[Mr. Meeson’s Will by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link book
Mr. Meeson’s Will

CHAPTER XX
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Passing on, he detailed how the publisher and the published had taken passage in the same vessel, and the tragic occurrences which followed down to Augusta's final rescue and arrival in England, and finally ended his spirited opening by appealing to the Court not to allow its mind to be influenced by the fact that since these events the two chief actors had become engaged to be married, which struck him, he said, as a very fitting climax to so romantic a story.
At last he ceased, and amidst a little buzz of applause, for the speech had really been a very fine one, sat down.

As he did so he glanced at the clock.

He had been on his legs for nearly two hours, and yet it seemed to him but a very little while.

In another moment he was up again and had called his first witness--Eustace Meeson.
Eustace's evidence was of a rather formal order, and was necessarily limited to an account of the relations between his uncle and himself, and between himself and Augusta.

Such as it was, however, he gave it very well, and with a complete openness that appeared to produce a favorable impression on the Court.
Then Fiddlestick, Q.C., rose to cross-examine, devoting his efforts to trying to make Eustace admit that his behaviour had been of a nature to amply justify his uncle's behaviour.


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