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<title>
The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Wolf-cub, by Patrick and Terence Casey.
@@ -172,47 +172,7 @@ table {
</style>
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<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Wolf Cub, by Patrick Casey
-
-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/license
-
-
-Title: The Wolf Cub
- A Novel of Spain
-
-Author: Patrick Casey
-
-Illustrator: Terence Casey
-
-Release Date: October 21, 2012 [EBook #41126]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WOLF CUB ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by D Alexander, Mary Meehan, The Internet Archive
-(TIA) and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41126 ***</div>
<div class="figcenter">
<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt=""/>
@@ -353,7 +313,7 @@ grave. Then they had shot down Lenchito; then they had shot down Juan
Quesada. And then the dog and the man were kicked together into the one
grave and sand piled on top of them both.</p>
-<p>But make no mistake, <i>mi señor caballero</i> reader! The men of the Guardia
+<p>But make no mistake, <i>mi señor caballero</i> reader! The men of the Guardia
Civil are not abominations of cruelty. They are not monsters, brutal and
depraved. <i>Quita!</i> no.</p>
@@ -677,7 +637,7 @@ frantic bullfight "bug." The successful bullfighter, be he matador, or
murderer of bulls, or only a <i>peon</i> of the <i>cuadrilla</i>, is given rich
food with which to garnish his belly; he learns how gold feels when it
is minted into money; his photographs are purchased by romantic
-<i>señoritas</i>; and wherever he goes, he is followed by crowds of tattered
+<i>señoritas</i>; and wherever he goes, he is followed by crowds of tattered
street urchins who studiously and hopefully ape his swagger. The whole
universe salves and butters him with admiration and envy; and he, the
popular <i>picador</i> or the distinguished <i>espada</i>, is in many ways more
@@ -714,7 +674,7 @@ backward than Spain. In Spain the type has persisted for five hundred
years and still continues to persist. In Spain the type is obstinate,
ineradicable.</p>
-<p>José Maria was a Spanish bandolero. Diego Corrientes, he who was loved
+<p>José Maria was a Spanish bandolero. Diego Corrientes, he who was loved
by a duchess, was a Spanish bandolero. And Spanish bandoleros were Visco
el Borje, Agua-Dulce, Joaquin Camargo, nicknamed El Vivillo, and
Pernales, the blond beast of prey. The bandolero is the blight of Spain.
@@ -892,7 +852,7 @@ carbine came up. A long tense hush. Then suddenly he exploded:</p>
<p>Minas de la Sierra was a long distance above and far back in the
sierras. With great surprise the bandolero recognized the child to whom
-he had waved a hand and called a laughing "á Dios" some time before.</p>
+he had waved a hand and called a laughing "á Dios" some time before.</p>
<p>"Are you alone?" The carbine still threatened.</p>
@@ -922,7 +882,7 @@ words aside. Trembling with eagerness, he cried:</p>
<p>"Take me with you, Pernales! I would be a bandolero, too! Lift me up
behind you on your horse, and I will go with you through Spain and be
-your <i>compañero</i> and your <i>dorado</i>&mdash;your golden one, your trustworthy
+your <i>compañero</i> and your <i>dorado</i>&mdash;your golden one, your trustworthy
one! Take me with you, please, please, Pernales!"</p>
<p>The bandolero did not credit his own ears. He was too astounded to
@@ -1056,7 +1016,7 @@ shows superb courage and astounding ferocity. But he is only two years
old; and five years old must be the age of Don Eduardo's animals before
he exhibits them in the Plaza de Toros. Does Don Eduardo make an
exception of this unique bull, does he allow him because of his
-astounding ferocity to have a premature début in the bull-ring? Name of
+astounding ferocity to have a premature début in the bull-ring? Name of
God, no! Not even if he be as magnificent with meat as the most mature
seven-year-old!</p>
@@ -1075,7 +1035,7 @@ say no to you, should I pass this way again when you are more fully
grown. Some day, I promise you, I shall again pass this way, and then if
you are still of the mind to be my dorado, you may join out with me and
we will murder the men of the Guardia Civil together, two sworn
-compañeros. Meanwhile, grow brawny, grow brave, grow high-handed. There
+compañeros. Meanwhile, grow brawny, grow brave, grow high-handed. There
will always be room in Spain for haughty resolute ones like you!"</p>
<p>"I accept the promise given," said Jacinto Quesada. "And I do not ask
@@ -1093,7 +1053,7 @@ through the moment.</p>
<p>The bandolero started on.</p>
-<p>"Go thou with God, compañero!" said Jacinto Quesada.</p>
+<p>"Go thou with God, compañero!" said Jacinto Quesada.</p>
<p>"Grow big, grow strong, thou!" said the great Pernales.</p>
@@ -1281,7 +1241,7 @@ pretentious and uncommon hold-up.</p>
Like most Spanish <i>bandoleros en grande</i>, Jacinto Quesada preferred,
whenever he could, to keep his heels clean of confederates and
coadjutors; he preferred to hold himself aloof and solitary. However,
-they were his compañeros for the nonce; for the nonce, they were his
+they were his compañeros for the nonce; for the nonce, they were his
dorados, his golden, his trustworthy ones.</p>
<p>One of them clambered up into the cab after the fireman, Benito. The
@@ -1323,7 +1283,7 @@ Barcelona manufactory. Then came two brokers who had been speeding about
Spain to make contracts on the grape, olive, orange, and apricot crops.
Then came a wine taster, one cork grower, and three cattle breeders; and
then a troupe of Gitanos, Gypsy musicians and dancers of the
-metropolitan cafés. And these having been plucked in their proper
+metropolitan cafés. And these having been plucked in their proper
sequence, there was led forward a wisp of black-clad nuns.</p>
<p>Jacinto Quesada stepped forward and took off his hat to the nuns. He
@@ -1549,7 +1509,7 @@ world where there are bandoleros and even men of worse sorts.</p>
when, aroused by something more than curiosity, Jacinto Quesada stepped
forward and asked brusquely, "You are a Frenchman?"</p>
-<p>"I am a Frenchman, <i>monseñor</i>."</p>
+<p>"I am a Frenchman, <i>monseñor</i>."</p>
<p>"And why, Frenchman, do you make signs with your hands to me?"</p>
@@ -1809,7 +1769,7 @@ to affix a dozen initials after their names&mdash;were always coming to Don
Jaime's house from the University of Salamanca and the Museo Provincial
of Seville to examine those books and to write historical treatises and
critiques from them. And it was not unusual to find one of these
-bookworms, these bibliophiles, these <i>hombres del todo aficionado á los
+bookworms, these bibliophiles, these <i>hombres del todo aficionado á los
libros</i>, making eager hints to purchase such of the precious dingy tomes
as they considered within their means.</p>
@@ -1916,7 +1876,7 @@ the whole transaction.</p>
this time heartily and long. Then suddenly he stopped laughing and,
looking hard into my eyes, said in a cold, challenging voice:</p>
-<p>"'Suppose I should tell you, <i>ma chérie</i>, that I am not in the employ of
+<p>"'Suppose I should tell you, <i>ma chérie</i>, that I am not in the employ of
a Paris book house; that my business is not at all that of a purchaser
of rare books; and that I care for rare books not a snap of the
fingers!'"</p>
@@ -2011,7 +1971,7 @@ five-thousand peseta bills!</p>
when he wrote that letter to Paris. Therefore, I delayed my journey to
Spain so that I should not reach your father's house until the English
book-buyer had paid over the money for the purchased books and had left
-with his purchases. Ma chérie, I came to Spain, not for books, but for
+with his purchases. Ma chérie, I came to Spain, not for books, but for
this. This is the money paid to your father for his books!" And he held
up the small mahogany-colored leather purse that had been Felicidad's
father's.</p>
@@ -2229,7 +2189,7 @@ minute will start. You do not wish to be left behind, do you?"</p>
<p>"But this is not our coach! The coach we rode in thus far is up
forward." Almost it seemed as if the girl were sparring for time.</p>
-<p>"Enter, it is <i>no importa, señora dona</i>!" said, with kindness, one of
+<p>"Enter, it is <i>no importa, señora dona</i>!" said, with kindness, one of
the men within&mdash;a man in a yellow bullfighter's costume, one of the
picadores of Morales' cuadrilla.</p>
@@ -2383,7 +2343,7 @@ romantic novels of the elder Dumas; but one does not think to see such
things occur in real life.</p>
<p>"You would search far in our country's history for a parallel to this
-outrageous crime! José Maria. Diego Corrientes, Agua-Dulce and Visco el
+outrageous crime! José Maria. Diego Corrientes, Agua-Dulce and Visco el
Borje left our women severely alone. They were simple-souled men of the
people, risen against oppression. Even as would any humble and pious and
hardworking labrador, so these bandoleros en grande feared God and
@@ -2404,7 +2364,7 @@ sometimes even to love.</p>
<p>"And even this Jacinto Quesada to-day! He treated me with great
consideration, chatting pleasantly about his love of bullfighting and
other very human things. And he struck me as being a bandolero of the
-splendid good old sort&mdash;the José Maria, the Visco el Borje sort! Why, he
+splendid good old sort&mdash;the José Maria, the Visco el Borje sort! Why, he
even asked after the health of my wife, Marta, and my two little ones!
But now! To find out that he is a renegade, a damnable turncoat from the
old bandolero code, an inhuman wretch, a despicable rapist&mdash;<i>Porvida!</i>"</p>
@@ -2576,7 +2536,7 @@ leather sheath, the younger policeman rather bitterly said:</p>
camino hiding out from us of the Guardia Civil."</p>
<p>"Yet I tell you, Miguel&mdash;most surely are they out there somewhere!"
-returned his compañero; vehemently dissenting. "How could they have
+returned his compañero; vehemently dissenting. "How could they have
attained, so soon, to the Sierra Morena ahead&mdash;I ask you that!"</p>
<p>Touching their ponies with their barbed heels, they enterprised once
@@ -2639,7 +2599,7 @@ Captain-General of the Guardia Civil for the District.</p></blockquote>
<p>Putting the yellow paper back in the breast of his tight blue jacket
faced with red, the younger policeman, Miguel, rode on up the slope
-beside his compañero?&mdash;a squat, fiercely mustached and apelike fellow.</p>
+beside his compañero?&mdash;a squat, fiercely mustached and apelike fellow.</p>
<p>"Pascual," he asked presently, "would you know that magnificent one,
Morales, should you meet him face to face&mdash;"</p>
@@ -2757,7 +2717,7 @@ ground?"</p>
<p>"<i>Zut!</i> How should I know? Who is it plucks grass, anyway?"</p>
-<p>The young policeman seemed to take joy in the rôle of Grand Inquisitor.
+<p>The young policeman seemed to take joy in the rôle of Grand Inquisitor.
He smiled a superior smile and moved on a few feet, and then again
halted.</p>
@@ -2907,7 +2867,7 @@ drew a little away from Miguel Alvarado. After that, he rode on, through
the gathering dusk, very much in the manner of a man companioned by one
possessed of a demon&mdash;full of a certain respect but also full of reserve
and caution. Scarcely could you say he became more at his ease, more the
-boon compañero and dorado. Was not the man he rode with one of Those of
+boon compañero and dorado. Was not the man he rode with one of Those of
the Predilection?</p>
<p>In Spain, especially in Andalusia, there has long existed a large class
@@ -2935,7 +2895,7 @@ up into the lines of washing and the overarching greenery; and there
were a dozen men and women, and three times that many children, postured
about the fires and beneath the wagons.</p>
-<p>"Alto à la Guardia Civil!" bellowed thunderously Pascual Montara,
+<p>"Alto à la Guardia Civil!" bellowed thunderously Pascual Montara,
thinking to give the Gypsies a start with this dread call of the police.</p>
<p>The men about the fires did not move. The golden-skinned sloe-eyed
@@ -3035,7 +2995,7 @@ shall I do?"</p>
<p>Go away and leave her victorious in her disdain? Not Miguel Alvarado!</p>
<p>When Pascual Montara finished questioning the Gypsy chieftain and
-hetman, and came seeking his compañero through the trees, he found them
+hetman, and came seeking his compañero through the trees, he found them
together still&mdash;the hot-blooded young policeman and the lithe Paquita of
the nut-brown legs. Miguel Alvarado had progressed some way with his
bitterly contested love-making. But she still shrugged away from him
@@ -3123,7 +3083,7 @@ and brutal and magnificent than you!"</p>
<p>Pascual Montara had mounted his horse and was waiting in growing
impatience.</p>
-<p>"Hola, mi compañero!" he called. "What is keeping you?"</p>
+<p>"Hola, mi compañero!" he called. "What is keeping you?"</p>
<p>Trotting his horse out into the open space where were the three fires of
black smoke and dancing embers, Alvarado joined him. Together the two
@@ -3571,14 +3531,14 @@ native mountaineers from their landholds.</p>
<p>Among his guests for this particular monteria were many Spanish
notables, high and mighty ones of Letters, the State, and the Church, as
-well as several foreign ambassadors and their attachés. The Duke of
-Fernan Nuñez, the Duke of Medinaceli, the Marquis of Viana, the Conde
+well as several foreign ambassadors and their attachés. The Duke of
+Fernan Nuñez, the Duke of Medinaceli, the Marquis of Viana, the Conde
de Agrela, the Marquesa de Manzanedo, Colonel Barrera and Senor D. I. L.
de Ybarra were among the crack guns invited.</p>
<p>Lario de Quinones had his own pack of <i>podencos</i>, or hunting dogs&mdash;a
<i>recoba</i> of about forty dogs. But, as is the custom of the sporting
-gentry of Spain, certain of his guests&mdash;the Duke of Fernan Nuñez, the
+gentry of Spain, certain of his guests&mdash;the Duke of Fernan Nuñez, the
Conde de Agrela, and Colonel Barrera&mdash;had brought with them their own
packs of podencos and their own huntsmen, to reinforce De Quinones' pack
and make the drive a more stupendous affair.</p>
@@ -4969,7 +4929,7 @@ before one through the thick mist than the nose upon one's face.</p>
of snarling wind-echoes and of eddying, dark shapes was the steep
ravine. Down the length of it, the fog marched like an endless caravan
of ghostly, silent, gray mules. The two fires, robust enough and
-certainly well attended, seemed as pale and anæmic and cold as two
+certainly well attended, seemed as pale and anæmic and cold as two
incandescents in the black heart of a mine.</p>
<p>Without the fling of the twin fires, a man in sheepskin zamarra,
@@ -5401,7 +5361,7 @@ story he just had heard, the matador sprang enthusiastically to his
feet.</p>
<p>"Senor Don Jacinto!" he exclaimed. "You are a bandolero of the splendid
-good old sort&mdash;the José Maria, the Visco el Borje sort! I knew it,
+good old sort&mdash;the José Maria, the Visco el Borje sort! I knew it,
caballero of my heart! You are a true Moor, chivalrous and brave!"</p>
<p>Carson, with the canniness so characteristic of the American, was not to
@@ -5537,7 +5497,7 @@ swallowed the bait in blissful ignorance.</p>
<p>"Is that so?" he queried with a lift of his blond eyebrows. He leaped
into a sudden and importunate impatience. "Let us go, let us go to my
-fiancée!" he urged. "Oh, I must see Felicidad!"</p>
+fiancée!" he urged. "Oh, I must see Felicidad!"</p>
<p>Said Morales very coldly, "Jacinto Quesada is just about to lead us to
his native pueblo where the girl is domiciled."</p>
@@ -7150,7 +7110,7 @@ in all piety the sacrament of Holy Orders.</p>
a tall, lean-faced, white-haired sergeant of police entered. As he
turned from the golden pyx, containing the Host, and raised his arms in
a Dominus Vobiscum, straight through the lungs the policeman shot him.
-Like Thomas à Becket of old, he pictured himself falling wounded to
+Like Thomas à Becket of old, he pictured himself falling wounded to
death upon the stainless cloth of the altar!</p>
<p>Carson was suffering, meanwhile, all the agonies he so often had
@@ -7772,7 +7732,7 @@ huge horse-pistol at the backing form of the golden-haired girl!</p>
<p>"Ha!" exclaimed the Frenchman, his eyes lighting up like sunlight on
ice, his grimacing face wreathing into an outrageous smile. "It is the
-haughty hidalgo come to wipe out his dishonor in the blood of ma chérie
+haughty hidalgo come to wipe out his dishonor in the blood of ma chérie
Felicidad!"</p>
<p>With a laugh that was worse than brutal, that was pitiless and fiendish
@@ -9906,386 +9866,6 @@ mistress of Peter the Cruel of Castile (1333-1369).</p></div>
as "king of demons." Also Beelzebub and Apollyon. Familiarly called the
genius of matrimonial unhappiness, or jealousy.</p></div>
-
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-<pre>
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