[The Weavers<br> Complete by Gilbert Parker]@TWC D-Link book
The Weavers
Complete

CHAPTER XXXI
10/25

I plunged into the river of work alone." "Thou didst not know the strength of the currents, the eddies and the whirlpools, the hidden rocks--and the shore is far off, Saadat." "It is not so far but that, if I could get breath to gather strength, I should reach the land in time.

Money--ah, but enough for this expedition! That over, order, quiet yonder, my own chosen men as governors, and I could"-- he pointed towards the southern horizon--"I could plant my foot in Cairo, and from the centre control the great machinery--with Kaid's help; and God's help.

A sixth of a million, and Kaid's hand behind me, and the boat would lunge free of the sand-banks and churn on, and churn on....

Friend," he added, with the winning insistence that few found it possible to resist, "if all be well, and we go thither, wilt thou become the governor-general yonder?
With thee to rule justly where there is most need of justice, the end would be sure--if it be the will of God." Ebn Ezra Bey sat for a moment looking into the worn, eager face, indistinct in the moonlight, then answered slowly: "I am seventy, and the years smite hard as they pass, and there or here, it little matters when I go, as I must go; and whether it be to bend the lance, or bear the flag before thee, or rule a Mudirieh, what does it matter! I will go with thee," he added hastily; "but it is better thou shouldst not go.

Within the last three days I have news from the South.


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