The Sa'-Zada Tales

Published by CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS

By W. A. FRASER Illustrated by ARTHUR HEMING
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS NEW YORK ... MDCCCCV
Copyright, 1905, by Charles Scribner's Sons Published September, 1905 J. F. Tapley Co. New York


From Drawings by Arthur Heming

All his life Sa'-zada the Keeper had lived with animals. That was why he could talk to them, and they to him; that was why he knew that something must be done to keep his animal friends from fretting themselves to death during the dreadful heat that came like a disease over their part of the Greater City.
In the Greater City itself the sun smote with a fierceness that was like the anger of evil gods. The air vibrated with palpitating white heat, and the shadows were as the blue flame of a forge. Men and women stole from ovened streets, wide-mouthed, to places where trees swayed and waters babbled feebly of a cooler rest; even the children were sent away that they might not die of fevered blood.
But in the Animal City there was no escape. The Dwellers from distant deep jungles and tall forests had only blistering iron bars between them and the sirocco that swept from the brick walls of the Greater City.

William Alexander Fraser
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2011-12-13

Темы

Animals -- Juvenile fiction

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