Ensign Knightley

A. E. W. Mason
Ensign Knightley and Other
Stories

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A. E. W. Mason
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Title: Ensign Knightley and Other Stories
Author: A. E. W. Mason
Release Date: July 9, 2004 [eBook #12859]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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KNIGHTLEY AND OTHER STORIES***
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ENSIGN KNIGHTLEY AND OTHER STORIES
By
A. E. W. MASON
Author of "The Courtship of Morrice Buckler," "The Watchers,"
"Parson Kelly," etc.
1901

CONTENTS.
ENSIGN KNIGHTLEY THE MAN OF WHEELS MR.
MITCHELBOURNE'S LAST ESCAPADE THE COWARD THE
DESERTER THE CROSSED GLOVES THE SHUTTERED HOUSE

KEEPER OF THE BISHOP THE CRUISE OF THE "WILLING
MIND" HOW BARRINGTON RETURNED TO JOHANNESBURG
HATTERAS THE PRINCESS JOCELIANDE A LIBERAL
EDUCATION THE TWENTY-KRONER STORY THE FIFTH
PICTURE

ENSIGN KNIGHTLEY.
It was eleven o'clock at night when Surgeon Wyley of His Majesty's
ship Bonetta washed his hands, drew on his coat, and walked from the
hospital up the narrow cobbled street of Tangier to the Main-Guard by
the Catherine Port. In the upper room of the Main-Guard he found
Major Shackleton of the Tangier Foot taking a hand at bassette with
Lieutenant Scrope of Trelawney's Regiment and young Captain Tessin
of the King's Battalion. There were three other officers in the room, and
to them Surgeon Wyley began to talk in a prosy, medical strain. Two of
his audience listened in an uninterested stolidity for just so long as the
remnant of manners, which still survived in Tangier, commanded, and
then strolling through the open window on to the balcony, lit their
pipes.
Overhead the stars blazed in the rich sky of Morocco; the riding-lights
of Admiral Herbert's fleet sprinkled the bay; and below them rose the
hum of an unquiet town. It was the night of May 13th, 1680, and the
life of every Christian in Tangier hung in the balance. The Moors had
burst through the outposts to the west, and were now entrenched
beneath the walls. The Henrietta Redoubt had fallen that day;
to-morrow the little fort at Devil's Drop, built on the edge of the sand
where the sea rippled up to the palisades, must fall; and Charles Fort, to
the southwest, was hardly in a better case. However, a sortie had been
commanded at daybreak as a last effort to relieve Charles Fort, and the
two officers on the balcony speculated over their pipes on the chances
of success.
Meanwhile, inside the room Surgeon Wyley lectured to his remaining
auditor, who, too tired to remonstrate, tilted his chair against the wall
and dozed.
"A concussion of the brain," Wyley went on, "has this curious effect,
that after recovery the patient will have lost from his consciousness a
period of time which immediately preceded the injury. Thus a man may

walk down a street here in Tangier; four, five, six hours afterwards, he
mounts his horse, is thrown on to his head. When he wakes again to his
senses, the last thing he remembers is--what? A sign, perhaps, over a
shop in the street he walked down, or a leper pestering him for alms.
The intervening hours are lost to him, and forever. It is no question of
an abeyance of memory. There is a gap in the continuity of his
experience, and that gap he will never fill up."
"Except by hearsay?"
The correction came from Lieutenant Scrope at the bassette table. It
was quite carelessly uttered while the Lieutenant was picking up his
cards. Surgeon Wyley shifted his chair towards the table, and accepted
the correction.
"Except, of course, by hearsay."
Wyley was a new-comer to Tangier, having sailed into the bay less than
a week back; but he had been long enough in the town to find in Scrope
a subject at once of interest and perplexity. Scrope was in years nearer
forty than thirty, dark of complexion, aquiline of feature, and though a
trifle below the middle height he redeemed his stature by the litheness
of his figure. What interested Wyley was that he seemed a man in
whom strong passions were always desperately at war with a strong
will. He wore habitually a mask of reserve; behind it, Wyley was aware
of sleeping fires. He spoke habitually in a quiet, decided voice, like one
that has the soundings of his nature; beneath it, Wyley detected,
continually recurring, continually subdued, a note of turbulence. Here,
in a word, was a man whose hand was against the world
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