FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42  
43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   >>  
that the gold does go down. COLONEL. [Smiling.] Oh! a personal opinion a matter of this sort! LEVER. [As though about to take the papers.] Perhaps we'd better close the sitting, sir; sorry to have bored you. COLONEL. Now, now! Don't be so touchy! If I'm to put money in, I'm bound to look at it all round. LEVER. [With lifted brows.] Please don't imagine that I want you to put money in. COLONEL. Confound it, sir! D 'you suppose I take you for a Company promoter? LEVER. Thank you! COLONEL. [Looking at him doubtfully.] You've got Irish blood in you--um? You're so hasty! LEVER. If you 're really thinking of taking shares--my advice to you is, don't! COLONEL. [Regretfully.] If this were an ordinary gold mine, I wouldn't dream of looking at it, I want you to understand that. Nobody has a greater objection to gold mines than I. LEVER. [Looks down at his host with half-closed eyes.] But it is a gold mine, Colonel Hope. COLONEL. I know, I know; but I 've been into it for myself; I've formed my opinion personally. Now, what 's the reason you don't want me to invest? LEVER. Well, if it doesn't turn out as you expect, you'll say it's my doing. I know what investors are. COLONEL. [Dubiously.] If it were a Westralian or a Kaffir I would n't touch it with a pair of tongs! It 's not as if I were going to put much in! [He suddenly bends above the papers as though magnetically attracted.] I like these Triassic formations! [DICK, who has hung the last lantern, moodily departs.] LEVER. [Looking after him.] That young man seems depressed. COLONEL. [As though remembering his principles.] I don't like mines, never have! [Suddenly absorbed again.] I tell you what, Lever--this thing's got tremendous possibilities. You don't seem to believe in it enough. No mine's any good without faith; until I see for myself, however, I shan't commit myself beyond a thousand. LEVER. Are you serious, sir? COLONEL. Certainly! I've been thinking it over ever since you told me Henty had fought shy. I 've a poor opinion of Henty. He's one of those fellows that says one thing and does another. An opportunist! LEVER. [Slowly.] I'm afraid we're all that, more or less. [He sits beneath the hollow tree.] COLONEL. A man never knows what he is himself. There 's my wife. She thinks she 's----By the way, don't say anything to her about this, please. And, Lever [nervously],
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42  
43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   >>  



Top keywords:
COLONEL
 

opinion

 
Looking
 

thinking

 
papers
 
formations
 
commit
 

Triassic

 

possibilities

 

tremendous


lantern

 

depressed

 

remembering

 

moodily

 

departs

 

principles

 

matter

 

absorbed

 

Suddenly

 

beneath


hollow

 

nervously

 

thinks

 

afraid

 
personal
 
fought
 

Certainly

 

opportunist

 

Slowly

 

Smiling


fellows

 
thousand
 
ordinary
 

wouldn

 

Regretfully

 

advice

 

understand

 

Nobody

 

greater

 
objection

shares
 
taking
 

suppose

 

Company

 
promoter
 

Confound

 

imagine

 

lifted

 

touchy

 
doubtfully