[The Light That Failed by Rudyard Kipling]@TWC D-Link book
The Light That Failed

CHAPTER XIV
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Were you readin' him about Stocks, Alf ?' 'No; it was all about fightin' out there where the soldiers is gone--a great long piece with all the lines close together and very hard words in it.

'E give me 'arf a crown because I read so well.

And 'e says the next time there's anything 'e wants read 'e'll send for me.' 'That's good hearing, but I do think for all the half-crown--put it into the kicking-donkey money-box, Alf, and let me see you do it--he might have kept you longer.

Why, he couldn't have begun to understand how beautiful you read.' 'He's best left to hisself--gentlemen always are when they're downhearted,' said Mr.Beeton.
Alf's rigorously limited powers of comprehending Torpenhow's special correspondence had waked the devil of unrest in Dick.

He could hear, through the boy's nasal chant, the camels grunting in the squares behind the soldiers outside Suakin; could hear the men swearing and chaffing across the cooking pots, and could smell the acrid wood-smoke as it drifted over camp before the wind of the desert.
That night he prayed to God that his mind might be taken from him, offering for proof that he was worthy of this favour the fact that he had not shot himself long ago.


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