[Mrs. Warren’s Daughter by Sir Harry Johnston]@TWC D-Link book
Mrs. Warren’s Daughter

CHAPTER XV
15/46

He lost his temper at the same time.

On this occasion Miss Davison's suicide or martyrdom would leave him perhaps on the wrong side in making up his day's book to the extent of fifteen hundred pounds.

Viewed in the right proportion it would be equivalent to our--you and me--having given a florin to a newspaper boy as the train was moving, instead of a penny.

But no doubt her unfortunate impulse had spoiled the day for him in other ways, upset schemes that were bound up with the winning of the King's horse.

Yet his outburst and the shocking language he applied to the Suffrage movement made history: for they fixed on him Vivie's attention when she was looking out for some one or something on whom to avenge the loss of a comrade.
[Footnote 1: He died in 1917.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books