TEXT E This is the weather Scobie
loves. Lying in bed he touches his telescope lovingly, turning a wistful eye on
the blank wall of rotting mud-bricks which shuts off his view of the
sea. Scobie is getting on for seventy and still afraid to die;
his one fear is that he will awake one morning and find himself
dead--Lieutenant-Commander Scobie, O. B. E. Consequently it gives him a seuere
shock every morning when the water carriers shriek under his window before dawn,
waking him up. For a moment, he says, he dares not open his eyes. Keeping them
fast shut (for fear they might open on the heavenly host) he gropes along the
cake stand beside his bed and grabs his pipe. It is always loaded from the night
before and an open matchbox stands beside it. The first whiff of tobacco
restores both his composure and his eyesight. He breathes deeply, grateful for
reassurance. He smiles. He gloats. Then, drawing the heavy sheepskin, which
serves him as a bed-cover up to his ears, he sings a little triumphal song to
the morning. Taking stock of himself he discovers that he has
the inevitable headache. His tongue is raw from last night’ s brandy. But
against these trifling discomforts the prospect of another day in life weighs
heavily. He pauses to slip in his false teeth. He places his
wrinkled fingers to his chest and is comforted by the sound of his heart at
work. He is rather proud of his heart. If you ever visit him when he is in bed
he is almost sure to grasp your hand in his and ask you to feel it. Swallowing a
little, you shove your hand inside his cheap night-jacket to experience those
sad, blunt, far-away bumps--like those of an unborn baby. He buttons up his
pajamas with touching pride and gives his imitation roar of animal health--"
Bounding from my bed like a lion" ---that is another of his phrases. You have
not experienced the full charm of the man unless you have actually seen him,
bent double with rheumatism, crawling out from between his coarse cotton sheets
like a ruin. Only in the warmest months of the year do his bones thaw out
sufficiently to enable him to stand erect. In the summer afternoons he walks in
the park, his little head glowing like a minor sun, his jaw set in a violent
expression of health. His tiny nautical pension is hardly enough
to pay for one cockroach-infested room; he ekes it out with an equally small
salary from the Egyptian government, which carries with it the proud title of
Bimbashi in the Police Force. Origins he has none. His past spreads over a dozen
continents like a true subject of myth. And his presence is so rich with
imaginary health that he needs nothing more except perhaps an occasional trip to
Cairo during Ramadhan, when his office is closed and presumably all crime comes
to a standstill because of the past. Every morning Scobie ______.
A.refused to open his eyes until he had had his first cigarette B.according to himself, did not open his eyes in case he had died in the night C.denied that he opened his eyes until he was woken up D.could not see anything when the first noises in the street woke him