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The Great Miss Driver

Anthony Hope

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Book Excerpt: 
. . .If Providence, or nature, or society makes a scheme of things, it is surely a merit in us poor units to fit into it? Let others attack or defend the country gentleman. Anyhow, if you are one, look it! And for such an one as does look it I have a heartfelt admiration, from the crown of his head to the sole of his foot—with a special affection for his legs in perfect boots and breeches. Young Lacey was such a consummate type; I did not wonder that Jenny's ever liberal appreciation smiled beams of approval as he appeared over the crest of a rising hillock and rode on to meet us. Excellent, too, were the lad's manners; he appeared really glad to see me—which in the nature of the case he hardly can have been in his heart.

"I'm going to win this morning!" he cried to Jenny. "I feel like winning to-day!"

"Why to-day? You don't win very often."

"That's true," he said to me. "Miss Driver's won two to my one, regular. At sixpence a race I owe. . . Read More

Community Reviews

The Great Miss Driver is, I feel, the best of Anthony Hope's novels, ending not as the reader probably wishes, but as the characters of the persons portayed demand. Unlike The Prisoner of Zenda, a dashing, but hardly believable story (even in the Ronald Colman movie version), The Great Miss Driver i