The Fire Trumpet: A Romance of the Cape Frontier

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book The Fire Trumpet: A Romance of the Cape Frontier by Bertram Mitford, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Bertram Mitford ISBN: 9781465621887
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Bertram Mitford
ISBN: 9781465621887
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English

One round, black speck high up yonder on the stony hillside. There he sits—the large old baboon; wary sentinel that he is, keeping jealous watch over the safety of the nimble troop under his charge, which, scattered about amid the bush, is feasting upon succulent roots and other vegetable provender afforded by its native wilds. And from his lofty perch he can descry something unwonted immediately beneath—danger possibly, intrusion at any rate—and he lifts up his voice: “Baugch-m! Baugch-m?” The sun blazes in a blue, cloudless sky, darting down his beams with a fierceness and vigour somewhat premature this lovely afternoon of an early South African spring day, and all nature is at rest in the drowsy stillness now broken by that loud, harsh cry. A cliff rears its perpendicular face from amid the bush-covered slopes, which, meeting at its base, form a triangular hollow. From the brow of the cliff rises a rugged steep, thickly grown with dark prickly aloes, whose bristling shapes, surmounted by bunches of red blossom, sprout upwards from the dry, stony soil. The tiniest thread of a streamlet trickles down the face of the rock, losing itself in a pool beneath, which reflects, as in a mirror, cliff, and overhanging bushes, and blue sky. A faint cattle track leading down to the water betokens that in a land of droughts and burning skies even this reservoir, remote and insignificant, is of account at times; but to-day here are no cattle. The long-drawn piping whistle of a spreuw (of the starling species) echoes now and again from the cool recesses of the rock; the hum of bees among the blossoming spekboem and mimosa; the twittering of the finks, whose pear-shaped pendulous nests sway to and fro over the water as the light-hearted birds fly in and out—all tell of solitude and of the peace of the wilderness. Here a big butterfly flits lightly on spotted wings above the flowering bushes; there, stalking solemnly among the stones, an armour-plated tortoise seems to be in rivalry with a horny and long-legged beetle as to which of them shall be the first to reach the other side of the small open space.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

One round, black speck high up yonder on the stony hillside. There he sits—the large old baboon; wary sentinel that he is, keeping jealous watch over the safety of the nimble troop under his charge, which, scattered about amid the bush, is feasting upon succulent roots and other vegetable provender afforded by its native wilds. And from his lofty perch he can descry something unwonted immediately beneath—danger possibly, intrusion at any rate—and he lifts up his voice: “Baugch-m! Baugch-m?” The sun blazes in a blue, cloudless sky, darting down his beams with a fierceness and vigour somewhat premature this lovely afternoon of an early South African spring day, and all nature is at rest in the drowsy stillness now broken by that loud, harsh cry. A cliff rears its perpendicular face from amid the bush-covered slopes, which, meeting at its base, form a triangular hollow. From the brow of the cliff rises a rugged steep, thickly grown with dark prickly aloes, whose bristling shapes, surmounted by bunches of red blossom, sprout upwards from the dry, stony soil. The tiniest thread of a streamlet trickles down the face of the rock, losing itself in a pool beneath, which reflects, as in a mirror, cliff, and overhanging bushes, and blue sky. A faint cattle track leading down to the water betokens that in a land of droughts and burning skies even this reservoir, remote and insignificant, is of account at times; but to-day here are no cattle. The long-drawn piping whistle of a spreuw (of the starling species) echoes now and again from the cool recesses of the rock; the hum of bees among the blossoming spekboem and mimosa; the twittering of the finks, whose pear-shaped pendulous nests sway to and fro over the water as the light-hearted birds fly in and out—all tell of solitude and of the peace of the wilderness. Here a big butterfly flits lightly on spotted wings above the flowering bushes; there, stalking solemnly among the stones, an armour-plated tortoise seems to be in rivalry with a horny and long-legged beetle as to which of them shall be the first to reach the other side of the small open space.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book May Iverson's Career by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book The Battle of Principles: A Study of the Heroism and Eloquence of the Anti-Slavery Conflict by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book Six Short Stories by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book Personal Recollections from Early Life to Old Age of Mary Somerville by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book Harding of Allenwood by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book In White Raiment by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book The Snowstorm by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book Prose Masterpieces from Modern Essayists by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book The Ballotless Victim of One-Party Government by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book Initiation Into Philosophy by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book The World's Greatest Books (Science) by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book Selected Short Stories of William Le Queux: A Move on the Forty, A Run With Rosalie, A Sentimental Swindle, The Six New Novels, and The Story of a Secret by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book On the Witness Stand: Essays on Psychology and Crime by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book A Rich Man's Relatives (Complete) by Bertram Mitford
Cover of the book The Crystal Ball: A Mystery Story for Girls by Bertram Mitford
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy