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+++ b/58188-0.txt
@@ -1,29 +1,7 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Oswald Cray, by Mrs. Henry Wood
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 58188 ***
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-Title: Oswald Cray
- A Novel
-Author: Mrs. Henry Wood
-
-Release Date: October 29, 2018 [EBook #58188]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OSWALD CRAY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Charles Bowen from page scans provided by Google Books
@@ -4894,7 +4872,7 @@ the driver and stoker, the one had saved himself by leaping from his
engine, the other was flung to a distance, and lay there as he fell.
Mark Cray, as you have heard, remained to tend the wounded. The first
-face he distinguished in the moonlight, lying amidst the débris of the
+face he distinguished in the moonlight, lying amidst the débris of the
overturned first-class carriage, was that of Lady Oswald: and so
completely astonished was he to see it, that he thought either his
eyes or the moon must be playing him false. He and Caroline had been
@@ -6465,7 +6443,7 @@ a situation of a different nature.
Now this grand scheme was destroyed. As the rising waves dash away the
"houses" built by children on the sands at the sea-shore, so this
-château en Espagne of Neal's was dashed down by the death of Lady
+château en Espagne of Neal's was dashed down by the death of Lady
Oswald. If Neal's cold and selfish heart could like any one, it had
liked her. She had kept up friendly relations with Neal, as a former
retainer of Sir John and Thorndyke; had shown more consideration to
@@ -14605,7 +14583,7 @@ so great a contrast to the past: the past which was at an end for
ever.
He went out, shown through the hall by Jessy, and leaving his card on
-the standing waiter for Miss Davenal. All _en règle_. And Sara in the
+the standing waiter for Miss Davenal. All _en règle_. And Sara in the
large drawing-room, so dreary now, remained on in her pain, alone.
@@ -15846,7 +15824,7 @@ key in it.
"So I had, Miss. I came up now for this vase. My mistress said it was
to be washed."
-He went downstairs carrying it: a valuable vase of Sèvres porcelain,
+He went downstairs carrying it: a valuable vase of Sèvres porcelain,
never intrusted to the hands of anybody but Neal. It had belonged to
poor Richard--was presented to him just before he went out on his
unfortunate voyage. Sara walked to her desk; it stood on the centre
@@ -16903,7 +16881,7 @@ gracious Queen, they felt uncomfortable, and attempted a sort of
apology that they had brought no evening dress with them to town.
And the dinner is in accordance with Caroline's attire. Soup, and
-fish, and _entrées_, and roasts, and jellies, and sweets, and
+fish, and _entrées_, and roasts, and jellies, and sweets, and
fal-lals; and more sorts of wine than the Miss Fords, simple and
plain, could remember afterwards to count; and flowers, and plate,
and servants in abundance: and grandeur enough altogether for the
@@ -17347,7 +17325,7 @@ before she could see Alfred King, and she wandered into the quiet
courts of the Temple, and came to the larger garden.
The gate-keeper would not admit her to it at first; she had not the
-_entrée_, he said; but she told him her case: that she was a stranger,
+_entrée_, he said; but she told him her case: that she was a stranger,
and had to wait an hour and a half to keep an appointment at a
solicitor's in Essex Street. Her sweet face and her plaintive
tone--for the voice catches the mind's sorrow--won him over, and,
@@ -17726,7 +17704,7 @@ gallantly.
Caroline laughed; a little all-conscious laugh of vanity. She laid her
beautiful bonnet of real lace and marabouts--and for which the
-milliner would assuredly charge £10--on a side-table, and threw off
+milliner would assuredly charge £10--on a side-table, and threw off
her costly white lace mantle. The folds of her silk dress, its colour
the delicate bloom of the spring lilac, rustled as she went back to
the window.
@@ -19705,13 +19683,13 @@ CHAPTER XLVIII.
DAY-DREAMS RUDELY INTERRUPTED.
-Before a costly breakfast service of Sèvres porcelain, with its
+Before a costly breakfast service of Sèvres porcelain, with its
adjuncts of glittering silver, on the morning subsequent to the visit
of Mr. Brackenbury, had sat Caroline Cray, in a charming morning robe
of white muslin and blue ribbons, with what she would have called a
_coiffure_, all blue ribbons and white lace, on her silky hair. A
stranger, taking a bird's-eye view of the scene, of the elegant room,
-the expensive accessories, the recherché attire of its mistress, would
+the expensive accessories, the recherché attire of its mistress, would
have concluded that there was no lack of means, that the income
supporting all this must at least be to the extent of some thousands
a-year.
@@ -19720,12 +19698,12 @@ In truth Mark Cray and his wife were a practical illustration of that
homely but expressive saying which must be so familiar to you all;
_they had begun at the wrong end of the ladder_. When fortune has
come; when it is actually realised, in the hands, then the top of the
-ladder, comprising its Sèvres porcelain and other costs in accordance,
+ladder, comprising its Sèvres porcelain and other costs in accordance,
may be safe and consistent; but if we _begin_ there without first
climbing to it, too many of us have an inconvenient fashion of
slipping down again. The furniture surrounding Caroline Cray was of
the most beautiful design, the most costly nature; the lace on that
-morning-robe, on that pretty "coiffure," would make a hole in a £20
+morning-robe, on that pretty "coiffure," would make a hole in a £20
bank-note, the silver ornaments on the table were fit for the first
palace in the land, and Mr. and Mrs. Cray had got these things about
them--and a great deal more besides which I have not time to tell you
@@ -20057,7 +20035,7 @@ since his first departure from them. They burst bounds, in tongue at
any rate, and talked of warrants and prosecutions and various
inconvenient things. Other shareholders joined in the general fury,
and it may perhaps be excused to them that when the carriage of Mark
-Cray suddenly appeared in the general melée, they turned their rage
+Cray suddenly appeared in the general melée, they turned their rage
upon it.
That is, they pressed round it and saluted it with reproaches not at
@@ -21775,7 +21753,7 @@ find the minuter points of the filling-in even more interesting. The
whole made a magnificent tableau, which, once seen, must rest upon the
charmed mind for ever.
-The Hôtel du Cheval Blanc, situated at one end of the town,
+The Hôtel du Cheval Blanc, situated at one end of the town,
was perhaps the best spot in all Honfleur for admiring this
panorama--unless, indeed, you mounted the heights above. Standing in
one of the end rooms of this hotel on the second floor, whose windows
@@ -22120,9 +22098,9 @@ productive of some temporary difficulty.
They started after their early dinner. M. Le Bleu lived not very far
from them, but in the heart of the town, and Mark began by calling him
-Mr. Blue, _sans cérémonie_. Mark had learned French at school, and
+Mr. Blue, _sans cérémonie_. Mark had learned French at school, and
therefore considered himself a French scholar. On the door was a brass
-plate--"M. Le Bleu, Médecin;" and a young woman in a red petticoat,
+plate--"M. Le Bleu, Médecin;" and a young woman in a red petticoat,
grey stockings, and sabots, came to the door in answer to the ring.
"Is Mr. Blue at home?" demanded Mark. "Mossier Blue, chez elle?"
@@ -22152,13 +22130,13 @@ name"--handing in his card.
The Frenchman was a little puzzled by so much English all at once, and
relieved himself by looking at the card.
-"Ah, c'est ça, Meestare Cr--Cr--Craw," pronounced the doctor, arriving
+"Ah, c'est ça, Meestare Cr--Cr--Craw," pronounced the doctor, arriving
with satisfaction at the name after some stammering. "And Madame what
has she?"
"Malade," briefly responded Mark. "Elle a une--une--lump--come in
-the--the (what's French for side, I wonder?) in the côté. Ici,
-Messeu," touching himself; "mais il est très petite encore; no larger
+the--the (what's French for side, I wonder?) in the côté. Ici,
+Messeu," touching himself; "mais il est très petite encore; no larger
than a--a--petite pois."
Clearly the gentleman did not understand. Mark had drawn him aside, so
@@ -22184,8 +22162,8 @@ Monsieur Le Bleu tried hard to understand. "Where you say it is, sare,
the mal? Est-ce que c'est une blessure?"
"It's here," said Mark, touching _him_ now. "It came of itself--venait
-tout seule, grande at first comme the tête of an épingle, not much
-more; à présent larger than a big pea--a petite pois."
+tout seule, grande at first comme the tête of an épingle, not much
+more; à présent larger than a big pea--a petite pois."
The doctor's ear was strained, and a faint light broke upon it. He had
enjoyed the pleasure of conversing with English patients before; in
@@ -22214,15 +22192,15 @@ French completely breaking down.
"Bon," said the surgeon, wishing Mark did not talk English quite so
fast. "Madame has not consultayed a docteur donc, encore?"
-"Only me," replied Mark. "I'm a doctor myself--docteur moi-même,
+"Only me," replied Mark. "I'm a doctor myself--docteur moi-même,
Messeu."
-"Ah, Monsieur est médecin lui-même," cried the doctor, making a
+"Ah, Monsieur est médecin lui-même," cried the doctor, making a
succession of bows in his politeness. "That will facilitate our
-understandings, sare. Has Madame the good--the bonne santé de
+understandings, sare. Has Madame the good--the bonne santé de
l'ordinaire?" he continued, coming to a breakdown himself.
-"Santé de l'ordinaire!--I wonder what that is," debated Mark within
+"Santé de l'ordinaire!--I wonder what that is," debated Mark within
himself. "Vin ordinaire means thin claret, I know. I no comprendre,
Messeu," he confessed aloud. "Ma femme eats and drinks everything."
@@ -22233,13 +22211,13 @@ ask?"
he exclaimed in astonishment. "She's as sane as you or I. What on
earth put that in your head, Messeu? she doesn't look mad, I hope!"
-"I no say mad," disclaimed Messeu. "I ask if she--ah, voilà le mot,
+"I no say mad," disclaimed Messeu. "I ask if she--ah, voilà le mot,
quel bonheur!--if she healthy?--if she partake of the good
constitution?"
A recollection flashed across Mark Cray's memory of a doubt he had
once heard drop from Dr. Davenal as to whether Caroline's constitution
-was a healthy one. "Elle a porté très bien," was his answer to
+was a healthy one. "Elle a porté très bien," was his answer to
Monsieur, plunging into his French again. "This mayn't be anything,
you know, Messeu."
@@ -22248,7 +22226,7 @@ you know, Messeu."
"Which buttons," demanded Mark.
"The buttons you do me the honour to consult for. Je ne les aime pas,
-soit clou, soit tumeur--n'importe pour l'espèce. In the place you
+soit clou, soit tumeur--n'importe pour l'espèce. In the place you
indicate to me it is like to be a tumeur, and she is obstinate."
"Who is, Messeu?" asked Mark, in doubt whether the incomprehensible
@@ -22288,7 +22266,7 @@ moment. Bite Madame? What on earth was "sonsues?"
to his finger. "You call them litch--litch--"
"Leeches!" interrupted Mark, with a laugh. "I could not understand,
-moi; Je pensé, Messeu, que vous--vous--speak of wild beasts."
+moi; Je pensé, Messeu, que vous--vous--speak of wild beasts."
"Yas," said the doctor complacently, "I thought you understand, sare."
@@ -22299,7 +22277,7 @@ Madame. I would see the hurt, me. I go to your house, sare, and meet
Madame without her robe. I go tomorrow at four of the clock after
twelve, if that will arrange you."
-"So be it," returned Mark, when he had puzzled out the words "Je dis à
+"So be it," returned Mark, when he had puzzled out the words "Je dis à
ma femme que--que--it was of no use for her to call here, herself;
you'd want to see her dishabillayed. Je vous merci, Messeu."
@@ -22318,7 +22296,7 @@ October of that same year 1861. The first fortnight of the month was
more lovely than can be imagined of October; it was brilliant and warm
as summer.
-Toiling up the ascent of the Côte de Grace went Mark Cray and his wife
+Toiling up the ascent of the Côte de Grace went Mark Cray and his wife
on one of these delightful days. The word toiling would be misapplied
to you, I hope, for the way is gentle, the ascent easy; but it was
toil now to Caroline Cray. The past three or four months had made a
@@ -22326,7 +22304,7 @@ great change in her: health and spirits had alike sunk. As the lump
got larger--we may as well call it by its familiar name--the body got
weaker, and she felt the fatigue of walking now. Mark and the
weather's unusual beauty had tempted her out, and they had taken the
-way through the town to the Cête de Grace.
+way through the town to the Cête de Grace.
Winding up the shady road--and the sun was too hot not to make the
shade welcome--they gained the top. Caroline sat down at once on a
@@ -22411,7 +22389,7 @@ enclosed and accommodating gardens of entertainment, where you might
order a dinner and eat it _al fresco_, or where you might take your
own basket of provisions and they would bring you drink from the
house, wine, milk, beer, lemonade, or coffee, at choice. Behind her,
-looking beyond, rose the little Chapelle de Nôtre-Dame-de-Grâce, on
+looking beyond, rose the little Chapelle de Nôtre-Dame-de-Grâce, on
whose interior walls were recorded accounts of devoted pilgrims who
had toiled on crutches up to the shrine, and whose faith Our Lady had
rewarded by an instantaneous cure, whereupon they went down rejoicing,
@@ -22438,7 +22416,7 @@ It was a very obstinate side, as M. Le Bleu would express it, a very
persistent, provoking lump, and that renowned practitioner--who was
really a skilful man, for all his obscure English--had formed his own
opinion upon it. It baffled him and his remedies persistently. Even
-those highly-regarded bêtes, the sangsues, had tried their best to
+those highly-regarded bêtes, the sangsues, had tried their best to
subdue it--and tried in vain. Evidently the effective remedy was not
sangsues. The lump had had its own way all these months. It had been
growing larger and larger, giving by degrees more and more pain.
@@ -22454,8 +22432,8 @@ This day has been noticed because it was a sort of turning-point in
this persistent malady: not a turning for better but for worse.
Whether the walk up the hill injured her--for perhaps she had grown
really unfit for it--or whether the disease itself made a sudden leap
-onwards, certain it was that poor Mrs. Cray never went up the Côte de
-Grâce again. She walked home with Mark very slowly, and fainted when
+onwards, certain it was that poor Mrs. Cray never went up the Côte de
+Grâce again. She walked home with Mark very slowly, and fainted when
she got in. Mark did not like her look, and ran off for Monsieur Le
Bleu. It was only the fatigue, she said to them: but the next morning
she did not rise from her bed.
@@ -23128,7 +23106,7 @@ he was content to let the home remain in abeyance, and lived in the
old rooms, putting up with the comforts and agreeables Mrs. Benn chose
to provide for him. The first thing Caroline did, on being placed on
an easy chair, was to faint away. It was the only time she had fainted
-since the day in October when she walked to the Côte de Grâce. Mark
+since the day in October when she walked to the Côte de Grâce. Mark
Cray gave fatigue the benefit of the blame then, and it was probably
due to the same cause now. When Mrs. Benn came up in answer to
Oswald's summons, nothing could well exceed her amazement at seeing a
@@ -23647,7 +23625,7 @@ inconvenient way of not allowing you to evade such mandates. It was
not pleasant to be reduced to a meal or so a day, and that not a
sumptuous one; it was not convenient to be restricted to the pair of
boots he had on, and to know that the soles were letting in the wet;
-it was not cheery to be out of charcoal for the cooking _réchauds_, or
+it was not cheery to be out of charcoal for the cooking _réchauds_, or
to have but a shovelful of coals left for the parlour; moreover and
above all, it was most especially annoying and unbearable not to have
had the money to pay for a letter that morning, and which, in
@@ -23757,7 +23735,7 @@ wanted to say it--such jargon as the fellow talked to be sure!--but
Blue's nothing better than an old woman. By the way, I wonder how long
Blue intends to stop away! It's fine for these French fellows, taking
a holiday when they choose, and leaving their patients to a
-_confrère_! I wish he had left _me_ the _confrère_ on the occasion,
+_confrère_! I wish he had left _me_ the _confrère_ on the occasion,
t'would have been a few francs, at any rate, in my pocket. The French
wouldn't have had that, I suppose! their envious laws won't permit an
Englishman to practice on them. Oh, if some rich countryman of one's
@@ -23796,7 +23774,7 @@ kicking pebbles into the manche: Mr. Mark Cray grew tired of his
pastime, and turned finally away from it. He sauntered through the
waste ground underneath the side windows of the hotel, his ears nearly
deafened by the noise of the rough boys who were quarrelling in groups
-over their marbles, made a _détour_ across the bridge, glanced askance
+over their marbles, made a _détour_ across the bridge, glanced askance
at the slip of building grandly designated Bureau des Postes, and
turned off towards his home. It was a soft, calm evening in January,
gloomy enough overhead, but in the west the sky was clearing, and a
@@ -23832,7 +23810,7 @@ sare, if you have the news from madame?"
"She's worse, and can't come back," said Mark. "Plus malade. Not to be
cured at all, they say, which I don't believe; pas croyable; messeu. I
-don't believe the English médecin understands the case. Non! jamais."
+don't believe the English médecin understands the case. Non! jamais."
"Do I not say two--three--four months ago, me? I know she not curable
I feel sure what it was. You call it 'lump' and 'bouton'--bah! C'est
@@ -23877,7 +23855,7 @@ letter to Mark. Mark spoke some obscure words about repaying him
on the morrow, and broke the seal.
There was still light enough to see, though very obscurely, and Mark
-Cray's dazed eyes fell on a bank-note for £5. The surgeon had bade him
+Cray's dazed eyes fell on a bank-note for £5. The surgeon had bade him
goodnight, and was walking away with the postman: Mark Cray was only
half-conscious of their departure. Debt did not affect Mark as it does
those ultra-sensitive spirits who can but sink under its ills:
@@ -25719,7 +25697,7 @@ carried out, and fortune is at hand."
"What's at hand?" asked Miss Bettina.
"Fortune," repeated Mark. "I shall take one of those nice little boxes
-in the Champs Elysées. Some of them are charming. Or perhaps only part
+in the Champs Elysées. Some of them are charming. Or perhaps only part
of one if--if Carine--O dear! it is hard for her that this luck did
not fall in a year ago! I wonder," broke off Mark, passing to another
phase of his future visions, "I wonder whether, if it were possible to
@@ -25784,7 +25762,7 @@ understood.
"There's the most beautiful home getting ready for you in Paris
Carine," he resumed, his voice sounding as if he were on the verge of
-tears. "We'll live in the Champ Elysées; it is the loveliest spot, and
+tears. "We'll live in the Champ Elysées; it is the loveliest spot, and
you can't fail to grow better there, if we can only get your disease
to turn. O Carine! don't leave me just when I am able to surround you
with wealth and luxury again! This will be a greater and a surer thing
@@ -26003,7 +25981,7 @@ supposed to be in readiness for him. Not _quite_ ready, however, he
found when he got there; some trifling preliminaries had to be
completed yet. Mark thought nothing of the check: he was sanguine:
Barker was sanguine; it was only a little delay: and Mark amused
-himself most agreeably, looking at the houses in the Champs Elysées,
+himself most agreeably, looking at the houses in the Champs Elysées,
against the time came that he should require to fix upon one.
Mark's friends in England heard nothing of him until the middle of the
@@ -26224,363 +26202,4 @@ THE END.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Oswald Cray, by Mrs. Henry Wood
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OSWALD CRAY ***
-
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diff --git a/58188-h/58188-h.htm b/58188-h/58188-h.htm
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-Title: Oswald Cray
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