the adventures of gerard(吉拉德历险记)-第50节
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the sea。 The third time a great wave filled it and stove the bottom。
Helplessly we waited beside it until the dawn broke; to show a raging sea
and a flying scud above it。 There was no sign of the Black Swan。
Climbing the hill we looked down; but on all the great torn expanse of the
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THE ADVENTURES OF GERARD
ocean there was no gleam of a sail。 She was gone。 Whether she had
sunk; or whether she was recaptured by her English crew; or what strange
fate may have been in store for her; I do not know。 Never again in this
life did I see Captain Fourneau to tell him the result of my mission。 For
my own part I gave myself up to the English; my boatman and I
pretending that we were the only survivors of a lost vesselthough; indeed;
there was no pretence in the matter。 At the hands of their officers I
received that generous hospitality which I have always encountered; but it
was many a long month before I could get a passage back to the dear land
outside of which there can be no happiness for so true a Frenchman as
myself。
And so I tell you in one evening how I bade good…bye to my master;
and I take my leave also of you; my kind friends; who have listened so
patiently to the long… winded stories of an old broken soldier。 Russia;
Italy; Germany; Spain; Portugal; and England; you have gone with me to
all these countries; and you have seen through my dim eyes something of
the sparkle and splendour of those great days; and I have brought back to
you some shadow of those men whose tread shook the earth。 Treasure it
in your minds and pass it on to your children; for the memory of a great
age is the most precious treasure that a nation can possess。 As the tree is
nurtured by its own cast leaves so it is these dead men and vanished days
which may bring out another blossoming of heroes; of rulers; and of sages。
I go to Gascony; but my words stay here in your memory; and long after
Etienne Gerard is forgotten a heart may be warmed or a spirit braced by
some faint echo of the words that he has spoken。 Gentlemen; an old
soldier salutes you and bids you farewell。
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