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Hilda Wade, a Woman with Tenacity of Purpose

Creator: Allen, Grant, 1848-1899
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himself in the first onslaught. That was virtual suicide--honourable suicide to avoid disgrace, at a moment of supreme remorse and horror." "You are right," I admitted, after a minute's consideration. "I see it now--though I should never have thought of it." "That is the use of being a woman," she answered. I waited a second once more, and mused. "Still, that is only one doubtful case," I objected. "There was another, you must remember: his uncle Alfred." "Alfred Le Geyt?" "No; HE died in his bed, quietly. Alfred Faskally." "What a memory you have!" I cried, astonished. "Why, that was before our time--in the days of the Chartist riots!" She smiled a certain curious sibylline smile of hers. Her earnest face looked prettier than ever. "I told you I could remember many things that happened before I was born," she answered. "THIS is one of them." "You remember it directly?"


Yale Oriental Series Researches Volume IV Part III Published from the fund given to the university in memory of Mary Stevens Hammond Yale Oriental Series. Researches, Volume IV, 3. An Old Babylonian Version of the Gilgamesh Epic On the Basis of Recently Discovered Texts
"How impossible! Have I not often explained to you that I am no diviner? I read no book of fate; I call no spirits from the vasty deep. I simply remember with exceptional clearness what I read and hear. And I have many times heard the story about Alfred Faskally." "So have I--but I forget it." "Unfortunately, I CAN'T forget. That is a sort of disease with me.... He was a special constable in the Chartist riots; and being a very strong and powerful man, like his nephew Hugo, he used his truncheon--his special constable's baton, or whatever you call it--with excessive force upon a starveling London tailor in the mob near Charing Cross. The man was hit on the forehead--badly hit, so that he died almost immediately of concussion of the brain. A woman rushed out of the crowd at once, seized the dying man, laid his head on her lap, and shrieked out in a wildly despairing voice that he was her husband, and the father of thirteen children. Alfred Faskally, who never meant to kill the man, or even to hurt him, but who was laying about him roundly, without realising the terrific force of his blows, was so horrified at what he had done when he heard the woman's cry, that he rushed off straight to Waterloo Bridge in an agony of remorse and--flung himself over. He was drowned instantly." "I recall the story now," I answered; "but, do you know, as it was told me, I think they said the mob THREW Faskally over in their desire for