In Kedars Tents

Henry Seton Merriman
In Kedar's Tents, by Henry Seton
Merriman

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Title: In Kedar's Tents
Author: Henry Seton Merriman

Release Date: June, 2004 [EBook #5987] [Yes, we are more than one
year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on October 8, 2002]
Edition: 10
Language: English
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, IN
KEDAR'S TENTS ***

Transcribed from the 1909 Smith, Elder and Co. edition by Les Bowler,
St. Ives, Dorset.

IN KEDAR'S TENTS by Henry Seton Merriman.

CONTENTS
CHAPTER I.
ONE SOWETH. II. ANOTHER REAPETH. III. LIKE SHIPS UPON
THE SEA. IV. LE PREMIER PAS. V. CONTRABAND. VI. AT
RONDA. VII. IN A MOORISH GARDEN. VIII. THE LOVE LETTER.
IX. A WAR OF WIT. X. THE CITY OF DISCONTENT. XI. A
TANGLED WEB. XII. ON THE TOLEDO ROAD. XIII. A WISE
IGNORAMUS. XIV. A WEIGHT OF EVIDENCE. XV. AN
ULTIMATUM. XVI. IN HONOUR. XVII. IN MADRID. XVIII. IN
TOLEDO. XIX. CONCEPCION TAKES THE ROAD. XX. ON THE
TALAVERA ROAD. XXI. A CROSS-EXAMINATION. XXII.
REPARATION. XXIII. LARRALDE'S PRICE. XXIV.
PRIESTCRAFT. XXV. SWORDCRAFT. XXVI. WOMANCRAFT.
XXVII. A NIGHT JOURNEY. XXVIII. THE CITY OF STRIFE.
XXIX. MIDNIGHT AND DAWN. XXX. THE DAWN OF PEACE.

CHAPTER I.
ONE SOWETH.

'If it be a duty to respect other men's claims, so also is it a duty to
maintain our own.'
It is in the staging of her comedies that fate shows herself superior to
mere human invention. While we, with careful regard to scenery, place
our conventional puppets on the stage and bid them play their old old
parts in a manner as ancient, she rings up the curtain and starts a
tragedy on a scene that has obviously been set by the carpenter for a
farce. She deals out the parts with a fine inconsistency, and the
jolly-faced little man is cast to play Romeo, while the poetic youth with
lantern jaw and an impaired digestion finds no Juliet to match his love.
Fate, with that playfulness which some take too seriously or quite amiss,
set her queer stage as long ago as 1838 for the comedy of certain lives,
and rang up the curtain one dark evening on no fitter scene than the
high road from Gateshead to Durham. It was raining hard, and a fresh
breeze from the south-east swept a salt rime from the North Sea across
a tract of land as bare and bleak as the waters of that grim ocean. A
hard, cold land this, where the iron that has filled men's purses has also
entered their souls.
There had been a great meeting at Chester-le-Street of those who were
at this time beginning to be known as Chartists, and, the Act having
been lately passed that torchlight meetings were illegal, this assembly
had gathered by the light of a waning moon long since hidden by the
clouds. Amid the storm of wind and rain, orators had expounded views
as wild as the night itself, to which the hard- visaged sons of
Northumbria had listened with grunts of approval or muttered words of
discontent. A dangerous game to play--this stirring up of the people's
heart, and one that may at any moment turn to the deepest earnest.
Few thought at this time that the movement awakening in the working

centres of the North and Midlands was destined to spread with the
strange rapidity of popular passion--to spread and live for a decade.
Few of the Chartists expected to see the fulfilment of half of their
desires. Yet, to-day, a moiety of the People's Charter has been granted.
These voices crying in the night demanded an extended suffrage, vote
by ballot, and freedom for rich and poor alike to sit in Parliament.
Within the scope of one reign these demands have been granted.
The meeting at Chester-le-Street was no different from
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