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My Hildegarde

Chapter 45: Transcriber’s Notes:
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About This Book

The narrator, weary from wandering and haunted by an unpleasant past, arrives in a semi-tropical gulf capital during a raucous festival and yields to its crowds and music in an attempt to forget. Beneath the city's pageantry and floral revelry the narrator senses political tension and the presence of exiles and conspiracies, and an unexpected encounter with a stranger lifts his spirits. The outing leads into a series of strange adventures and entanglements tied to revolutionary currents in the region, blending romance, danger, and impulsive choices as personal ghosts and public unrest collide.

EAGLE SERIESA weekly publication devoted to good literature.
August 10, 1903
NO. 329

Public records will show that there have been more women restored to health and strength, and more lives saved by

Lydia E.
Pinkham’s
Vegetable
Compound

than by any other medicine in the world.

It therefore must be the best medicine in the world for woman’s special ills.

NOTE.—If you are ill why don’t you write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., and get the advice which has restored more than a million women to health? It will cost you nothing, and may save your life.

Transcriber’s Notes:

A table of contents has been added by the transcriber and placed in the public domain.

Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected.

Some inconsistent hyphenation has been retained from the original.