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Project Gutenberg's Nearly Lost but Dearly Won, by Theodore P. Wilson 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: Nearly Lost but Dearly Won Author: Theodore P. Wilson Illustrator: M. D. H. Release Date: April 18, 2007 [EBook #21135] Language: English Character set encoding: ASCII *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NEARLY LOST BUT DEARLY WON *** Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England Nearly Lost but Dearly Won by the Reverend T.P. Wilson, M.A. ________________________________________________________________ Wilson wrote several books around the end of the 1880s. He had won a prize some ten years previously for the best book assessed by The Band of Hope, a Society devoted to helping the young never to take up drinking. This present book gives you the impression that it might well have been another one written to be entered into the competition. Anyway, if it was, it didn't win. It's quite a good story, but I think its trouble is, that it is neither a book that would appeal directly to teenagers, which one supposes was its target audience, nor yet to young adults. There is nothing like the amount of action we saw in "Frank Oldfield." it is rather a short book, but one of its crowning glories is the set of ten line drawings by "MDH". These are really superb, full of action and life, particularly where there are children or horses. I wish all childrens' books were as well illustrated. NH ________________________________________________________________ NEARLY LOST BUT DEARLY WON BY THE REVEREND T.P. WILSON, M.A. CHAPTER ONE. ESAU TANKARDEW. Certainly, Mr Tankardew was not a pattern of cleanliness, either in his house or his person. Someone had said of him sarcastically, "that there was nothing clean in his house but his _towels_;" and there was a great deal of truth in the remark. He seemed to dwell in an element of cobwebs; the atmosphere in which he lived, rather than breathed, was apparently a mixture of fog and dust. Everything he had on was faded-- everything that he had about him was faded--the only dew that seemed to visit the jaded-looking shrubs in the approach to his dwelling was _mil_dew. Dilapidation and dinginess went hand-in
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