Kffl M3rTi mkbuj ft. A miss wnm ' BMB&HUMFHIEYWAID, AOinOBOf "ROBftRT KLSMEBE." "I can cheese wliem Ilike7" ibe said ab ruptly, "I am net bound te Mr. Hawes," "Bcsidea," be said, cautiously, changing hit ground a little, "I theuld have said only, of course, you mutt knew much better that It is a little risky te give the British publie tuch very serious fare as thte, and Imme diately after the 'White Lady.' TheEnghth tboater-gecr never teems te me te take kindly te mcdiascalism king and knlghU and nobles and the Fifteenth century are very likely te bore him. Net that I mean te Im ply for a moment that the play would be a fallure in point of popularity. Yeu bave get Bitch a held that you could carry anything through; but I am Inclined te think that In 'Elvira' you would be rather fighting against wind and tide-, and that, as I said before, It would be a great strain upon you." "The public makes no objection te Mine. DcsfercU In Victer Huge," she answered quickly, even sharply. "Her parts, te far as I knew anything about them, are just these romantle parts, and she has made her enor mous reputation out of thorn." Kendal hesitated. "The French bave a great tradition of them," he said. "Racine, after all, was a preparation for Victer Huge." "Ne, nep she exclaimed, with sudden bit terness and a change of volce which startled htm, "it is net that. It is that I am I, and Mme. Dccfercts is Mme. Desferets. Oh, I seel I see very well that your mind Is agalnct It. And Mr. Wallace there wcre two or thrce things in his manner which have put tied me. He has never said yes te my pro posal formal ly. 1 understand perfectly what it means; you think that I shall de the play an injury by acting it; that It is tee geed former Kendal knelt as if a thunderbolt had fallen; the somber passion of her manner af fected him Indescribably. "Miss Brctherten f he ci led. "Yes, yes!'1 she said, almost fiercely, stop step ping in the path. "It's that, I knew. I have felt it almost slnce your first word. What power have I if net tragic power! If a part like Elvira docs net suit me, what docs suit me! Of ceurse that is what you mean. If I cannot act Elvira I am geed for nothing I am werse thaTl geed for nothing I nm an Imposter, a sham!'' Bhe sat down en the raised edge of the bank, for she was trembling, and clasped her quiveriug hands en her knees. Kendal was Clasped her quivering hands. beside himself with distress. Hew had he blundered se, and what had brought this about! It was be unexpected, It was Incred ible. "De dobcliave me!'1 he exclaimed, bend ing ever her. "I never meant nuything the least disrespectful te you; Inover dreamed of it. Yeu asked me te glve you my true opinion, and my criticism npplied much raore te the play than te yourself. Think nothing of It, If you yourself nre persuaded. Yeu must knew much better than I can what will suit you. And as for Wallace Walloce will be proud te let you de what you will with his play." It seemed te him that he would have said anything in the world te soetbo her. It was ' se piteous, se intolerable te him te watch that quivering lip. "Ah, yes," she said, looking up, n dreary emile flitting ever her face, "I knew you didnt mean te wound me, but it was there, your feeling; I saw it at ence. I might have seen it, if I hadn't been n feel, in Mr. Wnllace's manner. I did soe it. It's only what every ene whose opinion is worth hav ing is beginning te say. My ncting has been itnigbtmare te me lately. I lieliee it bes been a great, great mistake." Kcudal never felt a keener hatred of the concntlennlities which rule the rolatlens bo be tw ecu men and women. Could he only have simply expressed his own feeling, he would have knelt beside her en the paih, hae taken the trembling bands in his own, und com forted her ns a woman would have done. But . ns, it was, he could only stand stiff nnd awkward before her, nnd J'et it seemed te him as if the w hole world had resolved itself into his own individuality and hers, and as if the gay river party nnd the bright, friendly relations of nn hour boferowero separated from the prosent by an impassable gulf. -And, worst of all, there scorned te lj a strange perversity In bis speech a fate which dreve him into betraying every here nrd there his own real standpoint whether he would or no. "Yeu must net say such things," he said, as calmly as he could. "Yeu have charmed the English publie as no ene clse has ever charmed it. Is that net a great thing te have done! And if I, who nm very fastid ious nnd very captious nnd ever-critical m a hundred ways if I nm inclined te think that apart Is rather mero than you, with your short dramatic experience, can compass quite successfully, why, what does it matter! I may lw quite wrong. Don't take any netice of my opinion; forget it, and let me help you, if I can, by talking ever the pluy." Bhe shook her head with a bitter little smile. "Ne, no; I shall never forget it. Your attitude only brought home te me, nl nl mest mero strongly than I could bear, what I have suspected a long, long time the con cen mpt which peeple llke you end Mr. Wnl ia&rfccl formel'' "Contempt I'1 cried Kendal, beside himself, nnd feeling as if all the criticisms he had allowed himself te make of her wcre recoil ing iu ene nvenging mass upeu his head. "I never felt anything but the warmest admi ration for your courage, your work, your womanly goodness nnd sweetness." "Yes," she said, rising and holding out her hand half uncouscleusly for her cloak, which she put round licr 03 though the w cod bad suddenly grown cold; "admiration for me as n woman, contempt for me as nn artist I There's the whole bare truth. Dees It held my future In It, I wonder! Is there nothing in me but this beauty that peeple talk of, nnd which I sometimes hatel" She swept her hair back from her forehead with a fierce dramatic gesture. It wa3as though the self in her was rising up nnd ns sci ting itself ugainst the judgment which hud been pas-sol upon it, as if seme hidden force, hardly suspected even by herself, were beat ing ngainst its bars. Kendal watched ber in helpless sikuce. "Tell me," she said, fixing her deep hazel ojes upon him, "you ewo it te me you have given me se much pain. Ne, no; you did uet meau It. But tell me, and tell me from the lottem of your heart that is, if you nre interested enough in me what is it I want! What is it that seems te be threatening me with fallure as an artist! I work all day long; my work is never out of my head, it seems te pursue me all night. But the mero I struggle with it the less suc cessful I seem even te myself." Her leek was haunting; there wa despair nnd there was hepe in it. It implied that she hail set him up in her impulsivowayasnsert of an eracle who aloue could help her out el her dllllculty. In presence of that leek his own conventionality fell away from bim, and he spoke the plain, direct truth te her. "What you want," he said slowly, as if the words wcre forced from him, "is knowledge! - Londen lias taught you much, aud that Is why you are dis.itlsGed with your work it is the beginulug of all real success. But you want iitive knuw ieJge the kuowkdge you could get from books, aud the knowl knewl lge ether jieople could teach you. Yeu want a true sense of what has been dene and Hi M QOM wttti YYMf aft and VtM waataatealgkt Inte the world et Idea lying round ft and about It Yen are very young, ad yen bar ted te train yourself. But rerjr human art nowadays is se complicated that none of at can get ea without uelng tbe (Teat serai of esperienee ether have laid up rer as." It was all out new. He had spoken his tame mind. Tbey bad stepped again, and aba was looking at him Intently; It struck him that ha could net pesalbly have said what ha bad been saying unless be had been ltd en by an Instinctive dependence upon a great magnanimity of nature In her. And then the next moment the strange opposite the matter held In It flashed across him. He aaw tbe crowded theatre, the whlte figure en the stage; hit ear seemed te be full of the clamor of praise with which Londen had been overwhelming Its favorite It was te this spotted child of fertune that be had been playing the schoolmaster he, ene captious man of letters, against tbe world. But the had net a thought of the kind, or rather the situation presented Itself te her in exactly the contrary light. Te her Kendal's words, instead of being these of a single critic, were the voice and the embodiment of a hundred converging impressions nnd sensa tions, and she felt n relief In having analyzed te the full the vague treuble which bad been settling upon her by this unraveling of her own feelings and his. "I am very grateful te you," she said steadily; "very. It it strange, but almost when I first taw you I felt that there was something ominous In you te me. My dream in which I have been living has never been se perfect since, and new I think it has gene. Don't leek se grieved," the cried, inexpress ibly touched by his face. "I am glad you told me all you thought It will be a help te me. And as for peer Elvira," she added, trying te smile, for all ber extreme paleness, "tell Mr. Wallace I glve her up. I am net vexed. I am net angry. Don't you think new we had better go back te Mrs. Btuart! I should llke a rest with her before we all meet again." She moved forward as she spoke, and it seemed te Kendal that her step was unsteady and that she was deadly white. He planted himself before her in tbe descending path aud held out a hand te help her. Bhe gave htm her own, and he carried it impetuously te his lips. "Yeu are nobleness itself P he cried, from the depths of his heart. "I feel as if I had been the merest pedant blunderer the most incapable, clumsy idiot." Bhe smiled, but the could net answer. And in a few mere mementa voices and steps could be heard approaching, and the scene was ever. CHAPTER VI. The Sunday party separated at Padding Padding ten en the night of the Nuneham expedition, and Wnllace and Eustace Kendal walked eastward together. The journey home had been very quiet Miss Brctherten had been forced te declare, herself "extremely tired," and Mrs. Stuart's anxiety and sense of re sponsibility about her had communicated themselves te the rest of the party. "It is the effect of my long day yesterday," she said apologetically te Ferbes, who hov ered about ber with theso affectionate atten tions which n man en the verge of old age pays with freedom te a young girl. "It won't de te let tbe publie see se much of me in future. But I don't want te spoil our Sunday. Talk te me and I shall forget it" Wallace, who had bad bis eyes about him when she and Eustace Kendal emerged from the weed lu view of the rest of the party, was restless nnd ill at case, but there was no getting any information, even by gesture, from Kendal, who sat in his corner dil igently watching the moonlight en tbe flying fields, or making every new and then orae disjointed attempts at conversation with Mrs. Stuart At the station Miss Brcthcrten's carriage was waiting; tbe party of gentlemen saw her and Mrs. Stuart, who insisted en taking her home, into it; the pale, smiling fnce bent forward; she waved her hand in response te tbe lifted hats aud she was gene. "Well," said Wallace, with a world of in quiry In his voice, as be and Kendal turned eastward. "It has been an unfortunate business," said Kendal abruptly. "I never did n thing worse, I think, or spent a mere painful half hour." Wallace's face fell. "I wish I hadn't bored you with my confounded affaire," lie ex claimed. "It was tee bad 1" Kendal was inclined te ngrce inwardly, for hi was in n Plate of irritable reaction; but he had the justlce te add aleud: "It was I who was the feel te undcrtake it And I think, indeed, it could have lcen done, but that cir cumstances, which neither you nor I had weighed sufficiently, were against it. She is in n nervous, shaken state, mentally nnd physically, and before I hnd hnd time te dis cuss the point at all she had carried it en te the personal ground, aud the thing was up." "She is deeply offended, thenf' "Net ut all, in the ordinary sense; she is tee line creature; but she talked of the 'con tempt' that you and I feci for berl" "Geed heavensl" cried Wallace, feeling most unjustly persuaded that bis friend had buugled the matter horribly. "Yes," said Kendal deliberately; "'con tempt,' that was it I don't knew hew it came about. All I knew is, that w hat I Bald, which seemed te me very harmless, was like n match te a mine. But sbe told me te tell you that she made no further claim en 'Elvira.' Se the play is safe." "D the pluy P cried Wnllace vigorously, a sentiment te w hich jierhaps Kendal's Bilence gave consent. "But I cannot let it i-est there. I must write te her." "I don't think I would, if I were you," said Kendal. "I should let it alone. She leeks upon the matter as finished. She told me particularly te tell you that she was net vexed, and you may be qulte sure that she isn't, In any vulgar sense. lVrlmps that makes It all the werse. However, you'ven right te knew what happened, se I'll tell you ns far as I remember." He gave an abridged account of the con cen con vcrsatlen.whicli made matters a llttle clearer, though by no means less uncomforta ble, te Wnllace. When it was ever they were uearing Vige street, the point at which their routes diverged, Wallace having rooms in the Albany, nnd Kcudal hailed a hansom. "If I were J oil," he said, as itcameup, "I fheuld, as I said before, let the thing uloue as much as possible. She will probably sjKuk te you about it, and you will, of ceurse, bay what you like, but I'm pretty sure 6he won't tnke up the play again, and if she feels n coolness towards anybody It won't be toward you." "Thcre's small consolation in that!"' ex claimed Wallace. "Anyhow, make the let of It, my dear fel low," said Kendal, as though determined te stiikea lighter key. "Don't be se dismal, things will leek differently te morrow morn mern ingthey generally de tbere's no tremend ous harm done. I'm 6erry I didn't de your bidding better. Honestly, when I coma te think ever it, I don't see hew I could have dene otherwise. But I don't exjwet you te think se." Wnllace laughed, protested and they parted. A few moments later Kendal let himself into bU rooms, where lights were burning, nnd threw himself into his reading chair, be side which his 1oeks and papers steed ready te bis baud. Generally nothing gave him n greater tense of bien-etre than this nightly re turn, after a day sjwnt in society, te theso silent aud faithful companions of his life. He was accustomed te feel the ntmosphcre of bis room when hocameback te it charged with welcome. It was as though the thoughts mid schemes he bad left warm and safe in shelter there started te life again after a day's torpor, and thronged te meet him. His books smiled nt blm with friendly faces, tbe open page called te blm te resume the work of the morning he was In every sense at home. Te-night, however, the familiar spell seemed te have lest its force After a hasty supper be took up seme proofs, pen in band. But the first page was hardly turned Ix-fere they bail dropped en te his knee. It seemed te hfm as if be still felt en his arm the folds of a green, fur edged cloak, as if the touch of a soft, cold hand were still lingering In his. Pre sently he fell te recalling every detail of the afternoon scene the arching Leech trees, tbe rich red affd brown of tbe earth beneath, tinged with the winter sbeddings of tbe trees, tbe littla raised bank, her eyes as sbe looked up at bim, tbe soft wisps of her golden brown hair under her hat What superb, unap. proachable beauty It wesl Hew living, hew rich in content and expression) "Ami in leve witblsabsl Brctberjput'ha tut, mm PaeticnMteman' with hit en en the portrait of his sister. "Perhaps Marie could tell me-I dent un derstand myself. I dent think te. And it I were, I am net a youngster, and tny life Is a tolerably full one. I could bold myself in and trample it down It It were best te de se. I can hardly imagine myself absorbed in a great passion. . My bachelor 11 fe Is a geed many years old my habits won't break up easily. And, supposing I felt the beginning of It, I could step it if reason were against it" He left his chair and began te pace up and down tbe room, thinking. "And there it ab solutely no sort of reason In my letting my self fall In leve with Isabel Brrthertenl Bhe has never given me the smallest right te think that she tikes any mero interest iu me than she ders in hundreds of peeple whom sha meets en friendly terms, unless it may be an intellectual interest as Wallacn imagines, and that's a peer sort of stepping stene te level Audit it were ever possible that she should, this afternoon lias taken away the possibility. Fer, however maguaulmeus a woman may lie, a thing like that rankles; It can't help it Bhe will feel the sting of it werse te-morrow than today, nnd though she will bdl herself that she bears no grudge, it will leave n gulf between us. Fer, of course, she must go en acting, and whatever depres sions she may have, she must Iwllcve In her self; no ene can go en working without it, and I shall always recall te Iter something harsh and humiliating I . "Supposing, by any chance, it wt.re net se supposing I were nble te gather up my re lation with her again and make it u rcally frlendly one I should take, I think, n cry dcflnltollne; I should make up my mind te hoof usoteher. After nll.it Is true what she says there nre many things In me that might be helpful te her, and everything there was she should have the benefit of. I I would make a serious purpese of it She should find me a friend worth having." i His thoughts wandered en a while In this ' direction. It was pleasant te we himself in the future as illss Bretberten's philosopher nnd friend, but In the end the sense of reality gained upon his dreams. "Inmn feel," he said te himself resolutely at last, "and I may -as wsll go te bed nnd put her out of ray mind. Tbe chance is ever gene done with, I If it ever existed." The next morning, en coming down te breakfast, he saw nmeng his letters a hand writing which startled him. Where bad he seen it boferol In Wallace's hand three da) s age! He opened it nnd found the following nete: M Dtut Jin. KEJtn.il-Yeii knew, I think, that I am oft next week en Monday, If all gees well. I We go te Switzerland for n while, and then te ! Tnil.ik l.liUlt lwu.1. Ml u. t..,l . . . ' ww, nunu iwiia i uie isuuen very pleasant In August We shall be there by the 1st of Au gust and Mr. Wallace tells me he hears from you that your sister, Madame de Chatenuvleux, ill be there about the same time. I forget te ask you yesterday, but U you think she would net object te It would you glve me a llttle nole introducing me te her! All that I have beard of her makes me very anxious te knew her, and she would net And me a troublesome person 1 We shall hardly, I suppose, meet again before I start It net, ploase remember that my friends con always find me en 6unday afternoon. Yours very truly, Isinu. Urctiiiiiien. Kendal's hand closed tightly ever the note. Then he put it carefully back into its enve lope, and walked away with his hands behind him and the nete Id them, te stare out of window at the red reefs opposite "That Is llke her," he murmured te himself: "I wound and hurt her; she guesses I shall suffer for It, and, by way of setting up the friendly bend again, next day, without a word, she asks me te de hern kindnessl could anything Ira mero delicate, mero gra cious!" Kendal never had greater difficulty In fix ing his thoughts te bis work than that morn ing, nnd at lest, in despair, he pushed bis book aside, and wrote an answer te MJss Brcth Brcth ereon, and, when that was accomplished, a long letter te his sister. The first took bim longer than its brevity seemed te justify. It contained no refcrence te anything but ber request He felt a compulsion upon blm te treat the situation exactly as she bad dour, but, given this limitation, hew much cordi ality and respect could two sides of letter Saper be made te carry with due regard te cee rum and grammar! When he next met Wallace, that hopeful, bright tempered person bad entirely recov ered his cheerfulness. Miss Brethcrten, he reported, had attacked the subject of Elvira with blm, but se lightly that he had no op portunity for saying' any of the skillful things he had prepared. "She evidently did net want the question seriously opened," he said, "se I followed your ndvlce and let it alone, and slnce then she has liecn charming both te Agnes nnd me. I feel myself as much of a hrute ns ever, but I see that the only thing I can de is te bold my tengue about It." Te which Kendal heartily agreed. A few days afterwerds the newspapers gave a prominent place te reporUef Mlsa Bretberten's farowell performance. It had been n qrcat social event Half the distin guished peeple in Londen wcre present, led by royalty. londen, in fact, could hardly bear te part with Its favorite, nnd compli ments, flowers nnd farewells showered upon ber. Kendal, who had net meant tegnnt thotiinewbon tickets wcre te be had, tried nbeut tbe middle of tbe week after the Ox ford Sunday te get a seat, but found it ut terly Impossible. He might have managed It by applying te her through Edward Wal lace, but that he was unwilling te de for various reasons. He told himself that, after all, It was better te let her llttle nete and his answer clese his relations with her for the present Everywhere else but In the theatre she might still regard him ns rcr friend; but tbcre tbey could net but 13 antagonistic in seme degree ene te another, and net even In tellectually did Kendal wish just new te meet her ej a footing of antagonism. Se, when Saturday night came, he passed the hour of Miss Bretberten's triumph at a ministerial evening party, where it seemed te him that tbe air was full of her name, and that half the guests wcre tbore as a pls-allcr, because the Calllope could net I cccive them. And yet he thought be noticed in the com mon talk about her that criticism of her as an actress was a geed tleal moi-e general than it had lieeu at the beginning of the season. Tba llttle knot of persons with nn opinion nnd reasons for it had gradually Influenced the larger public. Novcrtheless there was no abatement whatever of the jwpular desire te see her, whether en the stage or in society, The engeucment for ber personally, for her Ticauty, and her fresh, pure womanliness, showed no signs of yielding, and would held out, Kendal thought, for seme time, against a much stronger current of depreciation en tbe intellectual slde than had as yet set in. He laid down tbe Monday paper with a smiloef self scorn and muttered; "I should llke te knew hew much 6he remembers by tbe tlmoef the prig who lectured te her in, Nuneham weeds a week age 1" In the even ing hU Tall Mall Gazctte told him that Miss Brctherten bad crossed the channel that morning, en reute for Paris and Venice. He fell te calculating tbe weeks which must clapse before his sister would Ikj in Vcnice, and lief ero he could hear of any meeting lv tween Ler and the Brctherten jwrty, und weundup bis calculations by deciding that Londen was already het and would seen be empty, nud that, as seen as he could gather together certaiti lioeks he was iu want of, he would carry them and his proofs down Inte Surrey, refuse all invitations te country houses, nnd tloveto himself te his work. Befere be left be paid a farewell call te Sirs, btmrt, who gave bun full end enthusi astic ncceunts of Isabel Brptherteu's last night, nnd informed him that her brother talked of following the Ilretherteus te Venice seme time in August. "Allx-rt," sha said, speaking of her hus band, "declares that be cannot get nway for mero than thrce weeks, and that be must liave wine walking; se that what we propose at present Is te pick up Edward at Vcnice at tbe cod of August, and meve up altogether into the mountains afterward. Ob, Mr. Ken dal," she w cut en, a llttle nervously, as if net quite knowing whether te attack the subject or net, "It was devoted of you te threw yeurtcif Inte the breach for Ed ward as you did at Oxford. I axi nfraid it must have beemery dUagrecable, lieta te jeu nnd te her When Edward told me of it next morn ing it made me cold te think of it I made up my mind that our friendship yours and ours with her was ever. But de you knew the came te call en ma that very afternoon bow tbe made tiuie I don't knew, but she did. Naturally, 1 was cry uncomfortable, but sha U'gautetalk of it lu the calmest way w hlle we word having tea. 'Mr. Kendal was prob ably r.mte light,' she said, 'In thinking tbe jart unsultwl te me. Anyhow, I asked him for his opinion, and I should be a peer crea ture te minil hi? glyjng It.,' And. then the tugBea aaa caia tMt sat Bawarate keep hit eyes open for anything that weMx de better for her in tbe antumn. And since then she bat behaved as if the had forgotten all about it. I never knew any ene with test imallncn about her." "Ne; she Is a fine creature," said Kendal, almost mechanically. Hew llttle Mrs. Btuart knew or, rather, hew entirely remote tbe was from feeling what had happened t It teemed (e blm that the emotion of that tcene was still thrilling through all his pulses, vet te what ordinary llttle proportions had it been reduced inMrt.Btuart'stnlndl Uealone had seen the vtil lifted, had come clese te the energetic reality of the girl's nature. That Isabella Brctherten could feel se, could leek se, was known only te blm the thought had pain in It, but the keenest pleasure also. "De you knew," said Mrs. Btuart pres ently, wlthntone of reproach In her voice, "that she asked for you en tbe last nlgbtP "Did she!" "Yes. Wu bad Just gene en the stage te see ber after the curtain had fallen. It was such a pretty sight, you ought net te have missed It Tbe prince bad ceme te say good geed by te hr, aud, as we came in, she was just turning away iu her long phantom dress with the whlte heed falling round ber head, llke that Remncy picture don't you remem ber! of Lady Hamilton Mr. Ferbes het rawn ber In it two or three times. The stage was full of people. Mr. Ferbet was there, of course, and Edward, and eurtelret, and presently I heard her tay te Edward, 'Is Mr. Kendal here! I did net sen htm in the house.' Edward said something about your net having been nble te act a scat, which I thought clumsy of him, for, of She uat.Jusl turning nu-ciy. course, we could have get some sort of n place for you nt the last moment She didn't say nnytblng, but I thought if you won't mind my saying se, Mr. Kendal that, con sidering all things, it would bave liecn better If you had been there." "It seems te me," said Kendal, with voxa vexa voxa tlen In rlis voice, "that there la n fatcngalnst my doing anything ns I ought te de It I thought, en the whole, It would be better net te make n fuss about it when it came te the last Yeu see she must leek upon me te seme extent ns a critical, If net n hostile, In fluence, nnd I did net wish te remind her of my existence." "Ob, well, said Mrs. Stuart, In her cheery, common sense way, "that evening was such nn evern helming experience that I tlen't suppese sbe could bave felt any soreness to wards anybody. And, de you knew, Bhe is improved! I don't qulte knew what it Is, but certainly ene or two of theso long scenes sbe does mero Intelligently, nnd even the death srene Is better less monotonous. I sometimes think sbe will surprise us all yet" "Very likely," said Kendal, absently, net iu reality believing a went It, but it was im im pesjlbla te dissent "I hepe se," exclaimed Mrs. Stuart, "with all my heart. She has lieeu very depressed often theso last weeks, nnd certainly, en the whole, peeple have been harder upon her than they were at first. I am se glad that sbe and your sister will meet in Venice. Mme. de Chateau v lour is just the friend she wants." Kendal walked home fecllug the rankling of a fresh pin point. She had nsked for blm, and he had net been there I What must she think, apparently, but that, from a sour, moreso consistency, he bad refused te be u witness of her triumph I Ob, hostllefatesl A week later Eustace was settled iutbe Surrey farm hoube which bad sheltered the Sunday league en its first expedition. The Surrey country was In its full glory; the first purple heather was fully out nnd the distant hills rese blue and vaporous across stretches of vivid crimson, broken here and there by the dim gray greens of the furze or the sharper color of the bracken. The chorus of birds had died away, but the nests wcre net yet tcnantless. Tbe great sand pit near the farm heuse was still vocal with innumeruhle breeds of sand martins, still onlivcued by the constant skimming te and fro of the parent birds. And under Kendal's sitting room window n iair of tomtits, which the party had watehed that Slay Sunday, wcre Just launching their young family en the world, One of his first walks was te that spot beyond the pond where they bad made their after noon camping ground. The nut hatches had fled fled, Kendal hoped, seme tlme licfore, for tbe band of the spoiler had been near their dwelling, and iU fragments lay scat tered en the ground. He presently learned te netice that he never beard the sharp sound of the bird's tapping bonk among the weeds without a llttle start of recollection. Outslde his walks, his days wcre spent in continuous literary effort Ills book was in a coudltieu which called for all his energies, nnd be threw himself vigorously into it. The first weeks were taken up with n long review of Victer Huge's prese und poetry, with n. view te a final critical result. It seemed te him that there was stuff in the great French man te suit all weathers and allskles. There wcre somber, wind swept days when the stretches of brown ling net yet in flower, tbe hurrying clouds nnd the bending trees were In harmony witii all tbe flerce tempestuous silo of the great romantic. There wcre ethers when tbe homely, tender, domestic aspect of tbe country formed a sort of frame work and accompaniment te the simpler patriarchal elements in the leeks which Ken dal had about him. Then, when tbe pages en Victer Huge wcre written, theso already printed en Chateaubriand tegaii te dissat isfy him, and he steeped himself ence raore iu tbe rolling artificial harmonies, the mingled beauty and falsity of ene of the most wonder ful of styles, that he might draw from it its secrets and say n last just word about it. He knew a few families in tbe neighbor hood, but he kept nway from them, and al most bl only connection with tbe outer world during his first month in tbe country was his corrcsjwndcnce with Mine, tin Chatcauvlcux, who was at Etrctat with her husband. She wrete her lietbcr very lively characteristic accounts of tbe life tbcre, fill ing ber lettcra with amusing sketches of the political ortartlitie celebrities with whom the little Nerman town swarms in tbe season. After tbe third or fourth letter, however, Kendal began te leek restlessly at tbe Etrctat postmark, te reflect that Marie had been there a long time, and te wonder she was net already tired of such u publie sort of existence as tbe Etrctat life. The bathing scenes, and the fire eating, deputy, and tbe literary woman with a mission for the spread of naturalism, became very flat te blm. He was astonished that his sister was net as onxieui te start for Italy as be was te hear that she had dene se. This temper of his was connected with the fact that after the first of August he began te develop a curious Imiiatlence en the sub ject of the dally peit. At Old Heuso farm the pest was taken as leisurely as everything clse; there was no regular delivery, and Ken dal generally was content te trust te tbe casual mercies of the butcher or baker for lib letters. But after the date mentioned it oc curred te him that his letters uached him with an abominable inegularity, ami that it would tle hU work no harm, but, en tbu con trary, much geed, it he took a daily constitu tional in the direction of tbe postelllce, which gave n touch of official dignity te tbe wasp filled precincts of n grocer's shop In tbe vil lage, seme two miles off. Fer seme considerable number of days, however, hi walks only furnished htm with feel for reflection en the common dltprojior dltprejior dltprojier tlon of meaus te ends in this life. His sister's I-rsLtcuce iu sticking te tbe soil of France began te seem te blm extraordinary 1 Hew vtr, at last the manoteny of the EtreUt peattnarka wat broken by a pett card from Lyens. "We are here for the night en tome business of Paul's; te-morrow we hope te be at Turin, and two or three days later at Venice, By the way, where will tbe Brethe r r tens be! I mutt trust te ray natlve wlte, I tuppose, when I get there. Bhe is net the tort of light te be bidden under n bushel. This pest cant disturbed Kendal net a llttle, nnd be felt Irritably that somebody had mismanaged matters. He had supposed, and Indeed suggested, that Miss Brctherten tbeuld lnclote his note in ene of ber own te hit sister's Paris address, giving, at the same time, tome indication of a place of meeting in Venice. But if the had net dene this, it was very possible that the two women might oust each ether after all Bometimes, when he had been contemplating this possibility with disgust, be would, with n great effort, make himself reflect why it was that he eared about the matter se disproportionate. Whv was he te deeply Interested In Isabel Breiherten'i movements abroad and In the meeting which would bring her, te te speak, once mero into his own world! Why! be cause It was impossible,' he would answer himself indignantly, net te foci a profound Interest In any woman who had ever shared as much emotion with you as she had with him In these moments at Nuneham, who had received a wound nt your hands, had winced under It and still had remained gracious and kind and womanly t "I tbeuld be n hard hearted brute," be tatd te himself, "it I did net feel a very deep and peculiar Interest lu her It I did net desire that Marie's friend ship should abundantly make up te her for my blundering l" Did he ever really deceive himself Inte Im agining that this was all! It Is difficult te tay. The mind et a man no longer young, and trained In nil the subtleties of thought, does net deal with an Invading sentiment exactly as n youth would de with all his ex perience te come. It steals upon blm mero slowly, he Is capable et disguising it (e him self longer, of escaping from it into ether in terests. Passion is in Its ultimata essence tbe some, wherever it appears and under what ever conditions, but It possesses Itscir et human life In different ways. Slowly ant certainly the old primeval Are, the com monest, fatalcst, dtvinest force of life, was making Its way Inte Kendal's nature. But it was making lu way against antagonists forces of habit, tradition, self restraint It found a hundred ether Interests' In possession; It had a strange Impersonality and timidity of nature te light with. Kendal had been ac customed te llve In ether men's lives. Was he only Just beginning te llve his own! But, however it was, be was at least con scious during this waiting tlme that life was full of tome bidden saver; that his thoughts wcre never Idle, never vacant; that, as he lay flat among the fern In his moments et rest, following the march of the clouds as they sailed divinely ever the rich breadth and color of tbe commons, a whole breed et im ages ncstled at his heart, or teemed te hover In the sunny air befere him visions et a slender form fashioned with Greek suppleness and majesty, et a soft and radiant presence, et leeks all womanliness, and gestures all grace, of a smlle llke no ether he hnd ever seen for charm, et n quick, Impulsive gait I He followed that figure through sccne after scene; be (aw primroses iu its band, nnd the pale spring blue above It ; be recalled It stand ing tense and still with blanched check and fixed appealing eye, while all round the June weeds murmured In the brocze; he sur rounded it In imagination with tbe pomp and clrcumstance of the stage, and realized it as n center of emotion te thousands. And then from 'memories be would pass en te (peculations, from tbe scenes he knew te theso he could only guess at, from the Ufa of which he had seen a llttle te tbe larger and unex plored life boyeud. And se the days went un, and though he was impatient and restless, yet indoors his work was congenial te him, and out of doers the sun was bright anil all the while n certain little god lay hidden, speaking no nrtlculate word, but waiting with a mlscliloveus pa tience for the final overthrew of ene mero peer mortal. At last the old postmistress, whom he had almost ceme le.rcgard as cherishing n per sonal grudge against blm, ceased te repulse blm, and after bis seven years of famlne the years of abundnnce set in. Fur the epace of three weeks lettcrs from Venice lay waiting for blm almost every alternate morning, ana the hcathery slopes lictwccn tbe farm and the village grew familiar with the spoctacle of a tall, thlu man In n rough tweed suit strug gling as he walked with sheets of foreign paper which the wlud was doing its host te filch away from him. Tbe following extracts from these lettcra contain tuch portions of them as are neces sary te our ebject: "Casa. MiwiHEfTr. "My DKAn Eustace I can only write you n very scrappy letter today, for we nre Just nettling into our apartment, and the rooms are strewn in tbe most distracting way with boxes, books and garments; whlle my maid, Felicie, and the old Italian wenuui Catcrinn, who Is te cook and manage for us, seem te be able te de nothing net even te put chair straight or order seme bread te keep us from Btarving without consulting me, Paul, tak ing advantage et a husband's prerogative, has geno off te flaucr en the piazza, whlle bis women folk make Ufa tolerableat home; which It a very unfair aud spiteful version et his proceedings, for be has really geno as much en my business as en his own. I sent him feeling his leek of misery, as ha tat en a packing case iu the lnlddle of this chaos, terribly en my mind te see if he could find tbe English consul (whom he knows a little), and discover from bim, if possible, where your friends are. It is ttrange, as you say, that Mls.1 Brctherten should net have written te me; but I Incline te put it down te our old Jacques at home, who is getting mero and mero Imbecile with tbe weight of years and infirmities, aud is qulte cnpable et forward ing te us all the letters which are net worth posting, and leaving all the Important ones piled up in the hall te await our return. It Is provoking, for, it the Brethcrten party are uet going te stay long In Venice, we may easily spend nil our tlme in looking for each ether; which will, Indeed, lien lame nnd im potent conclusion. However, I bave heies of Paul's clevcrnc&i. "And new, 4 o'clock I There is no help for it, my dear Eustace. I must go nud Instruct Catcrinn hew net te poison us in our dinner tonight Sbe leeks a dear old soul, but totally Innocent et anything but Italian barbaritlesjin the way of cooking. A'nd Felicie also Is well meaning but Ignorant, se unless I wish te have Paul en my hands for a week I must be off Thl3 rough picnicking life, In Venice, et all places, Is a curious llttle ex perience, but I made up my mind last tlme we wcre here that we would venture our precious i elves in no mero hotels. Tbe heat, tbe niusqultec, tbe horrors of the feed were tee much. Here we have a garden, a kitchen, a cool sitting recm, and It I cboeso te feed l'aul en llsane and milk pudding;, who is te prevent mcl "Faul bad Just ceme In with victory written en bis brew. The English consul was of no use; but, ns he was strolling home, be went Inte St. Mark's, and there, of course, found tbcml Iu the church wcre apparently all the English peeple who have ns yet ven tured te Venice, and these, or most of them, seemed te be following iu the wake of a llttle party of four poriens two ladies, a gentle man and a lame girl walking with a crutch. An excited English tourist condescended te Inform l'aul that It was 'the great English ectress, Miss Brctherten,' who was creating all the commotion. Then, of course, he went up te her he was provoked that he could hardly see her In tbe dim light of St Mark's Introduced himself and described our per plexities. Ot course, tbe had written. I ex pected ns much. Jacques must certainly be portioned effl Paul thought the ether three very Inferior te her, though the undo was civil and talked condescendingly of Venice, ns though it wcre even geed enough te be admired liy a Worrall. It is arranged that the beauty is te ceme and see me te-morrow if, nfur Caterlna has operated upon us dur ing two meals, we are still alive. Ooed night and geed by." "Venice, Aug. 7. "Well, I bave seen her! It has been a blazing day. I was sitting In the llttle gar den which separates oue-half et enr reemi from the ether, whlle Caterlna was arrang ing the dejeuner under tbe llttle acacia nrlwr In the center of it Suddenly Felicie came out from tbe heuse, and behind ber a tall fig ure In a large bat and a whlte dress. The figure held out both hand te me inn cordial, un-Englih way, and said a number of pleas nut things rupldly i't a delicious voice, while I, with tbe dazzle of tbe suit lu my eyes, se that I could lierdly maka out the featuraa. tto6dfeeMBgaUIenHBMbytMvwle te fameut a person. In a few moments, howl ever, as It teemed te me, we were slttlnJ under the acacias, the wat helping me te cua up the melon and arrange the figs, at If we; had known ene another for months, and I was experiencing one of these sudden rushes' of liking which, as you knew, are a weakness of mine. She stayed and took her meal with ut. rnul, of course, was fascinated, and for once has net set her down ns a reputation turfalte, "Her beauty has a curious air el the place; nnd new I remember that her mother was Italian Venetian, actually, was It net! That ncceunts for it; the is the Venetian type rplr ituallzed. At the foundation of her face, as it were, lies the face of the Burano lace maker; only the original type has lecn se re fined, se chiseled and smoothed away, that, te speak fancifully, only n beautiful ghost of It remains. That large ttatellnem et ber movement, tee, Is Italian. Yeu may see it in any Venetian street, and Vcroncse has flxedltlnart" "Whlle we were sitting In the garden who tbeuld be announced but Edward Wallace. I knew, of course, from you that he might be here about this time, but tit (he hurry of our settling In I hnd qulte forgettcu his exist ence, te that the sight et his trim person bearing down upon us was n surprise. He and the Brethcrten party, however, had been going nbeut together for several days, se that he and she hail plenty et gossip In com mon. Mrs. Brcthcrten's enthusiasm nbeut Venice Is et a very naive, het, outspoken kind. It seems te me that she Is avcrysus avcrysus ceptlble creature. Bhe Uvea her life fast nnd crowds Inte It a greater number of sensations than most people. All this rest nnd pleasure must censume a vast amount of nervous force, but It makes her very refreshing te poeplo as blase ns Taul and I nre. My first feeling nlieut her is very much what yours was. Personally, there teems te be all tbe ttufT in her of which an actress Is made. Will she tome day stumble upon the discovery of hew te bring her own Individual flamennd force te bear upon her art! I should think it net unlikely, and, altogether, I feel ns though I theuld take a mero hopeful view et ber Intellectually than you de. Yeu see, my dear Eustace, you men never realize hew clever we women are, hew fast we learn nnd hew qulcklv we catch up hints from all quar ters under heaven aud Unprove upon them. Au actress se young and se sympathetic as Isabel Brctherten must still be very much of an unknown quantity dramatically. I knew you think that the want of training Is fatal, nud that pepularjty will stereotype her faults. It may be te; but I am inclined te think, from my first sight of her, that the is a nature that will gather from life rather what stimulates It than what dulls and vul garizes it Altogether, when I compare my first Impressions of her with the image of her left by your letters, I feel tbnt I have been pleasantly surprised. Only lit the matter of Intelligence. Otherwise it has, of course, been your descriptions of her that bave planted and nurtured in me that strong sense of attraction which blossomed into lik ing at the moment of personal contact" "August 10. "This afternoon we bave been out in the gondola belonging te this modest establish ment, with our magnificent gondolier. Picre. nnd his boy, te convey us te the Lide. I get Mils Bretherteu te talk te me about her Jamaica career. Bhe made us all laugh with her accounts of the bleed nnd thunder pieces In which tbe audiences of the Kingsten theatre reveled. Bhe seems generally te have played the 'Bandit's Daughter,' the 'Smug gler's Wlfe,' or 'The European Damsel Car ried Off by Indians,' or seme ether thrilling elemental personage of the kind. The 'White Lady' was, apparently, her first Introduction te a mere complicated order of play. It is extraordinary, when ene comea te think of it, hew llttle posltive dramatic knewledge she must bavel 8he knows seme Shake speare, I think at least sbe mentions two or three plays and I gather from noinethlng the said that the is new making the Inovltn Inevltn Inovltn bie study of Juliet that every actress makes sooner or later; but Sheridan, Goldsmith, nnd, et ceurse, all the French peeple are mere names te ber. When I think et the mlnute exhaustive training our Paris actor! go through and compare It with such a ttate et nature as hers, I am amazed at what she baa donel Fer, after nil, you knew, she must be able te net te some extent; the must knew n great deal raore et her business than you and I suspect, or the could net get en at alL" "August 10. "It is almost n week, I see, slnce I wrete te you hut During that tlme we bave teen a great deal mero et Miss Brethcrten, some times in company with her belongings, somo semo some tlmus without them, and my impressions et her have ripened very fast, Ob, my dear Eustace, you bave been hasty all tbe world has ieeA hasty. Isabel Brothorten's real self is only new coming te the front, nnd It is a self which, as I tay te myself with as tenishment, net evcu your keen eyoshnve ever seen hardly suspected even. Should I, myself a woman, buve been as blind te a woman's capabilities, I wender! Very likely 1 These suddcu rich developments of youth are eftcu lioyeud all calculation, "Mr. Wnllace's attttude makes me realize mero than I otherwise could tbe past and present condition et things. He comes aud talks te me with amazement of the changes In her tene and outlook, of tbe girl's sharp ening intellect and grewbig sensitiveness, and as he recalls incidents and traits of the Londen season confessions or judgment or blunders etj hers, aud puts them beside tbe impression which he sees her te be making en Paul and myself I begin te understand from bis talk ami his bewilderment something of tbe real nature of the case. Intellectually, it has been 'tbe ugly duckling' ever again. Under all tbe crude, unfledged imperfection of her young performance, you jnople who liave watched her with your trained critical eyes seem te me never te have succted the coining wings, tba ttrange nascent xwcr, i? hich Is only new asserting itself In the light f day. I ".'What ha3 Eustace been obeutr said Taul V me last night, after we had all returned ,'rem rambling round and round the moonlit piazza, and be bad been describing te me bis talk with her. 'He ought te have seen fur ther ahead That crcature Is only Just begin ning te live, nnd it will be n life worth hav lug. He has kindled it, tee, as much as 'inybedy. Of course, we have net teen her ;ict yet, and Ignorant yes, tne is certainly Ignorant though net se much as I Imagined. 'But as for natural peyrr and delicacy of mind, there can lie no question ut all about bcml' a " 'I don't knew that Eustace did question :hcm,' I said. 'He thought simply that she liad no conception of what her art really re- luirexl of her, and never would have because )f her popularity.' "Te which Paul replied that, ns far us he :euld make out, nobody theueit raore meanly if her popularity than tbe did, and he has Ijccn talking n great deal te her about her iiasen. " 'I never saw n woman nt a mere critical or Interesting point of development,' he ex claimed at last, striding up and down, and se absorbed iu the subject that I v'euld have Al Al eost laughed at hU eagerness. 'Something or ether, luckily for her, ret her en the right track thrce months nge, and it is apparently nature en which nothing Is lest. One can co it In the way in which she take Vcnice; there isn't n scrap of her, llttle as sbe knows ibeutlr, that isn't keen and Interested and wide awake I' " 'Well, nfter nil,' I reminded him as he iras settling down te his books, 'we knew itbiug about her as an actress.' "We shall see,' be said; 'I will find out frutthing about that tee befere long.' "And se he ha!'1 "August 17-W, "Paul has leen devoting himself raore nnd mero te the beauty, Mr. Wallace nnd I look ing en with consldcrable amusement and in terest; and this nftcrnoen, finding it in tolerable that Miss Brctherten has net even a bowing acqualntance with any of his favor favor Ite plajs, Augler, Dumas, Victer Huge or anything else, he has been reading aloud te us in the garden, ruuiu-g en from sceue te scena and speech te siecch, translating as he went she In rapt attention, and he gesticu lating and spouting, and, except for an occa sional queer rendering that made us laugh, 'getting en capitally with his English. She .was enchanted; the novelty aud the cxclto cxclte cxclto ment of it absorbed her; and evcry new and then she would step l'aul with a llttle Im perious ware et her hand, and repeat the substance of a speech after bim with au lot let lot (ictueus clan, an energy of comprehension, which drew llttle nods et satisfaction out of him, and sometimes produced a strong and startllngeffcct upon myself and Mr. Wallace. However, Mr. Wullace might stare us ba liked: tbe tiTorxeQla concerned wcre totally tAoOMCtetftiOff wM fVM6f Ml MtH asVHC'U -" after the great death teeae M tt uiancbe,' l'aul threw down MM Men with a teb, and the, rising with reeling, held out her wblta ai tmaglnary lever, and wtth 1.111 ... A '. .-.-a Af, IlltS tsttttm.. ,. & JPiffiw'. JM iiwiwiMir- vX --- - m . vi a the horelno't last tpeecbntt . rf Jtrw, '"AchtlKbelevedl myeret are ataa-MkaA raltts of death are gathering. OAcMlletMte " " white cettage by the rlver-the tM la thr '' reeds your face and mine in the waif thai .-V ItlllA liAfkVnn twtlriW titt In ttt alrtaat t Ats ir' 3 quick I theM hands, thote llptt Bnt UlMu ' listen! It it the cruel wind rWef . rlfteV ji . ,- v chills ran te the bene: It chokes, it . l-Il l cannot tea tbe river, and the cottage H flatts, and the tun. O Achilla, it it dark, te bfcl, Oather me close, beloved I closer I ekwrl O death Is kind-tender, like your tewhl I have no fears none l' "She tank back Inte her chair. Anything raore pathetic, mere noble than ber tateesv tlen or theso words could net bars Imagined. Desferets herself could net spoken them-wlth a mero simple, piercing tenderness. I wat te cenfi multltude et conflicting feelinct ar Impressions and yours, the reallttat of present position and the pettiblllUet of future that I forget te applaud her. It wati the first tlme I had had any gllmpaa at ajltt ncr uramaue power, and, reugn ana Wft feet as the test was, it teemed te tMaaetjgfc. I have net been te devoted te tba Fraaeaia, and te seme et the people connected with ML for ten years for nothing! One cetaahiM of insight from long habit, which, I think, eat may trust Oh, you blind Eustace, boweMdd you forget that for a creature te full of prist prist tlve energy, te rich in tbe ituS of Ufa, noth ing Is irrcparablel Education hat paaitd her by. Well, the will go te And her Macatfea. Bhe will make a teacher out of every friend, out of every sensation. Incident and feaUag, praise and dlspraise will all alike tend te meld the tentlttve, plattle material lata shape. Be far at the may have remaiaag outside her art; the art, no doubt, baa hew a conventional appendage, and littla mera. Training would nave glrin her geed coa cea coa vcntlens, whereat sbe has only picked up hat and imperfect ones. But no training cenld bave given ber what the will evidently toen develop for herself , that force and fltmeet imagination which fuses together iaatraiatat and Idea in one great artlttle whole. Mm has that imagination. Yeu can tee it in her responslve wars, ber quick, sensitive amo ame amo teon. Only let it be routed and guided te a certain height, and it will overleap the bar rier! which have hemmed it in, and peer Itself into the channels made ready for It by her art "There, at least, you have myttresg im pression. It is, in many ways, at varUaea with seme of my most cherished priaeiplai; for both you and I are perhaps Inclined te everrate the value et education, whether technical or general, in its effect en the indi viduality. And, of course, a better technical preparation would have tared Isabel Brether Brether eou an Immense amount of time; would hara Ererented ber from contracting a botVef bat ablts all et which the will have te unlearn. But tbe root et the matter is in her; of that I am sure: and whatever weight et hostile circumstance may be against her, the will, If she kcept her health at te which I am tome times, like you, a little anxious break through It all and triumph. "But it you did net understand h quite, you have enormously helped her; te much I will tell you for your comfort Bhe tatd te me yesterday abruptly we were alone la our gondola, far out en the lagoon 'Did your brother ever tell you of a conversation he and I bad in the weeds at Nuneham aheat Mr.Wallace'eplayl' ' "Yes,1 1 answered with outward beldatat. but a llttle Inward trepidation;'! hara bob known anything distress him te much for a long time. He thought you bad mltnndari steed him.' " 'Ne,' the tatd, quietly, but as (t seemed te me with au undercurrent et emotion la bar veice: 'I did net misunderstand him. Mm meant what he tatd, and I would hara forced the truth from bim, whatever hap pened. I was determined te make him thew me what be felt That Londen teatea was sometimes tcrrlble te me. I teemed te my self te be living In twojwerldt one a world in which there wa3 nlwnyt a sea of facet oppo site te me, or crowds about me, and a prata ringing In my cart which was enough te tarm' '' anybody's head, but which after a while ra pclled ma at if ther was something batait latlngln it; and then en tba ether aid, a llttle Inner world of people I cared for and respected, who looked at me kindly, and thought for me, but te whom, at an actress, I wet just of no account at all I It wat your brother who first routed that tense in me: It was se ttrange and painful, for bow could I help at first bclievlng In all tbe hubbub and applause! "'Peer child!' 1 tald, reaching out my 'Tter chilitl" I taid. hand for oue of hers. 'Did Eustace maka himself dlsagrccable te your " 'It was raore, I think,' the answered, aa if reflecting, 'the standard be always teemed te carry about with him than anything con nected with my own work. At least, of course, I mean before that Nuneham day. Ah, that Nunthara dayl It cut deep. "She turned away from me and leaned ever the tlde of the beat, te that I could net tea her face. " 'Yeu forced it out of Eustace, you knew,' I said, trying te laugh at her, 'you uncom promising young person! Of course, he flat tered himself that you forget all about hit preaching the moment you get home. Men always make themselves 'ixlleve what they want te believe.' " 'Why should be want te bellove ter tha replied quickly. 'I bad halt foreseen it, I had forced it from bun, and yet Welt it Ilka a blew! It cost me a sleepless ntgbt, and teme well, seme very bitter tears. Net that; tbe tears wcre a new experience. Hew often, after all that nolse at tbe theatre, hara I geno home and cried myself te sleep ever the Impossibility et doing what I wanted te de, of moving theso hundred of people, of mak ing them feel and et putting my own feeling into sbapel But that night, and with my sense of illness just then, I saw myself it seemed te me qulte iu the near future grown old nud ugly, a forgotten failure, without any of these memories which con con sole peeple who bave been great when they must give up. I felt myself struggling against such a weight of igaorance, of bad habits, of unfavorable surroundings. Hew was I ever te get free and te rererte thai judgment of Mr. Kendal's I My very tuceet steed in my way. Hew was "Miss Brethcr Brethcr eon" te put herself te school V (Continued next Saturday.) Utltlshert Hesing Breweries It la repotted that three Chicago brewer lea have been told ten British avndleata. Tba consideration named it 11.800,000 McAvoy Brewing company, Waeaar 4 Itlrka aud tbe Michael Brand company ara the establishments aald te nave been pur chased. ... . . The tbree leading brewcrlca nf Koeheeter, N. "i , weie in Wtdneadty purchased by an English syndicate. Tha prteee paM wera aa fellow! : Bartbolemay biawerir, J.&00,CW; Ueneaee brewery, oOO,e; rtecheater brewery, tOCO.COO. Wte per cent 1: rld down. m t A Big Beg. Martin Miller killed for Isaac Moweiy.et Ltaccelc tewnehlp, a hog weighing 772 peunde Created. 11 wta el the Cheater While variety. ' . s. ""'SfcV-j e H', ' Xt,2 m . ; "v ?- t . &.( , Ttf3 ' v: B" S5V k r m 7t .- '; MS -311 m T 2il fat v-f . m. m xJT Trf S3 &3 jm ira m sm h, ftM m m j fa a ii 'm S ,-i- , J'-TK' ' afeX ' ? i-i --U -v1 4. fllt-uill f-....--