The Virgin of the Sun eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 351 pages of information about The Virgin of the Sun.

The Virgin of the Sun eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 351 pages of information about The Virgin of the Sun.

“Master,” he said, “when we still in Thames River, you ask me whether we should run ashore into the hands of the hunters who try to catch us, or sail on.  I answer, ’You have God and I have God and better fall into hands of gods than into hands of men.’  So we sail on into the big storm.  For long we sail, and though once it turn, always the great wind blew, behind us.  You grow weak and your mind leave you, but I keep you alive with medicine that I have and for many days I stay awake and steer.  Then at last my mind leave me, too, and I know no more.  Three days ago I wake up and find the ship in this place.  Then I eat more medicine and get strength, also food from people on the shore who think us gods.  That all the story, except that you live, not die.  Your God and my God bring us here safe.”

“Yes, Kari, but where are we?”

“Master, I think in that country from which I come; not in my own land which is still far away, but still in that country.  You remember,” he added with a flash of his dark eyes, “I always say that you and I go there together one day.”

“But what is the country, Kari?”

“Master, not know its name.  It big and have many names, but you first white man who ever come here, that why people think you God.  Now you go sleep again; to-morrow we talk.”

I shut my eyes, being so very tired, and as I learned afterwards, slept for twelve hours or more, to awake on the morning of the following day, feeling wonderfully stronger and able to eat with appetite.  Also Kari brought me water and washed me, and clean clothes which he had found in the ship that I put on.

Thus it went on for a long while and day by day I recovered strength till at length I was almost as I had been when I married Blanche Aleys in the church of St. Margaret at Westminster.  Only now sorrow had changed me within and without my face had grown more serious, while to it hung a short yellow beard which, when I looked at my reflection, seemed to become me well enough.  That beard puzzled me much, since such are not grown in a day, although it is true that as yet it was not over-long.  Weeks must have passed since it began to sprout upon my chin and as we had been but three days in this place when I woke up, those weeks without doubt were spent upon the sea.

Whither, then, had we come?  Driving all the while before a great gale, that for most of our voyage had blown from the east, as, if Kari were right, we had done, this country must be very far away from England.  That it was so, indeed there could be no doubt, since here everything was different.  For example, having been a mariner from my childhood, I had been taught and observed something of the stars, and noted that the constellations had changed their places in the heavens, also that some with which I was familiar were missing, while other new ones had appeared.  Further, the heat was great and constant, even at night being more than that of our hottest summer day, and

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The Virgin of the Sun from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.