The Hell Rides Of Sindbad, the Beatified

Fiction & Literature, Short Stories
Cover of the book The Hell Rides Of Sindbad, the Beatified by Gabor Szappanos, Peter Ortutay
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Gabor Szappanos ISBN: 6610000164585
Publisher: Peter Ortutay Publication: March 24, 2019
Imprint: Peter Ortutay Language: English
Author: Gabor Szappanos
ISBN: 6610000164585
Publisher: Peter Ortutay
Publication: March 24, 2019
Imprint: Peter Ortutay
Language: English

So after having consumed two large stuffed cabbages and six small semi-dry greenish white wine spritzers, his favorite, Sindbad leaned back comfortably on the davenport in the only guest room of the inn to die. He put his legs on the ledge and tucked soft pillows under his head. The pub was not accidentally named Deep Cellar because just now the guest room was under the water level of the Danube: on the other side of the carefully closed double window looking at the little court Sindbad saw curious small fries, carps, horn-fish, tench, burbot, common rudd gathering to the light that filtered through the window of Sindbad’s room. As he was observing the fish from beneath his tired eyelashes he had the river in mind and thought of how much it meant to him. It was this old lazy lecher that taught him to lie. The sailor was always favorably inclined to wooing on the bank of the river – once he was able to kiss even a woman philosopher with black teeth above the black water in a hot and motionless summer night in June in the false light of the yellow gas lamps because he did not want to let out anybody of his love that he felt towards the whole world, i.e. all the women. Lies resurged more easily from him by the river because the treacherous waves showed him a bad example: they came and went, unperceived, as if being absent but were really present all the time. Sindbad was also an old Danube, and his lies were like its tattle waves… He loved the river most when it was so silently, almost imperceptibly clacking under his feet as he was walking, absorbed in his thoughts, on the quayside in unmovable summer nights alone or with some ladyship arm in arm – respectively he took to the river when it became wild and ran over its banks; in such case Sindbad was simply so electrified by the fight for survival as by whirling storms or blizzards. In such case he felt as an unworthy bachelor, still heated by a lascivious flush, who got accidentally on Noah’s bark…

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

So after having consumed two large stuffed cabbages and six small semi-dry greenish white wine spritzers, his favorite, Sindbad leaned back comfortably on the davenport in the only guest room of the inn to die. He put his legs on the ledge and tucked soft pillows under his head. The pub was not accidentally named Deep Cellar because just now the guest room was under the water level of the Danube: on the other side of the carefully closed double window looking at the little court Sindbad saw curious small fries, carps, horn-fish, tench, burbot, common rudd gathering to the light that filtered through the window of Sindbad’s room. As he was observing the fish from beneath his tired eyelashes he had the river in mind and thought of how much it meant to him. It was this old lazy lecher that taught him to lie. The sailor was always favorably inclined to wooing on the bank of the river – once he was able to kiss even a woman philosopher with black teeth above the black water in a hot and motionless summer night in June in the false light of the yellow gas lamps because he did not want to let out anybody of his love that he felt towards the whole world, i.e. all the women. Lies resurged more easily from him by the river because the treacherous waves showed him a bad example: they came and went, unperceived, as if being absent but were really present all the time. Sindbad was also an old Danube, and his lies were like its tattle waves… He loved the river most when it was so silently, almost imperceptibly clacking under his feet as he was walking, absorbed in his thoughts, on the quayside in unmovable summer nights alone or with some ladyship arm in arm – respectively he took to the river when it became wild and ran over its banks; in such case Sindbad was simply so electrified by the fight for survival as by whirling storms or blizzards. In such case he felt as an unworthy bachelor, still heated by a lascivious flush, who got accidentally on Noah’s bark…

More books from Short Stories

Cover of the book For the Love of Thomas Chase and Other Horror Stories by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book L'uomo che era morto by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book Under Oak Island by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book The Lord Dunsany Collection by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book O Natal de Sherry by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book Racconti Palindromi by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book THE BAITÂL PACHCHISI by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book La calda estate di Linda by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book Boys And Bullies by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book The Rabbi in the Attic by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book The Little Book of Stories by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book Celeste by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book Louisa Pallant by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book Cuentos de la selva by Gabor Szappanos
Cover of the book Follies by Gabor Szappanos
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