American library books ยป Fiction ยป Sybil, Or, The Two Nations by Earl of Beaconsfield Benjamin Disraeli (10 best novels of all time txt) ๐Ÿ“•

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labour,โ€ said a pale young man, very thin but with a countenance of remarkable energy. โ€œThe selfish instincts will come into play and will baulk our political object, while a great increase of physical suffering must be inevitable.โ€

โ€œIt might be done,โ€ said a middle-aged, thickset man, in a thoughtful tone. โ€œIf the Unions were really to put their shoulder to the wheel, it might be done.โ€

โ€œAnd if it is not done,โ€ said Gerard, โ€œwhat do you propose? The people ask you to guide them. Shrink at such a conjuncture, and our influence over them is forfeited and justly forfeited.โ€

โ€œI am for partial but extensive insurrections,โ€ said the young man. โ€œSufficient in extent and number to demand all the troops and yet to distract the military movements. We can count on Birmingham again, if we act at once before their new Police Act is in force; Manchester is ripe; and several of the cotton towns; but above all I have letters that assure me that at this moment we can do anything in Wales.โ€

โ€œGlamorganshire is right to a man,โ€ said Wilkins a Baptist teacher. โ€œAnd trade is so bad that the Holiday at all events must take place there, for the masters themselves are extinguishing their furnaces.

โ€œAll the north is seething,โ€ said Gerard.

โ€œWe must contrive to agitate the metropolis,โ€ said Maclast, a shrewd carroty-haired paper-stainer. โ€œWe must have weekly meetings at Kennington and demonstrations at White Conduit House: we cannot do more here I fear than talk, but a few thousand men on Kennington Common every Saturday and some spicy resolutions will keep the Guards in London.โ€

โ€œAy, ay,โ€ said Gerard; โ€œI wish the woollen and cotton trades were as bad to do as the iron, and we should need no holiday as you say, Wilkins. However it will come. In the meantime the Poor-law pinches and terrifies, and will make even the most spiritless turn.โ€

โ€œThe accounts to-day from the north are very encouraging though,โ€ said the young man. โ€œStevens is producing a great effect, and this plan of our people going in procession and taking possession of the churches very much affects the imagination of the multitude.โ€

โ€œAh!โ€ said Gerard, โ€œif we could only have the Church on our side, as in the good old days, we would soon put an end to the demon tyranny of Capital.โ€

โ€œAnd now,โ€ said the pale young man, taking up a manuscript paper, โ€œto our immediate business. Here is the draft of the projected proclamation of the Convention on the Birmingham outbreak. It enjoins peace and order, and counsels the people to arm themselves in order to secure both. You understand: that they may resist if the troops and the police endeavour to produce disturbance.โ€

โ€œAy, ay,โ€ said Gerard. โ€œLet it be stout. We will settle this at once, and so get it out to-morrow. Then for action.โ€

โ€œBut we must circulate this pamphlet of the Polish Count on the manner of encountering cavalry with pikes,โ€ said Maclast.

โ€œโ€˜Tis printed,โ€ said the stout thickset man; โ€œwe have set it up on a broadside. We have sent ten thousand to the north and five thousand to John Frost. We shall have another delivery tomorrow. It takes very generally.โ€

The pale young man read the draft of the proclamation; it was canvassed and criticised sentence by sentence; altered, approved: finally put to the vote, and unanimously carried. On the morrow it was to be posted in every thoroughfare of the metropolis, and circulated in every great city of the provinces and populous district of labour.

โ€œAnd now,โ€ said Gerard, โ€œI shall to-morrow to the north, where I am wanted. But before I go I propose, as suggested yesterday, that we five together with Langley, whom I counted on seeing here to-night, now form ourselves into a committee for arming the people. Three of us are permanent in London; Wilkins and myself will aid you in the provinces. Nothing can be decided on this head till we see Langley, who will make a communication from Birmingham that cannot be trusted to writing. The seven oโ€™clock train must have long since arrived. He is now a good hour behind his time.โ€

โ€œI hear foot-steps,โ€ said Maclast.

โ€œHe comes,โ€ said Gerard.

The door of the chamber opened and a woman entered. Pale, agitated, exhausted, she advanced to them in the glimmering light.

โ€œWhat is this?โ€ said several of the council.

โ€œSybil!โ€ exclaimed the astonished Gerard, and he rose from his seat.

She caught the arm of her father, and leant on him for a moment in silence. Then looking up with an expression that seemed to indicate she was rallying her last energies, she said, in a voice low yet so distinct that it reached the ear of all present, โ€œThere is not an instant to lose: fly!โ€

The men rose hastily from their seats; they approached the messenger of danger; Gerard waved them off, for he perceived his daughter was sinking. Gently he placed her in his chair; she was sensible, for she grasped his arm, and she murmuredโ€”still she murmuredโ€”โ€œfly!โ€

โ€œโ€˜Tis very strange,โ€ said Maclast.

โ€œI feel queer!โ€ said the thickset man.

โ€œMethinks she looks like a heavenly messenger,โ€ said Wilkins. โ€œI had no idea that earth had anything so fair,โ€ said the youthful scribe of proclamations.

โ€œHush friends!โ€ said Gerard: and then he bent over Sybil and said in a low soothing voice, โ€œTell me, my child, what is it?โ€

She looked up to her father; a glance as it were of devotion and despair: her lips moved, but they refused their office and expressed no words. There was a deep silence in the room.

โ€œShe is gone,โ€ said her father.

โ€œWater,โ€ said the young man, and he hurried away to obtain some.

โ€œI feel queer,โ€ said his thickset colleague to Maclast.

โ€œI will answer for Langley as for myself.โ€ said Maclast; โ€œand there is not another human being aware of our purpose.โ€

โ€œExcept Morley.โ€

โ€œYes: except Morley. But I should as soon doubt Gerard as Stephen Morley.โ€

โ€œCertainly.โ€

โ€œI cannot conceive how she traced me,โ€ said Gerard. โ€œI have never even breathed to her of our meeting. Would we had some water! Ah! here it comes.

โ€œI arrest you in the Queenโ€™s name,โ€ said a serjeant of police. โ€œResistance is vain.โ€ Maclast blew out the light, and then ran up into the loft, followed by the thickset man, who fell down the stairs: Wilkins got up the chimney. The sergeant took a lanthorn from his pocket, and threw a powerful light on the chamber, while his followers entered, seized and secured all the papers, and commenced their search.

The light fell upon a group that did not move: the father holding the hand of his insensible child, while he extended his other arm as if to preserve her from the

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