The Lust of Hate by Guy Newell Boothby (digital book reader txt) đź“•
"If you send him away to the Mail Change," I cried, looking Bartrand square in the eye, "where you hope they won't take him in--and, even if they do, you know they'll not take the trouble to nurse him--you'll be as much a murderer as the man who stabs another to the heart, and so I tell you to your face."
Bartrand came a step closer to me, with his fists clenched and his face showing as white with passion as his tanned skin would permit.
"You call me a murderer, you dog?" he hissed. "Then, by God, I'll act up to what I've been threatening to do these months past and clear you off the place at once. Pack up your traps and make yourself scarce within an hour, o
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Title: The Lust of Hate
Author: Guy Boothby
A Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook
eBook No.: 0601611.txt
Edition: 1
Language: English
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Date first posted: June 2006
Date most recently updated: June 2006
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The Lust of Hate
Guy Boothby
INTRODUCTION. MY CHANCE IN LIFE.
CHAPTER I. ENGLAND ONCE MORE.
CHAPTER II. A GREUSOME TALE.
CHAPTER III. THE LUST OF HATE.
CHAPTER IV. A STRANGE COINCIDENCE.
CHAPTER V. THE WRECK OF THE “FIJI PRINCESS”
CHAPTER VI. THE SALVAGES.
CHAPTER VII. A BITTER DISAPPOINTMENT.
CHAPTER VIII. WE ARE SAVED!
CHAPTER IX. SOUTH AFRICA.
CHAPTER X. I TELL MY STORY.
CHAPTER XI. A TERRIBLE SURPRISE.
CHAPTER XII. THE END.
INTRODUCTION. MY CHANCE IN LIFE.
Let me begin by explaining that I have set myself the task of
telling this story for two sufficient reasons. The first, because I
consider that it presents as good a warning to a young fellow as he
could anywhere find, against allowing himself to be deluded by a
false hatred into committing a sin that at any other time he would
consider in every way contemptible and cowardly; and the second,
because I think it just possible that it may serve to set others on
their guard against one of the most unscrupulous men, if man he
is—of which I begin to have my doubts—who ever wore shoe leather.
If the first should prove of no avail, I can console myself with the
reflection that I have at least done my best, and, at any rate, can
have wrought no harm; if the second is not required, well, in that
case, I think I shall have satisfactorily proved to my reader,
whoever he may be, what a truly lucky man he may consider himself
never to have fallen into Dr. Nikola’s clutches. What stroke of ill
fortune brought me into this fiend’s power I suppose I shall never be
able to discover. One thing, however, is very certain, that is that I
have no sort of desire ever to see or hear of him again. Sometimes
when I lie in bed at night, and my dear wife—the truest and
noblest woman, I verily believe, who ever came into this world for a
man’s comfort and consolation—is sleeping by my side, I think of all
the curious adventures I have passed through in the last two years,
and then fall to wondering how on earth I managed to come out of them
alive, to say nothing of doing so with so much happiness as is now my
portion. This sort of moralising, however, is not telling my tale; so
if you will excuse me, kind reader, I will bring myself to my
bearings and plunge into my narrative forthwith.
By way of commencement I must tell you something of myself and my
antecedents. My name is Gilbert Pennethorne; my mother was a
Tregenna. and if you remember the old adage—“By Tre—, Pol— and
Pen— You may know the Cornishmen,” you will see that I may claim to
be Cornish to the backbone.
My father, as far back as I can recollect him, was a highly
respectable, but decidedly choleric, gentleman of the old school, who
clung to his black silk stock and high-rolled collar long after both
had ceased to be the fashion, and for a like reason had for modern
innovations much the same hatred as the stage coachman was supposed
to entertain for railway engines. Many were the absurd situations
this animosity led him into. Of his six children—two boys and four
girls—I was perhaps the least fortunate in his favour. For some
reason or another—perhaps because I was the youngest, and my advent
into the world had cost my mother her life—he could scarcely bring
himself at any time to treat me with ordinary civility. In
consequence I never ventured near him unless I was absolutely
compelled to do so. I went my way, he went his—and as a result we
knew but little of each other, and liked what we saw still less.
Looking back upon it now, I can see that mine must have been an
extraordinary childhood.
To outsiders my disposition was friendly almost to the borders of
demonstrativeness; in my own home, where an equivalent temperament
might surely have been looked for, I was morose, quick to take
offence, and at times sullen even to brutishness. This my father, to
whom opposition of any kind was as hateful as the Reform Bill, met
with an equal spirit. Ridicule and carping criticism, for which he
had an extraordinary aptitude, became my daily portion, and when
these failed to effect their purpose, corporal punishment followed
sure and sharp. As a result I detested my home as cordially as I
loathed my parent, and was never so happy as when at school—an
unnatural feeling, as you will admit, in one so young. From Eton I
went up to Oxford, where my former ill luck pursued me. Owing to a
misunderstanding I had the misfortune to incur the enmity of my
college authorities during my first term, and, in company with two
others, was ignominiously “sent down” at the outset of my second
year. This was the opportunity my family had been looking for from
the moment I was breeched, and they were quick to take advantage of
it. My debts were heavy, for I had never felt the obligation to stint
myself, and in consequence my father’s anger rose in proportion to
the swiftness with which the bills arrived. As the result of half an
hour’s one-sided conversation in the library, with a thunder-shower
pattering a melancholy accompaniment upon the window panes, I
received a cheque for five thousand pounds with which to meet my
University liabilities, an uncomplimentary review of my life, past
and present, and a curt announcement that I need never trouble the
parental roof with my society in the future. I took him at his word,
pocketed the cheque, expressed a hypocritical regret that I had
caused him so much anxiety; went up to my room and collected my
belongings; then, having bidden my sisters farewell in icy state in
the drawing-room, took my seat in the dog-cart, and was driven to the
station to catch the express to town. A month later I was on my way
to Australia with a draft for two thousand pounds in my pocket, and
the smallest possible notion of what I was going to do with myself
when I reached the Antipodes.
In its customary fashion ill luck pursued me from the very moment
I set foot on Australian soil. I landed in Melbourne at a
particularly unfortunate time, and within a month had lost half my
capital in a plausible, but ultimately unprofitable, mining venture.
The balance I took with me into the bush, only to lose it there as
easily as I had done the first in town. The aspect of affairs then
changed completely. The so-called friends I had hitherto made
deserted me with but one exception. That one, however, curiously
enough the least respectable of the lot, exerted himself on my behalf
to such good purpose that he obtained for me the position of
storekeeper on a Murrumbidgee sheep station. I embraced the
opportunity with alacrity, and for eighteen months continued in the
same employment, working with a certain amount of pleasure to myself,
and, I believe, some satisfaction to my employers. How long I should
have remained there I cannot say, but when the Banyah Creek gold
field was proclaimed, I caught the fever, abandoned my employment,
and started off, with my swag upon my back, to try my fortune. This
turned out so poorly that less than seven weeks found me desperate,
my savings departed, and my claim,—which I must in honesty confess
showed but small prospects of success—seized for a debt by a
rascally Jew storekeeper upon the Field. A month later a new rush
swept away the inhabitants, and Banyah Creek was deserted. Not
wishing to be left behind I followed the general inclination, and in
something under a fortnight was prostrated at death’s door by an
attack of fever, to which I should probably have succumbed had it not
been for the kindness of a misanthrope of the field, an old miner,
Ben Garman by name. This extraordinary individual, who had tried his
luck on every gold-field of importance in the five colonies and was
as yet as far off making his fortune as when he had first taken a
shovel in his hand, found me lying unconscious alongside the creek.
He carried me to his tent, and, neglecting his claim, set to work to
nurse me back to life again. It was not until I had turned the corner
and was convalescent that I discovered the curiosity my benefactor
really was. His personal appearance was as peculiar as his mode of
life. He was very short, very broad, very red faced, wore a long grey
beard, had bristling, white eyebrows, enormous ears, and the largest
hands and feet I have ever seen on a human being. Where he had
hailed from originally he was unable himself to say. His earliest
recollection was playing with another small boy upon the beach of one
of the innumerable bays of Sydney harbour; but how he had got there,
whether his parents had just emigrated, or whether they had been out
long enough for him to have been born in the colony were points of
which he pronounced himself entirely ignorant. He detested women,
though he could not explain the reason of his antipathy, and there
were not two other men upon the field with whom he was on even the
barest speaking terms. How it came about that he took such a fancy to
me puzzled me then and has continued to do so ever since, for, as far
as I could see, save a certain leaning towards the solitary in life,
we had not a single bond in common. As it was, however, we were
friends without being intimate, and companions by day and night
without knowing more than the merest outside rind of each other’s
lives.
As soon as I was able to get about again I began to wonder what on
earth I should do with myself next. I had not a halfpenny in the
world, and even on a gold field it is necessary to eat if one desires
to live, and to have the wherewithal to pay if one desires to eat. I
therefore placed the matter before my companion and ask his advice.
He gave it with his usual candour, and in doing so solved my
difficulty for me once and for all.
“Stay with me, lad,” he said, “and help me to work
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