s. w "fi A NOVEL DEALING "WITH COTEMFORAKY LIFE. WRITTEN FOE THE DISPATCH. BY WILLIAM BLACK, Author,of "A Princess of Thule," "Sunrise," and Many Other Stories of the Highest Meputation on Ttao Continents. CHAPXEE XXIY. KETT WAYS OP LIFE. Bat no soonerhad he torn open the en velope than his heart seemed to stand still with a sort of fear and amazement. For this was Maisrie's own handwriting that he beheld as startlintr a thing as if she herself had suddenly appeared bclore him, after these long, voiceless months. Be sure the worthy banker's accompanying letter did not win much regard; it was this sheet of thin blue paper that he quickly unfolded, his eye catching a sentence here and there, and eager to grasp all that she hat to say at once. Alas! there was no need for any such haste; when he came to read this message that she had sent to Toronto, it had little to tell him ot that which he most wanted to know. And yet it was a marvelous thing to hear her speak, as it were! There was no date nor place mentioned in the letter; but none the less had this actual thing come all the way from her; her fingers had penned these lines; she had folded up this sheet of paper that now lay in his hands. It appeared to have been written on board ship; further than that all was uncertain and unknown. He went into the library, and sought out a quiet corner; there was something in the strange reticenceof this communication that he wished to study with care. And yet there was an apparent simplicity, too. She began by telling Air. Thompson that her grandfather had asked her to write to him, merely to recall both of them to his memory; and she wenton to say that they often talked of him and thought of him, and of bygone djys in Toronto. "Whether we shall ever surprise you by an unexpected visit in Yonge street," she proceeded, "I cannot tell; iorgrandtather's plans seem to be very vague at present and, in fdet, I do not think he likes to be ques tioned. But as far as I can judge he does not enjoy traveling as much as he used; it appears to fatigue him more than formerly; and from my heart I wish he would settle down in some quiet place, and let me care for him better than I can do iu long voyages and railway journeys. You know what a brave face he puts on everything and, ip deed, becomes a little impatient if you show auy anxiety on his behalf; still, I can &ee he is not what he was; and 1 think he should rest now. "Why not in his own couutrv? that has been his talk lor nianv a day; but I suppose he considers me quite a child yet, and won't confide in me; &o that when I try to persuade him that we should go to Scotland, and settle down to a quiet life in some place familiar to him, he grows quite angry, and telis me I don't understand such tilings. But I know his own fancy goes that way. The other morn ing I was reading to him on deck, and somehow I got to think he was not listening; so I raised uiy head; and I saw there were tears running down his cheeks he did not seem to know I was there at all and I heard him say to himself 'The beech woods of Balloray one look at them before I die!' And now I never read to him any of the Scotch songs that mention places such as Yarrow, or Craigiebnrn, or Xiogan Braes he becomes so strangely agitated; for some time afterward he walks up and down, by himself, repeating the word, as if he saw the place before him, and I know that he is constantly thinking about Scotland, but won't acknowledge it to me or anyone. "Then here is another piece ot news which is all the news one can 'send from on board a ship; and it is that poor dear grand lather has grown very peremptory! Can you believe it? Can vou imagine him irritable 'and impatient? You know how he has al ways scorned to be vexed about trifles; how he could always escape lrom everyday an noyances and exasperations into his own dream-world, but of late it has been quite iiflereni; and as I am constantly with him, lam the chief suflerer. Of course I don't mind it, not in the least, if I minded it I wouldn't mention it, you may be sure; I know what his heart really feels toward me. Indeed, it amuses me a little; it is as if I had grown a child again, it is 'Do this' and Do that' and no reason given. Ah, well, there is not much amusement for either of us two; it is something." And here she went ou to speak of certain common Iriends in Toronto, to whom she wished to be remembered, finally winding up with a very pretty message iroui "Yours affectionately, Margaret Betnune." Then Vincent bethought him of the banker; what comments had he to make? "Dear sir, I enclose you a letter, received to-day, from the pernicious little Omahussy, who says neither where she is nor where she is going, gives no date nor the name of the ship from which she writes, and is altogether a vexatious young witch. But I imagine this may be the old gentleman's doing; he may have been 'peremptory' in his instruc tions; otherwise I cannot understand why she should conceal anything from me. And why should he? There also I am in the dark; unless, indeed (supposing him to have some wish to keep their whereabouts unknown to you) he may have seen an an nouncement in the papers to the effect that you were going to the United States and Canada, in which case he may have guessed that you would probably call on one whose name they had mentioned to you as a fnend ot theirs And not a bad guess either; George Bethune is long-headed when he comes down from the clouds; though why he should take such elaborate precautions to keep away from you, I cannot surmise." Vincent knew only too well! The banker proceeded: "I confess I am disappointed for the moment. I took it for granted you would have no difficulty in discovering where they were; but, of course, if friend George Is not going to give his address to anybody, for tear of their communicating with you, some time may elapse before you hear anything definite. However, there is this to be said: I gather from Margaret's letter that tier grandfather has at last got a little tired of traveling, and may be willing to settle down in some quiet place for good. But I think she mistakes in imagining that he would go to Scotland. Scotland would be a lonely couctrr for George Bethune now. I should say that nearly all the friends he has living are on this side; and if he wished to pitch his tent anywhere, I shouldn't be surprised if he chose Toronto. One might be on the look-out if it were possible to know whether they were going east or west when Margaret's letter was posted. I forgot to mention that the postmark on the envelope was Port Said " Port Saidl Had Maisrie been at Port Said and not so long ago either? Instantly there sprang into the young man's mind a vision of the place as he remembered it a poor enough place, no doubt, but now all lit up by this new and vivid interest: he could see before him the rectangular streets of pink and white shanties, the sandv roads and arid squares, the swarthy AraSs and yellow Greeks and Italians, the busy quays and repairing yards and docks, the green water and the swarming boats. And did Maisrie and her grandfather while the great vessel was getting in hercoals, and the air was being filled with an almost im perceptibU black dust did thev escape down the gangway and go ash'ore and ' wander about, looking at the strange cos- turns and the sanblinds and the half-burst TOB f AJT, tropical vegetation? Mr. Thompson went on to say that he himself had never been to Port Said; but he gusssed that it was more a calling-place for steamers than a pleasure or health resort; and no doubt the Bethunes Had merely posted their letters there en route. But were they bound east or west? There was no answer to this question for they had not given the name ot their ship. So the wild hopes that had arisen in Vin cent's breast when he caught sight of Mais rie's handwriting had all subsided again; and the world was as vague and as empty as before. Sometimes he tried to imagine that the big steamer which he pictured to himself as lving in the harbor at Port Said was homeward bound; and that, consequently, even now old George Bethune and his granddaughter might have returned to their own country; and then again something told him that it was useless to search papers for lists of passengers that the unknown ship had gone away down the Bed Sea and out to Australia or New Zealand, or per haps had struck north toward Canton or Shanghai. He could only wait and watch and he had a sandal-wood necklace when he wished to dream. But the truth is he had very little time for dreaming; for Vin Harris was now become one of the very busiest of the millions of busy creatures crowding this London town. He "knew his best distraction lay that way; but there were other reasons urging him on. As it chanced, the great statesman who had always been Vincent's especial friend and patron, finding that his private secretary wished to leave him, decided to put the office in commission; that is to say, he pro posed to have two private secretaries, the one to look after his own immediate affairs and correspondence, the other to serve as his "devil," so to speak, in political mat ters; and the latter post he offered to Vin cent, he having the excentional qualifica tions of being a member of the House. It is not to be supposed that the ex-Mimster was influenced in his choice by the fact that the young man was now on the staff of two im portant papers, one a daily journal, the other a weekly; for such mundane con siderations do not enter the sub lime sphere of politics; nor, on the other hand, is it to be imagined that Vin Harris accepted the offer with all the more alacrity that bis hold on those two papers might be strengthened by bis confidential relations with the great man. Surmises and conjectures in such a case are futile the mere playthines of one's enemies. It needs only to be stated that he accepted the office with every expectation of hard work; and that he got it. Such hunt ing up ot authorities; such verification of quotations; such boiling down of blue books; such constant attendance at the House of Commons; it was all bardly earned at a salary of 400 a year. But very well be knew that there were many young men in this country who would have re joiced to accept that position at nothing a year; for it is quite wonderful bojv private secretaries of Parliamentary chiefs manage, subsequently, to tumble in for good things. Then it is probable that his journalistic enterprises which necessarily became some what more intermittent after his acceptance of the secretaryship brought him in, on the average, another 400 a year. On this in come he set seriously to work to make him self a miser. His tastes had always been simple and excellent health may have been at once the cause and effect of his abstem iousness; but now the meager fare he al lowed himself, and bis rigidly economical habits in'every way," had a very definite aim in View. He was "saving money; he was building up a miniature fortune by half crowns and pence. Food and drink cost him next to nothing; if he smoked at all it was a pipe the last thing in the morning be fore going to bed. Omnibusses served his turn unless some urgent business in behalf of his chief demanded a hansom. He could not give up his club; for that was in a way a political institution; and ottentimes he had to rush up thither and find someone who was not in the precincts of St. Steph en's; but then oc the other hand, in a good club things are much cheaper than in any restaurant or in the members' dining room of the House of Commons. It was remarkable how the little fortune ac cumulated; and it was a kind of amuse ment in a fashion. He pinched himself and laughed. He debated moral questions for example as to whether it was lawful to use club stationary in writing articles for newspapers; but he knew something of the ways of Government offices, and perhaps his conscience was salved by evil example. What the manager of the Westminster Palace Hotel thought of his manner of liv ing can be imagined if so august an official cared to inquire into such details. His solitary room, breakfast and washing: no more: those were small bills that he called for week by week. And so bis little hoard of capital gradually augmented very grad ually, it is true, but surelv, as the rate of interest on deposits rose and fell. In the meanwhile Lord Musselburgh had not been very successful in his endeavors to bring about a reconciliation between Vin Harris and his family; nor had he been able to obtain the information that Vincent de manded. "You see, Vin." he said (they were again walking up and down the lamp-lit terrace by the side of the deep-flowing river), "my wife is awfully upset over this affair. She thinks it is entirely owing to her misman agement. She would never have told you about the 5,000 if she had not been certain that that would be conclusive proof to you of the character ot those two people; and now that she sees what has come of her tell ing you so much, she is afraid to tell you any more. Not that I suppose there is much to tell. Mr. Bethune and Miss .Bethune are no longer in this country; but I doubt whether anyone can say precisely where they are " "Nonsensel" Vincent broke in, im patiently. "They're humbugging you, Mus selburgh. Consider Ibis for a moment. Do you imagine that George Morris handed over that 5,000. as a Inmp sum, without making stipulations, and very definite stipu lations? Do you imagine he would be con tent .to take the word of a man whom he considered a thief? It is absurd to think bo. Do ut facias would be his motto; and be would take preclons good care to keep control over the money in case of non-fulfilment " "But there is the receipt!" put in Lord Musselburgh. "A receipt for theatrical purposesl" said Vincent, with something of contempt. "You may depend oh it the money was not handed over in that unconditional fashion; that is not the way in which' George Morris would do business. He has got some hold over Mr. Bethune; and he must know well enough where he is. Supposing Mr. Bethune had that money in his pocket, what is to prevent his returning to this country to-morrow? Where would be the penalty for his breaking his covenant? You don't trust "a man whom you consider a swindler; yon must have some guarantee; and the guarantee means that you must be able to get at him when you choose. It stands to reason! V "Yes, I suppose so it would seem so," said Lord Musselburgh, rafher dr-btfully; "but at all events i t isn't George Viorris who is going to open his mouth. I've been to 'him; he declines; refers me to your family. And then, you see, Vin, I'm rather in an awKward position, x aon i want to tafce aides; I don't want to be a partisan; I would I rather act as the friead ot all of vouj but the moment I try to do anvtbing I am met by a challenge and a particularly incon venient challenge it is. Do I believe with them, or do I believe with you? I told your aunt what you said about Mr. Bethene how you described his character, and all that; but I didn't do it as well as you; for she remains unconvinced. As you told the story, it seemed natural and plausible; but as I told it and I was conscious of it at the time it was less satisfactory. Ahd mind you, if you stick to hard facts, and don't allow for any interpretation " If you look through the blue spectacles, in short" "Precisely. Well, then, you are con fronted with some extremely awkward things. I don't wonder that your aunt asks pertinently whv. it von are to beein and ex tend this liberal constrnction of conduct this allowing for motives this convenient doctrine or forgiving everything to sen-ae-ception this looking at a man from his own standpoint I don't wonder that she asks why anybody should be sent to prison at all." "Oh, as for that," said Vincent, frankly, ."I don't say it would be good for the com monwealth if all of us were George Bethunes. Far from it. I look upon him as a sort of magnificent lusus Daturas; and I would not have him other than be is not in any one -particular. But a nation of George Bethunes? it would soon strike its head against the stars." "Very well, then," said Lord Mussel burgh, "you are not contending for any general principle. I don't see why you and your family shouldn't be prepared to agree. You may both of you be right You don't insist upon having the justifications you extend to Mr. Bethune extended to every one else, or to any one else; you make him the exception; and you needn't quarrel with those who take a more literal view of his character." "Literal?" said Vincent, with a certain coldness. "Blindness want of considera- ' tion want of understanding is that tOj.be literal? Perhaps it is. But I thought yo said something just now about Mr. Bethune and a prison; will you tell me of any one action of his that would suggest imprison ment?" "Your aunt was merely talking of theo ries," said Musselburgh, rather uneasily, for he had not intended to use the phrase. "What I urge is this why shouldn't both of you admit that there may be something in tbe other's view of Mr. Bethune, and agree to differ? I stand between you; I can see now how much can be advanced on both sides." "And so you would patch up a truce," said Vincent. "How long would it last? Of course I do not know for what period of banishment my kind relatives stipulated; 5,000 is a considerable sum to pay; I sup pose they bargained that Mr. Bethune and his granddaughter should remain away from Entrland for some time. But not for ever? Even then, is it to be imagined that they 4 cannot be found? Very well, then. Either in this country or abroad, Miss Bethune and I meet face to face again; and she becomes my wife I hope. It is what I live for. And then? Where will your patched-un truce be then? Beside, I "don't want any sham friendships with people who have acted as they have done" "It was in your interest, Vin," his friend again urged. "Why not give them a little of the lenient judgment you so freely ex tended to those others " "To those others?" replied Vincent, firing up hotly. "To whom?" "To Mr. Bethune, then," was the pacific reply. "I don't think Mr. Bethune ever con sciously wronged any human being. But they were they not aware what they were dointr when thev slaved this underhand "trick? sending that girl out into the world again, through her devotion to ber grand father? I have told you before, there is no use crying peace, peace, when there is no peace. Let them undo some of the mischiel they have done, first; then we will see. And look at this silly aflectation of secrecy! They told me too much when they told me they had paid money to get George Bethune out of the country; then I understood why Maisrie went; then I knew I must have patience until she came back in the same mind as when she left, that I know well. I was puzzled before, and sometimes anxious; but now I understand; now I am content to wait And I have plenty to do in the mean time. I have to gain a proper foothofd and make some provision for the future as well: already I am independent of anybody and everybody. And perhaps, in time to come, when it is all over, when all these things have been set right, 1 may be able to forgive; but I shall not be able to forget." This was all the message that Lord Mus selburgh had to take borne with him, to his wife's profound distress. For she was very fond of her nephew and very prond of him, too, and of the position he had already won forhimself, and what she had done she had done with the best intentions towards him. Once, indeed, she confessed to her hnsband that in spite of herself shehadaBortoUneak iog admiration for Vincent's obdurate con sistency and faith, insomuch, she said, that if only the old man and all his chicaneries were out of the way she could almost find it in her heart to try to like the girl, lor Vin cent's sake. "The real question," she continued, "the thing that concerns the most of all to think of is this: Can a girl who has been so dragged through the mire have retained her purity of mind and her proper self-respect? Surely she must have known that her grandfather was wheedling people out of money right and left, and he took her about with him to enlist sympathy? Do you suppose she was not per fectlv aware that Vincent invariably paid the bills at those restaurants? When trades people were pressing for money, do you tancyshe was in Ignorance all the time? Very well : what a life for any one to lead ! How could she hold up her head among ordinarily honest and solvent people? Even supposing that she herself was all she onght to be, the humiliation must have sunk deep. And even if one were to try to liKe her, there would always be that consciousness between her and you. You might be sorry for her, in a kind of way; but you would be still sorrier for Vincent; and that would be dreadful." "My dear Madge," her husband said in his character of mediator and peacemaker, "you are arguing on a series of assumptions and prejudices. If Vin does hold on to his faith in those two and if he does in the end marry Miss Bethune I shall comfort my- I self with the conviction, that be was likely IT "WAS IN MAISRIE'S 0TN HANDWRITING. THE PITTSBTOpDISPATCH.' SUNDAY; DECEMBER 14, to know more about them than anybody else. Ho and they have been on terms of closest intimacy, and for a long time; and you may be pretty sure that the girl Vin wants to marry is no tarnished kind of a person in his eyes." "Ab, yes in his eyes!" said Lady Mus selburgh rather sadly "Well, his eyes are as clear as most folks at least, I've generally found them so," her husband said trying wbata little vague optimism would do. One afternoon Vincent was walking along Piccadilly and walking rapidly, as was his wont, for'the twin purposes of exercise and economy when he saw, some way ahead of him, Lady Musselburgh crossing the pave ment to her carriage. She saw him, too, and stopped color mounting to her face. When be came up be merely lilted nis nat, and would have kept on his way but that sne addressed mm. "Vmcentl" she said in an appealing, half reproachful fashion. And then she said "I want you to come into the house for a few minutes I must speak with you." ,"Is there any, use?" he asked rather coldly. However, she was very much embarrassed, as her heightened color showed, and he could not keep her standing qere in Picca dilly. He said, "Very well," and followed her up the steps and into the house. When they had got into the drawing room she shut the door behind them, and began at once with not a little piteous agitation in her manner. "Vin, this is too dreadful ! Can nothing be done? Why are you so implacable? I suppose you don't understand what you have been to me, always, and how I have looked to your future as something almost belonging to me, something that I was to be proud ot; and now that it is all likely to come true, you go and make a stranger ot yourself 1 When I see your name in the papers, or hear yon spoken of at a dinner table it is someone who is dis tant from me, as if I had no concern vith him .any longer. People come up to me and say, 'Ob, I heard your nephew speak at the Mansion House the other afternoon,' or 'I met yonr nephew at the Foreign Office last night;' and I cannot say, 'Don't you know; he has gone and made himself a stranger to us?' " "I wonder who it was who made a stranger of me!" he interposed but quite impass ively, "I can only say, again and again, that it was done for the best, Vin!" she answered him. "The mistake I made was in letting you krrow. But I took it for granted that as soon as you were told that those people had accepted money from us to go away " "Those people? What people?" he de manded, with a sterner air. "Oh, I meant only Mr. Bethune himself, said she, hastily. "Oh, yes, certainly, only him; there were no negotiations with any one else." "Negotiations!" he said, with a touch of scorn. ''Well, perhaps you can tell me what those negotiations were? How long did Mr. Bethune undertake to remain out of this country?" "Three years, Vin," said she, timidly re garding him. "Three years?" he repeated, in an absent way. "But there is no reason," she added quickly, "why he should not return at any moment if he wishes; so I understand; of course, I did not make the arrangement but I believe that is so." "Return at any moment?" He said.slowly. "Do you mean to tell me that you put 5,000 into that old man's hands, on con dition he should leave the country for three years, and that all the same you left him tree to return at any moment?" "Of course he would forfeit the money," said she, rather nervously. "But how could he forfeit themoney if he already has it? He has got the money; you showed me the receipt. Come, aunt," said he, in quite a different tone, "let us be a little more honest and above-board. Shall I tell you how I read the whole situation? You can contradict me if I am wrong. But that receipt you showed me; wasn't it pro duced for merely theatrical purposes; wasn't it meant to crush and overwhelm me as a piece of evidence? Themoney wasn't handed over like that, was it? Supposing I were to conjecture that somebody representing you or representing my father has still got con trol over that money; and that it is to be paid in installments as it is earned by absence? Well, isn't that so?" He fixed bis eyes on her; she hesitated and was a little confused. "I tell you, Vin," she said, "Ihad person ally nothing to do with making the ar rangement; all that was left in George Morris' hands; and, of course, he would take whatever precautions he thought necessary. And why should you talk about theatrical purposes? I really did not think that when I could show you Mr. Betnune was ready to take money from strangers to go away from England you would change your opinion of him. But apparently, in your eyes, he can do no wrong. He is not to be judged by ordinary rules and stand ards. Everything is to be twisted about on his behalf, and forgiven, or even admired. Nobody else is allowed such latitude ot con struction; and everything is granted to him because he is George Bethune. But I don't think it is quite fair: or that you should take sides against your own family." This was an adroit stroke, following upon a very clever attempt to extricate herself from an embarrassing position; but his thoughts were otherwise occupied. "I should like you to tell me," said he. "if you can, what moral wrong was involved in Mr. Bethune consenting to accept that money. Where was the barm or the igno miny? Do you think I cannot guess at the representations and inducements put before him, to get him to stay abroad for three years? Why, 1 could almost tell you, word for word, what waB said to,himl Here was an arrangement that would be of incalcula ble benefit to everybody concerned. He would be healing up family dissensions. He would be guarding his granddaughter from a marriage that conld only bring her disappointment and humiliation. Three years of absence and forgetfulness would pat an end to all thoie projects. And then, of course, you could not ask. him to throw up'his literary engagements and incur the expense of travel, without some compensation. Here is a sum of 5,000. whioh will afford him some kind of securityin view of this disturbance of his engagements, A receipt? objjef, a receipt, if necessary. But then, again, on second boughts, wouldn't it only be prudent to lodge this 5,000 with some third person, some man of position whom all could trust, and who would send it In installments, to avoid the risk of carrying so large a sum about with one? There might be a little harmless condition or two attached, more over. You undertake, for example, that the young people shall not have communication with each other; you say your grand daughter will do as you wish in all things. Very well, pake her away; disappear, both of you; you are doing us an immense kind ness, and you are acting in the bestinterests of all concerned. Never mind a little mis ery here or there, or the risk of a broken heart; we can afford to pay for such things; we can afford to have the moulds of a des sert service destroyed and a little matter of 5,000 is not much, when we have plans. And so those two go out into the world again." He paused for a second. "Well, aunt, you've had your way; and there's no more to be said, except this, perhaps, that you don't seem to realize the greatest of all the mistakes you have made. Your three years, even if they should be three years of ab sence, will not be years of forgetfulness on either Maisrie Bethune's part or mine; Oh, no; nothing of the kind; don't cherish auy illusions on that score. It happened curi ously that just befere they left Brighton she and I had a little talk over one or two things; and she asked ma for a promise, which I gave her, and which I mean to keep." Well, the handsome lad now standing be fore her had a great hold on her affection; and she even admired, in a covert way, this very bigotry of constancy and unswerving faith of his, so that lor an instant her head swam, and she was on the point of crying out "Vincent Vincent go and bring her to me and I will take her to my heart lor your sakel" But the next moment she had recovered from that mad impulse; she saw that what bad been done was not to be un done in that happy-go-lucky fashion, even if it could be undone at all; and she was silent and embarrassed, It was he who "Well, von must excuse me. aunt; I've to be down at the House by question time." "You're not going like that, Vin!" she exclaimed. "What do you want of me?" he asked in a coldly civil way. "I I want you to be as you once were, to all of us," she cried, ratberincoherently. "I want you to go back to Gro'svenor Place; and to accept the allowance your father has made you ever since you came of age; and to resume the old bygone relations with us. Surely it would be possible, with a little consideration on both sides. What we have done was done entirely out of thoughtful ness for you; and if we have made a mis take we are only human beings! And re member, it is quite possible that you may be mistaken too, Vin; it is one thing to be able to get up and make a clear and clever speech about some political subject, and quite another to. understand some of the strange sides of human nature. You may be mistaken just as much as we and and" "What you propose, aunt," said he (for time was precious with him), "even if it were practicable, would only be temporary. I am looking forward to marrying Maisrie Bethune iu spite of your three years of forgetfulness and when that happens, your Eatched-up state of affairs would all come to its again. So what is the use of professing a sort of sham reconciliation? I have no wish to return to Grosvenor Place. I have taken some rooms at the foot of Bucking ham etreet; and I have a key that letsme through by the Embankment gardens into Villiers street; it will be convenient for getting to the House. And I can tide along pretty well without any allowance from my father; in fact, I'm saving a little money in a quiet way 7 "But at what a cost, Vincent at what a cost!" she protested. "I wish you could see how worn and ill you are looking " "Well, I've had some things to think of lately thanks to my kind relatives," said he. "But really I must be off " "Vincent," she said, making one last des pairing effort to' bring things back to their former footing, "when are you going to ask Lonie Drexell and me to dine with you at "the House?" "I'm so busy, aunt, just now," said he, as he opened the door for her. Then he saw her into her carriage; and she drove away a most perplexed and unhappy woman. These rooms that Vincent had taken at the foot of Buckingham street were right up at the top of the building; and commanded a spacious prospect of the river, the embank ment gardens, the bridges, the great dusky world of London lying all around, and the dome of St Paul's rising dim and phantas mal in the East They were bachelor cham bers, that had doubtless seen many tenants (the name of one, George Brand, was still over the door, and Vincent did not think it worth while to change it), but the young man had no sooner entered into possession than he began a series of alterations and improvements that bachelor chambers did not seem to demand. Not in any Hurry, however, nor perhaps with any fixed intent; it was a kind of amusement for this or that odd halt-hour . he could snatch from his multifarious duties. To begin with, he had the wood work painted a deep Indian red, and the walls a pearly blue-gray; while the former color was repeated in the Japanese window curtains, and tbe latter by the great world outside, on the lambent moonlight, nights, or sometimes in the awakening of, the dawn, as he lay in a low easy chair and watched the vast, silent city coming ont of its sleep. This top floor was "a very still place, except for the early chattering of the tree sparrows, into whose nests, swayiug on the branches just beneath him, he could have tossed a biscuit. Andf then his peregrinations through London, rapid though they were as a rule, occasionally brought him face to face with a bric-a-brac shop; and from time to time he picked up one thing or another, just as it happened to strike his fancy. Per haps these modest purchases were jnst a trifle too elegant for a bachelor's apart ments, tbe sitting room away up in that lofty situation came to look rather like a boudoir; lor example, there was a musio stand In rosewood and ormula a tall stand it was, as if for a violin player which he him self never used. Pictures he conld not afford; but-books he could; and the volumes which were one by one added to those shelves were of a more graceful and literary stamp than you would have expected to find in tbe library of a young and busy member of Parliament It was not a lordly palace of art, this humble suite of apartments in the neighborhood of tbe Strand; but there was a prevailing air of selection and good taste; perhaps, one ought to say, of expect ancy, also, in the presence of things not yet in use. Then the two large and low win dows of the sitting room were all sur rounded with ivy, of long training; but beside that, there were flower boxes; and at a moment's notice, and at small expense, these could be filled with potted geraniums, if one wished to be gay. And always outside was the varied panorama of the great city; the wide rlvr and the bridges, the spires ana the towers, the far marses of buildings becoming more and more spectral as they receded into the gray and wavering mist 'Sometimes the rose and saffron of the dawn were there, ascending with a soft suf fusion behind the purple dome of St Paul's; sometimes there were blown and breezy days, with flying showers and watery gleams of snnlight;and sametlmes tbe night lay blue and still and clear, tbe Surrey aide in black and mysterious shadow, the white moon high in the south. This silent alti tude was a fine place for dreaming, after all the toil and moil of the working hours were overj aud .1 fine place for listening, too; sometimes, toward the morning, just as the leaves began to stir, you could tancy the wind was bringing a message with it it' seemed, coming from far away, to say some thing about Claire Fontaine. (2V be continued next Sunday.) Glvo the Ducks Time to Eat Coos Bay. Ore., News j It is the intention to introdacea bill at the next session of the Legislature prohibit ing night shooting on the waters of Coo Bav. The .ducks are allowed no time tog ,ee.d. at present, either 4 or night, 1890, FEATS OF -FASTING. Doctor Gibier's Explanation of tbe Secret of Signor Sncci. WILL J OWEK AND TRAINING DO IT. The Unparalleled but Well-Established Achievement of Ilarides. ' MONTHS IS A SDBTEEEANEAN T01IB The fast of Signor Succi (pronounced "Sooehy") at New York is attracting uni versal attention. He ate his last meal No vember 5, and if he completes his 46 days without food he will take his first meal Sun day morning, December 21. He is a mere skeleton now, and, as this is his thirty eighth day, he is likely to be a mere astral body before the 45 days are up. What is his secret? Few men are better qualified to discuss this matter than Dr. Paul Gibier, director of the New York Pasteur Institute, not so much by reason of his knowledge of bacteri ology and contagious diseases as because of his thorough knowledge of psychological questions. Dr. Gibier studied at the famous Salpetriere Hospital, in Paris, and under Prof. Charcot and Dr. Luys, both of whom are unrivaled as specialists! He is himself the author of varions standard works on psychological questions. Asked about Succi, the eminent physician spoke to a New York Herald as follows: THE THEORIES ADVANCED. "I shall not take up your time in discuss ing.the different theories that have been ad vanced regarding Signor Succi. There is without doubt a little truth in each of them. Succi is certainly highly endowed with that power of resistance which is peculiar to the human race. He has great strength of will and energy. He lives by the universal ether, for what is the universal ether but the energy, the anima mundi, which animates all living beings, but which must not be confounded with tbe intelligence. So, you see, there is a certain amonnt of truth in each theory, but not sufficient in any to sat isfy the scientific mind. My explanation will, I think, satisfy you, if not completely at least better than the others. "When a man wants to do something ex traordinary, no matter what be its nature, he can accomplish feats quite unusual and apparently entirely at variance with the laws of nature. He attains his object here is the whole secret in a nutshell by means of a combination of a mild sort of enthusi asm and energy. His strength of will en ables him to succeed. I am well aware that men, and even animals, have lived a long time without food, aud yet in these cases no one would claim that enthusiasm had proved an auxiliary. STARVATION THAT'S INVOLUNTARY. "Dogs, for example, can live for weeks without food, but not without drink, as has been fully proved by different physiolo gists, among others by Dr. Laborde, of Paris. Men condemned to death who have tried to starve themselves in order that they might escape the gallows have lived for weeks. These, however, are isolated cases. On the other hand, Sncci's case is the result of training, as I will demonstrate by facts which may appear to you extraordinary, but which are easily and naturally explained. "Six hundred years ago Ibn Kaldoun, an Arabian savant, told iu his 'Prolegomena of Universal History,' a copy of which can be seen in the National Library of Paris, of men who surrendered themselves to a strange enthusiasm with the object of discovering things concealed from human ken both in the present and the future, and he added that 'these men are as a rule inhabitants of India, where they are known as Yoghis. According to Ibu Kaldoun these Yoghis wrote several books describing the method of training and containing accounts of mar velous feats of fasting and endurance. So you see that 600 years ago, as to-day, India was considered the cradle of the marvelous. THE INFLEXIBLE "WILL. "Through a long and painful education these believers acquire a new nature, and are in consequence enabled to exercise the psychic powers of which Ibn Kaldoun ipeaks, their great aim, I say without hesi tation, being to attain an ideal which is at once most beautiful and most lofty. It is astonishing what feats a man can perform when impelled by an inflexible will, which nothing can swerve from the proposed goal. We hear of fasters who, like Succi, remain for several weeks without taking into their system any substance except pure water. In India there are men who go to even greater extremes. There can be lound tasters who remain for several years without taking any thing except some grains of rice and a little water. Some perform a still more wonder ful feat; by means of a peculiar process of auto-hypnotization they succeed in suspending for the time being all the normal functions of active life. WHAT DE. HONIGBEEOER SAW. "How 'great is the will power of these Voghis, and how horrible are the torments which they callously inflict upon their bodies, you can see from the following ac count of an extraordinary feat, witnessed by Dr. Honigberger and confirmed by Sir Claudius Wade, the English Besident Min ister at Lahore. "After long meditation and thinking it high time that he should join Brahma in an eternal Nirvana, Harides, the Brahmin, be came a hermit and began that series of relig ious, physical and intellectual exercises by which men are fitted for that state, which Dr. Beyer calls anabiose, and which the Hindoos call Vdg Vidya, Bu Stambha or Vaju Stambha, which means the art of pro ducing, by means of ecstacy and a complete withdrawal of the elemental forces of life, an entire and harmless snspension of the vital functions. While in this state a man may be buried for a long time and brought back again to life.' HARIDES, THE FASTER. "Haridesffrst builta sort of semi-subterraneous cell and. aided by his disciples, he entered through a narrow door and stretched himself on a soft bed of wool and cotton. His servants then closed the door with earth and left him within, seated in the attitude of Brahma or reclining on his couch and either reciting prayers or meditating pro foundly on the Divinity. At first he only secluded himself for some minutes, then for some hours, but finally, by gradually ac customing himself to live without air, he acquired the power to remain in his narrow grave for several days. At the same time hi began the exercise of Pranayama, or holding the breath, aud at first for 5 min utes, then for 10, then for 21, then 43, then for Si minutes he did not suffer a breath to escape him. Don't ask me why he abstained from breathing for exactly so many min utes on each occasion, as that is a secret of the Voghis. "He also caused several incisions to be cnt under his tongue one incision ealh week. Tbe object of this operation was to enable him to turn hii tongue back into his pharynx in such a manner that the opening of the glottis would be closed during the period ot his anaboise. And while all these preparations Vere being made tbe recluse observed all the rules of Voghism. He nonrished himself with vegetables only and kept himself unspotted from the world. A -WONDERFUL EXHIBITION. "Finally, when he was ready to make the great trial, he presented himself at the Court of Lahore. Why did he present himself he fore Eajah Bunget Sing? I 'presume his object was either to convert him, if he was a Mussulman, or, following the example ot tbe prophets of Israel, who were also Voghis in their own way, to reproach tbe King with his faults and predict that he and all his courtiers would come to a speedy and lamentable end if they did not straightway repent of their sinf. In any case, in order that thev, might feel assured ot his divine mission, he oflered to prove thatlie could re main lor weeks and mouths under ground in 1 a coffin and then resume bis natural life. "His proposition was accepted. Then Hsxidw. tb.9 Yogbjl saade-hJafiaal preparations. His body he purified exter iorly by ablutions and interiorly by fasting and the juices of sacred herbs; his stomach he cleansed, not by means of a tube, after our modern method, bnt by means of long strips of linen, which he swallowed and afterward drew out through his mouth. On the appointed day an immense crowd as sembled. Surrounded by his difciples and attended by the Eajah and his court, Harides advanced solemnly toward his chosen grave. A DEATH-LIKE TRANCE. "There a linen shroud had been stretched on tbe ground, and on it he placed himself, and turning his face toward the east cros ed his legs in the attitude Pamadzan that is to say, in tbe attitude of Brahma seated on tbe lotus. Then he rolled his tongue back into his throat, fixedhis eyes on the tip of his nose and remained motionless. Pres ently his eyes closed, hit limbs became stiff and it became apparent that he was in a sort of lethargic catalepsy. I propose to call this death-like trance tbanatoeidis, from the Greek word signifying 'death and 'appearance.' The epithet 'lethargic' does not signify 'apparent death,' as we under stand the phrase, but 'a deep, pathological sleep,' as can be seen from the derivation of the word. Anabiose also seems to me an improper word in this sense, as it signifies 'loss of life,' whereas snspension of life is all that really takes place. ' "The followers of Harides then hastened to close his eyes and nostrils with linen plugs, their object doubtless being to protect him from insects. Above his head they joined the four corners of the shroud and tied them firmly together. The Kajah's seal was placed on the knots and tbe body was then shut up in a wooden casket fourfeet in height by three feet in width, which was closed hermetically and was also stamped with the royal seal. SIX TVEEKS IN A TOMB. "The casket was placed in a vault of exactly the same dimensions, which had been constructed tor the purpose, three feet under ground. The door was then closed, sealed and completely) i surrounded with earth'. Thenceforth the tomb was guarded day and night by chosen sentinels and was an object of veneration to thousands of Hindoos, who had flocked from all direc tions, as thongh on a pilgrimage, to the burial place of the holy man. "At the end of six weeks, which was the time fixed for the opening of the tomb, an immense mass of spectators gathered and waited to see what would happen, and first the Bajah caused the earth which walled up the door to be removed and was satisfied that his seal had not been broken. Then the door was opened and the lid of the casket, on which the seal also was untouched, was raised. "Dr. Honigberger noticed that the shroud was covered with a moist substance, and naiurally attributed it to the humidity of the grave. The body of the recluse, still wrapped in the shroud, was removed from the casket by bis disciples and propped against the lid; then, while the shroud was still around him, they ponred some hot water over his head. Finally they released him from the shrond, after they bad verified and broken the seals. A REMARKABLE RESUSCITATION. "Then Dr. Honigberger examined him carefully. The man's attitude was the same as on the day of the burial, except that his bead now reposed on one shoulder. The skin was wrinkled, the limbs were stiff. All the body was cold, except the head, which bad been sprinkled with hot water. Of a pulse no trace conld be fonnd, and tbe utter failure to discover any sign of motion in the heart seemed to be a clear indication of death. Tbe raised eyelids revealed eyes glazed and spiritless as those of a corpse. "The disciples and servants washed the body and began to rnb the limbs. One of them placed on the skull a mass of hot wheaten dongb, which was renewed several times, while another removed the stoppages from the ears and nose and opened the month with a knife. Still, Harides re mained as a statue of wax and there was not the faintest sign of life in him. "After opening his mouth the disciple caught hold of his tongue and replaced it in its natural position. Thus he held it for some time until its tendency to tall back on the larynx was overcome. Meanwhile the eyelids had been rubbed with grease and a final ointment of hot dough had been placed on the head. Juit then the body was seized with trembling, the nostrils dilated, a deep breath was drawn, tbe pulse began to beat slowly and the limbs became mobile. A littlt melted butter was poured on the tongue, and after this painful scene, the result of which had appeared so doubt ful, the eyes regained their pristine bril liancy. A SECOND ENTOMBMENT. "The resurrection of the Voghi was ac complished, and as bis own eyes met tbe Bajah's he said to him simply, 'Now do you believe me?' Half an hour sufficed to re vive him and in another half hour, though still weak, be was sitting at the royal table, clothed in a rich garment and decorated with a necklace of pearls and bracelets of gold. Some time afterward, doubtless be cause the Bajah had paid no heed to his teaching, the Voghi caused himself to be en tombed a second time, and on tnis occasion .his grave was six feet under ground. Earth was piled around nis comn, tne grave was walled in, more earth was spread over it and in this earth barley was sown. Ac cording to the same eye witnesses Harides remained for four months in this tomb and at the end of that period came back to life in the same manner as on the former occa sion. "These achievements are as much at vari ance with all that physiology teaches us about the ordinary conditions of human life that one cannot refrain from sayiug: 'Yes, these strange things may be true, but I'd like to see them.' SHO-WS THE POSSIBILITIES. "Still, as the writer, from whom I bor rowed this story remarks: 'It would be rash for us, simply because we cannot yet ex plain them, to assume that such fact3 are impossible.' I could tell yon of many other marvelous deeds of a similar nature achieved in India, bnt I think I have said enough, at any rate you can see that Sncci is yet far from being the equal of Harides, though it is quite possible that by rigid training and the exercise of that will power, with which he is unquestionably endowed, he may ultimately arrive at tbe same re sults. "Whether he does or not, the examples which I have cited prove, I think, that pe culiar powers which are apparently at vari ance with all laws of physiology, may be acquired by training and that just as men can become boxers, runners, swimmers and morphine maniacs, so, too, men can becom adepts at fasting. All tbey need is to grad ually acquire the habit until it becomes, as it were, their second nature'." ABE THE DOCTORS CRIMINALLY LIABLE? Complications of an alarming character' are likely to arise' in connection witn tne long fast of Succi. A dozen doctors may be indicted for manslaughter. That is, if the Italian dies, and he is failing very fast Of course, tbe doctors deride the idea,but it is a novel question and may give them serious trouble. The report that Succi had gone insane has been followed several times by statements that he was at death's door. His weight is at about the hundred mark now, and his average dally loss of avoirdupois since his fight with starvation began has been about a pound and a .sixth a day. At the rate he has been dwindling in bulk he will weigh about 94 pounds if he is alive at the end of 45 days. This will be a loss of ZZYK pounds to an undeiz:d middle-weight man. Can a man of slight .bnirs and nervous temperament like SlSnor Sncci, who never weighed more than 147 pounds, stand such a loss? Can he go 46 daysfwifliout as much food as the crumb which the sparrow picks up for breakfast? It is true that the plucky Italian has fasted successfully for 40 days in the languid climate of Italy and in the muggy atmosphere of England, where tbe processes of life are slow and the waste of tissue small. But that is no evidenee that he c in fast 46 days in the clearairof the United States. His waste ol tissue is greater in New York and his appetite keener than they would be JLa tho cliautt cf th -Old "World, 21 ON AN OSTEICH FARM. Growing the BBirds in the Colonies of South Africa. CHICKS ARE COMICAL BEAUTIES. Kaffirs Fall Oat the Stabs of the Feathers With their Teeth. APPETITE OP THE SECKETAP.I BIED In the early' days of ostrich farming splendid fortunes weremade. Then feathers were worth 100 per pound, the plumes of one bird at a single plucking realizing on an average 25. For a good pair of breeding birds 400, or even 500, was no uncommon price; and little chicks, only just out oftht egg, were worth 10 each. Indeed, the un hatched eggs have been sometimes valued at the same amount But since the supply has become so much greater than the demand things are sadly changed for tbe farmer; our best pair of ostriches would not now sell for more than 12. And experience has taught us to look for no bigbersum than 30 shillings for tbe feathers of the handsomest bird at one plucking. At the same time, if a lady wishes to buy a good leather in London or in Paris, she has to pay nearly the same price as in former times. There are not many young animals pret tier than a little ostrich chick during the first few weeks of life, writes Annie Martin from an ostrich farm South Africa, in a very clever contribution to literature. It has such a sweet, innocent baby face, such large eyes, and such a plump, round little body. Ail its movements are comical, andtlhere is an air of conceit and independence about tbe tiny creature which is most amusing. niS PRETTY STRIPED COAT. Instead of feathers it has a little rough coat which seems all made up of narrow strips of material, of as many different shades of brown and grey as there are in a tailor's pattern book, mixed with shreds of black; while tbe head and neck are apparently cov ered with the softest plush, striped and col ored just like a tiger's skin on a small scale. On tbe whole, tbe little fellow on hifirst appearance in tbe world is not unlike a hedgehog on two legs, with along neck. On a large farm, when plucking is con templated, it is anything but an -easy mat ter to collect the birds; the gathering togeth er of ours was generally a work of three days. Men have to be sent out in all direc tions to drive the birds up, by twos and threes, from the far off spots to which they have wandered. Little troops are gradually brought together, and collected, first, in a large inclosure, then in a small one, the plucking kraal, in which they are crowded together so closely that the most savage bird has no room to make himself disagreeable. Besides the gates through which the ostriches are driven into the kraal, there is an outlet at the opposite end through the "plucking box." This latter is a most use ful invention, saving much time and trouble. It is a very solid wooden box, in which though there is just room for an os trich to stand, he cannot possibly turn round; nor can he kick, the sides of the box being too high. PLUCKING THE BIG BIRDS. At each end there is a stout door, and after more or less of a scuffle he is pushed in and the door slammed behind him. Then the two operators, standing one on each side of the box, have bim completely in their power, and with a lew rapid snips of their shears his splendid wings are soon denuded of their long white plumes. These, to pre vent their tips from being spoiled, are always cut before the quills are ripe. The stumps of the latter are allowed to remain some two or three months longer, until they are so ripe that they can be pulled out generally by the teeth of the Kaffirs with out hurting the bird. It is necessary to pull them; the feathers, which by their weight would have caused the stumps to fall out naturally at the right time, being gone. Some farmers, anxious to hurry on the next crop of feathers, are cruel enoy gh to draw the stumps before they are ripe, but nature, as usual, resents the interference with her laws, and the feathers of birds which have been thus treated soon dete riorate. It is best to pluck only once a year. The tails and the glossy black quills are not cut, but pulled out; this, every one says, does not hurt the birds, but there is an unpleasant tearing sound about the opera tion which I think must make their eyes water. S-WALLO-WED KITTENS ALIVE. Among the numerous pets on the farm from which I write, says Mrs. Martin, is a secretary bird. He was like a boa-constrictor in bis capacity for "cutting himself outside" the animals on which he fed lizards, rats, toads, frogs, fat, juicy locusts', young chickens, alas! and some of the smaller pets, if left incautiously within his reacb, even little kittens all went down whole. The last named animals were his favourite delicacy, and he was fortunate enough while at Walmer to get plenty of them. His enormous appetite, and our difficulty in satisfying it, were well known in tne neighborhood, ana the owners of several prolific cats,instead ot drowning the superfluous progeny, bestowed them on us as offerings to Jacob. They were killed and given to him at the rate of one a day. Once, however, by an unlucky accident, one of them got into his clutches witheut the preliminary knock on tbe head, and the old barbarian swallowed it alive. For some minutes we could hearthe poor thing mewing piteously in Jacob's interior, while, he himself stood there listening and looking all around in a puzzled manner to see where the noise came from. He evidently thought there was another kitten somewhere, and seemed much disappointed at not finding it SNAKES OF bOUTH AFRICA. Snakes are, it seems, indeed, one of the greatest drawbacks to South African life. There are so many of them, they are of such deadly sorts, and the obtrusive familiarity and utter absence of ceremony with which they come into the houses render the nerves ot newly arrived inmates liable at any mo ment to receive a severe shock. After a time, of course, finding that every one you meet bas some startling experience to relate of the discovery of intrusive snakes in all sorts of places where they were most unlooked for and least observable, yon be come somewhat inured to this unueasans feature of colonial existence, ana move about your house with the caution of one who would not be surprised to find a snaka anywhere. MADAME A. RUPPERT Complexion Specialist jr nrn. A. Ennnert's world-renowned M.ai.h I tba onlv laee tonic in tne world whiaM 1 positively removes freckles, moth patehenj blackheads, pimples, birthmarks, eczema ase ' all blemishes ot the skin, and when appHed mnnnt bs observed br anyone. The fada Mcacn can only ba had at my branch o&eei Jf r. VS tlllo avenue, iiammun uunainjt roosa 203 and 204, Pittsburg, or sent to any address oa receipt ot price. Bold at tZ per bottle, or terea i bottles, usually required to clear tbe flTrmalnTij ion, so. seaaiceBwjw'-'Koiuiiai.ua.rcH .ecll-sa UHS.A.B.VSSi -- 1