The Lost Continent by C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne (best desktop ebook reader TXT) ๐
Description
The Lost Continent, initially published as a serial in 1899, remains one of the enduring classics of the โlost raceโ genre. In it we follow Deucalion, a warrior-priest on the lost continent of Atlantis, as he tries to battle the influence of an egotistical upstart empress. Featuring magic, intrigue, mythical monsters, and fearsome combat on both land and sea, the story is nothing if not a swashbuckling adventure.
The Lost Continent was very influential on pulp fiction of the subsequent decades, and echoes of its style can be found in the work of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Robert E. Howard, and others.
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- Author: C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne
Read book online ยซThe Lost Continent by C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne (best desktop ebook reader TXT) ๐ยป. Author - C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne
โWe have a weapon that was forged in no mortal smithy,โ shrilled the old man, โwhereof the key is now lodged in the Ark of the Mysteries. But that weapon can be used only as a last resource. The nature of it even is too awful to be told in words. Our other powers will be launched against you first, and for this poor countryโs sake I pray that they may cause you to wince. Yet rest assured, Phorenice, that we shall not step aside once we have put a hand to this matter. We shall carry it through, even though the cost be a universal burning and destruction. For know this, daughter of the swineherd, it is agreed amongst the most High Gods that you are too full of sin to continue unchecked.โ
โSpeak him fairly,โ Ylga urged from behind. โHe has a power at which you cannot even guess.โ
The Empress made to rise, but Ylga clung to her skirt. โFor the sake of your fame,โ she urged, โfor the sake of your life, do not defy him.โ But Phorenice struck her fiercely aside, and faced the old man in a tumult of passion. โYou dare call me a blasphemer, who blaspheme yourself? You dare cast slurs upon my birth, who am come direct from the most high Heaven? Old man, your craziness protects you in part, but not in all. You shall be whipped. Do you hear me? I say, whipped. The lean flesh shall be scourged from your scraggy bones, and you shall totter away from this place as a red and bleeding example for those who would dare traduce their Empress. Here, some of you, I say, take that man, and let him be whipped where he stands.โ
Her cry went out clearly enough. But not a soul amongst those glittering feasters stirred in his place. Not a soldier amongst the guards stepped from his rank. The place was hung in a terrible silence. It seemed as though no one within the hall dared so much as to draw a breath. All felt that the very air was big with fate.
Phorenice, with her head crouched forward, looked from one group to another. Her face was working. โHave I no true servants,โ she asked, โamongst all you pretty lip-servers?โ
Still no one moved. They stood, or sat, or crouched like people fascinated. For myself, with the first words he had uttered, I had recognized the old man by his voice. It was Zaemon, the weak governor who had given the Empress her first step towards power; that earnest searcher into the mysteries, who knew more of their powers, and more about the hidden forces, than any other dweller on the Sacred Mountain, even at that time when I left for my colony. And now, during his strange hermit life, how much more might he not have learned? I was torn by warring duties. I owed much to the Priestsโ Clan, by reason of my oath and membership; it seemed I owed no less to Phorenice. And, again, was Zaemon the truly accredited envoy of the high council of the priests of the Sacred Mountain? And was the Empress of a truth deposed by the High Gods above, or was she still Empress, and still the commander of my duty? I could not tell, and so I sat in my seat awaiting what the event would sow.
Phoreniceโs fury was growing. โDo I stand alone here?โ she cried. โHave I pampered you creatures out of all touch with gratitude? It seems that at last I want a new chief to my guards. Ho! Who will be chief of the guards of the Empress?โ
There was a shifting of eyes, a hesitation. Then a great burly form strode up from the farther end of the hall, and a perceptible shudder went up from all the others as they watched him.
โSo, Tarca, you prefer to take the risks, and remain chief of the guard yourself?โ she said with an angry scoff. โTruly there did not seem to be many thrusting forward to strip you of the office. I shall have a fine sorting up of places in payment for this nightโs work. But for the present, Tarca, do your duty.โ
The man came up, obviously timorous. He was a solidly made fellow, but not altogether unmartial, and though but little of his cheek showed above his decorated beard, I could see that he paled as he came near to the priest. โMy lord,โ he said quietly, โI must ask you to come with me.โ
โStand aside,โ said the old man, thrusting out the Symbol in front of him. I could see his eyes gather on the soldier and his brows knit with a strain of will.
Tarca saw this too, and I thought he would have fallen, but with an effort he kept his manhood, and doggedly repeated his summons. โI must obey the command of my mistress, and I would have you remember, my lord, that I am but a servant. You must come with me to the whip.โ
โI warn you!โ cried the old man. โStand from out of my path, you!โ
It must have been with the courage of desperation that the soldier dared to use force. But the hand he stretched out dropped limply back to his side the moment it touched the old manโs bare shoulder, as though it had been struck by some shock. He seemed almost to have expected some such repulse; yet when he picked up that hand with the other, and looked at it, and saw its whiteness, he let out of him a yell like a wounded beast. โOh, Gods!โ he cried. โNot that. Spare me!โ
But Zaemon was glowering at him
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