Autobiography of Mark Twain (44 page)

BOOK: Autobiography of Mark Twain
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^
the crushing strain upon her
astonishing
^
astounding
^
memory, fighting
that
long battle
serene and
undismayed against
these
colossal odds
,stands alone in its pathos and its sublimity; it
^
It
^
has nowhere its
mate
,
^
match,
^
either in the annals of fact
or in the
creations of fable.
^
realms of fiction.
^

3.
And how
^
How
^
fine and great were the
things she daily said, how fresh and crisp—and she so worn in body,
^
words she spoke day by day, her ready answers, her bright demeanour, and crisp criticisms, and she so worn in body,
^
so starved,
and
^
so
^
tired,
and
^
so
^
harried
They
^
Her utterances
^
run through the whole gamut of feeling and expression
from scorn and defiance,
uttered
^
spoken
^
with soldierly fire and frankness,
all down the scale
to wounded dignity clothed in words of noble pathos
;as, w
hen her patience was exhausted by the pestering attempts of her persecutors to
find out
^
discover
^
what
kind of
devil’s-witchcraft she had employed to rouse the war-spirit in her soldiers she
burst
^
cried
^
out
with
“What I said was, ‘Ride these English down’—and I did it myself!”
and as, w
hen insultingly asked why it was that
her
standard had place at the crowning of the King in the Cathedral of Rheims rather than
the standards
^
those
^
of
the
other captains, she uttered that touching speech, “It had borne the burden, it had earned the honour

a phrase which fell from her lips without
preparation, but whose
^
premeditation, the
^
moving beauty and simple grace
it
^
of which
^
would bankrupt the art
of language to surpass.

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