Short Fiction H. G. Wells (classic books for 7th graders TXT) š
- Author: H. G. Wells
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So he went back and watched through the long hours at the bottom of the shaft where the evil spirit lay in the stolen body it had maimed, writhing and cursing, and weeping and groaning, and learning the lesson of pain. And towards dawn the thing he had waited for happened, the brain glowed brightly and the evil spirit came out, and Mr. Bessel entered the body he had feared he should never enter again. As he did so, the silenceā āthe brooding silenceā āended; he heard the tumult of traffic and the voices of people overhead, and that strange world that is the shadow of our worldā āthe dark and silent shadows of ineffectual desire and the shadows of lost menā āvanished clean away.
He lay there for the space of about three hours before he was found. And in spite of the pain and suffering of his wounds, and of the dim damp place in which he lay; in spite of the tearsā āwrung from him by his physical distressā āhis heart was full of gladness to know that he was nevertheless back once more in the kindly world of men.
Jimmy Goggles the GodāIt isnāt everyone whoās been a god,ā said the sunburnt man. āBut itās happened to meā āamong other things.ā
I intimated my sense of his condescension.
āIt donāt leave much for ambition, does it?ā said the sunburnt man.
āI was one of those men who were saved from the Ocean Pioneer. Gummy! how time flies! Itās twenty years ago. I doubt if youāll remember anything of the Ocean Pioneer?ā
The name was familiar, and I tried to recall when and where I had read it. The Ocean Pioneer? āSomething about gold dust,ā I said vaguely, ābut the preciseā āā
āThatās it,ā he said. āIn a beastly little channel she hadnāt no business inā ādodging pirates. It was before theyād put the kybosh on that business. And thereād been volcanoes or something and all the rocks was wrong. Thereās places about by Soona where you fair have to follow the rocks about to see where theyāre going next. Down she went in twenty fathoms before you could have dealt for whist, with fifty thousand pounds worth of gold aboard, it was said, in one form or another.ā
āSurvivors?ā
āThree.ā
āI remember the case now,ā I said. āThere was something about salvageā āā
But at the word salvage the sunburnt man exploded into language so extraordinarily horrible that I stopped aghast. He came down to more ordinary swearing, and pulled himself up abruptly. āExcuse me,ā he said, ābutā āsalvage!ā
He leant over towards me. āI was in that job,ā he said. āTried to make myself a rich man, and got made a god instead. Iāve got my feelingsā ā
āIt aināt all jam being a god,ā said the sunburnt man, and for some time conversed by means of such pithy but unprogressive axioms. At last he took up his tale again.
āThere was me,ā said the sunburnt man, āand a seaman named Jacobs, and Always, the mate of the Ocean Pioneer. And him it was that set the whole thing going. I remember him now, when we was in the jolly-boat, suggesting it all to our minds just by one sentence. He was a wonderful hand at suggesting things. āThere was forty thousand pounds,ā he said, āon that ship, and itās for me to say just where she went down.ā It didnāt need much brains to tumble to that. And he was the leader from the first to the last. He got hold of the Sanderses and their brig; they were brothers, and the brig was the Pride of Banya, and he it was bought the diving dressā āa secondhand one with a compressed air apparatus instead of pumping. Heād have done the diving too, if it hadnāt made him sick going down. And the salvage people were mucking about with a chart heād cooked up, as solemn as could be, at Starr Race, a hundred and twenty miles away.
āI can tell you we was a happy lot aboard that brig, jokes and drink and bright hopes all the time. It all seemed so neat and clean and straightforward, and what rough chaps call a ācert.ā And we used to speculate how the other blessed lot, the proper salvagers, whoād started two days before us, were getting on, until our sides fairly ached. We all messed together in the Sandersesā cabinā āit was a curious crew, all officers and no menā āand there stood the diving-dress waiting its turn. Young Sanders was a humorous sort of chap, and there certainly was something funny in the confounded thingās great fat head and its stare, and he made us see it too. āJimmy Goggles,ā he used to call it, and talk to it like a Christian. Asked if he was married, and how Mrs. Goggles was, and all the little Goggleses. Fit to make you split. And every blessed day all of us used to drink the health of Jimmy Goggles in rum, and unscrew his eye and pour a glass of rum in him, until, instead of that nasty mackintosheriness, he smelt as nice in his inside as a cask of rum. It was jolly times we had in those days, I can tell youā ālittle suspecting, poor chaps! what was a-coming.
āWe werenāt going to throw away our chances by any blessed hurry, you know, and we spent a whole day sounding our way towards where the Ocean Pioneer had gone down, right between two chunks of ropy grey rockā ālava rocks that rose nearly out of the water. We had to lay off about half a mile to get a safe anchorage, and there was a thundering row who should stop on board. And there she lay just as she had gone down, so that you could see the top of the masts that was still standing perfectly distinctly. The row ended in all coming in the boat. I went down in the diving-dress on Friday morning directly it was
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