THE MISSOURIAN
"JACQUELINE""She was the spirit of the enigma, the very personification of theNapoleonic sphinx"]
THE MISSOURIAN
by
EUGENE P. LYLE, Jr.
Illustrated by Ernest Haskell
New YorkDoubleday, Page & Company1905
Copyright, 1905, byDoubleday, Page & CompanyPublished, August, 1905
All rights reserved, including that of translation into foreignlanguages, including the Scandinavian
To
MY TWO BEST FRIENDS
My Father and my Mother
CONTENTS
PART I.
THE THORN IN THE LAND OF ROSES
PART II.
THE ROSE THAT WAS A THORN IN THE LAND OF ROSES
I. Meagre Shanks 273 II. The Black Decree 284 III. As Between Women 293 IV. The Lacking Coincidence 298 V. The Missourians 306 VI. If a Kiss Were All 315 VII. A Crop of Colonels 324 VIII. Royal Resolution 335 IX. Interpreter to the Almighty 344 X. Alone Among His Loving Subjects 351 XI. Fatality and the Missourian 359 XII. The Rendezvous of the Republic 369 XIII. A Buccaneer and a Battle 380 XIV. Blood and Noise--What Else? 391 XV. Of All News the Most Spiteful 406 XVI. Vendetta's Half Sister, Better Born 422 XVII. Under a Spanish Cloak 434 XVIII. El Chaparrito 443 XIX. In Articulo Mortis 459 XX. Knighthood's Belated Flower 465 XXI. The Title of Nobility 475 XXII. The Abbey of Mount Regret 484 XXIII. The Contrariness of Jacqueline 496 XXIV. The Journalistic Sagacity of a Daniel 506