CHAPTER III. DON HYPOLITO XUAREZ. CHAPTER VI. THE SHRINE OF THE OPAL. CHAPTER VII. AN UNEXPECTED MEETING. CHAPTER VIII. AN INDIAN FESTIVAL. CHAPTER X. FORTUNE TURNS HER WHEEL. CHAPTER XI. AWAY TO THE FRONT. CHAPTER XII. A NAVAL ENGAGEMENT NEW STYLE. CHAPTER XIII. WITHOUT THE WALLS. A ROMANCE
BY FERGUS HUME Author of "The Island of Fantasy," "Aladdin in London," etc. Volume II Once a realm of Indian glory, Famed in Aztec song and story, Fabled by Tradition hoary As an earthly Paradise; Now a land of love romances, Serenades, bolero dances, Looks of scorn, adoring glances, Under burning tropic skies. LONDON WYMAN AND SONS, LIMITED, LONDON AND REDHILL. PROEM. The stone had its birth in the nurturing earth. Its home in the heart of the main, From the coraline caves it was tossed by the waves On the breast of an aureate plain; And the spirits who dwell in the nethermost hell Stored fire in its bosom of white; The sylphs of the air made it gracious and fair With the blue of the firmament's height. The dull gnomes I ween, gave it glittering sheen. Till yellow as gold it became: The nymphs of the sea made the opal to be A beacon of emerald flame. The many tints glow, they come and they go At bidding of spirits abhorr'd, When one ray is bright, in the bosom of white, Its hue tells the fate of its lord. For yellow hints wealth, and blue meaneth health, While green forbodes passing of gloom, But beware of the red, 'tis an omen of dread, Portending disaster and doom. |