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Updated: June 19, 2025
'Go, he said, almost threateningly, to Albert and his wife. 'Mrs. Shawn, look after your husband's wound. It needs it. See the blood! 'But 'Go, said Hugo. And they went. And when they were gone he released the mechanism, and in the still solitude of the bedroom listened to the strange story of Francis Tudor, related in Francis Tudor's own voice.
She is a prisoner for our holy faith, And in your native land, alas! she suffers." He pauses. MARY. Excellent man! All is not lost, indeed, While such a friend remains in my misfortunes! MORTIMER. Then he began, with moving eloquence, To paint the sufferings of your martyrdom; He showed me then your lofty pedigree, And your descent from Tudor's royal house.
And so in despair and gloom dragged out the last months of Mary Tudor's life. The last message she received from her husband was to beg her to make no difficulties about the succession of the sister who, she knew, would seek to reverse her policy.
'Don't I know it, sir! 'Enough of that! What have you to report? 'Miss Payne left at 2.15, whipped round to the flats entrance, took the lift to the top-floor, went into Mr. Francis Tudor's flat. 'What's that you say? Whose flat? cried Hugo. 'Mr. Francis Tudor's, sir. Mr.
Clarke, where with him and her very merry discoursing of the late play of Henry the 5th, which they conclude the best that ever was made, but confess with me that Tudor's being dismissed in the manner he is is a great blemish to the play. I am mightily pleased with the Doctor, for he is the only man I know that I could learn to pronounce by, which he do the best that ever I heard any man.
Tooder'll be at the foot of the next set before this. Mr. Neverbend wished that Mr. Tudor's journey might still be down, and down, and down, till he reached the globe's centre, in which conflicting attractions might keep him for ever fixed. In his despair he essayed to put one foot upon the ladder, and then looked piteously up to the guide's face.
The profound and pathetic tragedy of Tudor's career did not touch him until long afterwards. 'She lives! Ravengar lives! Ravengar probably knows where she is, and I do not know! And Ravengar is at large! I have set him at large.
Now and then a doubt of Aunt Philippa's wisdom came to me, on the last evening, for instance, when I was speaking to Jill about Heathfield, and when I rather incautiously mentioned Lawrence Tudor's name. I recollected then that Jill had never once spoken of him since the night of the accident. It had dropped completely out of our conversation.
An elaboration of these notes was printed in the "Massachusetts Spy," April 29, 1778, and with corrections by Adams fifty years after the event in William Tudor's "Life of James Otis," chs. 5-7. This is the speech to which Adams, at a later date, attributed the beginning of the Revolution. James Otis in 1765 declared the Virginia Resolutions to be treasonable.
"It is Jeanie he comes to see," she observed. "Oh, obviously." Tudor's retort was so ironical as to be almost rude. She received it in silence, and after a moment he made a half-grudging amendment. "He never showed any interest in Jeanie before, you know. I don't think she is the sole attraction." "No?" said Avery.
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