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The woman with a stone heart

Chapter 2: Dedication
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About This Book

A young woman, Marie Sampalit, faces an interrupted engagement when her fiancé, Rolando Dimiguez, leaves to serve in an insurrection and is later captured. Grief and resolve transform her into a daring and resourceful agent who pursues espionage, vengeance, and rescue amid the chaos of war. The narrative follows her participation in covert missions, boat and river combats, the liberation and protection of prisoners, and arduous inland journeys, culminating in confrontations with military forces and personal reckoning. Themes of love, duty, sacrifice, and the moral costs of conflict run through a sequence of episodic wartime adventures.

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Title: The woman with a stone heart

A romance of the Philippine War

Author: O. W. Coursey

Release date: February 27, 2008 [eBook #24705]
Most recently updated: January 3, 2021

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
produced from scanned images of public domain material
from the Google Print project and the Internet Archive.)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WOMAN WITH A STONE HEART ***

The Woman with a Stone Heart
A Romance of the Philippine War.
All of these books are published and for sale by
THE EDUCATOR SUPPLY COMPANY
Mitchell, South Dakota

Copyrighted 1914

By O. W. Coursey

The Woman with a Stone Heart

Introduction

To those whose love of adventure would cause them to plunge head-long into an abyss of vain glory, hoping at life’s sunset to reap a harvest contrary to the seed that were sown, let me suggest that you pause first to read the story of “The Woman With a Stone Heart,” Marie Sampalit, dare-devil of the Philippines.


Perhaps we might profitably meditate for a few moments on the musings of Whittier:

“The tissue of the life to be

We weave in colors all our own,

And in the field of destiny

We’ll reap as we have sown.”

The Author.

Dedication

To Her, who, as a bride of only eighteen months, stood broken-hearted on the depot platform and bade me a tearful farewell as our train of soldier boys started to war; who later, while I was Ten Thousand miles away from home on soldier duty in the Philippine Islands, became a Mother; and who, unfortunately, three months thereafter, was called upon to lay our first-born, Oliver D. Coursey, into his snow-lined baby tomb amid the bleak silence of a cold winter’s night, with no strong arm to bear her up in those awful hours of anguish and despair,


My Soldier Wife, Julia,

this book is most affectionately dedicated.

“Only a baby’s grave,

Yet often we go and sit

By the little stone,

And thank God to own,

We are nearer heaven for it.”

O. W. Coursey.

List of Illustrations

Table of Contents

Marie Sampalit

“The woman with a stone heart.’