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+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
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<title>
The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Blue Dragon, by Kirk Munroe.
@@ -192,48 +192,7 @@ em.gesperrt
</style>
</head>
<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Blue Dragon, by Kirk Munroe
-
-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 www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Blue Dragon
- A Tale of Recent Adventure in China
-
-Author: Kirk Munroe
-
-Release Date: June 6, 2013 [EBook #42886]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BLUE DRAGON ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Greg Bergquist, Mary Meehan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 42886 ***</div>
<div class="figleft">
<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt=""/>
@@ -323,7 +282,7 @@ HARPER &amp; BROTHERS PUBLISHERS<br />
<table summary="illustrations">
<tr><td><a href="#illus1">"A HORSEMAN FLED BEFORE THEM" </a></td><td align="right"><i>Frontispiece</i></td></tr>
<tr><td><a href="#map">MAP SHOWING ROUTE FOLLOWED BY AUTHOR </a></td><td align="right"><i>Facing p.</i> 1</td></tr>
-<tr><td><a href="#illus2">"AS POOR JO LOST HIS FOOTING AND FELL, ROB DASHED INTO THE MÊLÉE" </a></td><td align="right">20</td></tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#illus2">"AS POOR JO LOST HIS FOOTING AND FELL, ROB DASHED INTO THE MÊLÉE" </a></td><td align="right">20</td></tr>
<tr><td><a href="#illus3">"HIS MADLY YELLING PURSUERS WERE NOW CLOSE UPON HIM" </a></td><td align="right">140</td></tr>
<tr><td><a href="#illus4">"THE FUGITIVES MADE A CAUTIOUS ENTRY INTO THE SACRED PRECINCTS" </a></td><td align="right">152</td></tr>
<tr><td><a href="#illus5">"HE WAS ABLE TO GAZE CALMLY AT HER WHEN THEY ONCE MORE WERE ESCORTED PAST THE CATHEDRAL" </a></td><td align="right">184</td></tr>
@@ -541,7 +500,7 @@ the house, and from them he took the most marvellous array of gifts
for various members of the Hinckley family that ever had been seen
in Hatton. To Mrs. Hinckley he presented several superb pieces of
embroidered silks from Canton, a centre-piece for a table of pale-blue
-grass linen, drawn work from Swatow, a cloisonné teapot from Pekin,
+grass linen, drawn work from Swatow, a cloisonné teapot from Pekin,
and half a dozen tiny teacups of exquisite Foo-Chow porcelain. For Mr.
Hinckley he had wonderful ivory carvings in the shape of chessmen, and
a wadded silk dressing-gown; while to Rob, in addition to several jars
@@ -855,7 +814,7 @@ himself, Rob sprang forward, swinging the milk-can above his head as he
ran. So busy were the tormentors of the Chinese lad with their sport
that the coming of a would-be rescuer was unnoticed until he was close
upon them. As poor Jo lost his footing and fell, Rob dashed into the
-mêlée, dealing telling blows with his milk-can, and scattering the horde
+mêlée, dealing telling blows with his milk-can, and scattering the horde
of young toughs as though he had been a charge of cavalry. The stopper
flew out of the can, and its contents were flung to right and left,
impartially drenching friend and foe. Thus, for a minute, the tide of
@@ -870,7 +829,7 @@ calmly than could his companions, shouted:</p>
<img src="images/illus2.jpg" alt=""/>
</div>
-<h3> "AS POOR JO LOST HIS FOOTING AND FELL, ROB DASHED INTO THE MÊLÉE"</h3>
+<h3> "AS POOR JO LOST HIS FOOTING AND FELL, ROB DASHED INTO THE MÊLÉE"</h3>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p>"There ain't but one saphead, fellers! Go for him! Kill him! He ain't no
@@ -2969,7 +2928,7 @@ setting sun, across seven thousand miles of Pacific waters.</p>
concerning his adventures and change of plans, had not found a minute
when it seemed possible to do so. Not until the <i>Logan</i>, with her
crowded passenger-list, including civil officials, military officers,
-troops, government school-teachers and other employés, and her vast
+troops, government school-teachers and other employés, and her vast
miscellaneous cargo of live-stock, guns, ammunition, machinery, and
stores of every description, had got so far out to sea that the
Farallones were only a blur on the horizon behind her did it occur
@@ -3020,7 +2979,7 @@ the name we would call it 'Alderman Island.'"</p>
expanse of water, and recall the stirring events of May-day, 1898, when
Dewey and his men did the same thing, only with the terrible difference
that at any moment they were liable to run into a deadly nest of
-torpedoes. As they approached the head of the bay they saw Cavité on
+torpedoes. As they approached the head of the bay they saw Cavité on
the right; then the shipping anchored in the roadstead; and then Manila
itself lying on both sides of the sluggish Pasig, the old walled city on
the right and the more modern town on the left as they faced them.</p>
@@ -3231,7 +3190,7 @@ to the world. Here are silk embroideries of a beauty, delicacy, and
texture not found elsewhere, exquisitely carved ivories, startling
designs, boldly executed in lacquer, gold, and silver, jade, crystal,
and precious stones. Here are feather-work and brass-work, priceless
-porcelains and cloisonné, softest crêpes and gossamer linens, black
+porcelains and cloisonné, softest crêpes and gossamer linens, black
wood furniture graved with the painstaking skill that workmen of the
Western world bestow only upon precious metals. All these things, and
an infinity of others equally desirable, are passed in slow succession
@@ -3928,7 +3887,7 @@ summer mission stations everywhere were looted and destroyed, while
their unfortunate occupants were driven out to be killed or cast into
loathsome prisons, from which death was their only release. Christian
converts were massacred by scores and hundreds, railroad property was
-destroyed, and railroad employés suffered the fate of missionaries. A
+destroyed, and railroad employés suffered the fate of missionaries. A
rumor to the effect that all foreigners, including members of legations,
had been driven from Pekin, was generally believed; as was another,
stating that every foreign resident of Tien-Tsin had been killed. Above
@@ -4668,7 +4627,7 @@ I am. Now I want to get down and out, for I don't like the place."</p>
<p>Accepting this advice, Rob withdrew the head that had looked so absurdly
small on top of that great image, and in another minute slid out of the
-open doorway far below, in company with a quantity of débris.</p>
+open doorway far below, in company with a quantity of débris.</p>
<p>"Whew!" he gasped. "That was a sure enough dust-bath. Now let us get
outside and into an atmosphere that isn't quite so thick with mud."</p>
@@ -5544,7 +5503,7 @@ without carrying a suspicion of anything having gone wrong. Rob got
his tank full of water without trouble, and had hardly done so when
Jo reappeared, hurrying towards the locomotive. He was followed by a
boy bearing a basket full of cooked rice and Chinese cakes. The young
-officer had ordered the few employés of the station about with such a
+officer had ordered the few employés of the station about with such a
lordly air that they had obeyed him without question.</p>
<p>"Did they know we were coming?" asked Rob, as the engine again gathered
@@ -5737,7 +5696,7 @@ their houses into the streets.</p>
<p>Some of the occupants of the station-agent's room fled from it unharmed,
while others, and among them our lads, more or less bruised by falling
-bricks or tiles, crawled out from the débris and made exit more slowly.
+bricks or tiles, crawled out from the débris and made exit more slowly.
Only one remained behind, crushed to death beneath a heavy roof-timber,
and he was the engine-driver, killed, in the very act of denouncing Rob,
by the blowing up of his own locomotive. It had been left with a roaring
@@ -6340,7 +6299,7 @@ retreat to the legation grounds. Jo also was asked to go out and make
special note of what the people of the city were saying.</p>
<p>So the two lads set forth, going by way of Instruct the People Street,
-called by foreigners Legation Street, past the Hôtel de Pékin, in which
+called by foreigners Legation Street, past the Hôtel de Pékin, in which
the Lorimers were staying, and where Rob wished he might make a call.
From there they held their way eastward to Ha-ta (Great) Street, which
they found thronged with citizens and soldiery. They walked slowly up
@@ -6545,7 +6504,7 @@ pouring in from every direction. The numerous low, one-story buildings
of the legation were being assigned to different nationalities, or
set apart for specific purposes. Men, women, and children, diplomats,
soldiers, missionaries, railway engineers, bank clerks, customs
-employés, servants, and coolies, speaking every language under the sun,
+employés, servants, and coolies, speaking every language under the sun,
dogs and ponies, rapid-fire guns, jinrikishas, carts, and wheelbarrows,
furniture, bedding, provisions, cases of wine, barrels of beer, and
a thousand other things, all were mixed in apparently inextricable
@@ -6578,7 +6537,7 @@ to many fierce attacks and an almost continuous bombardment that set its
buildings on fire a dozen times, it never was given up.</p>
<p>Besides this outpost, the American, Russian, German, Japanese, and
-French legations also were held, as was the Hôtel de Pékin of M. Charnot
+French legations also were held, as was the Hôtel de Pékin of M. Charnot
and his brave American wife. It was strongly fortified with sand-bags,
and sent out to its guests, who had taken refuge in the British
Legation, three meals a day with unbroken regularity during the siege.
@@ -6604,7 +6563,7 @@ was given over to a young American missionary engineer, while the actual
duty of defence was distributed according to nationality.</p>
<p>The British Legation compound, including the northwest angle of the
-whole line, was left to the resident inmates&mdash;ministers, attachés,
+whole line, was left to the resident inmates&mdash;ministers, attachés,
missionaries, etc. The Su Yamen and northeast angle were intrusted to
the Japanese, aided by Italians and Austrians. At the southeast angle
were French and Germans, the latter occupying a section of the great
@@ -7290,383 +7249,6 @@ out by Chinese Jo!"</p>
<h3>THE END</h3>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
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-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Blue Dragon, by Kirk Munroe
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