The Judgment House eBook

Gilbert Parker
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 574 pages of information about The Judgment House.

The Judgment House eBook

Gilbert Parker
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 574 pages of information about The Judgment House.

Byng grumbled out an oath, then fixed his clear, strong look on Stafford.  “It’s almost enough to make Germany and France forget 1870 and fall into each other’s arms,” he answered.  “But that’s your business, you Foreign Office people’s business.  It’s the fellows out there, friends of mine, so many of them, I’m thinking of.  It’s the British kids that can’t be taught in their mother-tongue, and the men who pay all the taxes and can’t become citizens.  It’s the justice you can only buy; it’s the foot of Kruger on the necks of the subjects of his suzerain; it’s eating dirt as Englishmen have never had to eat it anywhere in the range of the Seven Seas.  And when they catch Dr. Jim, it’ll be ten times worse.  Yes, it’ll be at Doornkop, unless—­ But, no, they’ll track him, trap him, get him now.  Johannesburg wasn’t ready.  Only yesterday I had a cable that—­” he stopped short . . . “but they weren’t ready.  They hadn’t guns enough, or something; and Englishmen aren’t good conspirators, not by a damned sight!  Now it’ll be the old Majuba game all over again.  You’ll see.”

“It certainly will set things back.  Your last state will be worse than your first,” remarked Stafford.

Rudyard Byng drained off a glass of brandy and water at a gulp almost, as Stafford watched him with inward adverse comment, for he never touched wine or spirits save at meal-time, and the between-meal swizzle revolted his Eesthetic sense.  Byng put down the glass very slowly, gazing straight before him for a moment without speaking.  Then he looked round.  There was no one very near, though curious faces were turned in his direction, as the grim news of the Raid was passed from mouth to mouth.  He came up close to Stafford and touched his chest with a firm forefinger.

“Every egg in the basket is broken, Stafford.  I’m sure of that.  Dr. Jim’ll never get in now; and there’ll be no oeufs a la coque for breakfast.  But there’s an omelette to be got out of the mess, if the chef doesn’t turn up his nose too high.  After all, what has brought things to this pass?  Why, mean, low tyranny and injustice.  Why, just a narrow, jealous race-hatred which makes helots of British men.  Simple farmers, the sentimental newspapers call them—­simple Machiavellis in veldschoen!” *

Stafford nodded assent.  “But England is a very conventional chef,” he replied.  “She likes the eggs for her omelette broken in the orthodox way.”

“She’s not so particular where the eggs come from, is she?”

Stafford smiled as he answered:  “There’ll be a good many people in England who won’t sleep to-night some because they want Jameson to get in; some because they don’t; but most because they’re thinking of the millions of British money locked up in the Rand, with Kruger standing over it with a sjambak, which he’ll use.  Last night at the opera we had a fine example of presence of mind, when a lady burst into flames on the stage.  That spirited South African prima donna, the Transvaal, is in flames.  I wonder if she really will be saved, and who will save her, and—­”

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Project Gutenberg
The Judgment House from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.