Rujub, the Juggler by G. A. Henty (novels to read in english .txt) ๐
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- Author: G. A. Henty
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โThe Major is a good officer, Doolan, and you were as lazy a youngster, and as hard a bargain, as the Company ever got. You ought to thank your stars that you had the good luck in having a Captain who knew his business, and made you learn yours. Why, if you had had a man like Rintoul as your Captain, you would never have been worth your salt.โ
โYou are not complimentary, Doctor; but then nobody looks for compliments from you.โ
โI can pay compliments if I have a chance,โ the Doctor retorted, โbut it is very seldom I get one of doing soโat least, without lying. Well, Bathurst, are you ready to turn in?โ
โQuite ready, Doctor; that is one of the advantages of not caring for races; the merits and demerits of the horses that run tomorrow do not in the slightest degree affect me, and even the news that all the favorites had gone wrong would not deprive me of an hour's sleep.โ
โI think it a good thing to take an interest in racing, Bathurst. Take men as a whole: out here they work hardโsome of them work tremendously hardโand unless they get some change to their thoughts, some sort of recreation, nineteen out of twenty will break down sooner or later. If they don't they become mere machines. Every man ought to have some sort of hobby; he need not ride it to death, but he wants to take some sort of interest in it. I don't care whether he takes to pig sticking, or racing, or shooting, or whether he goes in for what I may call the milder kinds of relaxation, such as dining out, billiards, whist, or even general philandering. Anything is better than nothingโanything that will take his mind off his work. As far as I can see, you don't do anything.โ
โTherefore I shall either break down or become a machine, Doctor?โ
โOne or the other certainly, Bathurst. You may smile, but I mean what I say. I have seen other young fellows just as full of work and enthusiasm as you are, but I have never seen an exception to the rule, unless, of course, they took up something so as to give their minds a rest.โ
โThe Doctor has just been scolding me because I am not fond enough of work,โ Captain Doolan laughed.
โYou are differently placed, Doolan,โ the Doctor said. โYou have got plenty of enthusiasm in your natureโmost Irishmen haveโbut you have had nothing to stir it. Life in a native regiment in India is an easy one. Your duties are over in two or three hours out of the twenty-four, whereas the work of a civilian in a large district literally never ends, unless he puts a resolute stop to it. What with seeing people from morning until night, and riding about and listening to complaints, every hour of the day is occupied, and then at night there are reports to write and documents of all sorts to go through. It is a great pity that there cannot be a better division of work, though I own I don't see how it is to be managed.โ
By this time they were walking towards the lines.
โI should not mind taking a share of the civil work at the station,โ Captain Doolan said, โif they would make our pay a little more like that of the civilians.โ
โThere is something in that, Doolan,โ the Doctor agreed; โit is just as hard work having nothing to do as it is having too much; and I have always been of opinion that the tremendous disproportion between the pay of a military man and of a civilian of the same age is simply monstrous. Well, goodnight, Doolan; I hope you will tell Mrs. Doolan that the credit is entirely due to me that you are home at the reasonable hour of one o'clock, instead of dropping in just in time to change for parade.โ
โA good fellow,โ the Doctor said, as he walked on with Bathurst; โhe would never set the Thames on fire; but he is an honest, kindly fellow. He would make a capital officer if he were on service. His marriage has been an excellent thing for him. He had nothing to do before but to pass away his time in the club or mess house, and drink more than was good for him. But he has pulled himself round altogether since he married. His wife is a bright, clever little woman, and knows how to make the house happy for him; if he had married a lackadaisical sort of a woman, the betting is he would have gone to the bad altogether.โ
โI only met him once or twice before,โ Bathurst said. โYou see I am not here very often, and when I am it is only on business, so I know a very few people here except those I have to deal with, and by the time I have got through my business I am generally so thoroughly out of temper with the pig headed stupidity and obstinacy of people in general, that I get into my buggy and drive straight away.โ
โI fancy you irritate them as much as they irritate you, Bathurst. Well, here we are; now we will have a quiet cheroot and a peg, to quiet our nerves after all that din, before we turn in. Let us get off our coats and collars, and make ourselves comfortable; it is a proof of the bestial stupidity of mankind that they should wear such abominations as dress clothes in a climate like this. Here, boy, light the candles and bring two sodas and brandies.โ
โWell, Bathurst,โ he went on, when they had made themselves comfortable in two lounging chairs, โwhat do you thing of Miss Hannay?โ
โI was prepared to admire her, Doctor, from what you said; it is not very often that you overpraise things; but she is a charming girl, very pretty and bright, frank and natural.โ
โShe is all that,โ the Doctor said. โWe were four months on the voyage out, and I saw enough of her in that time to know her pretty thoroughly.โ
โWhat puzzles me about her,โ Bathurst said, โis that I seemed to know her face. Where I saw her, and under what circumstances, I have been puzzling myself half the evening to recall, but I have the strongest conviction that I have met her.โ
โYou are dreaming, man. You have been out here eight years; she was a child of ten when you left England! You certainly have not seen her, and as I know pretty well every woman who has been in this station for the last five or six years, I can answer for it that you have not seen anyone in the slightest degree resembling her.โ
โThat is what I have been saying to myself, Doctor, but that does not in the slightest degree shake my conviction about it.โ
โThen you must have dreamt it,โ the Doctor said decidedly. โSome fool of a poet has said,
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