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قراءة كتاب Where the Pavement Ends
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WHERE THE PAVEMENT ENDS
BY
JOHN RUSSELL
AUTHOR OF
IN DARK PLACES, Etc.
"The leaf was darkish, and had prickles on it,
But in another country, as he said,
Bore a bright golden flow'r...."
Comus
PUBLISHERS
GROSSET & DUNLAP
NEW YORK
Made in the United States of America
COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY JOHN RUSSELL
Published, October, 1919
PublishedSecond Printing, September, 1921
PublishedThird Printing, March, 1922
PublishedFourth Printing, November, 1922
PublishedFifth Printing, April, 1923
PublishedSixth Printing, August, 1923
English Edition Published May 1921
London, Thornton Butterworth Ltd.
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
To
CARL BRANDT
CONTENTS
The Fourth Man | 9 |
The Lost God | 33 |
The Passion Vine | 59 |
The Price of the Head | 91 |
The Slanted Beam | 106 |
The Red Mark | 121 |
East of Eastward | 162 |
Jetsam | 183 |
The Adversary | 206 |
Meaning—Chase Yourself | 221 |
The Wicks of Macassar | 239 |
Doubloon Gold | 253 |
The Practicing of Christopher | 284 |
Amok | 308 |
THE FOURTH MAN
The raft might have been taken for a swath of cut sedge or a drifting tangle of roots as it slid out of the shadowy river mouth at dawn and dipped into the first ground swell. But while the sky brightened and the breeze came fresh offshore it picked a way among shoals and swampy islets with purpose and direction, and when at last the sun leaped up and cleared his bright eye of the morning mist it had passed the wide entrance to the bay and stood to open sea.
It was a curious craft for such a venture, of a type that survives here and there in the obscure corners of the world. The coracle maker would have scorned it. The first navigating pithecanthrope built nearly as well with his log and bush. A mat of pandanus leaves served for its sail and a paddle of niaouli wood for its helm. But it had a single point of real seaworthiness. Its twin floats, paired as a catamaran, were woven of reed bundles and bamboo sticks upon triple rows of bladders. It was light as a bladder itself, elastic, fit to ride any weather. One other quality this raft possessed which recommended it beyond all comfort and all safety to its present crew. It was very nearly invisible. They had only to unstep its mast and lie flat in the cup of its soggy platform and they could not be spied half a mile away.
Four men occupied the raft. Three of them were white. Their bodies had been scored with brambles and blackened with dried blood, and on wrist and ankle they bore the dark and wrinkled stain of the gyves. The hair upon them was long and matted. They wore only the rags of blue canvas uniforms. But they were whites, members of the superior race—members of a highly superior race according to those philosophers who rate the criminal aberration as a form of genius.
The fourth was the man who had built the raft and was now sailing it. There was nothing superior about him. His skin was a layer of soot. His prognathous jaw carried out the angle of a low forehead. No line of beauty redeemed his lean limbs and knobby joints. Nature had set upon him her plainest stamp of inferiority, and his only attempts to relieve it were the twist of bark about his middle and the prong of pig ivory through the cartilage of his nose. Altogether a very ordinary specimen of one of the lowest branches of the human family—the Canaques of New Caledonia.
The three whites sat together well forward, and so they had sat in silence for hours. But at sunrise, as if some spell had been raised by the clang of that great copper gong in the east, they stirred and breathed