Alice Cogswell Bemis: A Sketch by a Friend

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Alice Cogswell Bemis: A Sketch by a Friend by Anonymous, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Anonymous ISBN: 9781465505101
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Anonymous
ISBN: 9781465505101
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English

NEW Year’s Eve! A hot night in midsummer in the drought. It was so dark — with a smOthering darkness — that even the low loom of the scrub- covered ridges, close at hand across the creek, was not to be seen. The sky was not clouded for rain, but with drought haze and the smoke of distant bush fires. Down the hard road to the crossing at Pipeclay Creek sounded the footsteps of a man. Not the crunching steps of an English labourer, clod-hopping contentedly home; these sounded more like the footsteps of one pacing steadily to and fro, and thinking steadily and hopelessly — sorting out the past. Only the steps went on. A glimmer of white moleskin trousers and a suggestion of light-coloured tweed jacket, now and again, as if in the glimmer of a faint ghost light in the darkness. The road ran along by the foot of a line of low ridges or spurs, and, as he passed the gullies or gaps, he felt a breath of hotter air, like blasts from a furnace in the suffocating atmosphere. He followed a two-railed fence for a short distance, and turned in at a white batten gate. It seemed lighter now. There was a house, or, rather, a hut suggested, with whitewashed slab walls and a bark roof. He walked quietly round to the door of a detached kitchen, opened it softly, went in and struck a match. A candle stood, stuck in a blot of its own grease, on one end of the dresser. He lit the candle and looked round. The walls of the kitchen were of split slabs, the roof box-bark, the floor clay, and there was a large clay-lined fireplace, the sides a dirty brown, and the back black. It had evidently never been whitewashed. There was a bed of about a week’s ashes, and above it, suspended by a blackened hook and chain from a grimy cross-bar, hung a black bucket full of warm water. The man got a fork, explored the bucket, and found what he expected — a piece of raw corned-beef in water, which had gone off the boil before the meat had been heated through

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

NEW Year’s Eve! A hot night in midsummer in the drought. It was so dark — with a smOthering darkness — that even the low loom of the scrub- covered ridges, close at hand across the creek, was not to be seen. The sky was not clouded for rain, but with drought haze and the smoke of distant bush fires. Down the hard road to the crossing at Pipeclay Creek sounded the footsteps of a man. Not the crunching steps of an English labourer, clod-hopping contentedly home; these sounded more like the footsteps of one pacing steadily to and fro, and thinking steadily and hopelessly — sorting out the past. Only the steps went on. A glimmer of white moleskin trousers and a suggestion of light-coloured tweed jacket, now and again, as if in the glimmer of a faint ghost light in the darkness. The road ran along by the foot of a line of low ridges or spurs, and, as he passed the gullies or gaps, he felt a breath of hotter air, like blasts from a furnace in the suffocating atmosphere. He followed a two-railed fence for a short distance, and turned in at a white batten gate. It seemed lighter now. There was a house, or, rather, a hut suggested, with whitewashed slab walls and a bark roof. He walked quietly round to the door of a detached kitchen, opened it softly, went in and struck a match. A candle stood, stuck in a blot of its own grease, on one end of the dresser. He lit the candle and looked round. The walls of the kitchen were of split slabs, the roof box-bark, the floor clay, and there was a large clay-lined fireplace, the sides a dirty brown, and the back black. It had evidently never been whitewashed. There was a bed of about a week’s ashes, and above it, suspended by a blackened hook and chain from a grimy cross-bar, hung a black bucket full of warm water. The man got a fork, explored the bucket, and found what he expected — a piece of raw corned-beef in water, which had gone off the boil before the meat had been heated through

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book On Hemorrhoids by Anonymous
Cover of the book Hildebrand, or, The Days of Queen Elizabeth: An Historic Romance (Complete) by Anonymous
Cover of the book Histoire de la prostitution chez tous les peuples du monde depuis l'antiquité la plus reculée jusqu'à nos jours, tome IV of VI by Anonymous
Cover of the book The Underground World: A Mirror of Life Below the Surface by Anonymous
Cover of the book Luiz de Camões: notas biograficas: Prefacio da setima edição do Camões de Garrett by Anonymous
Cover of the book Mr. John Stuart Mill and the Ballot: A Criticism of His Opinions As Expressed In Thoughts On Parliamentary Reform by Anonymous
Cover of the book Drums and Shadows: Survival Studies Among The Georgia Coastal Negroes by Anonymous
Cover of the book Thomas Jefferson Brown by Anonymous
Cover of the book The Solitary Farm by Anonymous
Cover of the book Italian Letters: The History of the Count de St. Julian by Anonymous
Cover of the book The Extant Works and Fragments of Hippolytus by Anonymous
Cover of the book Consumers' Cooperative Societies in New York State by Anonymous
Cover of the book The Lost Middy: Being the Secret of the Smugglers' Gap by Anonymous
Cover of the book Our Navy in the War by Anonymous
Cover of the book Some Pioneers and Pilgrims on The Prairies of Dakota Or, From The Ox Team to The Aeroplane by Anonymous
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy