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King Solomon's Mines | H. Rider Haggard | |
The Last Stand Of The Greys |
Page 11 of 11 |
"Now," he began, "now our rebellion is swallowed up in victory, and our evil-doing is justified by strength. "In the morning the oppressors arose and stretched themselves; they bound on their harness and made them ready to war. "They rose up and tossed their spears: the soldiers called to the captains, 'Come, lead us'--and the captains cried to the king, 'Direct thou the battle.' "They laughed in their pride, twenty thousand men, and yet a twenty thousand. "Their plumes covered the valleys as the plumes of a bird cover her nest; they shook their shields and shouted, yea, they shook their shields in the sunlight; they lusted for battle and were glad. "They came up against me; their strong ones ran swiftly to slay me; they cried, 'Ha! ha! he is as one already dead.' "Then breathed I on them, and my breath was as the breath of a wind, and lo! they were not. "My lightnings pierced them; I licked up their strength with the lightning of my spears; I shook them to the ground with the thunder of my shoutings. "They broke--they scattered--they were gone as the mists of the morning. "They are food for the kites and the foxes, and the place of battle is fat with their blood. "Where are the mighty ones who rose up in the morning? "Where are the proud ones who tossed their spears and cried, 'He is as a man already dead'? "They bow their heads, but not in sleep; they are stretched out, but not in sleep. "They are forgotten; they have gone into the blackness; they dwell in the dead moons; yea, others shall lead away their wives, and their children shall remember them no more. |
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King Solomon's Mines H. Rider Haggard |
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