[The Recollections of Geoffrey Hamlyn by Henry Kingsley]@TWC D-Link bookThe Recollections of Geoffrey Hamlyn CHAPTER XXIV 10/31
Ay! the very hay-stack is safe! And the paddocks ?--all right!--glory be to God! I got home, and James came running to meet me. "I was getting terribly frightened, old man," said he.
"I thought you were caught.
Lord save us, you look ten years older than you did this morning!" I tried to answer, but could not speak for drought.
He ran and got me a great tumbler of claret-and-water; and, in the evening, having drunk about an imperial gallon of water, and taken afterwards some claret, I felt pretty well revived. Men were sent out at once to see after the Morgans, and found them perfectly safe, but very much frightened; they had, however, saved their hut, for the fire had passed before the wind had got to its full strength. So we were delivered from the fire; but still no rain.
All day, for the next month, the hot north wind would blow till five o'clock, and then a cool southerly breeze would come up and revive us; but still the heavens were dry, and our cattle died by hundreds. On the eighteenth of March, we sat in the verandah looking still over the blackened unlovely prospect, but now cheerfully and with hope; for the eastern sky was piled up range beyond range with the scarlet and purple splendour of cloud-land, and, as darkness gathered, we saw the lightning, not twinkling and glimmering harmlessly about the horizon, as it had been all the summer, but falling sheer in violet-coloured rivers behind the dark curtain of rain that hung from the black edge of a teeming thunder-cloud. We had asked our overseer in that night, being Saturday, to drink with us; he sat very still, and talked but little, as was his wont.
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