Allan and the Holy Flower by H. Rider Haggard (easy books to read txt) ๐
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- Author: H. Rider Haggard
Read book online ยซAllan and the Holy Flower by H. Rider Haggard (easy books to read txt) ๐ยป. Author - H. Rider Haggard
Our reception at Beza was most imposing, for the whole population, headed by old Bausi himself, came out to meet us with loud shouts of welcome, from which we had to ask them to desist for Stephenโs sake.
So in the end we got back to our huts with gratitude of heart. Indeed, we should have been very happy there for a while, had it not been for our anxiety about Stephen. But it is always thus in the world; who was ever allowed to eat his pot of honey without finding a fly or perhaps a cockroach in his mouth?
In all, Stephen was really ill for about a month. On the tenth day after our arrival at Beza, according to my diary, which, having little else to do, I entered up fully at this time, we thought that he would surely die. Even Brother John, who attended him with the most constant skill, and who had ample quinine and other drugs at his command, for these we had brought with us from Durban in plenty, gave up the case. Day and night the poor fellow raved and always about that confounded orchid, the loss of which seemed to weigh upon his mind as though it were a whole sackful of unrepented crimes.
I really think that he owed his life to a subterfuge, or rather to a bold invention of Hopeโs. One evening, when he was at his very worst and going on like a mad creature about the lost plantโI was present in the hut at the time alone with him and herโshe took his hand and pointing to a perfectly open space on the floor, said:
โLook, O Stephen, the flower has been brought back.โ
He stared and stared, and then to my amazement answered:
โBy Jove, so it has! But those beggars have broken off all the blooms except one.โ
โYes,โ she echoed, โbut one remains and it is the finest of them all.โ
After this he went quietly to sleep and slept for twelve hours, then took some food and slept again and, what is more, his temperature went down to, or a little below, normal. When he finally woke up, as it chanced, I was again present in the hut with Hope, who was standing on the spot which she had persuaded him was occupied by the orchid. He stared at this spot and he stared at herโme he could not see, for I was behind himโthen said in a weak voice:
โDidnโt you tell me, Miss Hope, that the plant was where you are and that the most beautiful of the flowers was left?โ
I wondered what on earth her answer would be. However, she rose to the occasion.
โO Stephen,โ she replied, in her soft voice and speaking in a way so natural that it freed her words from any boldness, โit is here, for am I not its childโโher native appellation, it will be remembered, was โChild of the Flower.โ โAnd the fairest of the flowers is here, too, for I am that Flower which you found in the island of the lake. O Stephen, I pray you to trouble no more about a lost plant of which you have seed in plenty, but make thanks that you still live and that through you my mother and I still live, who, if you had died, would weep our eyes away.โ
โThrough me,โ he answered. โYou mean through Allan and Hans. Also it was you who saved my life there in the water. Oh! I remember it all now. You are right, Hope; although I didnโt know it, you are the true Holy Flower that I saw.โ
She ran to him and kneeling by his side, gave him her hand, which he pressed to his pale lips.
Then I sneaked out of that hut and left them to discuss the lost flower that was found again. It was a pretty scene, and one that to my mind gave a sort of spiritual meaning to the whole of an otherwise rather insane quest. He sought an ideal flower, he foundโthe love of his life.
After this, Stephen recovered rapidly, for such love is the best of medicinesโif it be returned.
I donโt know what passed between the pair and Brother John and his wife, for I never asked. But I noted that from this day forward they began to treat him as a son. The new relationship between Stephen and Hope seemed to be tacitly accepted without discussion. Even the natives accepted it, for old Mavovo asked me when they were going to be married and how many cows Stephen had promised to pay Brother John for such a beautiful wife. โIt ought to be a large herd,โ he said, โand of a big breed of cattle.โ
Sammy, too, alluded to the young lady in conversation with me, as โMr. Somersโs affianced spouse.โ Only Hans said nothing. Such a trivial matter as marrying and giving in marriage did not interest him. Or, perhaps, he looked upon the affair as a foregone conclusion and therefore unworthy of comment.
We stayed at Bausiโs kraal for a full month longer whilst Stephen recovered his strength. I grew thoroughly bored with the place and so did Mavovo and the Zulus, but Brother John and his wife did not seem to mind. Mrs. Eversley was a passive creature, quite content to take things as they came and after so long an absence from civilization, to bide a little longer among savages. Also she had her beloved John, at whom she would sit and gaze by the hour like a cat sometimes does at a person to whom it is attached. Indeed, when she spoke to him, her voice seemed to me to resemble a kind of blissful purr. I think it made the old boy rather fidgety sometimes, for after an hour or two of it he would rise and go to hunt for butterflies.
To tell the truth, the situation got a little on my nerves at last, for wherever I looked I seemed to see there Stephen and Hope making love to each other, or Brother John and his wife admiring each other, which didnโt leave me much spare conversation. Evidently they thought that Mavovo, Hans, Sammy, Bausi, Babemba and Co. were enough for meโthat is, if they reflected on the matter at all. So they were, in a sense, for the Zulu hunters began to get out of hand in the midst of this idleness and plenty, eating too much, drinking too much native beer, smoking too much of the intoxicating dakka, a mischievous kind of hemp, and making too much love to the Mazitu women, which of course resulted in the usual rows that I had to settle.
At last I struck and said that we must move on as Stephen was now fit to travel.
โQuite so,โ said Brother John, mildly. โWhat have you arranged, Allan?โ
With some irritation, for I hated that sentence of Brother Johnโs, I replied that I had arranged nothing, but that as none of them seemed to have any suggestions to make, I would go out and talk the matter over with Hans and Mavovo, which I did.
I need not chronicle the results of our conference since other arrangements were being made for us at which I
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