SAG Bellefonte, Pa., October 9, 1908. mm— HEREDITY. When | look on a blue-veined wrist Aud think how its pulsing tide, Began in u far-off mist Where centuries breathed and died. There is something within me yearns For that kindred of long ago, Who govern my life by turos, Whether | will or no. There's a soldier with a heart of gold But a spirit that brooked no wrong ; Am | fearless? iis courage bold, Not mine has made me strong. "Tis a Quaker the ages know Who ean otten my varying mood ; Not to forgive my toe Were to wrong thet gentle blood. There's a priest in gown and stole Stands« rapt at an altar-rail, Above him an aureole : Through him must my prayer avail, And one with a wind-filled sheet Feralien Innds outspread ; 1 follow with roviog feet His haunts revisited. Nota long procession of saints But a line of honor fusi, The brush of history paints On the canvas of my past, And [love them one and all And offer a “Bidding Prayer” For a race without stain or thrall, That blesses me unaware. —| Louise Manning Hodgkins, in The Congre- gationalist, -. WALTER HARVEY-COWARD. Walter Harvey faced a cold fact on she evening of his return to Thorpe Academy ~ he was a coward mentally and physical- ly. He kuew in his heart that every strange sound which he counldn’t account for fully, whether it was a dusky figure on the road at twilight or a adden noise in a silent place, cansed something to drop within him. Only five minutes before he had felt a great nervous panic when a shadewy form appeared in the barn door, just as night was olosing in. He bad resisted the temp- tation to slip into the house, bracing bhim- sell with all his strength, yet tinly i» a tremor. It was only his father, and when he was alone again he muttered to himself: “I am a regular coward, and it is all the worse that I pretend not to be.” Certain it is that nobody eunspected him of cowardice. He was a olean cut, athletic lad of sixteen, with a singularly calm and determined face and poise. In baseball mes at Thorpe his steadiness in the box Bad been an inspiration to more than one victory. He was never ruffled, never loss bis head, but always held his team in the most trying moweunts. People kuew him as a ‘nervy boy,” and always his father had said : *‘Walter has more courage than either of his older brothers, and almost as much as the two put together.” This reputation, gained more, perhaps, because as a youngsier, he would go alone to bed in the dark, when his brothers would not, had never lefs him. The praise which he got then, though he knew that bi- feared many things on those nightly t11ps, bad kept him from showiug or ad- witting fear afterward. Yet to-night he wae honest with himself. ‘If I should ever meet a real danger, I'd probably faint away like a pervoue old la- uy.! He did vot know, as brave men do, that cowardice is more a matter of action than feeling ; he didn’t realize that the hravest deeds in the world's history have been done by men whose hearts pumped and knees shook while they made their pames famous, The courage that overcomes the desite to ran, that can wait for the un. known aud the terrible, when every fiber of the body i+ tense with fear—that was | not courage +o hi- mind, but deception like bis. And vet he esnld not remember that any of his fears had come true. In a quiet, silent way be bad ontwmdly lived up to the npearned reputation his father had given him because it flattered him to be called brave, and the next day, stil! disgusted with his cowardice he re. sarned to Thorpe. He was walking in a big wood, a month later, with Mi. Benjamin, a big, square- shooldered fellow, just ous of college, who was teaching at Thorpe that year ; when a mile or more from the town, at the foot of the mountain, svddenly a twig snapped nearby. Walter stopped for a second, his face going white, shen plodded on. In a minute he had control of himself, but as be looked at Mr. Benjamin he saw the keen, quizical glance and his face flash- “Gave youn a start?’ gneried Mr. Benja- min. “Um—yes—] must have been dream- ing,” Walter added slowly. Bat Mr. Benjamin knew something of humo nature and he gaes