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<title>
The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Lost Cause, by Guy Thorne.
@@ -174,45 +174,7 @@ table {
</style>
</head>
<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's A Lost Cause, by Cyril Arthur Edward Ranger Gull
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: A Lost Cause
-
-Author: Cyril Arthur Edward Ranger Gull
-
-Release Date: August 19, 2012 [EBook #40539]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LOST CAUSE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Mark C. Orton, Mary Meehan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
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-
-
-
-</pre>
-
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40539 ***</div>
<div class="figcenter">
<img src="images/tp.jpg" alt=""/>
@@ -1551,7 +1513,7 @@ definite step without a full weighing of the chances and results.</p>
<p>But the two had become great friends. Agatha Poyntz had her own thoughts
about the matter, and they were very pleasant ones. Nothing would have
pleased her more than the marriage of her brother and her friend, and
-she had made <i>tête-à-têtes</i> for them in the adroit, unobtrusive manner
+she had made <i>tête-à-têtes</i> for them in the adroit, unobtrusive manner
that girls know.</p>
<p>In all his conversations with Lucy, Poyntz had found a keen, resilient
@@ -1941,7 +1903,7 @@ carriage came upon Waterloo Bridge, the wonderful panorama of riverside
London was uplifting. Away to her right, the purple dome of St. Paul's
shone white-grey in the sun. The great river glittered in the morning
air, and busy craft moved up and down the tide. The mammoth buildings of
-the embankment, Somerset House with its noble façade, the Savoy, the
+the embankment, Somerset House with its noble façade, the Savoy, the
monster Cecil, the tiled roofs of Scotland Yard all came to the eye in
one majestic sweep of form and colour. And far away to the left, dim in
a haze of light, the towers of Westminster rose like a fairy palace,
@@ -1980,7 +1942,7 @@ appreciated the good material things that life has to offer. At
sixty-two, when dames of the middle classes have silver hair and are
beginning to assume the gentle manners of age, Lady Linquest wore the
high curled fringe of the fashion, a mass of dark red hair that had
-started life upon the head of a Bréton peasant girl. Art had been at
+started life upon the head of a Bréton peasant girl. Art had been at
work upon her face and she was pleasant to look on, an artificial
product indeed, but with all the charm that a perfect work of art has.</p>
@@ -2006,7 +1968,7 @@ think."</p>
satisfactorily as might be, while Lady Linquest took her mid-morning
pick-me-up of Liebig and cognac.</p>
-<p>The good lady gave her niece a rapid <i>précis</i> of the news of their set
+<p>The good lady gave her niece a rapid <i>précis</i> of the news of their set
during the few days she had been away. "So that you'll know," she said,
"what to talk about at General Pompe's lunch&mdash;your last decent meal, by
the way, for a fortnight! I shall give orders to the cook to put a
@@ -2156,7 +2118,7 @@ was frankly bored, and became more cynical and bitter with every
scandalous story she told.</p>
<p>Only Mr. Duveen preserved his equanimity. He ate and drank and purred
-with secure complaisance. It was his rôle in life. Ever since he had
+with secure complaisance. It was his rôle in life. Ever since he had
been a little lick-trencher fag at Eton he had been thus. It was said by
his friends in society&mdash;after his back was turned&mdash;that on one occasion,
having discovered the Earl of &mdash;&mdash; kissing his wife, he had murmured an
@@ -2176,7 +2138,7 @@ brain now,&mdash;a long-forgotten passage:</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"Quest i non hanno speranza di morte,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">E la lor cicca vita è tanto bassa<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">E la lor cicca vita è tanto bassa<br /></span>
<span class="i0">Che invidiosi son d'ogni altra sorte."<br /></span>
</div></div>
@@ -3023,7 +2985,7 @@ would do most things for you, Ber, but, really, that woman!"</p>
<p>"Well, it can't be helped, I suppose," the vicar said with humorous
resignation. "It was bound to come sooner or later, and I'm selfish
-enough to be glad it's you've given me lady the <i>congé</i> and not me. Mrs.
+enough to be glad it's you've given me lady the <i>congé</i> and not me. Mrs.
Stiffe here knows her, don't you, Mrs. Stiffe?"</p>
<p>"I do, Mr. Blantyre," the stout lady said. "I've met the woman several
@@ -3629,7 +3591,7 @@ being copied out into one of the ledgers in the outer office.</p>
contained the sinews of war he read with a running comment, others were
placed in a basket for further consideration.</p>
-<p>"'Well-wisher,' five shillings; 'Well-wisher,' £2 0 0, by cheque, Sam.
+<p>"'Well-wisher,' five shillings; 'Well-wisher,' £2 0 0, by cheque, Sam.
'Ethel and her sisters,' ten and six&mdash;small family that, I should think!
'Protestant,' five pounds&mdash;a note, Sam, take the number. It's curious
that 'Protestant' always gives most. Yesterday seven 'Protestants'
@@ -5258,7 +5220,7 @@ employer. She had no affection for Miss Pritchett&mdash;and it would have
been wonderful if she had&mdash;but her feeling was not stronger than that.
As for the money question, the money that the rich old lady was giving
to the Luther League, Gussie saw no harm in that. The money was for a
-good cause, so she believed, and the Hamlyns, <i>père et fils</i>, had much
+good cause, so she believed, and the Hamlyns, <i>père et fils</i>, had much
better have the handling of it than any one else!</p>
<p>Mr. Hamlyn was a considerable time. The girl wandered about the room,
@@ -5807,7 +5769,7 @@ pears through the city streets, and though the meeting would, no doubt,
be skilfully packed with partisans, many women would be present and
nothing more than a wordy war would be likely to result.</p>
-<p>Lucy saw the date and considered that the question of the matinée was
+<p>Lucy saw the date and considered that the question of the matinée was
decided for her. She mentioned the invitation at lunch, and was very
much surprised to find that her brother strongly deprecated her
intention of being present at the discussion and welcomed this
@@ -5840,7 +5802,7 @@ minutes to wait before the rise of the curtain.</p>
<p>The theatre was curious after the glare of the sun outside, fantastic
and unreal. Hardly anybody talked, though there was a good house, and
-the strange quiet of a matinée audience seemed to pervade the four
+the strange quiet of a matinée audience seemed to pervade the four
people in the box also.</p>
<p>Lucy leaned back in her chair with the sensation of dreaming. This
@@ -5947,7 +5909,7 @@ began to be as if it were hung with banners.</p>
<p>They passed from the roar of the street to the great courtyard, with its
gay awnings of white and red, its palms and tree-ferns in green tubs,
-its little tables like the tables of a continental café. Little groups
+its little tables like the tables of a continental café. Little groups
of people of all nationalities sat about there. The party heard the
twanging accent of the United States, the guttural German, the purring,
spitting Russian.</p>
@@ -6593,7 +6555,7 @@ together.</p>
<p>"Yes," Carr answered. "I don't know what you purpose exactly&mdash;and I
don't care! I trust you as a brother now, Blantyre, I am learning every
day. I'm a conservative, you know, new things are distasteful to me. But
-I am learning that there are medicines, <i>pro salute animæ</i>."</p>
+I am learning that there are medicines, <i>pro salute animæ</i>."</p>
<p>"New things!" Blantyre said; "ye're an old Protestant at heart still.
Did they teach ye <i>no</i> history at Cambridge except that the Church of
@@ -7011,7 +6973,7 @@ and from the heart as well as from the head."&mdash;<i>Congregationalist.</i></p
<p class="center"><i>Author of "The Emperor's Candlesticks," etc.</i></p>
-<p>A dramatic romance of the French Revolution and the Émigré Nobles. The
+<p>A dramatic romance of the French Revolution and the Émigré Nobles. The
"Scarlet Pimpernel" was the chief of a daring band of young Englishmen
leagued together to rescue members of the French nobility from the
Terrorists of France. The identity of the brilliant and resourceful
@@ -7021,7 +6983,7 @@ danger, and devotion, follow close one upon another. The heroine is a
charming, fearless woman who in the end shares the honors with the
"Scarlet Pimpernel." In a stage version prepared by the author <i>The
Scarlet Pimpernel</i> was one of the dramatic successes of the last London
-season, Mr. Fred Terry and Miss Julia Neilson acting the leading rôles.</p>
+season, Mr. Fred Terry and Miss Julia Neilson acting the leading rôles.</p>
<p>"Something distinctly out of the common, well conceived, vividly told,
and stirring from start to finish."&mdash;<i>London Telegraph.</i></p>
@@ -7066,382 +7028,6 @@ narrowest of chances.</p>
<p class="center"><i>A Fascinating Romance</i></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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