Page:Kim - Rudyard Kipling (1912).djvu/360

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CHAPTER XV

I'd not give room for an Emperor—
    I'd hold my road for a King.
To the Triple Crown I'd not bow down—
    But this is a different thing!
I'll not fight with the Powers of Air—
    Sentries pass him through!
Drawbridge let fall—He's the Lord of us all—
    The Dreamer whose dream came true!

The Siege of the Fairies.

Two hundred miles north of Chini, on the blue shade of Ladahk, lies Yankling Sahib, a merry-minded man, spy-glassing wrathfully across the ridges for some sign of his pet tracker—a man from Ao-chung. But that renegade, with a new Mannlicher rifle and two hundred cartridges, is elsewhere, shooting musk-deer for the market, and Yankling Sahib will learn next season how very ill he has been.

Up the valleys of Bushahr—the far beholding eagles of the Himalayas swerve at his new blue-and-white gored umbrella—hurries a Bengali, once fat and well-looking, now lean and weather-worn. He has received the thanks of two foreigners of distinction, whom he has piloted not unskilfully to Mashobra tunnel which leads to the great and gay capital of India. It was not his fault that, blanketed by wet mists, he conveyed them past the telegraph station and European colony of Kotgarh. It was not his fault, but that of the Gods, of whom he discoursed so engagingly, that he led them into the borders of Nahan, where the Rajah of

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