Active Service by Stephen Crane (reading tree .TXT) π
Shadows Made By The Palms On The Window Ledge, Her Face
Wore The Expression Of Thoughtful Melancholy Expected on The
Faces Of The Devotees Who Pace In cloistered gloom. She Halted
Before A Door At The End Of The Hall And Laid Her Hand On The
Knob. She Stood Hesitating, Her Head Bowed. It Was Evident
That This Mission Was To Require Great Fortitude.
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- Author: Stephen Crane
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Officers Stood Upon The Little Iron Chairs In front Of The Cafes; All
The Urchins Came Running and Shouting; Ladies Waved their
Handkerchiefs From The Balconies; The Whole City Was Vivified
With A Leaping and Joyous Enthusiasm. The Athenians--As
Dragomen Or Otherwise-Had Preserved an Ardor For Their
Glorious Traditions, And It Was As If That In the White Dust Which
Lifted from The Plaza And Floated across The Old-Ivory Face Of The
Palace, There Were The Souls Of The Capable Soldiers Of The Past.
Coleman Was Almost Intoxicated with It. It Seemed to Celebrate
His Own Reasons, His Reasons Of Love And Ambition To Conquer
In Love.
When The Carriage Arrived in front Of The Hotel D'Angleterre,
Coleman Found The Servants Of The Place With More Than One
Eye Upon The Scene In the Plaza, But They Soon Paid Heed to The
Arrival Of A Gentleman With Such An Amount Of Beautiful Leather
Luggage, All Marked boldly With The Initials "R. C." Coleman Let
Them Lead Him And Follow Him And Conduct Him And
Use Bad English Upon Him Without Noting either
Their Words, Their Salaams Or Their Work. His Mind Had Quickly
Fixed upon The Fact That Here Was The Probable Headquarters Of
The Wainwright Party And, With The Rush Of His Western Race
Fleeting through His Veins, He Felt That He Would Choke And Die
If He Did Not Learn Of The Wainwrights In the First Two Minutes. It
Was A Tragic Venture To Attempt To Make The Levantine Mind
Understand Something off The Course, That The New Arrival'S First
Thought Was To Establish A Knowlege Of The Whereabouts Of
Some Of His Friends Rather Than To Swarm Helter-Skelter Into That
Part Of The Hotel For Which He Was Willing to Pay Rent. In fact He
Failed to Thus Impress Them; Failed in dark Wrath, But,
Nevertheless, Failed. At Last He Was Simply Forced to Concede
The Travel Of Files Of Men Up The Broad, Redcarpeted stair-Case,
Each Man Being loaded with Coleman'S Luggage. The Men In the
Hotel-Bureau Were Then Able To Comprehend That The Foreign
Gentleman Might Have Something else On His Mind. They Raised
Their Eye-Brows Languidly When He Spoke Of The Wainwright
Party In gentle Surprise That He Had Not Yet Learned that They
Were Gone Some Time. They Were Departed on Some Excursion.
Where? Oh, Really-It Was Almost Laughable, Indeed-They Didn'T
Know. Were They Sure? Why, Yes-It Was Almost Laughable,
Indeed -They Were Quite Sure. Where Could The Gentleman Find
Out About Them ? Well, They-As They Had Explained-Did
Not Know, But-It Was Possible-The American
Minister Might Know. Where Was He To Be Found? Oh, That Was
Very Simple. It Was Well Known That The American Minister Had
Apartments In the Hotel. Was He In? Ah, That They Could Not
Say.
So Coleman, Rejoicing at His Final Emancipation And With The
Grime Of Travel Still Upon Him, Burst In somewhat Violently Upon
The Secretary Of The Hon. Thomas M. Gordner Of Nebraska, The
United states Minister To Greece. From His Desk The Secretary
Arose From Behind An Accidental Bulwark Of Books And
Govermental Pamphets. " Yes, Certainly. Mr. Gordner Is In. If
You Would Give Me Your Card-"
Directly. Coleman Was Introduced into Another Room Where A
Quiet Man Who Was Rolling a Cigarette Looked him Frankly But
Carefully In the Eye. "The Wainwrights " Said The Minister
Immediately After The Question. "Why, I Myself Am Immensely
Concerned about Them At Present. I'M Afraid They'Ve Gotten
Themselves Into Trouble.'
" Really? " Said Coleman.
" Yes. That Little Professor Is Ratherer--Stubborn; Isn'T He ?
He Wanted to Make An Expedition To Nikopolis And I Explained
To Him All The Possibilities Of War And Begged him To At Least Not
Take His Wife And Daughter With Him."
" Daughter," Murmured coleman, As If In his Sleep.
"But That Little Old Man Had A Head Like A Stone
And Only Laughed at Me. Of Course Those Villainous Young
Students Were Only Too Delighted at A Prospect Of War, But It
Was A Stupid And Absurd. Thing for The Man To Take His Wife And
Daughter There. They Are Up There Now. I Can'T Get A Word From
Them Or Get A Word To Them."
Coleman Had Been Choking. "Where Is Nikopolis? " He Asked.
The Minister Gazed suddenly In comprehension Of The Man
Before Him. " Nikopolis Is In turkey," He Answered gently.
Turkey At That Time Was Believed to Be A Country Of Delay,
Corruption, Turbulence And Massacre. It Meant Everything. More
Than A Half Of The Christians Of The World Shuddered at The Name
Of Turkey. Coleman'S Lips Tightened and Perhaps Blanched, And
His Chin Moved out Strangely, Once, Twice, Thrice. " How Can I
Get To Nikopolis? " He Said.
The Minister Smiled. " It Would Take You The Better Part Of
Four Days If You Could Get There, But As A Matter Of Fact You
Can'T Get There At The Present Time. A Greek Army And A Turkish
Army Are Looking at Each Other From The Sides Of The River At
Arta-The River Is There The Frontier-And Nikopolis Happens To Be
On The Wrong Side. You Can'T Reach Them. The Forces At Arta Will
Fight Within Three Days. I Know It. Of Course I'Ve Notified our
Legation At Constantinople, But, With Turkish Methods Of
Communication, Nikopolis Is About As Far From
Constantinople As New York Is From Pekin."
Coleman Arose. "They'Ve Run Themselves Into A Nice Mess,"
He Said Crossly. " Well, I'M A Thousand Times Obliged to You, I'M
Sure."
The Minister Opened his Eyes A Trifle. You Are Not Going to
Try To Reach Them, Are You ? "
" Yes," Answered coleman, Abstractedly. " I'M Going to Have A
Try At It. Friends Of Mine, You Know-"
At The Bureau Of The Hotel, The Correspondent Found Several
Cables Awaiting him From The Alert Office Of The New York Eclipse.
One Of Them Read: "State Department Gives Out Bad Plight Of
Wainwright Party Lost Somewhere; Find Them. Eclipse." When
Coleman Perused the Message He Began To Smile With Seraphic
Bliss. Could Fate Have Ever Been Less Perverse.
Whereupon He Whirled himself In athens. And It Was To The
Considerable Astonishment Of Some Athenians. He Discovered
And Instantly Subsidised a Young Englishman Who, During his
Absence At The Front, Would Act As Correspondent For The
Eclipse At The Capital. He Took Unto Himself A Dragoman And
Then Bought Three Horses And Hired a Groom At A Speed that
Caused a Little Crowd At The Horse Dealer'S Place To Come Out
Upon The Pavement And Watch This Surprising young Man Ride
Back Toward His Hotel. He Had Already Driven His Dragoman Into
A Curious State Of Oriental Bewilderment And Panic In which He
Could Only Lumber Hastily And Helplessly Here And There, With
His Face In the Meantime Marked with Agony. Coleman'S Own Field
Equipment Had Been Ordered by Cable From New York To London, But
It Was Necessary To Buy Much Tinned meats, Chocolate, Coffee,
Candles, Patent Food, Brandy, Tobaccos, Medicine And Other
Things.
He Went To Bed that Night Feeling more Placid. The Train Back
To Patras Was To Start In the Early Morning, And He Felt The
Satisfaction Of A Man Who Is At Last About To Start On His Own
Great Quest. Before He Dropped off To Slumber, He Heard Crowds
Cheering exultantly In the Streets, And The Cheering moved him
As It Had Done In the Morning. He Felt That The Celebration Of The
People Was Really An Accompaniment To His Primal Reason, A
Reason Of Love And Ambition To Conquer In love-Even As In the
Theatre, The Music Accompanies The Heroin His Progress. He
Arose Once During the Night To Study A Map Of The Balkan
Peninsula And Get Nailed into His Mind The Exact Position Of
Nikopolis. It Was Important.
Chapter 8Coleman'S Dragoman Aroused him In the Blue Before Dawn.
The Correspondent Arrayed himself In one Of His New Khaki Suits-
Riding breeches And A Tunic Well Marked with Buttoned pockets-
And Accompanied by Some Of His Beautiful Brown Luggage, They
Departed for The Station.
The Ride To Patras Is A Terror Under Ordinary Circumstances. It
Begins In the Early Morning and Ends In the Twilight. To
Coleman, Having just Come From Patras To Athens, This Journey
From Athens To Patras Had All The Exasperating elements Of A
Forced recantation. Moreover, He Had Not Come Prepared to
View With Awe The Ancient City Of Corinth Nor To View With
Admiration The Limpid Beauties Of The Gulf Of That Name With Its
Olive Grove Shore. He Was Not Stirred by Parnassus, A Far-Away
Snow-Field High On The Black Shoulders Of The Mountains Across
The Gulf. No; He Wished to Go To Nikopolis. He Passed over The
Graves Of An Ancient Race The Gleam Of Whose Mighty Minds
Shot, Hardly Dimmed, Through The Clouding ages. No; He Wished
To Go To Nikopolis. The Train Went At A Snail'S Pace, And If
Coleman Bad An Interest It Was In the People Who Lined the Route
And Cheered the Soldiers On The Train. In coleman S Compartment There Was A
Greasy Person Who Spoke A Little English. He Explained that He
Was A Poet, A Poet Who Now Wrote Of Nothing but War. When A
Man Is In pursuit Of His Love And Success Is Known To Be At Least
Remote, It Often Relieves His Strain If He Is Deeply Bored from Time
To Time.
The Train Was Really Obliged to Arrive Finally At Patras Even If It
Was A Tortoise, And When This Happened, A Hotel Runner
Appeared, Who Lied for The Benefit Of The Hotel In saying that
There Was No Boat Over To Mesalonghi That Night. When, All Too
Late, Coleman Discovered the Truth Of The Matter His Wretched
Dragoman Came In for A Period Of Infamy And Suffering.
However, While Strolling in the Plaza At Patras, Amid Newsboys
From Every Side, By Rumour And Truth, Coleman Learned things To
His Advantage. A Greek Fleet Was Bombarding prevasa. Prevasa
Was Near Nikopolis. The Opposing armies At Arta Were
Engaged, Principally In an Artillery Duel. Arta Was On The Road From
Nikopolis Into Greece. Hearing this News In the Sunlit Square
Made Him Betray No Weakness, But In the Darkness Of His Room
At The Hotel, He Seemed to Behold Marjory Encircled by
Insurmountable Walls Of Flame. He Could Look Out Of His Window
Into The Black Night Of The North And Feel Every Ounce Of A
Hideous Circumstance. It Appalled him; Here Was No Power Of
Calling up A Score Of Reporters And Sending them Scampering to
Accomplish Everything. He Even Might As Well Have Been Without
A Tongue As Far As It Could Serve Him In goodly Speech. He Was
Alone, Confronting the Black Ominous Turkish North Behind Which
Were The Deadly Flames; Behind The Flames Was Marjory. It Worked
Upon Him Until He Felt Obliged to Call In his Dragoman, And Then,
Seated upon The Edge Of His Bed and Waving his Pipe Eloquently, He
Described the Plight Of Some Very Dear Friends Who Were Cut Off At
Nikopolis In epirus. Some Of His Talk Was Almost Wistful In its Wish
For Sympathy From His Servant, But At The End He Bade The Dragoman
Understand That Be, Coleman, Was Going to Their Rescue, And He
Defiantly Asked the Hireling if He Was Prepared to Go With Him.
But He Did Not Know The Greek Nature. In two Minutes The
Dragoman Was Weeping tears Of Enthusiasm, And, For These Tears,
Coleman Was Over-Grateful, Because He Had Not Been Told That
Any Of The More Crude Forms Of Sentiment Arouse The Common
Greek To The Highest Pitch, But Sometimes, When It Comes To
What The Americans Call A "Show Down," When He Gets Backed
Toward His Last Corner With A Solitary Privilege Of Dying for These
Sentiments, Perhaps He Does Not Always Exhibit Those Talents
Which Are Supposed to Be Possessed by The Bulldog. He Often
Then, Goes Into The Cafes And Take'S It Out In oration, Like
Any Common Parisian.
In The Morning a Steamer Carried them Across The
Strait And Landed them Near Mesalonghi At The Foot Of The
Railroad That Leads To Agrinion. At Agrinion Coleman At Last
Began To Feel That He Was Nearing his Goal. There Were Plenty Of
Soldiers
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