The Project Gutenberg EBook of Snake and Sword,
by Percival Christopher Wren
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Title: Snake and Sword
A Novel
Author: Percival Christopher Wren
Release Date: January 10, 2004 [EBook #10667]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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SNAKE AND SWORD
_A NOVEL_
BY
PERCIVAL CHRISTOPHER WREN
DEDICATED TO MY WIFE ALICE LUCILLE WREN
CONTENTS
PART I.
THE WELDING OF A SOUL
I. The Snake and the Soul
PART II.
THE SEARING OF A SOUL
II. The Sword and the Snake
III. The Snake Appears
IV. The Sword and the Soul
V. Lucille
VI. The Snake's "Myrmidon"
VII. Love--and the Snake
VIII. Troopers of the Queen
IX. A Snake avenges a Haddock and Lucille behaves
in an un-Smelliean Manner
X. Much Ado about Almost Nothing--A Mere
Trooper
XI. More Myrmidons
PART III.
THE SAVING OF A SOUL
XII. Vultures and Luck--Good and Bad
XIII. Found
XIV. The Snake and the Sword
Seven Years After
PART I.
THE WELDING OF A SOUL.
CHAPTER I.
THE SNAKE AND THE SOUL.
When Colonel Matthew Devon de Warrenne, V.C., D.S.O., of the Queen's
Own (118th) Bombay Lancers, pinned his Victoria Cross to the bosom of
his dying wife's night-dress, in token of his recognition that she was
the braver of the twain, he was not himself.
He was beside himself with grief.
Afterwards he adjured the sole witness of this impulsive and emotional
act, Major John Decies, never to mention his "damned theatrical folly"
to any living soul, and to excuse him on the score of an ancient
sword-cut on the head and two bad sun-strokes.
For the one thing in heaven above, on the earth beneath, or in the
waters under the earth, that Colonel de Warrenne feared, was breach of
good form and stereotyped convention.
And the one thing he loved was the dying woman.
This last statement applies also to Major John Decies, of the Indian
Medical Service, Civil Surgeon of Bimariabad, and may even be
expanded, for the one thing he e
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