Lion's Share, The 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lion's Share, by E. Arnold 
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Title: The Lion's Share 
Author: E. Arnold Bennett 
Release Date: December 27, 2004 [EBook #14487] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
LION'S SHARE *** 
 
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THE LION'S SHARE 
by 
Arnold Bennett 
First Published 1916. 
 
BY THE SAME AUTHOR NOVELS-- A MAN FROM THE NORTH 
ANNA OF THE FIVE TOWNS LEONORA A GREAT MAN 
SACRED AND PROFANE LOVE WHOM GOD HATH JOINED 
BURIED ALIVE THE OLD WIVES' TALE THE GLIMPSE HELEN 
WITH THE HIGH HAND CLAYHANGER HILDA LESSWAYS
THESE TWAIN THE CARD THE REGENT THE PRICE OF LOVE 
FANTASIAS-- THE GRAND BABYLON HOTEL THE GATES OF 
WRATH TERESA OF WATLING STREET THE LOOT OF CITIES 
HUGO THE GHOST THE CITY OF PLEASURE 
SHORT STORIES-- TALES OF THE FIVE TOWNS THE GRIM 
SMILE OF THE FIVE TOWNS THE MATADOR OF THE FIVE 
TOWNS 
BELLES-LETTRES-- JOURNALISM FOR WOMEN FAME AND 
FICTION HOW TO BECOME AN AUTHOR THE TRUTH ABOUT 
AN AUTHOR THE REASONABLE LIFE HOW TO LIVE ON 
TWENTY-FOUR HOURS A DAY THE HUMAN MACHINE 
LITERARY TASTE FRIENDSHIP AND HAPPINESS THOSE 
UNITED STATES MARRIAGE LIBERTY 
DRAMA-- POLITE FARCES CUPID AND COMMONSENSE 
WHAT THE PUBLIC WANTS THE HONEYMOON THE GREAT 
ADVENTURE MILESTONES (in collaboration with Edward 
Knoblauch) 
* * * * * 
(In collaboration with Eden Phillpotts) THE SINEWS OF WAR: A 
Romance THE STATUE: A Romance 
 
CONTENTS 
 
CHAPTER 
1. MISS INGATE, AND THE YACHT 2. THE THIEF'S PLAN 
WRECKED 3. THE LEGACY 4. MR. FOULGER 5. THE DEAD 
HAND 6. THE YOUNG WIDOW 7. THE CIGARETTE GIRL 8. 
EXPLOITATION OF WIDOWHOOD 9. LIFE IN PARIS 10. FANCY 
DRESS 11. A POLITICAL REFUGEE 12. WIDOWHOOD IN THE 
STUDIO 13. THE SWOON 14. MISS INGATE POINTS OUT THE 
DOOR 15. THE RIGHT BANK 16. ROBES 17. SOIRÉE 18. A 
DECISION 19. THE BOUDOIR 20. PAGET GARDENS 21. JANE 22. 
THE DETECTIVE 23. THE BLUE CITY 24. THE SPATTS 25. THE 
MUTE 26. NOCTURNE 27. IN THE GARDEN 28. ENCOUNTER 29. 
FLIGHT 30. ARIADNE 31. THE NOSTRUM 32. BY THE 
BINNACLE 33. AGUILAR'S DOUBLE LIFE 34. THE TANK-ROOM
35. THE THIRD SORT OF WOMAN 36. IN THE DINGHY 37. 
AFLOAT 38. IN THE UNIVERSE 39. THE IMMINENT DRIVE 40. 
GENIUS AT BAY 41. FINANCIAL NEWS 42. INTERVAL 43. 
ENTR'ACTE 44. END OF THE CONCERT 45. STRANGE RESULT 
OF A QUARREL 46. AN EPILOGUE 
 
CHAPTER I 
MISS INGATE, AND THE YACHT 
Audrey had just closed the safe in her father's study when she was 
startled by a slight noise. She turned like a defensive animal to face 
danger. It had indeed occurred to her that she was rather like an animal 
in captivity, and she found a bitter pleasure in the idea, though it was 
not at all original. 
"And Flank Hall is my Zoo!" she had said. (Not that she had ever seen 
the Zoological Gardens or visited London.) 
She was lithe; she moved with charm. Her short, plain blue serge 
walking-frock disclosed the form of her limbs and left them free, and it 
made her look younger even than she was. Its simplicity suited her 
gestures and took grace from them. But she wore the old thing without 
the least interest in it--almost unconsciously. She had none of the 
preoccupations caused by the paraphernalia of existence. She scarcely 
knew what it was to own. She was aware only of her body and her soul. 
Beyond these her possessions were so few, so mean, so unimportant, 
that she might have carried them to the grave and into heaven without 
protest from the authorities earthly or celestial. 
The slight noise was due to the door of the study, which great age had 
distorted and bereft of sense, and, in fact, almost unhinged. It unlatched 
itself, paused, and then calmly but firmly swung wide open. When it 
could swing no farther it shook, vibrating into repose. 
Audrey condemned the door for a senile lunatic, and herself for a
poltroon. She became defiant of peril, until the sound of a step on the 
stair beyond the door threw her back into alarm. But when the figure of 
Miss Ingate appeared in the doorway she was definitely reassured, to 
the point of disdain. All her facial expression said: "It's only Miss 
Ingate." 
And yet Miss Ingate was not a negligible woman. Her untidy hair was 
greying; she was stout, she was fifty, she was plain, she had    
    
		
	
	
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