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قراءة كتاب Anno Domini 2000; or, Woman's Destiny

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‏اللغة: English
Anno Domini 2000; or, Woman's Destiny

Anno Domini 2000; or, Woman's Destiny

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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ANNO DOMINI 2000;

OR,

WOMAN'S DESTINY.

BY

SIR JULIUS VOGEL, K.C.M.G.

LONDON:
HUTCHINSON AND CO.,
25, PATERNOSTER SQUARE.
1889.



Printed by Hazell, Watson, & Viney, Ld., London and Aylesbury.


Dedicated
TO
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE

THE EARL OF CARNARVON,

WHO, BY HIS SUCCESSFUL EFFORTS TO CONSOLIDATE
THE CANADIAN DOMINIONS, HAS
GREATLY AIDED THE CAUSE
OF FEDERATION.


CONTENTS.


PAGE
PROLOGUE 3
 
CHAPTER I.
THE YEAR 2000—UNITED BRITAIN 27
 
CHAPTER II.
THE EMPEROR AND HILDA FITZHERBERT 59
 
CHAPTER III.
LORD REGINALD PARAMATTA 67
 
CHAPTER IV.
A PARTIAL VICTORY 83
 
CHAPTER V.
CABINET NEGOTIATIONS 99
 
CHAPTER VI.
BAFFLED REVENGE 119
 
CHAPTER VII.
HEROINE WORSHIP 165
 
CHAPTER VIII.
AIR-CRUISERS 177
 
CHAPTER IX.
TOO STRANGE NOT TO BE TRUE 193
 
CHAPTER X.
LORD REGINALD AGAIN 215
 
CHAPTER XI.
GRATEFUL IRELAND 233
 
CHAPTER XII.
THE EMPEROR PLANS A CAMPAIGN 251
 
CHAPTER XIII.
LOVE AND WAR 261
 
CHAPTER XIV.
THE FOURTH OF JULY RETRIEVED 287
 
CHAPTER XV.
CONCLUSION 295
 
EPILOGUE 309

PROLOGUE.


PROLOGUE. A.D. 1920.


George Claude Sonsius in his early youth appeared to have before him a fair, prosperous future. His father and mother were of good family, but neither of them inherited wealth. When young Sonsius finished his university career, the small fortune which his father possessed was swept away by the failure of a large banking company. All that remained from the wreck was a trifling annuity payable during the lives of his father and mother, and this they did not live long to enjoy. They died within a year of each other, but they had been able to obtain for their son a fairly good position in a large mercantile house as foreign correspondent. At twenty-five the young man married; and three years afterwards he unfortunately met with a serious accident, that made him for two years a helpless invalid and at the end of the time left him with his right hand incapable of use. Meanwhile his appointment had lapsed, his wife's small fortune had disappeared, and during several years his existence had been one continual struggle with ever-increasing want and penury. The end was approaching. The father and mother and their one crippled son, twelve years old, dwelt in the miserable attic of a most dilapidated house in one of the poorest neighbourhoods of London. The roof over their heads did not even protect them from the weather. The room was denuded of every article of furniture with the exception of two worthless wooden cases and a horsehair mattress on which the unhappy boy stretched his pain-wrung limbs.

Early in life this child suffered only

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