set’ in Stedwell. “elient upon a lease : but he knew = ! ois . 3 succession as her mood changed ina he- emorralic witching, fanciful way ? or could it he her J voice, so full of melodious inflections, at! : times 50 piteous and again so utterly weary, Bellefonte, Pa., April 17. 1896. c were questions which Edgar Thring asked himself many times ; yet heé could give no answer to them. All he knew was that he loved her, as man can love but once : to him there was no heaven save in her eyes, no music save in her voice, no. grace nor beauty save in her every trivial action. THE CROWN OF FAILURE. When your leive lived your life, When yon have fonght your st good tight ld won, And the day's work is finished, and the sun Sets on the darkening world and sl its strife- tated on his, they met opposite the decay- Ere the worn hands are tired with a1 they've ing, tottering, toiling old mill many times done, —And the picture progressed but slowly. ire the mind's strength begins to droop and and the trout, reveling in their freedom, wine. were caught—not all. Ere the first touch of sleep has dulled the hain, One day the fisherman was at his post, armed with a book of flies, his rod, line and basket, disconsolately flicking the sleepy waters. for Gladys Grey had not come to put the long-delayed finishing touches to her sketch of the old mill. She had told him upon the previous evening when they had parted at her garden gate. that she re the heart's springs are slow sind running dry- When vou have lived your lite, TTwere good to die, LEE may not he so, i you but fight a fight you nay not win : Nee the far gos! hut way not enier i T"were better then to die and not to know Defeat —to dic amidst the wash and din, 3 but still she came not. morrow as usual : : “ Can anything he the Is she ill» {matter © = = —=Qomething said to himself, uneasily : and his glance continually wandered to the broken hur- dles at the entrance to the meadow, through which she must pass. He looked at his watch. hour behind her usual time. “Iwill wait another ten minutes,” he muttered, *‘and then—then I will go to her house and find out what is the matter.” Perhaps, until this moment—the first Still striving, while the heart beats high and fast With glorious lite, If yon must fail at last, Such end were hest with all vane hope and all Your spirit in its yonth Then, when You (alll [Far better so to dic, Still toiling upward throngh the mists obscure, With all things possible and nothing