我所理解的北大精神

    本书是谢冕先生记述北大、阐释北大精神的一部作品,是作者数十年来关于北大的文章精选。谢冕先生在北大工作和生活了半个多世纪,他饱含对北大的热爱,讲述了北大的历史与现在,刻画了校园里未名湖、图书馆、朗润园等景致,追忆了他在北大的学习、生活和师友往事,描写了那些具有北大精神传统与人格魅力的人物如蔡元培、季羡林、林庚、吴组缃、金克木等诸位先生,还有北大对新诗的影响和现代诗歌的发展进程……这所有的一切在他的眼中,都展现着独特的北大精神。
  • 佛说八部佛名经

    佛说八部佛名经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 鸿蒙之使

    鸿蒙之使

    这是一个不一样的洪荒仙侠,圣人不是最强,鸿钧天道道祖也是枉然;至上苍天如何突破道尊,成就破灭天和永恒天的结合不朽境界……
  • 迷离档案

    迷离档案

    一个精于行为心理分析的心理咨询师,遇到离奇凶杀案件,每一个案件都仿佛与他相关,这是一场心理的博弈,离奇,诡异……最后,当走近真相才发现所有的一切包藏着一个惊天的谜局。
  • 红尘异事录

    红尘异事录

    一本意外打开的诡异古书,一件件尘封的旧事,一段段埋葬在红尘中的因果。跨越百年的人情世故、事态变迁,一页又一页被掀开。
  • 东方神剑

    东方神剑

    二十世纪历史将以最沉重的笔墨,记载下人类的一人惨案!一九八八年六月十四日,中国科技考察团成员陆兴华在东京东寺公园龙岩洞被害。据悉,上午,他去了趟东京甲子园商场,购了一件衬衫,下午二点,接到一个陌生的电话,对方自称是邮票店的恒内岗茨,以一枚孤邮珍品为诱饵,约他下午六点去东寺公园看贷,到时他派车来接他。准知电话被骷髅党窃听。骷髅党是日本的地下黑社会组织,国际恐怖分子,他们的猖獗活动是东南亚闻名的。这名窃听的骷髅党小头目一声冷笑,脸上露出不可告人的阴险神情……
  • 最好的爱情:致青春

    最好的爱情:致青春

    大三那年,周小伶原本还算秀气的脸冒了密密麻麻的青春嘎巴痘,于是一心对付自己这张试验田,试验的结果是最喜欢的男生许海亮跟一个没痘的女生好上了,于是原来被追的周小伶开始发奋倒追,偷偷地带早餐放许海亮的抽屉,但是,这一切似乎都没什么改善,直至有一天许海亮打球时摔地上,碎了几颗门牙,然后陪着他去医院,遇到了在医院实习的朋友哥哥张小杰,张小杰挺喜欢周小伶的,开始追求她,好久没人追的周小伶自然心花怒放,俩人就谈成了恋爱,而许海亮此时又开始觉得周小拎的好,毕业之后,死活留在她所在的城市。
  • 质子为妃

    质子为妃

    无数万年前,据说天上落下七颗流星这才形成了北斗七国。然七国间神奇的并存了数万年却没有发生大规模的吞并战役,这本身就是一件不同寻常之事。而故事就从天枢国的女姬落水开始。