The Lost Heir
THE MERSHON COMPANY RAHWAY, N. J. NEW YORK
A number of soldiers were standing in the road near the bungalow of Brigadier-General Mathieson, the officer in command of the force in the cantonments of Benares and the surrounding district.
They are coming now, I think, one sergeant said to another. It is a bad business. They say the General is terribly hurt, and it was thought better to bring him and the other fellow who was mixed up in it down in doolies. I heard Captain Harvey say in the orderly-room that they have arranged relays of bearers every five miles all the way down. He is a good fellow is the General, and we should all miss him. He is not one of the sort who has everything comfortable himself and don't care a rap how the soldiers get on: he sees to the comfort of everyone and spends his money freely, too. He don't seem to care what he lays out in making the quarters of the married men comfortable, and in getting any amount of ice for the hospital, and extra punkawallahs in the barrack rooms during the hot season. He goes out and sees to everything himself. Why, on the march I have known him, when all the doolies were full, give up his own horse to a man who had fallen out. He has had bad luck too; lost his wife years ago by cholera, and he has got no one to care for but his girl. She was only a few months old when her mother died. Of course she was sent off to England, and has been there ever since. He must be a rich man, besides his pay and allowances; but it aint every rich man who spends his money as he does. There won't be a dry eye in the cantonment if he goes under.
How was it the other man got hurt?
Well, I hear that the tiger sprang on to the General's elephant and seized him by the leg. They both went off together, and the brute shifted its hold to the shoulder, and carried him into the jungle; then the other fellow slipped off his elephant and ran after the tiger. He got badly mauled too; but he killed the brute and saved the General's life.
G. A. Henty
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THE LOST HEIR
AUTHOR OF "STURDY AND STRONG," "RUJUB, THE JUGGLER," "BY ENGLAND'S AID," ETC., ETC.
CONTENTS.
THE LOST HEIR.
A BRAVE ACTION.
IN THE SOUTH SEAS.
A DEAF GIRL.
THE GYPSY.
A GAMBLING DEN.
"YOU DON'T REMEMBER ME, GENERAL?"
JOHN SIMCOE.
JOHN SIMCOE'S FRIEND.
GENERAL MATHIESON'S SEIZURE.
A STRANGE ILLNESS.
TWO HEAVY BLOWS.
THE NURSE WAS SITTING ON A CHAIR, SOBBING BITTERLY.
A STARTLING WILL.
DR. LEEDS SPEAKS.
NETTA VISITS STOWMARKET.
AN ADVERTISEMENT.
VERY BAD NEWS.
A FRESH CLEW.
NETTA ACTS INDEPENDENTLY.
DOWN IN THE MARSHES.
A PARTIAL SUCCESS.
A DINNER PARTY.
A BOX AT THE OPERA.
NEARING THE GOAL.
WALTER.
"I AM A MAGISTRATE OF THE COUNTY OF ESSEX."
A NEW BARGE.
A CRUSHING EXPOSURE.
A LETTER FROM ABROAD.
THE END.
THE FAMOUS HENTY BOOKS
The Boys' Own library
FLAG OF FREEDOM SERIES
Язык
Английский
Год издания
2011-08-05
Темы
Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction; England -- Fiction; Children -- Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction; Kidnapping -- Juvenile fiction; Adventure and adventurers -- Juvenile fiction; Voyages and travels -- Juvenile fiction; Nurses -- Juvenile fiction; Inheritance and succession -- Juvenile fiction; Diligence -- Juvenile fiction; Success -- Juvenile fiction; Courage -- Juvenile fiction; Murder -- Juvenile fiction; India -- Juvenile fiction; War -- Juvenile fiction; Wills -- Juvenile fiction; Impostors and imposture -- Juvenile fiction; Forgers -- Juvenile fiction; Youth -- Juvenile fiction