Beneath the Banner

Frederick J. Cross

Beneath the Banner

The Project Gutenberg EBook of Beneath the Banner, by F. J. Cross 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.net
Title: Beneath the Banner
Author: F. J. Cross
Release Date: November 9, 2003 [EBook #10024]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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BENEATH THE BANNER
BEING NARRATIVES OF NOBLE LIVES AND BRAVE DEEDS
BY
F.J. CROSS

ILLUSTRATED
"I have done my best for the honour of our country."--GORDON
SECOND EDITION
1895
BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
GOOD MORNING! GOOD NIGHT!
TRUE STORIES PURE AND BRIGHT.
In this work will be found a Series of upwards of sixty Chats with Children, suitable for morning and evening reading. The book abounds with anecdotes, and contains numerous illustrations.
Ready about May, 1895.

CONTENTS.
Only a Nurse Girl,--ALICE AYRES
A Slave Trade Warrior,--SIR SAMUEL BAKER
Two Working Men Heroes,--CASE AND CHEW
The Commander of the Thin Red Line,--SIR COLIN CAMPBELL
A Sailor Bold and True,--LORD COCHRANE
A Rough Diamond that was Polished,--JOHN CASSELL
"A Brave, Fearless Sort of Lass,"--GRACE DARLING
A Friend of Lepers,--FATHER DAMIEN
A Great Arctic Explorer,--SIR JOHN FRANKLIN
A Saviour of Six,--FIREMAN FORD
A Blind Helper of the Blind,--ELIZABETH GILBERT
A Great Traveller in the Air,--JAMES GLAISHER
The Soldier with the Magic Wand,--GENERAL GORDON
"Valiant and True,"--SIR RICHARD GRENVILLE
One who Left All,--BISHOP HANNINGTON
A Man who Conquered Disappointments,--SIR HENRY HAVELOCK
A Friend of Prisoners,--JOHN HOWARD
A Hero of the Victoria Cross,--KAVANAGH
The Man who Braved the Flood,--CAPTAIN LENDY
A Temperance Leader,--JOSEPH LIVESEY
A Great Missionary Explorer,--DAVID LIVINGSTONE
From Farm Lad to Merchant Prince,--GEORGE MOORE
A Man who Asked and Received,--GEORGE M��LLER
A Labourer in the Vineyard,--ROBERT MOFFAT
"The Lady with the Lamp,"--FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE
For England, Home, and Duty,--THE DEATH OF NELSON
A Woman who Succeeded by Failure,--HARRIET NEWELL
A Martyr of the South Seas,--BISHOP PATTESON
"K.G. and Coster,"--LORD SHAFTESBURY
A Statesman who had no Enemies,--W.H. SMITH
Greater than an Archbishop,--THE REV.C. SIMEON
A Soldier Missionary,--HEDLEY VICARS
A Lass that Loved the Sailors,--AGNES WESTON
A Great Commander on a Famous Battlefield THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON
A Prince of Preachers,--JOHN WESLEY
Some Children of the Kingdom
The Victor, the Story of an Unknown Man
A Boy Hero,--JOHN CLINTON
Postscript

BENEATH THE BANNER.
STORIES OF MEN AND WOMEN WHO HAVE BEEN STEADY WHEN "UNDER FIRE".

ONLY A NURSE GIRL!
THE STORY OF ALICE AYRES.
On the night of Thursday, 25th April, 1886, the cry rang through Union Street, Borough, that the shop of Chandler, the oilman, was in flames.
So rapid was the progress of the fire that, by the time the escapes reached the house, tongues of flame were shooting out from the windows, and it was impossible to place the ladders in position. The gunpowder had exploded with great violence, and casks of oil were burning with an indescribable fury.
As the people rushed together to the exciting scene they were horrified to find at one of the upper windows a girl, clad only in her night-dress, bearing in her arms a child, and crying for help.
It was Alice Ayres, who, finding there was no way of escape by the staircase, was seeking for some means of preserving the lives of the children in her charge. The frantic crowd gathered below shouted for her to save herself; but that was not her first aim. Darting back into the blinding smoke, she fetched a feather-bed and forced it through the window. This the crowd held whilst she carefully threw down to them one of the children, which alighted safe on the bed.
Again the people in the street called on her to save her own life; but her only answer was to go back into the fierce flames and stifling smoke, and bring out another child, which was safely transferred to the crowd below.
Once again they frantically entreated her to jump down herself; and once again she staggered back blinded and choking into the fiery furnace; and for the third time emerged, bearing the last of her charges, whose life also was saved.
Then, at length, she was free to think of herself. But, alas! her head was dizzy and confused, and she was no longer able to act as surely as she had hitherto done. She jumped--but, to the horror of that anxious admiring throng below, her body struck against the projecting shop-sign, and rebounded, falling with terrific force on to the hard pavement below.
Her spine was so badly injured that although everything possible was done for her at Guy's Hospital, whither she was removed, she died on the following Sunday.
Beautiful windows have been erected at Red Cross Hall, Southwark, to commemorate her heroism; but the best memorial is her own expression: "I tried to do my best"--for this will live in the hearts of all who read of her self-devotion. She had tried to do her best always. Her loving tenderness to the children committed to her care and her
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