Flower o' the Peach - Perceval Gibbon

Flower o' the Peach

FLOWER O' THE PEACH
PERCEVAL GIBBON
Flower o' the peach, Death for us all and his own life for each. Fra Lippo Lippi .
NEW YORK THE CENTURY CO. 1911
Copyright, 1911, by THE CENTURY CO.
Published, October, 1911
TO JESSIE AND JOSEPH CONRAD
FLOWER O' THE PEACH
CHAPTER I
It was late in the afternoon when the sheep moved off, and the west was full of the sunset. They flowed out from the cactus-ringed fold like a broadening trickle of milk, with their mild idiot faces set southwards towards the sparse pastures beyond the horizon, and the dust from their feet hung over them in a haze of soft bronze. Half-way along the path between the house and the dam, Paul turned to watch their departure, dwelling with parted lips on the picture they made as they drifted forth to join themselves with earth and sky in a single mellowness of hue.
The little farmhouse with its outbuildings, and the one other house that reared its steep roof within eyeshot of the farm, were behind him as he stood; nothing interrupted the suave level of the miles stretching forth, like a sluggish sea, to the sky-line. In its sunset mood, its barren brown, the universal tint into which its poor scrub faded and was lost to the eye, was touched to warmth and softened; it was a wilderness with a soul. The tall boy, who knew it in all its aspects for a neighbor, stood gazing absorbed as the sheep came to a pause, with the lean, smooth-coated dog at their heels, and waited for the shepherd who was to drive them through the night. He was nearing seventeen years of age, and the whole of those years had been spent on the Karoo, in the native land of dreams. The glamour of it was on his face, where the soft childish curves were not yet broken into angles, and in his gaze, as his steady unconscious eyes pored on the distance, deep with foreknowledge of the coming of the night.
Baas!

Perceval Gibbon
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2013-11-16

Темы

South Africa -- Fiction; Race relations -- Fiction

Reload 🗙