The Project Gutenberg EBook of Clara Maynard, by W.H.G. Kingston
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Title: Clara Maynard
The True and the False - A Tale of the Times
Author: W.H.G. Kingston
Release Date: October 17, 2007 [EBook #23070]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CLARA MAYNARD ***
Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
Clara Maynard; The True and the False--A Tale of the Times, By W.H.G.
Kingston.
________________________________________________________________________
This is a short book, about a quarter of the length of a typical
Kingston novel. Clara is the daughter of a retired Royal Navy Captain,
who owns a large yacht, a cutter. She can take a large number of guests
to sea, even more than the cutter in Marryat's "The Three Cutters".
They use the yacht as a means of getting to a picnic spot on a beach,
where they are met by even more people, including the new incumbent of
the local parish, the family who own the presentation to the living, and
a couple of Roman priests who are staying with them.
In chapter two Clara's father dies after a series of strokes. Her
betrothed young man, who had been at the picnic, returns on Army service
to India, and she falls under the influence of the new vicar of the
parish, who persuades her to enter a nunnery. This is an absolute
disaster, as the cruelty and lack of goodness and charity of what went
on in that nunnery is quite intolerable.
Eventually she breaks free, and is reunited with her fa
ily. Her betrothed comes back, she marries him and all is well.
________________________________________________________________________
CLARA MAYNARD; THE TRUE AND THE FALSE--A TALE OF THE TIMES, BY W.H.G.
KINGSTON.
CHAPTER ONE.
The blue waters of the British Channel sparkled brightly in the rays of
the sun, shining forth from a cloudless sky, as a light breeze from the
northward filled the sails of a small yacht which glided smoothly along
the southern coast of England. At the helm of the little vessel stood
her owner, Captain Maynard, a retired naval officer. Next to his fair
young daughter, Clara, the old sailor looked upon his yacht as one of
th
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