[Adventures and Letters by Richard Harding Davis]@TWC D-Link book
Adventures and Letters

CHAPTER XIII
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THE SPANISH AND ENGLISH CORONATIONS Interrupted by frequent brief visits to New York Philadelphia, and Boston, Richard and his wife remained in Marion from May, 1901, until the early spring of 1902.

During this year Richard accomplished a great deal of work and lived an ideal existence.

In the summer months there were golf and tennis and an army of visitors, and during the winter many of their friends came from New York to enjoy a most charming hospitality and the best of duck shooting and all kinds of winter sports.
Late in April, they sailed for Gibraltar on their way to Madrid, where Richard was to report the coronation ceremonies, and from Madrid they went to Paris and then to London to see the coronation of King Edward.
It was while on a visit to the Rudyard Kiplings that they heard the news that Edward had been suddenly stricken with a serious illness and that the ceremony had been postponed.
11, St.James's Place, St.James's Street, S.W.
London.
June, 1902.
DEAR MOTHER:-- This is only to say that at the Kipling's we heard the news, and being two newspaper men, refused to believe it and went to the postoffice of the little village to call up Brighton on the 'phone.

It was very dramatic, the real laureate of the British Empire asking if the King were really in such danger that he could not be crowned, while the small boy in charge of the grocery shop, where the postoffice was, wept with his elbows on the counter.

They sent me my ticket--unasked--for the Abbey, early this morning, and while I was undecided whether to keep it--or send it back, this came.


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