A Rent In A Cloud
OUT of a window of the Weissen Ross, at Coblentz, looking upon the rapid Rhine, over whose circling eddies a rich sunset shed a golden tint, two young Englishmen lounged and smoked their cigars; rarely speaking, and, to all seeming, wearing that air of boredom which, strangely enough, would appear peculiar to a very enjoyable time of life. They were acquaintances of only a few days. They had met on an Antwerp steamer—rejoined each other in a picture-gallery—chanced to be side by side at a table d’hôte at Brussels, and, at last, drifted into one of those intimacies which, to very young men, represents friendship. They agreed they would travel together, all the more readily that neither cared very much in what direction. “As for me,” said Calvert, “it doesn’t much signify where I pass the interval; but, in October, I must return to India and join my regiment.”
“And I,” said Loyd, “about the same time must be in England. I have just been called to the bar.”
“Slow work that must be, I take it.”
“Do you like soldiering?” asked Loyd, in a low quiet voice.
“Hate it! abhor it! It’s all very well when you join first You are so glad to be free of Woolwich or Sandhurst, or wherever it is. You are eager to be treated like a man, and so full of Cox and Greenwood, and the army tailor, and your camp furniture, and then comes the dépôt and the mess. One’s first three months at mess seemed to be the cream of existence.”
“Is it really so jolly? Are the fellows good talkers?”
“About the worst in the universe; but to a young hand, they are enchantment All their discourse is of something to be enjoyed. It is that foot-race, that game of billiards, that match at cricket, that stunning fine girl to ride out with, those excellent cigars Watkins is sending us; and so on. All is action, and very pleasant action too. Then duty, though it’s the habit to revile and curse it, duty is associated with a sense of manhood; a sort of goosestep chivalry to be sure, but still chivalry. One likes to see the sergeant with his orderly book, and to read, ‘Ensign Calvert for the main guard.’”
Charles James Lever
A RENT IN A CLOUD
CHAPTER I. THE WHITE HORSE AT COBLENTZ
CHAPTER II. THE PASSENGERS ON THE STEAMBOAT.
CHAPTER III. FELLOW-TRAVELLERS’ LIFE
CHAPTER IV. THE “LAGO D’ORTA.”
CHAPTER V. OLD MEMORIES.
CHAPTER VI. SOPHY’S LETTER.
CHAPTER VII. DISSENSION.
CHAPTER VIII. GROWING DARKER
CHAPTER IX. ON THE ROAD
CHAPTER X. A DAYBREAK BESIDE THE RHINE.
CHAPTER XI. THE LIFE AT THE VILLA.
CHAPTER XII. DARKER AND DARKER.
CHAPTER XIII. AGAIN TO MILAN.
CHAPTER XIV. THE LAST WALK IN THE GARDEN.
CHAPTER XV. SISTERS’ CONFIDENCES.
CHAPTER XVI. A LOVERS’ QUARREL
CHAPTER XVII. PARTING SORROWS.
CHAPTER XVIII. TIDINGS FROM BENGAL.
CHAPTER XIX. A SHOCK.
CHAPTER XX. AGAIN AT ORTA.
CHAPTER XXI. THE RETURN.
CHAPTER XXII. A LETTER OF CONFESSIONS.
CHAPTER XXIII. A STORM.
CHAPTER XXIV. THE LAST AND THE SHORTEST