TAILIEUCHUNG - Ailsa Paige

The butler made an instinctive movement to detain him, but he flung him aside and entered the drawing-room, the servant recovering his equilibrium and following on a run. Light from great crystal chandeliers dazzled him for a moment; the butler again confronted him but hesitated under the wicked glare from his eyes. Then through the brilliant vista, the young fellow caught a glimpse of a dining-room, a table where silver and crystal glimmered, and a great gray man just lowering a glass of wine from his lips to gaze at him with quiet curiosity. The next moment he traversed the carpeted interval between them and halted. | Ailsa Paige 1 CHAPTER I p CHAPTER II p CHAPTER III p CHAPTER IV p CHAPTER V p CHAPTER VI p CHAPTER VII p CHAPTER VIII p CHAPTER IX p CHAPTER X p CHAPTER XI p CHAPTER XII p CHAPTER XIII p CHAPTER XIV p CHAPTER XV p CHAPTER XVI p CHAPTER XVII p CHAPTER XVIII p CHAPTER XIX p CHAPTER XX p CHAPTER XXI p Ailsa Paige The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ailsa Paige by Robert W. Chambers This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at Title Ailsa Paige Author Robert W. Chambers Release Date April 4 2004 EBook 11904 Language English 2 Ailsa Paige Character set encoding ASCII START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AILSA PAIGE Produced by Al Haines AILSA PAIGE A NOVEL BY ROBERT W. CHAMBERS It is at best but a mixture of a little good with much evil and a little pleasure with much pain the beautiful is linked with the revolting the trivial with the solemn bathos with pathos the commonplace with the sublime. ILLUSTRATED D. APPLETON AND COMPANY NEW YORK AND LONDON 1910 COPTRIGHT 1910 BY ROBERT W. CHAMBERS Copyright 1910 by The Curtis Publishing Company Published August 1910 TO THE CONQUERORS WHO WON IMMORTAL VICTORY Arm yourselves and be Valiant Men and see that ye rise up in readiness against the Dawn that ye may do Battle with These that are Assembled against us. For it is better to die in Battle than live to behold the Calamities of our own People. Lord we took not the Land into Possession by our own Swords neither was it our own Hands that helped us but Thy Hand was a Buckler and Thy right Arm a Shield and the Light of Thy Countenance hath conquered forever. AND TO THE VANQUISHED WHO WON IMMORTALITY We are the fallen who with helpless faces Low in the dust in stiffening ruin lay Felt the hoofs beat and heard the rattling traces As o er us drove the chariots of the fray. We are the .

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