A Passage to India E. M. Forster (best ereader manga TXT) đ
- Author: E. M. Forster
Book online «A Passage to India E. M. Forster (best ereader manga TXT) đ». Author E. M. Forster
They gained Ronnyâs private room, where a group of their own sort had collected. None were cowardly, all nervy, for queer reports kept coming in. The Sweepers had just struck, and half the commodes of Chandrapore remained desolate in consequenceâ âonly half, and Sweepers from the District, who felt less strongly about the innocence of Dr. Aziz, would arrive in the afternoon, and break the strike, but why should the grotesque incident occur? And a number of Mohammedan ladies had sworn to take no food until the prisoner was acquitted; their death would make little difference, indeed, being invisible, they seemed dead already, nevertheless it was disquieting. A new spirit seemed abroad, a rearrangement, which no one in the stern little band of whites could explain. There was a tendency to see Fielding at the back of it: the idea that he was weak and cranky had been dropped. They abused Fielding vigorously: he had been seen driving up with the two counsels, Amritrao and Mahmoud Ali; he encouraged the Boy Scout movement for seditious reasons; he received letters with foreign stamps on them, and was probably a Japanese spy. This morningâs verdict would break the renegade, but he had done his country and the Empire incalculable disservice. While they denounced him, Miss Quested lay back with her hands on the arms of her chair and her eyes closed, reserving her strength. They noticed her after a time, and felt ashamed of making so much noise.
âCan we do nothing for you?â Miss Derek said.
âI donât think so, Nancy, and I seem able to do nothing for myself.â
âBut youâre strictly forbidden to talk like that; youâre wonderful.â
âYes indeed,â came the reverent chorus.
âMy old Das is all right,â said Ronny, starting a new subject in low tones.
âNot one of themâs all right,â contradicted Major Callendar.
âDas is, really.â
âYou mean heâs more frightened of acquitting than convicting, because if he acquits heâll lose his job,â said Lesley with a clever little laugh.
Ronny did mean that, but he cherished âillusionsâ about his own subordinates (following the finer traditions of his service here), and he liked to maintain that his old Das really did possess moral courage of the Public School brand. He pointed out thatâ âfrom one point of viewâ âit was good that an Indian was taking the case. Conviction was inevitable; so better let an Indian pronounce it, there would be less fuss in the long run. Interested in the argument, he let Adela become dim in his mind.
âIn fact, you disapprove of the appeal I forwarded to Lady Mellanby,â said Mrs. Turton with considerable heat. âPray donât apologize, Mr. Heaslop; I am accustomed to being in the wrong.â
âI didnât mean thatâ ââ âŠâ
âAll right. I said donât apologize.â
âThose swine are always on the lookout for a grievance,â said Lesley, to propitiate her.
âSwine, I should think so,â the Major echoed. âAnd whatâs more, Iâll tell you what. Whatâs happened is a damn good thing really, barring of course its application to present company. Itâll make them squeal and itâs time they did squeal. Iâve put the fear of God into them at the hospital anyhow. You should see the grandson of our so-called leading loyalist.â He tittered brutally as he described poor Nureddinâs present appearance.
âHis beautyâs gone, five upper teeth, two lower and a nostril.â ââ ⊠Old Panna Lal brought him the looking-glass yesterday and he blubbered.â ââ ⊠I laughed; I laughed, I tell you, and so would you; that used to be one of these buck niggers, I thought, now heâs all septic; damn him, blast his soulâ âerâ âI believe he was unspeakably immoralâ âerâ ââ He subsided, nudged in the ribs, but added, âI wish Iâd had the cutting up of my late assistant too; nothingâs too bad for these people.â
âAt last some sense is being talked,â Mrs. Turton cried, much to her husbandâs discomfort.
âThatâs what I say; I say thereâs not such a thing as cruelty after a thing like this.â
âExactly, and remember it afterwards, you men. Youâre weak, weak, weak. Why, they ought to crawl from here to the caves on their hands and knees whenever an Englishwomanâs in sight, they oughtnât to be spoken to, they ought to be spat at, they ought to be ground into the dust, weâve been far too kind with our Bridge Parties and the rest.â
She paused. Profiting by her wrath, the heat had invaded her. She subsided into a lemon squash, and continued between the sips to murmur, âWeak, weak.â And the process was repeated. The issues Miss Quested had raised
Comments (0)