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+Project Gutenberg's Stories by American Authors, Volume 1, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Stories by American Authors, Volume 1
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: March 4, 2004 [EBook #11436]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORIES AMERICAN, VOL 1. ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Stan Goodman, Amy Petri and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+STORIES BY AMERICAN AUTHORS. VOLUME I
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+Stories by American Authors VOLUME I
+
+ WHO WAS SHE. By BAYARD TAYLOR
+
+ THE DOCUMENTS IN THE CASE. By BRANDER MATTHEWS AND H.C. BUNNER
+
+ ONE OF THE THIRTY PIECES. By WILLIAM HENRY BISHOP
+
+ BALACCHI BROTHERS. By REBECCA HARDING DAVIS
+
+ AN OPERATION IN MONEY. By ALBERT WEBSTER
+
+
+1903
+
+
+[Illustration: BRANDER MATTHEWS]
+
+Stories by American Authors VOLUME I
+
+
+
+
+WHO WAS SHE?
+
+BY BAYARD TAYLOR.
+
+Come, now, there may as well be an end of this! Every time I meet your
+eyes squarely I detect the question just slipping out of them. If you
+had spoken it, or even boldly looked it; if you had shown in your
+motions the least sign of a fussy or fidgety concern on my account; if
+this were not the evening of my birthday, and you the only friend who
+remembered it; if confession were not good for the soul, though harder
+than sin to some people, of whom I am one,--well, if all reasons were
+not at this instant converged into a focus, and burning me rather
+violently in that region where the seat of emotion is supposed to lie, I
+should keep my trouble to myself.
+
+Yes, I have fifty times had it on my mind to tell you the whole story.
+But who can be certain that his best friend will not smile--or, what is
+worse, cherish a kind of charitable pity ever afterwards--when the
+external forms of a very serious kind of passion seem trivial,
+fantastic, foolish? And the worst of all is that the heroic part which I
+imagined I was playing proves to have been almost the reverse. The only
+comfort which I can find in my humiliation is that I am capable of
+feeling it. There isn't a bit of a paradox in this, as you will see; but
+I only mention it, now, to prepare you for, maybe, a little morbid
+sensitiveness of my moral nerves.
+
+The documents are all in this portfolio, under my elbow. I had just read
+them again completely through, when you were announced. You may examine
+them as you like, afterwards: for the present, fill your glass, take
+another Cabaña, and keep silent until my "ghastly tale" has reached its
+most lamentable conclusion.
+
+The beginning of it was at Wampsocket Springs three years ago last
+summer. I suppose most unmarried men who have reached, or passed, the
+age of thirty--and I was then thirty-three--experience a milder return
+of their adolescent warmth, a kind of fainter second spring, since the
+first has not fulfilled its promise. Of course, I wasn't clearly
+conscious of this at the time: who is? But I had had my youthful passion
+and my tragic disappointment, as you know: I had looked far enough into
+what Thackeray used to call the cryptic mysteries, to save me from the
+Scylla of dissipation, and yet preserved enough of natural nature to
+keep me out of the Pharisaic Charybdis. My devotion to my legal studies
+had already brought me a mild distinction; the paternal legacy was a
+good nest-egg for the incubation of wealth,--in short, I was a fair,
+respectable "party," desirable to the humbler mammas, and not to be
+despised by the haughty exclusives.
+
+The fashionable hotel at the Springs holds three hundred, and it was
+packed. I had meant to lounge there for a fortnight and then finish my
+holidays at Long Branch; but eighty, at least, out of the three hundred,
+were young and moved lightly in muslin. With my years and experience I
+felt so safe, that to walk, talk, or dance with them became simply a
+luxury, such as I had never--at least so freely--possessed before. My
+name and standing, known to some families, were agreeably exaggerated to
+the others, and I enjoyed that supreme satisfaction which a man always
+feels when he discovers or imagines that he is popular in society. There
+is a kind of premonitory apology implied in my saying this, I am aware.
+You must remember that I am culprit and culprit's counsel at the same
+time.
+
+You have never been at Wampsocket? Well, the hills sweep around in a
+crescent on the northern side and four or five radiating glens
+descending from them unite just above the village. The central one
+leading to a waterfall (called "Minnehehe" by the irreverent young
+people, because there is so little of it), is the fashionable drive and
+promenade; but the second ravine on the left, steep, crooked, and
+cumbered with bowlders which have tumbled from somewhere and lodged in
+the most extraordinary groupings, became my favorite walk of a morning.
+There was a footpath in it, well-trodden at first, but gradually fading
+out as it became more like a ladder than a path, and I soon discovered
+that no other city feet than mine were likely to scale a certain rough
+slope which seemed the end of the ravine. With the aid of the tough
+laurel-stems I climbed to the top, passed through a cleft as narrow as a
+doorway, and presently found myself in a little upper dell, as wild and
+sweet and strange as one of the pictures that haunt us on the brink of
+sleep.
+
+There was a pond--no, rather a bowl--of water in the centre; hardly
+twenty yards across, yet the sky in it was so pure and far down that the
+circle of rocks and summer foliage inclosing it seemed like a little
+planetary ring, floating off alone through space. I can't explain the
+charm of the spot, nor the selfishness which instantly suggested that I
+should keep the discovery to myself. Ten years earlier, I should have
+looked around for some fair spirit to be my "minister," but now--
+
+One forenoon--I think it was the third or fourth time I had visited the
+place--I was startled to find the dint of a heel in the earth, half-way
+up the slope. There had been rain during the night, and the earth was
+still moist and soft It was the mark of a woman's boot, only to be
+distinguished from that of a walking-stick by its semicircular form. A
+little higher, I found the outline of a foot, not so small as to awake
+an ecstasy, but with a suggestion of lightness, elasticity, and grace.
+If hands were thrust through holes in a boardfence, and nothing of the
+attached bodies seen, I can easily imagine that some would attract and
+others repel us: with footprints the impression is weaker, of course,
+but we cannot escape it. I am not sure whether I wanted to find the
+unknown wearer of the boot within my precious personal solitude; I was
+afraid I should see her, while passing through the rocky crevice, and
+yet was disappointed when I found no one.
+
+But on the flat, warm rock overhanging the tarn--my special throne--lay
+some withering wild-flowers, and a book! I looked up and down, right and
+left: there was not the slightest sign of another human life than mine.
+Then I lay down for a quarter of an hour, and listened; there were only
+the noises of bird and squirrel, as before. At last I took up the book,
+the flat breadth of which suggested only sketches. There were, indeed,
+some tolerable studies of rocks and trees on the first pages; a few not
+very striking caricatures, which seemed to have been commenced as
+portraits, but recalled no faces I knew; then a number of fragmentary
+notes, written in pencil. I found no name, from first to last; only,
+under the sketches, a monogram so complicated and laborious that the
+initials could hardly be discovered unless one already knew them.
+
+The writing was a woman's, but it had surely taken its character from
+certain features of her own: it was clear, firm, individual. It had
+nothing of that air of general debility which usually marks the
+manuscript of young ladies, yet its firmness was far removed from the
+stiff, conventional slope which all Englishwomen seem to acquire in
+youth and retain through life. I don't see how any man in my situation
+could have helped reading a few lines--if only for the sake of restoring
+lost property. But I was drawn on, and on, and finished by reading all:
+thence, since no further harm could be done, I re-read, pondering over
+certain passages until they stayed with me. Here they are, as I set them
+down, that evening, on the back of a legal blank:
+
+ "It makes a great deal of difference whether we
+ wear social forms as bracelets or handcuffs."
+
+ "Can we not still be wholly our independent
+ selves, even while doing, in the main, as others
+ do? I know two who are so; but they are married."
+
+ "The men who admire these bold, dashing
+ young girls treat them like weaker copies of themselves.
+ And yet they boast of what they call 'experience!'"
+
+ "I wonder if any one felt the exquisite beauty
+ of the noon as I did, to-day? A faint appreciation
+ of sunsets and storms is taught us in youth,
+ and kept alive by novels and flirtations; but the
+ broad, imperial splendor of this summer noon!--and
+ myself standing alone in it--yes, utterly
+ alone!"
+
+ "The men I seek _must_ exist: where are they?
+ How make an acquaintance, when one obsequiously
+ bows himself away, as I advance? The fault
+ is surely not all on my side."
+
+There was much more, intimate enough to inspire me with a keen interest
+in the writer, yet not sufficiently so to make my perusal a painful
+indiscretion. I yielded to the impulse of the moment, took out my
+pencil, and wrote a dozen lines on one of the blank pages. They ran
+something in this wise:
+
+ "IGNOTUS IGNOTAE!--You have bestowed without
+ intending it, and I have taken without your
+ knowledge. Do not regret the accident which has
+ enriched another. This concealed idyl of the hills
+ was mine, as I supposed, but I acknowledge your
+ equal right to it. Shall we share the possession,
+ or will you banish me?"
+
+There was a frank advance, tempered by a proper caution, I fancied, in
+the words I wrote. It was evident that she was unmarried, but outside of
+that certainty there lay a vast range of possibilities, some of them
+alarming enough. However, if any nearer acquaintance should arise out of
+the incident, the next step must be taken by her. Was I one of the men
+she sought? I almost imagined so--certainly hoped so.
+
+I laid the book on the rock, as I had found it, bestowed another keen
+scrutiny on the lonely landscape, and then descended the ravine. That
+evening, I went early to the ladies' parlor, chatted more than usual
+with the various damsels whom I knew, and watched with a new interest
+those whom I knew not. My mind, involuntarily, had already created a
+picture of the unknown. She might be twenty-five, I thought: a
+reflective habit of mind would hardly be developed before that age. Tall
+and stately, of course; distinctly proud in her bearing, and somewhat
+reserved in her manners. Why she should have large dark eyes, with long
+dark lashes, I could not tell; but so I seemed to see her. Quite
+forgetting that I was (or had meant to be) _Ignotus_, I found myself
+staring rather significantly at one or the other of the young ladies, in
+whom I discovered some slight general resemblance to the imaginary
+character. My fancies, I must confess, played strange pranks with me.
+They had been kept in a coop so many years, that now, when I suddenly
+turned them loose, their rickety attempts at flight quite bewildered me.
+
+No! there was no use in expecting a sudden discovery. I went to the glen
+betimes, next morning: the book was gone, and so were the faded flowers,
+but some of the latter were scattered over the top of another rock, a
+few yards from mine. Ha! this means that I am not to withdraw, I said
+to myself: she makes room for me! But how to surprise her?--for by this
+time I was fully resolved to make her acquaintance, even though she
+might turn out to be forty, scraggy, and sandy-haired.
+
+I knew no other way so likely as that of visiting the glen at all times
+of the day. I even went so far as to write a line of greeting, with a
+regret that our visits had not yet coincided, and laid it under a stone
+on the top of _her_ rock. The note disappeared, but there was no answer
+in its place. Then I suddenly remembered her fondness for the noon
+hours, at which time she was "utterly alone." The hotel _table d'hôte_
+was at one o'clock, her family, doubtless, dined later, in their own
+rooms. Why, this gave me, at least, her place in society! The question
+of age, to be sure, remained unsettled; but all else was safe.
+
+The next day I took a late and large breakfast and sacrificed my dinner.
+Before noon the guests had all straggled back to the hotel from glen and
+grove and lane, so bright and hot was the sunshine. Indeed, I could
+hardly have supported the reverberation of heat from the sides of the
+ravine, but for a fixed belief that I should be successful. While
+crossing the narrow meadow upon which it opened, I caught a glimpse of
+something white among the thickets higher up. A moment later, it had
+vanished, and I quickened my pace, feeling the beginning of an absurd
+nervous excitement in my limbs. At the next turn, there it was again!
+but only for another moment. I paused, exulting, and wiped my drenched
+forehead. "She cannot escape me!" I murmured between the deep draughts
+of cooler air I inhaled in the shadow of a rock.
+
+A few hundred steps more brought me to the foot of the steep ascent,
+where I had counted on overtaking her. I was too late for that, but the
+dry, baked soil had surely been crumbled and dislodged, here and there,
+by a rapid foot. I followed, in reckless haste, snatching at the
+laurel-branches right and left, and paying little heed to my footing.
+About one third of the way up I slipped, fell, caught a bush which
+snapped at the root, slid, whirled over, and before I fairly knew what
+had happened, I was lying doubled up at the bottom of the slope.
+
+I rose, made two steps forward, and then sat down with a groan of pain;
+my left ankle was badly sprained, in addition to various minor scratches
+and bruises. There was a revulsion of feeling, of course,--instant,
+complete, and hideous. I fairly hated the Unknown. "Fool that I was!" I
+exclaimed, in the theatrical manner, dashing the palm of my hand softly
+against my brow: "lured to this by the fair traitress! But, no!--not
+fair: she shows the artfulness of faded, desperate spinsterhood; she is
+all compact of enamel, 'liquid bloom of youth,' and hair-dye!"
+
+There was a fierce comfort in this thought, but it couldn't help me out
+of the scrape. I dared not sit still, lest a sun-stroke should be
+added, and there was no resource but to hop or crawl down the rugged
+path, in the hope of finding a forked sapling from which I could
+extemporize a crutch. With endless pain and trouble I reached a thicket,
+and was feebly working on a branch with my penknife, when the sound of a
+heavy footstep surprised me.
+
+A brown harvest-hand, in straw hat and shirtsleeves, presently appeared.
+He grinned when he saw me, and the thick snub of his nose would have
+seemed like a sneer at any other time.
+
+"Are you the gentleman that got hurt?" he asked. "Is it pretty tolerable
+bad?"
+
+"Who said I was hurt?" I cried in astonishment.
+
+"One of your town-women fro them hotel--I reckon she was. I was binding
+oats, in the field over the ridge; but I haven't lost no time in comin'
+here."
+
+While I was stupidly staring at this announcement, he whipped out a big
+clasp knife, and in a few minutes fashioned me a practicable crutch.
+Then, taking me by the other arm, he set me in motion toward the
+village.
+
+Grateful as I was for the man's help, he aggravated me by his ignorance.
+When I asked if he knew the lady, he answered: "It's more'n likely _you_
+know her better." But where did she come from? Down from the hill, he
+guessed, but it might ha' been up the road. How did she look? was she
+old or young? what was the color of her eyes? of her hair? There, now, I
+was too much for him. When a woman kept one o' them speckled veils over
+her face, turned her head away and held her parasol between, how were
+you to know her from Adam? I declare to you, I couldn't arrive at one
+positive particular. Even when he affirmed that she was tall, he added,
+the next instant: "Now I come to think on it, she stepped mighty quick;
+so I guess she must ha' been short."
+
+By the time we reached the hotel, I was in a state of fever; opiates and
+lotions had their will of me for the rest of the day. I was glad to
+escape the worry of questions, and the conventional sympathy expressed
+in inflections of the voice which are meant to soothe, and only
+exasperate. The next morning, as I lay upon my sofa, restful, patient,
+and properly cheerful, the waiter entered with a bouquet of wild
+flowers.
+
+"Who sent them?" I asked.
+
+"I found them outside your door, sir. Maybe there's a card; yes, here's
+a bit o' paper."
+
+I opened the twisted slip he handed me, and read: "From your dell--and
+mine." I took the flowers; among them were two or three rare and
+beautiful varieties, which I had only found in that one spot. Fool,
+again! I noiselessly kissed, while pretending to smell them, had them
+placed on a stand within reach, and fell into a state of quiet and
+agreeable contemplation.
+
+Tell me, yourself, whether any male human being is ever too old for
+sentiment, provided that it strikes him at the right time and in the
+right way! What did that bunch of wild flowers betoken? Knowledge,
+first; then, sympathy; and finally, encouragement, at least. Of course
+she had seen my accident, from above; of course she had sent the harvest
+laborer to aid me home. It was quite natural she should imagine some
+special romantic interest in the lonely dell, on my part, and the gift
+took additional value from her conjecture.
+
+Four days afterward there was a hop in the large dining-room of the
+hotel. Early in the morning a fresh bouquet had been left at my door. I
+was tired of my enforced idleness, eager to discover the fair unknown
+(she was again fair, to my fancy!), and I determined to go down,
+believing that a cane and a crimson velvet slipper on the left foot
+would provoke a glance of sympathy from certain eyes, and thus enable me
+to detect them.
+
+The fact was, the sympathy was much too general and effusive. Everybody,
+it seemed, came to me with kindly greetings; seats were vacated at my
+approach, even fat Mrs. Huxter insisting on my taking her warm place, at
+the head of the room. But Bob Leroy--you know him--as gallant a
+gentleman as ever lived, put me down at the right point, and kept me
+there. He only meant to divert me, yet gave me the only place where I
+could quietly inspect all the younger ladies, as dance or supper
+brought them near.
+
+One of the dances was an old-fashioned cotillon, and one of the figures,
+the "coquette," brought every one, in turn, before me. I received a
+pleasant word or two from those whom I knew, and a long, kind, silent
+glance from Miss May Danvers. Where had been my eyes? She was tall,
+stately, twenty-five, had large dark eyes, and long dark lashes! Again
+the changes of the dance brought her near me; I threw (or strove to
+throw) unutterable meanings into my eyes, and cast them upon hers. She
+seemed startled, looked suddenly away, looked back to me, and--blushed.
+I knew her for what is called "a nice girl"--that is, tolerably frank,
+gently feminine, and not dangerously intelligent. Was it possible that I
+had overlooked so much character and intellect?
+
+As the cotillon closed, she was again in my neighborhood, and her
+partner led her in my direction. I was rising painfully from my chair,
+when Bob Leroy pushed me down again, whisked another seat from
+somewhere, planted it at my side, and there she was!
+
+She knew who was her neighbor, I plainly saw; but instead of turning
+toward me, she began to fan herself in a nervous way and to fidget with
+the buttons of her gloves. I grew impatient.
+
+"Miss Danvers!" I said, at last.
+
+"Oh!" was all her answer, as she looked at me for a moment. "Where are
+your thoughts?" I asked.
+
+Then she turned, with wide, astonished eyes, coloring softly up to the
+roots of her hair. My heart gave a sudden leap.
+
+"How can you tell, if I cannot?" she asked.
+
+"May I guess?"
+
+She made a slight inclination of the head, saying nothing. I was then
+quite sure.
+
+"The second ravine, to the left of the main drive?"
+
+This time she actually started; her color became deeper, and a leaf of
+the ivory fan snapped between her fingers.
+
+"Let there be no more a secret!" I exclaimed. "Your flowers have brought
+me your messages; I knew I should find you"--
+
+Full of certainty, I was speaking in a low, impassioned voice. She cut
+me short by rising from her seat; I felt that she was both angry and
+alarmed. Fisher, of Philadelphia, jostling right and left in his haste,
+made his way toward her. She fairly snatched his arm, clung to it with a
+warmth I had never seen expressed in a ball-room, and began to whisper
+in his ear. It was not five minutes before he came to me, alone, with a
+very stern face, bent down, and said:
+
+"If you have discovered our secret, you will keep silent. You are
+certainly a gentleman."
+
+I bowed coldly and savagely. There was a draft from the open window; my
+ankle became suddenly weary and painful, and I went to bed. Can you
+believe that I didn't guess, immediately, what it all meant? In a vague
+way, I fancied that I had been premature in my attempt to drop our
+mutual incognito, and that Fisher, a rival lover, was jealous of me.
+This was rather flattering than otherwise; but when I limped down to the
+ladies' parlor, the next day, no Miss Danvers was to be seen. I did not
+venture to ask for her; it might seem importunate, and a woman of so
+much hidden capacity was evidently not to be wooed in the ordinary way.
+
+So another night passed by; and then, with the morning, came a letter
+which made me feel, at the same instant, like a fool and a hero. It had
+been dropped in the Wampsocket post-office, was legibly addressed to me,
+and delivered with some other letters which had arrived by the night
+mail. Here it is; listen!
+
+ "NOTO IGNOTA!--Haste is not a gift of the gods,
+ and you have been impatient, with the usual result,
+ I was almost prepared for this, and thus am not
+ wholly disappointed. In a day or two more you
+ will discover your mistake, which, so far as I can
+ learn, has done no particular harm. If you wish
+ to find _me_, there is only one way to seek me;
+ should I tell you what it is, I should run the risk
+ of losing you,--that is, I should preclude the
+ manifestation of a certain quality which I hope to
+ find in the man who may--or, rather, must--be
+ my friend. This sounds enigmatical, yet you have
+ read enough of my nature, as written in these
+ random notes in my sketch-book, to guess, at least,
+ how much I require. Only this let me add: mere
+ guessing is useless.
+
+ "Being unknown, I can write freely. If you find
+ me, I shall be justified; if not, I shall hardly need
+ to blush, even to myself, over a futile experiment.
+
+ "It is possible for me to learn enough of your
+ life, henceforth, to direct my relation toward you.
+ This may be the end; if so, I shall know it soon.
+ I shall also know whether you continue to seek
+ me. Trusting in your honor as a man, I must ask
+ you to trust in mine, as a woman."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I _did_ discover my mistake, as the Unknown promised. There had been a
+secret betrothal between Fisher and Miss Danvers; and singularly enough,
+the momentous question and answer had been given in the very ravine
+leading to my upper dell! The two meant to keep the matter to
+themselves, but therein, it seems, I thwarted them; there was a little
+opposition on the part of their respective families, but all was
+amicably settled before I left Wampsocket.
+
+The letter made a very deep impression upon me. What was the one way to
+find her? What could it be but the triumph that follows ambitious
+toil--the manifestation of all my best qualities, as a man? Be she old
+or young, plain or beautiful, I reflected, hers is surely a nature worth
+knowing, and its candid intelligence conceals no hazards for me. I have
+sought her rashly, blundered, betrayed that I set her lower, in my
+thoughts, than her actual self: let me now adopt the opposite course,
+seek her openly no longer, go back to my tasks, and, following my own
+aims vigorously and cheerfully, restore that respect which she seemed to
+be on the point of losing. For, consciously or not, she had communicated
+to me a doubt, implied in the very expression of her own strength and
+pride. She had meant to address me as an equal, yet, despite herself,
+took a stand a little above that which she accorded to me.
+
+I came back to New York earlier than usual, worked steadily at my
+profession and with increasing success, and began to accept
+opportunities (which I had previously declined) of making myself
+personally known to the great, impressible, fickle, tyrannical public.
+One or two of my speeches in the hall of the Cooper Institute, on
+various occasions--as you may perhaps remember--gave me a good headway
+with the party, and were the chief cause of my nomination for the State
+office which I still hold. (There, on the table, lies a resignation,
+written to-day, but not yet signed. We'll talk of it afterwards.)
+
+Several months passed by, and no further letter reached me. I gave up
+much of my time to society, moved familiarly in more than one province
+of the kingdom here, and vastly extended my acquaintance, especially
+among the women; but not one of them betrayed the mysterious something
+or other--really I can't explain precisely what it was!--which I was
+looking for. In fact, the more I endeavored quietly to study the sex,
+the more confused I became.
+
+At last I was subjected to the usual onslaught from the strong-minded. A
+small but formidable committee entered my office one morning and
+demanded a categorical declaration of my principles. What my views on
+the subject were, I knew very well; they were clear and decided; and
+yet, I hesitated to declare them! It wasn't a temptation of Saint
+Anthony--that is, turned the other way--and the belligerent attitude of
+the dames did not alarm me in the least; but _she!_ What was _her_
+position? How could I best please her? It flashed upon my mind, while
+Mrs. ---- was making her formal speech, that I had taken no step for
+months without a vague, secret reference to _her_. So, I strove to be
+courteous, friendly, and agreeably non-committal; begged for further
+documents, and promised to reply by letter, in a few days.
+
+I was hardly surprised to find the well-known hand on the envelope of a
+letter, shortly afterwards. I held it for a minute in my palm, with an
+absurd hope that I might sympathetically feel its character, before
+breaking the seal. Then I read it with a great sense of relief.
+
+ "I have never assumed to guide a man, except
+ toward the full exercise of his powers. It is not
+ opinion in action, but opinion in a state of idleness
+ or indifference, which repels me. I am
+ deeply glad that you have gained so much since
+ you left the country. If, in shaping your course,
+ you have thought of me, I will frankly say that, _to
+ that extent_, you have drawn nearer. Am I mistaken
+ in conjecturing that you wish to know my
+ relation to the movement concerning which you
+ were recently interrogated? In this, as in other
+ instances which may come, I must beg you to consider
+ me only as a spectator. The more my own
+ views may seem likely to sway your action, the less
+ I shall be inclined to declare them. If you find
+ this cold or unwomanly, remember that it is not
+ easy!"
+
+Yes! I felt that I had certainly drawn much nearer to her. And from this
+time on, her imaginary face and form became other than they were. She
+was twenty-eight--three years older; a very little above the middle
+height, but not tall; serene, rather than stately, in her movements;
+with a calm, almost grave face, relieved by the sweetness of the full,
+firm lips; and finally eyes of pure, limpid gray, such as we fancy
+belonged to the Venus of Milo. I found her, thus, much more attractive
+than with the dark eyes and lashes--but she did not make her appearance
+in the circles which I frequented.
+
+Another year slipped away. As an official personage, my importance
+increased, but I was careful not to exaggerate it to myself. Many have
+wondered (perhaps you among the rest) at my success, seeing that I
+possess no remarkable abilities. If I have any secret, it is simply
+this--doing faithfully, with all my might, whatever I undertake. Nine
+tenths of our politicians become inflated and careless, after the first
+few years, and are easily forgotten when they once lose place. I am a
+little surprised, now, that I had so much patience with the Unknown. I
+was too important, at least, to be played with; too mature to be
+subjected to a longer test; too earnest, as I had proved, to be doubted,
+or thrown aside without a further explanation.
+
+Growing tired, at last, of silent waiting, I bethought me of
+advertising. A carefully-written "Personal," in which _Ignotus_ informed
+_Ignota_ of the necessity of his communicating with her, appeared
+simultaneously in the Tribune, Herald, World, and Times. I renewed the
+advertisement as the time expired without an answer, and I think it was
+about the end of the third week before one came, through the post, as
+before.
+
+Ah, yes! I had forgotten. See! my advertisement is pasted on the note,
+as a heading or motto for the manuscript lines. I don't know why the
+printed slip should give me a particular feeling of humiliation as I
+look at it, but such is the fact. What she wrote is all I need read to
+you:
+
+ "I could not, at first, be certain that this was
+ meant for me. If I were to explain to you why I
+ have not written for so long a time, I might give
+ you one of the few clews which I insist on keeping
+ in my own hands. In your public capacity,
+ you have been (so far as a woman may judge) upright,
+ independent, wholly manly: in your relations
+ with other men I learn nothing of you that is not
+ honorable: toward women you are kind, chivalrous,
+ no doubt, overflowing with the _usual_ social
+ refinements, but--Here, again, I run hard upon
+ the absolute necessity of silence. The way to me,
+ if you care to traverse it, is so simple, so very simple!
+ Yet, after what I have written, I cannot even
+ wave my hand in the direction of it, without certain
+ self-contempt. When I feel free to tell you,
+ we shall draw apart and remain unknown forever.
+
+ "You desire to write? I do not prohibit it. I
+ have heretofore made no arrangement for hearing
+ from you, in turn, because I could not discover
+ that any advantage would accrue from it. But it
+ seems only fair, I confess, and you dare not think
+ me capricious. So, three days hence, at six
+ o'clock in the evening, a trusty messenger of mine
+ will call at your door. If you have anything to
+ give her for me, the act of giving it must be the
+ sign of a compact on your part, that you will allow
+ her to leave immediately, unquestioned and
+ unfollowed."
+
+You look puzzled, I see: you don't catch the real drift of her words?
+Well--that's a melancholy encouragement. Neither did I, at the time: it
+was plain that I had disappointed her in some way, and my intercourse
+with, or manner toward, women, had something to do with it. In vain I
+ran over as much of my later social life as I could recall. There had
+been no special attention, nothing to mislead a susceptible heart; on
+the other side, certainly no rudeness, no want of "chivalrous" (she used
+the word!) respect and attention. What, in the name of all the gods, was
+the matter?
+
+In spite of all my efforts to grow clearer, I was obliged to write my
+letter in a rather muddled state of mind. I had _so_ much to say!
+sixteen folio pages, I was sure, would only suffice for an introduction
+to the case; yet, when the creamy vellum lay before me and the moist pen
+drew my fingers toward it, I sat stock dumb for half an hour. I wrote,
+finally, in a half-desperate mood, without regard to coherency or logic.
+Here's a rough draft of a part of the letter, and a single passage from
+it will be enough:
+
+ "I can conceive of no simpler way to you than
+ the knowledge of your name and address. I have
+ drawn airy images of you, but they do not become
+ incarnate, and I am not sure that I should recognize
+ you in the brief moment of passing. Your
+ nature is not of those which are instantly legible.
+ As an abstract power, it has wrought in my life
+ and it continually moves my heart with desires
+ which are unsatisfactory because so vague and
+ ignorant. Let me offer you, personally, my gratitude,
+ my earnest friendship: you would laugh if
+ I were _now_ to offer more."
+
+Stay! here is another fragment, more reckless in tone:
+
+ "I want to find the woman whom I can love--who
+ can love me. But this is a masquerade where
+ the features are hidden, the voice disguised, even
+ the hands grotesquely gloved. Come! I will
+ venture more than I ever thought was possible to
+ me. You shall know my deepest nature as I myself
+ seem to know it. Then, give me the commonest
+ chance of learning yours, through an intercourse
+ which shall leave both free, should we not
+ feel the closing of the inevitable bond!"
+
+After I had written that, the pages filled rapidly. When the appointed
+hour arrived, a bulky epistle, in a strong linen envelope, sealed with
+five wax seals, was waiting on my table. Precisely at six there was an
+announcement: the door opened, and a little outside, in the shadow, I
+saw an old woman, in a threadbare dress of rusty black.
+
+"Come in!" I said.
+
+"The letter!" answered a husky voice. She stretched out a bony hand,
+without moving a step.
+
+"It is for a lady--very important business," said I, taking up the
+letter; "are you sure that there is no mistake?"
+
+She drew her hand under the shawl, turned without a word, and moved
+toward the hall door.
+
+"Stop!" I cried; "I beg a thousand pardons! Take it--take it! You are
+the right messenger!"
+
+She clutched it, and was instantly gone.
+
+Several days passed, and I gradually became so nervous and uneasy that I
+was on the point of inserting another "Personal" in the daily papers,
+when the answer arrived. It was brief and mysterious; you shall hear
+the whole of it.
+
+ "I thank you. Your letter is a sacred confidence
+ which I pray you never to regret. Your
+ nature is sound and good. You ask no more
+ than is reasonable, and I have no real right to refuse.
+ In the one respect which I have hinted, _I_
+ may have been unskilful or too narrowly cautious:
+ I must have the certainty of this. Therefore, as a
+ generous favor, give me six months more! At
+ the end of that time I will write to you again.
+ Have patience with these brief lines: another
+ word might be a word too much."
+
+You notice the change in her tone? The letter gave me the strongest
+impression of a new, warm, almost anxious interest on her part. My
+fancies, as first at Wampsocket, began to play all sorts of singular
+pranks: sometimes she was rich and of an old family, sometimes
+moderately poor and obscure, but always the same calm, reposeful face
+and clear gray eyes. I ceased looking for her in society, quite sure
+that I should not find her, and nursed a wild expectation of suddenly
+meeting her, face to face, in the most unlikely places and under
+startling circumstances. However, the end of it all was
+patience--patience for six months.
+
+There's not much more to tell; but this last letter is hard for me to
+read. It came punctually, to a day. I knew it would, and at the last I
+began to dread the time, as if a heavy note were falling due, and I had
+no funds to meet it. My head was in a whirl when I broke the seal. The
+fact in it stared at me blankly, at once, but it was a long time before
+the words and sentences became intelligible.
+
+ "The stipulated time has come, and our hidden
+ romance is at an end. Had I taken this resolution
+ a year ago, it would have saved me many
+ vain hopes, and you, perhaps, a little uncertainty.
+ Forgive me, first, if you can, and then hear the
+ explanation!
+
+ "You wished for a personal interview: _you have
+ had, not one, but many_. We have met, in society,
+ talked face to face, discussed the weather, the
+ opera, toilettes, Queechy, Aurora Floyd, Long
+ Branch and Newport, and exchanged a weary
+ amount of fashionable gossip; and you never
+ guessed that I was governed by any deeper interest!
+ I have purposely uttered ridiculous platitudes,
+ and you were as smilingly courteous as if
+ you enjoyed them: I have let fall remarks whose
+ hollowness and selfishness could not have escaped
+ you, and have waited in vain for a word of sharp,
+ honest, manly reproof. Your manner to me was
+ unexceptionable, as it was to all other women:
+ but there lies the source of my disappointment,
+ of--yes--of my sorrow!
+
+ "You appreciate, I cannot doubt, the qualities
+ in woman which men value in one another--culture,
+ independence of thought, a high and earnest apprehension
+ of life; but you know not how to seek
+ them. It is not true that a mature and unperverted
+ woman is flattered by receiving only the
+ general obsequiousness which most men give to
+ the whole sex. In the man who contradicts and
+ strives with her, she discovers a truer interest,
+ a nobler respect. The empty-headed, spindle-shanked
+ youths who dance admirably, understand
+ something of billiards, much less of horses, and
+ still less of navigation, soon grow inexpressibly
+ wearisome to us; but the men who adopt their
+ social courtesy, never seeking to arouse, uplift, instruct
+ us, are a bitter disappointment.
+
+ "What would have been the end, had you really
+ found me? Certainly a sincere, satisfying friendship.
+ No mysterious magnetic force has drawn
+ you to me or held you near me, nor has my experiment
+ inspired me with an interest which cannot
+ be given up without a personal pang. I am
+ grieved, for the sake of all men and all women.
+ Yet, understand me! I mean no slightest reproach.
+ I esteem and honor you for what you
+ are. Farewell!"
+
+There. Nothing could be kinder in tone, nothing more humiliating in
+substance. I was sore and offended for a few days; but I soon began to
+see, and ever more and more clearly, that she was wholly right. I was
+sure, also, that any further attempt to correspond with her would be
+vain. It all comes of taking society just as we find it, and supposing
+that conventional courtesy is the only safe ground on which men and
+women can meet.
+
+The fact is--there's no use in hiding it from myself (and I see, by
+your face, that the letter cuts into your own conscience)--she is a
+free, courageous, independent character, and--I am not.
+
+But who _was_ she?
+
+
+
+
+THE DOCUMENTS IN THE CASE.
+
+BY BRANDER MATTHEWS AND H.C. BUNNER.
+
+PART FIRST:
+
+DOCUMENT NO. I.
+
+_Paragraph from the "Illustrated London News," published under the head
+of "Obituary of Eminent Persons" in the issue of January 4th, 1879:_
+
+SIR WILLIAM BEAUVOIR, BART.
+
+Sir William Beauvoir, Bart., whose lamented death has just occurred at
+Brighton, on December 28th, was the head and representative of the
+junior branch of the very ancient and honourable family of Beauvoir, and
+was the only son of the late General Sir William Beauvoir, Bart., by his
+wife Anne, daughter of Colonel Doyle, of Chelsworth Cottage, Suffolk.
+He was born in 1805, and was educated at Eton and Trinity Hall,
+Cambridge. He was M.P. for Lancashire from 1837 to 1847, and was
+appointed a Gentleman of the Privy Chamber in 1843. Sir William married,
+in 1826, Henrietta Georgiana, fourth daughter of the Right Honourable
+Adolphus Liddell, Q.C., by whom he had two sons, William Beauvoir and
+Oliver Liddell Beauvoir. The latter was with his lamented parent when he
+died. Of the former nothing has been heard for nearly thirty years,
+about which time he left England suddenly for America. It is supposed
+that he went to California, shortly after the discovery of gold. Much
+forgotten gossip will now in all probability be revived, for the will of
+the lamented baronet has been proved, on the 2d inst., and the
+personalty sworn under £70,000. The two sons are appointed executors.
+The estate in Lancashire is left to the elder, and the rest is divided
+equally between the brothers. The doubt as to the career of Sir
+William's eldest son must now of course be cleared up.
+
+This family of Beauvoirs is of Norman descent and of great antiquity.
+This is the younger branch, founded in the last century by Sir William
+Beauvoir, Bart., who was Chief Justice of the Canadas, whence he was
+granted the punning arms and motto now borne by his descendants--a
+beaver sable rampant on a field gules; motto, "Damno."
+
+PART SECOND:
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 2.
+
+_Promises to pay, put forth by William Beauvoir, junior, at various
+times in 1848:_
+
+ I.O.U
+ £105.0.0
+ April 10th, 1848.
+ William Beauvoir, junr.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 3.
+
+_The same_.
+
+ I.O.U
+ £250.0.0
+ April 22d, 1848.
+ William Beauvoir, junr.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 4.
+
+_The same._
+
+ I.O.U.
+ £600.0.0.
+ May 10th, 1848.
+ William Beauvoir, junr.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 5.
+
+_Extract from the "Sunday Satirist," a journal of high-life, published
+in London, May 13th, 1848:_
+
+Are not our hereditary lawmakers and the members of our old families the
+guardians of the honour of this realm? One would not think so to see the
+reckless gait at which some of them go down the road to ruin. The D----e
+of D----m and the E----l of B----n and L----d Y----g,--are not these
+pretty guardians of a nation's name? _Quis custodiet?_ etc. Guardians,
+forsooth, _parce qu'ils se sont donnés la peine de naître_! Some of the
+gentry make the running as well as their betters. Young W----m B----r,
+son of old Sir W----m B----r, late M.P. for L----e, is truly a model
+young man. He comes of a good old county family--his mother was a
+daughter of the Right Honourable A----s L----l, and he himself is old
+enough to know better. But we hear of his escapades night after night,
+and day after day. He bets all day and he plays all night, and poor
+tired nature has to make the best of it. And his poor worn purse gets
+the worst of it. He has duns by the score. His I.O.U.'s are held by
+every Jew in the city. He is not content with a little gentlemanlike
+game of whist or _écarté_, but he must needs revive for his especial use
+and behoof the dangerous and well-nigh forgotten _pharaoh_. As luck
+would have it, he had lost as much at this game of brute chance as ever
+he would at any game of skill. His judgment of horseflesh is no better
+than his luck at cards. He came a cropper over the "Two Thousand
+Guineas." The victory of the favorite cost him to the tune of over six
+thousand pounds. We learn that he hopes to recoup himself on the Derby,
+by backing Shylock for nearly nine thousand pounds; one bet was twelve
+hundred guineas.
+
+And this is the sort of man who may be chosen at any time by force of
+family interest to make laws for the toiling millions of Great Britain!
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 6.
+
+_Extract from "Bell's Life" of May 19th, 1848:_
+
+THE DERBY DAY.
+
+WEDNESDAY.--This day, like its predecessor, opened with a cloudless sky,
+and the throng which crowded the avenues leading to the grand scene of
+attraction was, as we have elsewhere remarked, incalculable.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE DERBY.
+
+The Derby Stakes of 50 sovs. each, h. ft. for three year-olds; colts, 8
+st. 7 lb., fillies, 8 st. 2 lb.; the second to receive 100 sovs., and
+the winner to pay 100 sovs. towards police, etc.; mile and a half on the
+new Derby course; 215 subs.
+
+ Lord Clifden's b.c. _Surplice_, by Touchstone.......... 1
+ Mr. Bowe's b.c. _Springy Jack_, by Hetman.............. 2
+ Mr. B. Green's br.c. _Shylock_, by Simoon.............. 3
+ Mr. Payne's b.c. _Glendower_, by Slane............... o
+ Mr. J.P. Day's b.c. _Nil Desperandum_, by Venison...... o
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 7.
+
+_Paragraph of Shipping Intelligence from the "Liverpool Courier" of June
+21st, 1848:_
+
+The bark _Euterpe_, Captain Riding, belonging to the Transatlantic
+Clipper Line of Messrs. Judkins & Cooke, left the Mersey yesterday
+afternoon, bound for New York. She took out the usual complement of
+steerage passengers. The first officer's cabin is occupied by Professor
+Titus Peebles, M.R.C.S., M.R.G.S., lately instructor in metallurgy at
+the University of Edinburgh, and Mr. William Beauvoir. Professor
+Peebles, we are informed, has an important scientific mission in the
+States, and will not return for six months.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 8.
+
+_Paragraph from the "N.Y. Herald" of September 9th, 1848:_
+
+While we well know that the record of vice and dissipation can never be
+pleasing to the refined tastes of the cultivated denizens of the only
+morally pure metropolis on the face of the earth, yet it may be of
+interest to those who enjoy the fascinating study of human folly and
+frailty to "point a moral or adorn a tale" from the events transpiring
+in our very midst. Such as these will view with alarm the sad example
+afforded the youth of our city by the dissolute career of a young lump
+of aristocratic affectation and patrician profligacy, recently arrived
+in this city. This young _gentleman's_ (save the mark!) name is Lord
+William F. Beauvoir, the latest scion of a venerable and wealthy English
+family. We print the full name of this beautiful exemplar of "haughty
+Albion," although he first appeared among our citizens under the alias
+of Beaver, by which name he is now generally known, although recorded on
+the books of the Astor House by the name which our enterprise first
+gives to the public. Lord Beauvoir's career since his arrival here has
+been one of unexampled extravagance and mad immorality. His days and
+nights have been passed in the gilded palaces of the fickle goddess,
+Fortune, in Thomas Street and College Place, where he has squandered
+fabulous sums, by some stated to amount to over £78,000 sterling. It is
+satisfactory to know that retribution has at last overtaken him. His
+enormous income has been exhausted to the ultimate farthing, and at
+latest accounts he had quit the city, leaving behind him, it is shrewdly
+suspected, a large hotel bill, though no such admission can be extorted
+from his last landlord, who is evidently a sycophantic adulator of
+British "aristocracy."
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 9.
+
+_Certificate of deposit, vulgarly known as a pawn-ticket, issued by one
+Simpson to William Beauvoir, December 2d, 1848:_
+
+ =John Simpson,
+ Loan Office,
+ 36 Bowery,
+ New York.=
+
+ _Dec. 2nd, 1848_,
+
+ _One Gold Hunting-case Watch and_ Dolls. Cts.
+
+ _Chain 150 00_
+
+ _William Beauvoir_
+
+ Not accountable in case of fire, damage, moth, robbery, breakage, &c.
+ 25% per ann. Good for 1 year only.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 10.
+
+_Letter from the late John Phoenix, found among the posthumous papers of
+the late John P. Squibob, and promptly published in the "San Diego
+Herald":_
+
+ OFF THE COAST OF FLORIDA, Jan. 3, 1849.
+
+ MY DEAR SQUIB:--I imagine your pathetic inquiry
+ as to my whereabouts--pathetic, not to say
+ hypothetic--for I am now where I cannot hear the
+ dulcet strains of your voice. I am on board ship.
+ I am half seas over. I am bound for California
+ by way of the Isthmus. I am going for the gold,
+ my boy, the gold. In the mean time I am lying
+ around loose on the deck of this magnificent
+ vessel, the _Mercy G. Tarbox,_ of Nantucket, bred by
+ _Noah's Ark_ out of _Pilot-boat,_ dam by _Mudscow_ out
+ of _Raging Canawl._ The _Mercy G. Tarbox_ is one of
+ the best boats of Nantucket, and Captain Clearstarch
+ is one of the best captains all along shore--although,
+ friend Squibob, I feel sure that you
+ are about to observe that a captain with a name
+ like that would give any one the blues. But
+ don't do it, Squib! Spare me this once.
+
+ But as a matter of fact this ultramarine joke of
+ yours is about east. It was blue on the _Mercy
+ G.--_mighty blue, too. And it needed the inspiring
+ hope of the gold I was soon to pick up in nuggets
+ to stiffen my back-bone to a respectable degree
+ of rigidity. I was about ready to wilt. But
+ I discovered two Englishmen on board, and now I
+ get along all right. We have formed a little temperance
+ society--just we three, you know--to see
+ if we cannot, by a course of sampling and severe
+ study, discover which of the captain's liquors is
+ most dangerous, so that we can take the pledge
+ not to touch it. One of them is a chemist or a
+ metallurgist, or something scientific. The other
+ is a gentleman.
+
+ The chemist or metallurgist or something scientific
+ is Professor Titus Peebles, who is going out
+ to prospect for gold. He feels sure that his professional
+ training will give him the inside track in
+ the gulches and gold mines. He is a smart chap.
+ He invented the celebrated "William Riley Baking
+ Powder"--bound to rise up every time.
+
+ And here I must tell you a little circumstance.
+ As I was coming down to the dock in New York,
+ to go aboard the _Mercy G.,_ a small boy was walloping
+ a boy still smaller; so I made peace, and walloped
+ them both. And then they both began heaving
+ rocks at me--one of which I caught dexterously
+ in the dexter hand. Yesterday, as I was
+ pacing the deck with the professor, I put my hand
+ in my pocket and found this stone. So I asked the
+ professor what it was.
+
+ He looked at it and said it was gneiss.
+
+ "Is it?" said I. "Well, if a small but energetic
+ youth had taken you on the back of the head
+ with it, you would not think it so nice!"
+
+ And then, O Squib, he set out to explain that he
+ meant "gneiss," not "nice!" The ignorance of
+ these English about a joke is really wonderful. It
+ is easy to see that they have never been brought
+ up on them. But perhaps there was some excuse
+ for the professor that day, for he was the president
+ _pro tem._ of our projected temperance society, and
+ as such he head been making a quantitative and
+ qualitative analysis of another kind of quartz.
+
+ So much for the chemist or metallurgist or
+ something scientific. The gentleman and I get on
+ better. His name is Beaver, which he persists
+ in spelling Beauvoir. Ridiculous, isn't it? How
+ easy it is to see that the English have never had
+ the advantage of a good common-school education--so
+ few of them can spell. Here's a man don't
+ know how to spell his own name. And this shows
+ how the race over there on the little island is degenerating.
+ It was not so in other days. Shakspere,
+ for instance, not only knew how to spell his
+ own name, but--and this is another proof of his
+ superiority to his contemporaries--he could spell
+ it in half a dozen different ways.
+
+ This Beaver is a clever fellow, and we get on
+ first rate together. He is going to California for
+ gold--like the rest of us. But I think he has had his
+ share--and spent it. At any rate he has not much
+ now. I have been teaching him poker, and I am
+ afraid he won't have any soon. I have an idea he
+ has been going pretty fast--and mostly down hill.
+ But he has his good points. He is a gentleman
+ all through, as you can see. Yes, friend Squibob,
+ even you could see right through him. We are
+ all going to California together, and I wonder
+ which one of the three will turn up trumps first--Beaver,
+ or the chemist, metallurgist or something
+ scientific, or
+
+ Yours respectfully, JOHN PHOENIX.
+
+ P.S. You think this a stupid letter, perhaps,
+ and not interesting. Just reflect on my surroundings.
+ Besides, the interest will accumulate a good
+ while before you get the missive. And I don't
+ know how you ever are to get it, for there is
+ no post-office near here, and on the Isthmus the
+ mails are as uncertain as the females are everywhere.
+ (I am informed that there is no postage on
+ old jokes--so I let that stand.)
+ J.P.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 11.
+
+_Extract from the "Bone Gulch Palladium," June 3d, 1850:_
+
+Our readers may remember how frequently we have declared our firm belief
+in the future unexampled prosperity of Bone Gulch. We saw it in the
+immediate future the metropolis of the Pacific Slope, as it was intended
+by nature to be. We pointed out repeatedly that a time would come when
+Bone Gulch would be an emporium of the arts and sciences and of the best
+society, even more than it is now. We foresaw the time when the best men
+from the old cities of the East would come flocking to us, passing with
+contempt the puny settlement of Deadhorse. But even we did not so soon
+see that members of the aristocracy of the effete monarchies of despotic
+Europe would acknowledge the undeniable advantages of Bone Gulch, and
+come here to stay permanently and forever. Within the past week we have
+received here Hon. William Beaver, one of the first men of Great Britain
+and Ireland, a statesman, an orator, a soldier and an extensive
+traveller. He has come to Bone Gulch as the best spot on the face of the
+everlasting universe. It is needless to say that our prominent citizens
+have received him with great cordiality. Bone Gulch is not like
+Deadhorse. We know a gentleman when we see one.
+
+Hon. Mr. Beaver is one of nature's noblemen; he is also related to the
+Royal Family of England. He is a second cousin of the Queen, and boards
+at the Tower of London with her when at home. We are informed that he
+has frequently taken the Prince of Wales out for a ride in his
+baby-wagon.
+
+We take great pleasure in congratulating Bone Gulch on its latest
+acquisition. And we know Hon. Mr. Beaver is sure to get along all right
+here under the best climate in the world and with the noblest men the
+sun ever shone on.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 12.
+
+_Extract from the Dead Horse "Gazette and Courier of Civilization" of
+August 26th, 1850:_
+
+BONEGULCH'S BRITISHER.
+
+Bonegulch sits in sackcloth and ashes and cools her mammoth cheek in the
+breezes of Colorado canyon. The self-styled Emporium of the West has
+lost her British darling, Beaver Bill, the big swell who was first
+cousin to the Marquis of Buckingham and own grandmother to the Emperor
+of China, the man with the biled shirt and low-necked shoes. This curled
+darling of the Bonegulch aristocrat-worshippers passed through Deadhorse
+yesterday, clean bust. Those who remember how the four-fingered editor
+of the Bonegulch "Palladium" pricked up his ears and lifted up his
+falsetto crow when this lovely specimen of the British snob first
+honored him by striking him for a $ will appreciate the point of the
+joke.
+
+It is said that the "Palladium" is going to come out, when it makes its
+next semi-occasional appearance, in full mourning, with turned rules.
+For this festive occasion we offer Brother B. the use of our late
+retired Spanish font, which we have discarded for the new and elegant
+dress in which we appear to-day, and to which we have elsewhere called
+the attention of our readers. It will be a change for the "Palladium's"
+eleven unhappy readers, who are getting very tired of the old type cast
+for the Concha Mission in 1811, which tries to make up for its lack of
+w's by a plentiful superfluity of greaser u's. How are you, Brother
+Biles?
+
+"We don't know a gent when we see him." Oh no(?)!
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 13.
+
+_Paragraph from "Police Court Notes," in the "New Centreville [late Dead
+Horse] Evening Gazette" January 2d, 1858:_
+
+HYMENEAL HIGH JINKS.
+
+William Beaver, better known ten years ago as "Beaver Bill," is now a
+quiet and prosperous agriculturalist in the Steal Valley. He was,
+however, a pioneer in the 1849 movement, and a vivid memory of this fact
+at times moves him to quit his bucolic labors and come in town for a
+real old-fashioned tare. He arrived in New Centreville during Christmas
+week; and got married suddenly, but not unexpectedly, yesterday morning.
+His friends took it upon themselves to celebrate the joyful occasion,
+rare in the experience of at least one of the parties, by getting very
+high on Irish Ike's whiskey and serenading the newly-married couple with
+fish-horns, horse-fiddles, and other improvised musical instruments. Six
+of the participators in this epithalamial serenade, namely, José Tanco,
+Hiram Scuttles, John P. Jones, Hermann Bumgardner, Jean Durant
+("Frenchy"), and Bernard McGinnis ("Big Barney"), were taken in tow by
+the police force, assisted by citizens, and locked up over night, to
+cool their generous enthusiasm in the gloomy dungeons of Justice
+Skinner's calaboose. This morning all were discharged with a reprimand,
+except Big Barney and José Tanco, who, being still drunk, were allotted
+ten days in default of $10. The bridal pair left this noon for the
+bridegroom's ranch.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 14.
+
+_Extract from "The New York Herald" for June 23d, 1861:_
+
+ THE RED SKINS.
+
+ A BORDER WAR AT LAST!
+
+ INDIAN INSURRECTION!
+
+ RED DEVILS RISING!
+
+ WOMEN AND CHILDREN SEEKING SAFETY IN THE LARGER
+ TOWNS.
+
+ HORRIBLE HOLOCAUSTS ANTICIPATED.
+
+ BURYING THE HATCHET--IN THE WHITE MAN'S HEAD.
+
+[SPECIAL DESPATCH TO THE NEW YORK HERALD.]
+
+CHICAGO, June 22, 1861.
+
+Great uneasiness exists all along the Indian frontier. Nearly all the
+regular troops have been withdrawn from the West for service in the
+South. With the return of the warm weather it seems certain that the red
+skins will take advantage of the opportunity thus offered, and
+inaugurate a bitter and vindictive fight against the whites. Rumors come
+from the agencies that the Indians are leaving in numbers. A feverish
+excitement among them has been easily to be detected. Their ponies are
+now in good condition, and forage can soon be had in abundance on the
+prairie, if it is not already. Everything points toward a sudden and
+startling outbreak of hostilities.
+
+[SPECIAL DESPATCH TO THE NEW YORK HERALD.]
+
+ST. PAUL, June 22, 1861.
+
+The Sioux near here are all in a ferment. Experienced Indian fighters
+say the signs of a speedy going on the war-path are not to be mistaken.
+No one can tell how soon the whole frontier may be in a bloody blaze.
+The women and children are rapidly coming in from all exposed
+settlements. Nothing overt as yet has transpired, but that the Indians
+will collide very soon with the settlers is certain. All the troops have
+been withdrawn. In our defenceless state there is no knowing how many
+lives may be lost before the regiments of volunteers now organizing can
+take the field.
+
+ LATER.
+
+ THE WAR BEGUN.
+
+ FIRST BLOOD FOR THE INDIANS.
+
+ THE SCALPING KNIFE AND THE TOMAHAWK AT WORK AGAIN.
+
+[SPECIAL DESPATCH TO THE NEW YORK HERALD.]
+
+BLACK WING AGENCY, June 22, 1861.
+
+The Indians made a sudden and unexpected attack on the town of Coyote
+Hill, forty miles from here, last night, and did much damage before the
+surprised settlers rallied and drove them off. The red skins met with
+heavy losses. Among the whites killed are a man named William Beaver,
+sometimes called Beaver Bill, and his wife. Their child, a beautiful
+little girl of two, was carried off by the red rascals. A party has been
+made up to pursue them. Owing to their taking their wounded with them,
+the trail is very distinct.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 15.
+
+_Letter from Mrs. Edgar Saville, in San Francisco, to Mr. Edgar Saville,
+in Chicago:_
+
+ CAL. JARDINE'S
+
+ Monster Variety and Dramatic Combination.
+
+ ON THE ROAD.
+
+ _G.W.K. McCULLUM,
+ Treasurer
+ HI. SAMUELS,
+ Stage Manager.
+ FNO. SHANKS,
+ Advance_.
+
+ _No dates filled except with first-class houses.
+
+ Hall owners will please consider silence a polite negative._
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO, January 29, 1863.
+
+ MY DEAR OLD MAN!--Here we are in our
+ second week at Frisco and you will be glad to
+ know playing to steadily increasing biz, having
+ signed for two weeks more, certain. I didn't like
+ to mention it when I wrote you last, but things
+ were very queer after we left Denver, and "Treasury"
+ was a mockery till we got to Bluefoot
+ Springs, which is a mining town, where we showed
+ in the hotel dining-room. Then there was a
+ strike just before the curtain went up. The house
+ was mostly miners in red shirts and very exacting.
+ The sinews were forthcoming very quick my
+ dear, and after that the ghost walked quite regular.
+ So now everything is bright, and you wont
+ have to worry if Chicago doesn't do the right
+ thing by you.
+
+ I don't find this engagement half as disagreeable
+ as I expected. Of course it aint so very nice
+ travelling in a combination with variety talent but
+ they keep to themselves and we regular professionals
+ make a _happy family_ that Barnum would not
+ be ashamed of and quite separate and comfortable.
+ We don't associate with any of them only
+ with The Unique Mulligans wife, because he beats
+ her. So when he is on a regular she sleeps with
+ me.
+
+ And talking of liquor dear old man, if you knew
+ how glad and proud I was to see you writing so
+ straight and steady and beautiful in your three
+ last letters. O, Im sure my darling if the boys
+ thought of the little wife out on the road they
+ wouldnt plague you so with the Enemy. Tell
+ Harry Atkinson this from me, he has a good kind
+ heart but he is the worst of your friends. Every
+ night when I am dressing I think of you at
+ Chicago, and pray you may never again go on the
+ way you did that terrible night at Rochester.
+ Tell me dear, did you look handsome in Horatio?
+ You ought to have had Laertes instead of that
+ duffing Merivale.
+
+ And now I have the queerest thing to tell you.
+ Jardine is going in for Indians and has secured six
+ very ugly ones. I mean real Indians, not professional.
+ They are hostile Comanshies or something
+ who have just laid down their arms. They
+ had an insurrection in the first year of the War,
+ when the troops went East, and they killed all the
+ settlers and ranches and destroyed the canyons
+ somewhere out in Nevada, and when they were
+ brought here they had a wee little kid with them
+ only four or five years old, but _so sweet._ They stole
+ her and killed her parents and brought her up for
+ their own in the cunningest little moccasins. She
+ could not speak a word of English except her own
+ name which is Nina. She has blue eyes and all
+ her second teeth. The ladies here made a great
+ fuss about her and sent her flowers and worsted
+ afgans, but they did not do anything else for her
+ and left her to us.
+
+ O dear old man you must let me have her!
+ You never refused me a thing yet and she is so
+ like our Avonia Marie that my heart almost breaks
+ when she puts her arms around my neck--_she calls
+ me mamma already._ I want to have her with us
+ when we get the little farm--and it must be near,
+ that little farm of ours--we have waited for it so
+ long--and something tells me my own old faker
+ will make his hit soon and be great. You cant
+ tell how I have loved it and hoped for it and how
+ real every foot of that farm is to me. And though
+ I can never see my own darling's face among the
+ roses it will make me so happy to see this poor
+ dead mothers pet get red and rosy in the country
+ air. And till the farm comes we shall always have
+ enough for her, without your ever having to black
+ up again as you did for me the winter I was sick
+ my own poor boy!
+
+ Write me yes--you will be glad when you see
+ her. And now love and regards to Mrs. Barry and
+ all friends. Tell the Worst of Managers that he
+ knows where to find his leading juvenile for next
+ season. Think how funny it would be for us to
+ play together next year--we havent done it since
+ '57--the third year we were married. That was
+ my first season higher than walking--and now I'm
+ quite an old woman--most thirty dear!
+
+ Write me soon a letter like that last one--and
+ send a kiss to Nina--_our Nina._
+
+ Your own girl,
+
+ MARY.
+
+ P.S. He has not worried me since.
+
+[Illustration: Nina drew this herself she says it is a horse so that you
+can get here soon.]
+
+PART THIRD:
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 16.
+
+_Letter from Messrs. Throstlethwaite, Throstlethwaite and Dick,
+Solicitors, Lincoln's Inn, London, England, to Messrs. Hitchcock and Van
+Rensselaer, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, 76 Broadway, New York,
+U.S.A._
+
+ January 8, 1879.
+
+ Messrs. HITCHCOCK & VAN RENSSELAER:
+
+ GENTLEMEN: On the death of our late client, Sir
+ William Beauvoir, Bart., and after the reading of
+ the deceased gentleman's will, drawn up nearly
+ forty years ago by our Mr. Dick, we were requested
+ by Oliver Beauvoir, Esq., the second son of the
+ late Sir William, to assist him in discovering and
+ communicating with his elder brother, the present
+ Sir William Beauvoir, of whose domicile we have
+ little or no information.
+
+ After a consultation between Mr. Oliver Beauvoir
+ and our Mr. Dick, it was seen that the sole
+ knowledge in our possession amounted substantially
+ to this: Thirty years ago the elder son of
+ the late baronet, after indulging in dissipation in
+ every possible form, much to the sorrow of his respected
+ parent, who frequently expressed as much
+ to our Mr. Dick, disappeared, leaving behind him
+ bills and debts of all descriptions, which we,
+ under instructions from Sir William, examined,
+ audited and paid. Sir William Beauvoir would
+ allow no search to be made for his erring son and
+ would listen to no mention of his name. Current
+ gossip declared that he had gone to New York,
+ where he probably arrived about midsummer,
+ 1848. Mr. Oliver Beauvoir thinks that he crossed
+ to the States in company with a distinguished
+ scientific gentleman, Professor Titus Peebles.
+ Within a year after his departure news came that
+ he had gone to California with Professor Peebles;
+ this was about the time gold was discovered in the
+ States. That the present Sir William Beauvoir
+ did about this time actually arrive on the Pacific
+ Coast in company with the distinguished scientific
+ man above mentioned, we have every reason
+ to believe: we have even direct evidence on the
+ subject. A former junior clerk who had left us at
+ about the same period as the disappearance of the
+ elder son of our late client, accosted our Mr. Dick
+ when the latter was in Paris last summer, and informed
+ him (our Mr. Dick) that he (the former
+ junior clerk) was now a resident of Nevada and a
+ member of Congress for that county, and in the
+ course of conversation he mentioned that he had
+ seen Professor Peebles and the son of our late
+ client in San Francisco, nearly thirty years ago.
+ Other information we have none. It ought not to
+ be difficult to discover Professor Peebles, whose
+ scientific attainments have doubtless ere this been
+ duly recognized by the U.S. government. As
+ our late client leaves the valuable family estate in
+ Lancashire to his elder son and divides the remainder
+ equally between his two sons, you will
+ readily see why we invoke your assistance in discovering
+ the present domicile of the late baronet's
+ elder son, or in default thereof, in placing in our
+ hands such proof of his death as may be necessary
+ to establish that lamentable fact in our probate
+ court.
+
+ We have the honour to remain, as ever, your
+ most humble and obedient servants,
+
+ THROSTLETHWAITE, THROSTLETHWAITE & DICK.
+
+ P.S. Our late client's grandson, Mr. William
+ Beauvoir, the only child of Oliver Beauvoir, Esq.,
+ is now in the States, in Chicago or Nebraska or
+ somewhere in the West. We shall be pleased if
+ you can keep him informed as to the progress of
+ your investigations. Our Mr. Dick has requested
+ Mr. Oliver Beauvoir to give his son your address,
+ and to suggest his calling on you as he passes
+ through New York on his way home.
+
+ T.T.& D.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 17.
+
+_Letter from Messrs. Hitchcock and Van Rensselaer, New York, to Messrs.
+Pixley and Sutton, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, 98 California
+Street, San Francisco, California._
+
+ Law Offices of Hitchcock & Van Rensselaer,
+ 70 Broadway, New York,
+ P.O. Box 4078.
+
+ Jan. 22, 1879.
+
+ Messrs. PIXLEY AND SUTTON:
+
+ GENTLEMEN: We have just received from our
+ London correspondents, Messrs. Throstlethwaite,
+ Throstlethwaite and Dick, of Lincoln's Inn, London,
+ the letter, a copy of which is herewith enclosed,
+ to which we invite your attention. We request that
+ you will do all in your power to aid us in the
+ search for the missing Englishman. From the letter
+ of Messrs. Throstlethwaite, Throstlethwaite and
+ Dick, it seems extremely probable, not to say certain,
+ that Mr. Beauvoir arrived in your city about
+ 1849, in company with a distinguished English
+ scientist, Professor Titus Peebles, whose professional
+ attainments were such that he is probably
+ well known, if not in California, at least in some
+ other of the mining States. The first thing to be
+ done, therefore, it seems to us, is to ascertain the
+ whereabouts of the professor, and to interview
+ him at once. It may be that he has no knowledge
+ of the present domicile of Mr. William Beauvoir--in
+ which case we shall rely on you to take such
+ steps as, in your judgment, will best conduce to a
+ satisfactory solution of the mystery. In any event,
+ please look up Professor Peebles, and interview
+ him at once.
+
+ Pray keep us fully informed by telegraph of your
+ movements. Yr obt serv'ts,
+
+ HITCHCOCK & VAN RENSSELAER.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 18.
+
+_Telegram from Messrs. Pixley and Sutton, Attorneys and Counsellors at
+Law, 98 California Street, San Francisco, California, to Messrs.
+Hitchcock and Van Rensselaer, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, 76
+Broadway, New York._
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
+ Jan. 30.
+
+ Tite Peebles well known frisco not professor
+ keeps faro bank.
+
+ PIXLEY & SUTTON.
+ (D.H. 919.)
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 19.
+
+_Telegram from Messrs. Hitchcock and Van Rensselaer to Messrs. Pixley
+and Sutton, in answer to the preceding._
+
+ NEW YORK, Jan. 30.
+
+ Must be mistake Titus Peebles distinguished
+ scientist.
+
+ HITCHCOCK & VAN RENSSELAER.
+ (Free. Answer to D.H.)
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 20.
+
+_Telegram from Messrs. Pixley and Sutton to Messrs. Hitchcock and Van
+Rensselaer. in reply to the preceding._
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.,
+ Jan. 30.
+
+ No mistake distinguished faro banker suspected
+ skin game shall we interview
+
+ PIXLEY & SUTTON.
+ (D.H. 919.)
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 21.
+
+_Telegram from Messrs. Hitchcock and Van Rensselaer to Messrs. Pixley
+and Sutton, in reply to the preceding._
+
+ NEW YORK, Jan. 30.
+
+ Must be mistake interview anyway
+
+ HITCHCOCK & VAN RENSSELAER.
+ (Free. Answer to D.H.)
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 22.
+
+_Telegram from Messrs. Pixley and Sutton to Messrs. Hitchcock and Van
+Rensselaer, in reply to the preceding._
+
+SAN FRANCISCO, CAL., Jan. 30.
+
+Peebles out of town have written him
+
+PIXLEY & SUTTON. (D.H. 919.)
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 23.
+
+_Letter from Tite W. Peebles, delegate to the California Constitutional
+Convention, Sacramento, to Messrs. Pixley and Sutton, 98 California
+Street, San Francisco, California._
+
+ SACRAMENTO, Feb. 2, '79.
+
+ Messrs. PIXLEY & SUTTON:
+ San Francisco.
+
+ GENTLEMEN: Your favor of the 31st ult., forwarded
+ me from San Francisco, has been duly
+ rec'd, and contents thereof noted.
+
+ My time is at present so fully occupied by my
+ duties as a delegate to the Constitutional Convention
+ that I can only jot down a brief report of my
+ recollections on this head. When I return to
+ S.F., I shall be happy to give you any further information
+ that may be in my possession.
+
+ The person concerning whom you inquire was
+ my fellow passenger on my first voyage to this
+ State on board the _Mercy G. Tarbox_, in the latter
+ part of the year. He was then known as Mr. William
+ Beauvoir. I was acquainted with his history,
+ of which the details escape me at this writing.
+ He was a countryman of mine; a member of an
+ important county family--Devonian, I believe--and
+ had left England on account of large gambling
+ debts, of which he confided to me the exact
+ figure. I believe they totted up something like
+ £14,500.
+
+ I had at no time a very intimate acquaintance
+ with Mr. Beauvoir; during our sojourn on the
+ _Tarbox_, he was the chosen associate of a depraved
+ and vicious character named Phoenix. I am not
+ averse from saying that I was then a member of a
+ profession rather different to my present one,
+ being, in fact, professor of metallurgy, and I saw
+ much less, at that period, of Mr. B. than I probably
+ should now.
+
+ Directly we landed at S.F., the object of your
+ inquiries set out for the gold region, without adequate
+ preparation, like so many others did at that
+ time, and, I heard, fared very ill.
+
+ I encountered him some six months later; I
+ have forgotten precisely in what locality, though I
+ have a faint impression that his then habitat was
+ some canon or ravine, deriving its name from certain
+ osseous deposits. Here he had engaged in
+ the business of gold-mining, without, perhaps,
+ sufficient grounds for any confident hope of ultimate
+ success. I have his I.O.U. for the amount
+ of my fee for assaying several specimens from his
+ claim, said specimens being all iron pyrites.
+
+ This is all I am able to call to mind at present
+ in the matter of Mr. Beauvoir. I trust his subsequent
+ career was of a nature better calculated to
+ be satisfactory to himself; but his mineralogical
+ knowledge was but superficial; and his character
+ was sadly deformed by a fatal taste for low associates.
+
+ I remain, gentlemen, your very humble and
+ obd't servant, TITUS W. PEEBLES.
+
+ P.S.--Private.
+
+ MY DEAR PIX: If you don't feel inclined to
+ pony up that little sum you are out on the bay
+ gelding, drop down to my place when I get back
+ and I'll give you another chance for your life at
+ the pasteboards. Constitution going through.
+
+ Yours, TITE.
+
+PART FOURTH:
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 24.
+
+_Extract from the New Centreville [late Dead Horse] "Gazette and Courier
+of Civilization," December 20th, 1878:_
+
+ "Miss Nina Saville appeared last night at the Mendocino
+ Grand Opera House, in her unrivalled specialty of _Winona
+ the Child of the Prairies;_ supported by Tompkins and Frobisher's
+ Grand Stellar Constellation. Although Miss Saville
+ has long been known as one of the most promising of California's
+ younger tragediennes, we feel safe in saying that the impression
+ she produced upon the large and cultured audience
+ gathered to greet her last night stamped her as one of the
+ greatest and most phenomenal geniuses of our own or other
+ times. Her marvellous beauty of form and feature, added to
+ her wonderful artistic power, and her perfect mastery of the difficult
+ science of clog-dancing, won her an immediate place in
+ the hearts of our citizens, and confirmed the belief that California
+ need no longer look to Europe or Chicago for dramatic
+ talent of the highest order. The sylph-like beauty, the harmonious
+ and ever-varying grace, the vivacity and the power of the
+ young artist who made her maiden effort among us last night,
+ prove conclusively that the virgin soil of California teems with
+ yet undiscovered fires of genius. The drama of _Winona, the
+ Child of the Prairies,_ is a pure, refined, and thoroughly absorbing
+ entertainment, and has been pronounced by the entire
+ press of the country equal to if not superior to the fascinating
+ _Lady of Lyons_. It introduces all the favorites of the company
+ in new and original characters, and with its original music,
+ which is a prominent feature, has already received over 200
+ representations in the principal cities in the country. It abounds
+ in effective situations, striking tableaux, and a most quaint and
+ original concert entitled 'The Mule Fling,' which alone is worth
+ the price of admission. As this is its first presentation in this
+ city, the theatre will no doubt be crowded, and seats should be
+ secured early in the day. The drama will be preceded by that
+ prince of humorists, Mr. Billy Barker, in his humorous sketches
+ and pictures from life."
+
+We quote the above from our esteemed contemporary, the Mendocino
+_Gazette_, at the request of Mr. Zeke Kilburn, Miss Saville's advance
+agent, who has still further appealed to us, not only on the ground of
+our common humanity, but as the only appreciative and thoroughly
+informed critics on the Pacific Slope to "endorse" this rather vivid
+expression of opinion. Nothing will give us greater pleasure. Allowing
+for the habitual enthusiasm of our northern neighbor, and for the
+well-known chaste aridity of Mendocino in respect of female beauty, we
+have no doubt that Miss Nina Saville is all that the fancy, peculiarly
+opulent and active even for an advance agent, of Mr. Kilburn has painted
+her, and is quite such a vision of youth, beauty, and artistic
+phenomenality as will make the stars of Paris and Illinois pale their
+ineffectual fires.
+
+Miss Saville will appear in her "unrivalled specialty" at Hanks's New
+Centreville Opera House, to-morrow night, as may be gathered, in a
+general way, from an advertisement in another column.
+
+We should not omit to mention that Mr. Zeke Kilburn, Miss Saville's
+advance agent, is a gentleman of imposing presence, elegant manners, and
+complete knowledge of his business. This information may be relied upon
+as at least authentic, having been derived from Mr. Kilburn himself, to
+which we can add, as our own contribution, the statement that Mr.
+Kilburn is a gentleman of marked liberality in his ideas of spirituous
+refreshments, and of equal originality in his conception of the uses,
+objects and personal susceptibilities of the journalistic profession.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 25.
+
+_Local Item from the "New Centreville Standard," December 20th, 1878:_
+
+Hon. William Beauvoir has registered at the United States Hotel. Mr.
+Beauvoir is a young English gentleman of great wealth, now engaged in
+investigating the gigantic resources of this great country. We welcome
+him to New Centreville.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 26.
+
+_Programme of the performance given in the Centreville Theatre, Dec.
+21st, 1878:_
+
+ HANKS' NEW CENTREVILLE OPERA HOUSE
+
+ A. Jackson Hanks.....................Sole Proprietor and Manager.
+
+ FIRST APPEARANCE IN THIS CITY OF TOMPKINS & FROBISHER'S GRAND
+ STELLAR CONSTELLATION,
+
+ Supporting California's favorite daughter, the young American
+ Tragedienne,
+
+ MISS NINA SAVILLE,
+
+ Who will appear in Her Unrivalled Specialty,
+
+ "Winona, the Child of the Prairie."
+
+ THIS EVENING, DECEMBER 21st, 1878,
+
+ Will be presented, with the following phenomenal cast, the accepted
+ American Drama,
+
+ WINONA: THE CHILD OF THE PRAIRIE.
+
+ WINONA.................................................... Miss
+ FLORA MacMADISON..................................... BIDDY
+ FLAHERTY........................................... OLD AUNT DINAH
+ (with Song, "Don't Get Weary").............Miss NINA SALLY
+ HOSKINS............................................. SAVILLE (With
+ the old-time melody, "Bobbin' Around.") POOR JOE (with
+ Song)...................................... FRAULINE LINA
+ BOOBENSTEIN................................. (With stammering song,
+ "I yoost landet.") SIR EDMOND BENNETT (specially
+ engaged)................E.C. GRAINGER WALTON
+ TRAVERS.........................................G.W. PARSONS GIPSY
+ JOE..................................................M. ISAACS
+ 'ANNIBAL 'ORACE 'IGGINS................................BILLY BARKER
+ TOMMY TIPPER.....................................Miss MAMIE SMITH
+ PETE, the Man on the Dock................................SI HANCOCK
+ Mrs. MALONE, the Old Woman in the Little House.... Mrs. K.Y. BOOTH
+ ROBERT BENNETT (aged five)......................Little ANNIE WATSON
+
+ Act I.--The Old Home. Act II.--Alone in the World. Act III.--The
+ Frozen Gulf: THE GREAT ICEBERG SENSATION. Act IV.--Wedding Bells.
+
+ "Winona, the Child of the Prairie," will be preceded by
+
+ A FAVORITE FARCE,
+
+ In which the great BILLY BARKER will appear in one of his most
+ outrageously funny bits.
+
+ New Scenery......................by....................Q.Z. Slocum
+
+ Music by Professor Kiddoo's Silver Bugle Brass Band and Philharmonic
+ Orchestra.
+
+ Chickway's Grand Piano, lent by Schmidt, 2 Opera House Block.
+
+ AFTER THE SHOW, GO TO HANKS' AND SEE A MAN
+
+ Pop Williams, the only legitimate Bill-Poster in New Centreville.
+
+ (New Centreville Standard Print.)
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 27.
+
+_Extract from the New Centreville [late Dead Horse] "Gazette and Courier
+of Civilization," Dec. 24th, 1878:_
+
+A little while ago, in noting the arrival of Miss Nina Saville of the
+New Centreville Opera House we quoted rather extensively from our
+esteemed contemporary, the Mendocino _Times_ and commented upon the
+quotation. Shortly afterwards, it may also be remembered, we made a very
+direct and decided apology for the sceptical levity which inspired those
+remarks, and expressed our hearty sympathy with the honest, if somewhat
+effusive, enthusiasm with which the dramatic critic of Mendocino greeted
+the sweet and dainty little girl who threw over the dull, weary old
+business of the stage "sensation" the charm of a fresh and childlike
+beauty and originality, as rare and delicate as those strange,
+unreasonable little glimmers of spring sunsets that now and then light
+up for a brief moment the dull skies of winter evenings, and seem to
+have strayed into ungrateful January out of sheer pity for the sad
+earth.
+
+Mendocino noticed the facts that form the basis of the above
+meteorological simile, and we believe we gave Mendocino full credit for
+it at the time. We refer to the matter at this date only because in our
+remarks of a few days ago we had occasion to mention the fact of the
+existence of Mr. Zeke Kilburn, an advance agent, who called upon us at
+the time, to endeavor to induce us, by means apparently calculated more
+closely for the latitude of Mendocino, to extend to Miss Saville, before
+her appearance, the critical approbation which we gladly extended after.
+This little item of interest we alluded to at the time, and furthermore
+intimated, with some vagueness, that there existed in Kilburn's
+character a certain misdirected zeal combined with a too keen artistic
+appreciation, are apt to be rather dangerous stock-in trade for an
+advance agent.
+
+It was twenty seven minutes past two o'clock yesterday afternoon. The
+chaste white mystery of Shigo Mountain was already taking on a faint,
+almost imperceptible, hint of pink, like the warm cheek of a girl who
+hears a voice and anticipates a blush. Yet the rays of the afternoon sun
+rested with undiminished radiance on the empty pork-barrel in front of
+McMullin's shebang. A small and vagrant infant, whose associations with
+empty barrels were doubtless hitherto connected solely with dreams of
+saccharine dissipation, approached the bunghole with precocious caution,
+and retired with celerity and a certain acquisition of experience. An
+unattached goat, a martyr to the radical theory of personal
+investigation, followed in the footsteps of infantile humanity, retired
+with even greater promptitude, and was fain to stay its stomach on a
+presumably empty rend-rock can, afterward going into seclusion behind
+McMullin's horse-shed, before the diuretic effect of tin flavored with
+blasting-powder could be observed by the attentive eye of science.
+
+Mr. Kilburn emerged from the hostlery without Mr. McMullin. Mr. Kilburn,
+as we have before stated at his own request, is a gentleman of imposing
+presence. It is well that we made this statement when we did, for it is
+hard to judge of the imposing quality in a gentleman's presence when
+that gentleman is suspended from the arm of another gentleman by the
+collar of the first gentleman's coat. The gentleman in the rear of Mr.
+Kilburn was Mr. William Beauvoir, a young Englishman in a check suit.
+Mr. Beauvoir is not avowedly a man of imposing presence; he wears a seal
+ring, and he is generally a scion of an effete oligarchy, but he has,
+since his introduction into this community, behaved himself, to use the
+adjectivial adverb of Mr. McMullin, _white_, and he has a very
+remarkable biceps. These qualities may hereafter enhance his popularity
+in New Centreville.
+
+Mr. Beauvoir's movements, at twenty-seven minutes past two yesterday
+afternoon, were few and simple. He doubled Mr. Kilburn up, after the
+fashion of an ordinary jack-knife, and placed him in the barrel,
+wedge-extremity first, remarking, as he did so, "She is, is she?" He
+then rammed Mr. Kilburn carefully home, and put the cover on.
+
+We learn to-day that Mr. Kilburn has resumed his professional duties on
+the road.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 28.
+
+_Account of the same event from the New Centreville "Standard" December
+24th, 1878:_
+
+It seems strange that even the holy influences which radiate from this
+joyous season cannot keep some men from getting into unseemly wrangles.
+It was only yesterday that our local saw a street row here in the quiet
+avenues of our peaceful city--a street row recalling the riotous scenes
+which took place here before Dead Horse experienced a change of heart
+and became New Centreville. Our local succeeded in gathering all the
+particulars of the affray, and the following statement is reliable. It
+seems that Mr. Kilburn, the gentlemanly and affable advance agent of the
+Nina Saville Dramatic Company, now performing at Andy Hanks' Opera House
+to big houses, was brutally assaulted by a ruffianly young Englishman,
+named Beauvoir, for no cause whatever. We say for no cause, as it is
+obvious that Mr. Kilburn, as the agent of the troupe, could have said
+nothing against Miss Saville which an outsider, not to say a foreigner
+like Mr. Beauvoir, had any call to resent. Mr. Kilburn is a gentleman
+unaccustomed to rough-and-tumble encounters, while his adversary has
+doubtless associated more with pugilists than gentlemen--at least any
+one would think so from his actions yesterday. Beauvoir hustled Mr.
+Kilburn out of Mr. McMullin's, where the unprovoked assault began, and
+violently shook him across the new plank sidewalk. The person by the
+name of Clark, whom Judge Jones for some reason now permits to edit the
+moribund but once respectable _Gazette_, caught the eye of the congenial
+Beauvoir, and, true to the ungentlemanly instincts of his base nature,
+pointed to a barrel in the street. The brutal Englishman took the hint
+and thrust Mr. Kilburn forcibly into the barrel, leaving the vicinity
+before Mr. Kilburn, emerging from his close quarters, had fully
+recovered. What the ruffianly Beauvoir's motive may have been for this
+wanton assault it is impossible to say; but it is obvious to all why
+this fellow Clark sought to injure Mr. Kilburn, a gentleman whose many
+good qualities he of course fails to appreciate. Mr. Kilburn,
+recognizing the acknowledged merits of our job-office, had given us the
+contract for all the printing he needed in New Centreville.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 29.
+
+_Advertisement from the New York "Clipper" Dec. 21st, 1878:_
+
+ WINSTON & MACK'S GRAND INTERNATIONAL MEGATHERIUM VARIETY
+ COMBINATION. COMPANY CALL.
+
+ Ladies and Gentlemen of the Company will assemble for rehearsal, at
+ Emerson's Opera House, San Francisco, on Wednesday, Dec 27th, 12 M
+ sharp. Band at 11. J.B. WINSTON EDWIN R. MACK--Managers. Emerson's
+ Opera House, San Francisco, Dec. 10th, 1878. Protean Artist wanted.
+ Would like to hear from Nina Saville. 12-11.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 30.
+
+_Letter from Nina Saville to William Beauvoir._
+
+ NEW CENTREVILLE, December 26, 1878.
+
+ My Dear Mr. Beauvoir--I was very sorry to
+ receive your letter of yesterday--_very_ sorry--because
+ there can be only one answer that I can
+ make--and you might well have spared me the
+ pain of saying the word--No. You ask me if I love
+ you. If I did--do you think it would be true
+ love in me to tell you so, when I know what it
+ would cost you? Oh indeed you must never
+ marry _me_! In your own country you would
+ never have heard of me--never seen me--surely
+ never written me such a letter to tell me that you
+ love me and want to marry me. It is not that I
+ am ashamed of my business or of the folks around
+ me, or ashamed that I am only the charity child
+ of two poor players, who lived and died working
+ for the bread for their mouths and mine. I am
+ proud of them--yes, proud of what they did and
+ suffered for one poorer than themselves--a little
+ foundling out of an Indian camp. But I know
+ the difference between you and me. You are a
+ great man at home--you have never told me how
+ great--but I know your father is a rich lord, and I
+ suppose you are. It is not that I think _you_ care
+ for that, or think less of me because I was born
+ different from you. I know how good--how
+ kind--how _respectful_ you have always been to
+ me--_my lord_--and I shall never forget it--for a girl
+ in my position knows well enough how you might
+ have been otherwise. Oh believe me--_my true
+ friend_--I am never going to forget all you have
+ done for me--and how good it has been to have
+ you near me--a man so different from most others.
+ I don't mean only the kind things you have
+ done--the books and the thoughts and the ways
+ you have taught me to enjoy--and all the trouble
+ you have taken to make me something better than
+ the stupid little girl I was when you found me--but
+ a great deal more than that--the consideration
+ you have had for me and for what I hold best in the
+ world. I had never met a _gentleman_ before--and
+ now the first one I meet--he is my _friend_. That is
+ a great deal.
+
+ Only think of it! You have been following me
+ around now for three months, and I have been
+ weak enough to allow it. I am going to do the
+ right thing now. You may think it hard in me _if
+ you really mean what you say,_ but even if everything
+ else were right, I would not marry you--because
+ of your rank. I do not know how things are at
+ your home--but something tells me it would be
+ wrong and that your family would have a right to
+ hate you and never forgive you. Professionals
+ cannot go in your society. And that is even if I
+ loved you--and I do not love you--I do not love
+ you--_I do not love you_--now I have written it you
+ will believe it.
+
+ So now it is ended--I am going back to the line
+ I was first in--variety--and with a new name. So
+ you can never find me--I entreat you--I beg of
+ you--not to look for me. If you only put your
+ mind to it--you will find it so easy to forget me--for
+ I will not do you the wrong to think that you
+ did not mean what you wrote in your letter or
+ what you said that night _when we sang Annie Laurie
+ together_ the last time.
+ Your sincere friend,
+ NINA.
+
+DOCUMENTS NOS. 31 AND 32.
+
+_Items from San Francisco "Figaro" of December 29th, 1878:_
+
+Nina Saville Co. disbanded New Centreville. 26th. No particulars
+received.
+
+Winston & Mack's Comb. takes the road December 31st, opening at Tuolumne
+Hollow. Manager Winston announces the engagement of Anna Laurie, the
+Protean change artiste, with songs, "Don't Get Weary," "Bobbin' Around,"
+"I Yoost Landet."
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 33.
+
+_Telegram from Zeke Kilburn, New Centreville, to Winston and Mack,
+Emerson's Opera House, San Francisco, Cal.:_
+
+ NEW CENTREVILLE, Dec. 28, 1878.
+
+ Have you vacancy for active and energetic advance
+ agent.
+
+ Z. KILBURN.
+ (9 words 30 paid.)
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 34.
+
+_Telegram from Winston and Mack, San Francisco, to Zeke Kilburn, New
+Centreville:_
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 28, 1878
+
+ No
+
+ WINSTON & MACK.
+ (Collect 30 cents.)
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 35.
+
+_Bill sent to William Beauvoir, United States Hotel, Tuolumne Hollow,
+Cal.:_
+
+ _Tuolumne Hollow, Cal., Dec. 29, 1878._
+
+ _Wm. Beauvoir, Esq._
+
+ Bought of HIMMEL & HATCH,
+ Opera House Block,
+ JEWELLERS & DIAMOND MERCHANTS,
+
+ Dealers in all kinds of Fancy Goods, Stationery and Umbrellas, Watches,
+ Clocks and Barometers.
+
+ TERMS CASH. MUSICAL BOXES REPAIRED.
+
+ _Dec. 29, One diamond and enamelled locket._........ $75.00
+ _One gold chain_........................................... 48.00
+ _______
+ $123.00
+
+ _Rec'd Payt._
+ _Himmel & Hatch,
+ per S._
+
+PART FIFTH:
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 36.
+
+_Letter from Cable J. Dexter, Esq., to Messrs: Pixley and Sutton, San
+Francisco:_
+
+ NEW CENTREVILLE, CAL., March 3, 1879.
+
+ Messrs. PIXLEY & SUTTON:
+
+ GENTS: I am happy to report that I have at last
+ reached the bottom level in the case of William
+ Beaver, _alias_ Beaver Bill, deceased through Indians
+ in 1861.
+
+ In accordance with your instructions and check,
+ I proceeded, on the 10th ult., to Shawgum Creek,
+ when I interviewed Blue Horse, chief of the Comanches,
+ who tomahawked subject of your inquiries
+ in the year above mentioned. Found the Horse
+ in the penitentiary, serving out a drunk and disorderly.
+ Though belligerent at date aforesaid,
+ Horse is now tame, though intemperate. Appeared
+ unwilling to converse, and required stimulants
+ to awaken his memory. Please find enclosed
+ memo. of account for whiskey, covering extra
+ demijohn to corrupt jailer. Horse finally stated
+ that he personally let daylight through deceased,
+ and is willing to guarantee thoroughness of decease.
+ Stated further that aforesaid Beaver's
+ family consisted of squaw and kid. Is willing to
+ swear that squaw was killed, the tribe having no
+ use for her. Killing done by Mule-Who-Goes-Crooked,
+ personal friend of Horse's. The minor
+ child was taken into camp and kept until December
+ of 1863, when tribe dropped to howling cold
+ winter and went on government reservation. Infant
+ (female) was then turned over to U.S. Government
+ at Fort Kearney.
+
+ I posted to last named locality on the 18th ult.
+ and found by the quartermaster's books that, no
+ one appearing to claim the kid, she had been duly
+ indentured, together with six Indians, to a man
+ by the name of Guardine or Sardine (probably the
+ latter), in the show business. The Indians were
+ invoiced as Sage Brush Jimmy, Boiling Hurricane,
+ Mule-Who-Goes-Crooked, Joe, Hairy Grasshopper
+ and Dead Polecat. Child known as White Kitten.
+ Receipt for Indians was signed by Mr. Hi.
+ Samuels, who is still in the circus business, and
+ whom I happen to be selling out at this moment,
+ at suit of McCullum & Montmorency, former partners.
+ Samuels positively identified kid with variety
+ specialist by name of Nina Saville, who has
+ been showing all through this region for a year
+ past.
+
+ I shall soon have the pleasure of laying before
+ you documents to establish the complete chain of
+ evidence, from knifing of original subject of your
+ inquiries right up to date.
+
+ I have to-day returned from New Centreville,
+ whither I went after Miss Saville. Found she had
+ just skipped the town with a young Englishman
+ by the name of Bovoir, who had been paying her
+ polite attentions for some time, having bowied or
+ otherwise squelched a man for her within a week
+ or two. It appears the young woman had refused
+ to have anything to do with him for a long
+ period; but he seems to have struck pay gravel
+ about two days before my arrival. At present,
+ therefore, the trail is temporarily lost; but I expect
+ to fetch the couple if they are anywhere this side
+ of the Rockies.
+
+ Awaiting your further instructions, and cash
+ backing thereto, I am, gents, very resp'y yours,
+
+ CABLE J. DEXTER.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 37
+
+_Envelope of letter from Sir Oliver Beauvoir, Bart., to his son, William
+Beauvoir:_
+
+ _Sent to Dead Letter Office._
+
+ _Mr. William Beauvoir_
+ _Sherman House Hotel_
+ _Chicago_
+ _United States of America_
+
+_not here_
+_try Brevoort House_
+_N.Y._
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 38.
+
+_Letter contained in the envelope above_:
+
+ CHELSWORTH COTTAGE, March 30, 1879.
+
+ MY DEAR BOY: In the sudden blow which has
+ come upon us all I cannot find words to write.
+ You do not know what you have done. Your
+ uncle William, after whom you were named, died
+ in America. He left but one child, a daughter,
+ the only grandchild of my father except you.
+ And this daughter is the Miss Nina Saville with
+ whom you have formed so unhappy a connection.
+ She is your own cousin. She is a Beauvoir. She
+ is of our blood, as good as any in England.
+
+ My feelings are overpowering. I am choked by
+ the suddenness of this great grief. I cannot write
+ to you as I would. But I can say this: Do not
+ let me see you or hear from until this stain be
+ taken from our name.
+
+ OLIVER BEAUVOIR.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 39.
+
+_Cable dispatch of William Beauvoir, Windsor Hotel, New York, to Sir
+Oliver Beauvoir, Bart., Chelsworth Cottage, Suffolk, England_:
+
+ NEW YORK, May 1, 1879.
+
+ Have posted you Herald.
+
+ WILLIAM BEAUVOIR.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 40.
+
+_Advertisement under head of "Marriages," from the New York "Herald,"
+April 30th, 1879:_
+
+BEAUVOIR--BEAUVOIR.--On Wednesday, Jan. 1st, 1879, at Steal Valley,
+California, by the Rev. Mr. Twells, William Beauvoir, only son of Sir
+Oliver Beauvoir, of Chelsworth Cottage, Surrey, England, to Nina, only
+child of the late William Beauvoir, of New Centreville, Cal.
+
+DOCUMENT NO. 41.
+
+_Extract from the New York "Herald" of May 29th, 1879:_
+
+Among the passengers on the outgoing Cunard steamer _Gallia_, which left
+New York on Wednesday, was the Honorable William Beauvoir, only son of
+Sir Oliver Beauvoir, Bart., of England. Mr. Beauvoir has been passing
+his honeymoon in this city, and, with his charming bride, a famous
+California belle, has been the recipient of many cordial courtesies from
+members of our best society. Mr. William Beauvoir is a young man of
+great promise and brilliant attainments, and is a highly desirable
+addition to the large and constantly increasing number of aristocratic
+Britons who seek for wives among the lovely daughters of Columbia. We
+understand that the bridal pair will take up their residence with the
+groom's father, at his stately country-seat, Chelsworth Manor, Suffolk.
+
+
+
+
+ONE OF THE THIRTY PIECES.
+
+
+BY WILLIAM HENRY BISHOP.
+
+
+
+
+I.
+
+
+GRUYÈRE'S.
+
+In the spring of the year 1870 the premium on gold had fallen so low
+that it began to be thought by sanguine people that specie payments
+would be resumed at once. Silver in considerable quantities actually
+came into circulation. Restaurants, cigar-stands, and establishments
+dealing in the lighter articles of merchandise paid it out in change, by
+way of an extra inducement to customers.
+
+On one of these days Henry Barwood, a treasury clerk, and Megilp, the
+rather well-known picture restorer, met by accident at the door of
+Gruyère's restaurant. Gruyère's place, although in the business
+quarter, is not supported to any great extent by the hurrying throng of
+bankers', brokers', merchants', and lawyers' clerks who overrun the
+vicinity every day at lunch-time. It is a rather leisurely resort,
+frequented by well-to-do importers, musicians, and artists, people who
+have travelled, and whose affairs admit of considerable deliberation and
+repose. Barwood in former times had been in the habit of going there
+occasionally to air his amateur French, burn a spoonful of brandy in his
+coffee, and enjoy an economical foretaste of Paris. Returned to New York
+after a considerable absence, to spend his vacation at home, he was
+inclined to renew this with other old associations.
+
+Megilp, sprung from a race which has supplied the world with a large
+share of its versatility of talent and its adventurous proclivities, was
+familiarly known at Gruyère's as "Mac." He was removed above want by the
+possession of an income sufficient, with some ingenuity of management,
+to provide him with the bare necessaries of life.
+
+He found leisure to come every day to retail the gossip of the studios,
+and fortify himself for the desultory labors in which he was engaged. He
+liked the society of young men for several reasons. For one thing, they
+were more free with their purses than his older cronies. The
+association, he also thought, threw a sort of glamour of youth about his
+own person. Finally, they listened to the disquisitions and artistic
+rhapsodies in which he was fond of indulging, with an attention by no
+means accorded by his compeers.
+
+Barwood was of a speculative turn of mind, and had also by nature a
+strong leaning towards whatever was curious and out of the common. These
+proclivities Megilp's conversation, pursuits, and studio full of
+trumpery were calculated to gratify. A moderate sort of friendship had
+in consequence sprung up between them.
+
+They made mutual protestations of pleasure at this meeting. Barwood
+considered it an occasion worthy of a bottle of Dry Verzenay, which was
+not demurred to by Megilp.
+
+The payment of specie was so entire a novelty that, when the inquiries
+and explanations natural after a long separation were concluded, it was
+among the first topics touched upon.
+
+"Sure it's the first hard money I've seen these ten years, so it is,"
+said Megilp.
+
+"That is my case also," said Barwood. "I took as little interest in the
+matter as any boy of fourteen might be expected to; but I remember very
+well how rapidly specie disappeared at the beginning of the war."
+
+"And where has it been?" said Megilp. "There's many fine points of
+interest about it, do you see. Consider the receptacles in which it has
+been hoarded--the secret places in chimneys, under floors and under
+ground, the vaults, old stockings, cabinets, and caskets that have
+teemed and glittered with it. Then there's the characters again, of all
+its various owners: the timid doubters about the government, the
+speculators, the curiosity hunters, the misers"--
+
+"Yes," said Barwood, "the history of a single one of these pieces for
+the period would probably make a story full of interest." It did not
+detract from the value of Megilp's conversation, in Barwood's view, that
+the worthy artist said "foine" and "hoorded" instead of adopting the
+more conventional pronunciation.
+
+"But what I'm after telling you isn't the singular part of it at all,"
+resumed Megilp, taking some silver from his pocket and evidently
+settling down to the subject. "What is ten years to it? According to the
+mint reports a coin of the precious metals loses by wear and tear but
+one twenty-four hundredth of its bulk in a year. These pieces I hold in
+my hand, coined forty years ago, are scarcely defaced. In another forty
+they will be hardly more so. What, for instance, has been the career of
+this Mexican dollar? Perhaps it was struck from bullion fresh from a
+Mexican mine. In that case I have nothing to say. But just as likely it
+was struck from old Spanish plate or from former coin, and then it takes
+us back to the earliest times, and its origin is lost in obscurity. The
+same metal is time after time re-melted, re-cast, re-stamped, and thus
+maintained in perpetual youth. This gold piece upon my watch-chain was
+perchance coined from the sands of the Pactolus, and once bore
+Chaldaean characters. And to what uses has it come?
+
+ 'Imperial Caesar, dead and turned to clay,
+ Might stop a hole to keep the wind away;'
+
+and so the pieces paid for the ransom of the Inca of Peru or Richard the
+Lion-hearted, the material of the spurs of Agincourt, the rings of
+Cleopatra and Zenobia, the golden targets of Solomon, fashioned from the
+treasures of Ophir, may purchase soap and candles and mutton-chops for
+John Smith. And yet why not? We ourselves have come down to commonplace
+usages; why should not the works of our hands? You with your
+conventional hat and English walking-coat, I with my spectacles and
+Irish brogue, have had ancestors that wore coats of mail in the first
+crusade, or twanged cross-bows with Robin Hood, sailed in the ships of
+Tarshish, and traded to Tyre and Sidon."
+
+"You think, then," said Barwood, "that some part of the coinage of
+antiquity is still in circulation."
+
+"To be sure I do, don't I tell you? I say the precious metals are
+indestructible. All the coins that have figured prominently in history
+are in some shape or other among us still. Twenty-four hundred years of
+active use are needed to wear out a coin completely. How long will it
+last with moderate use, and with intervals of lying buried for hundreds
+of years, as much of the coinage of antiquity now extant in its
+original condition has done? We have among us the rings, bolts, chains
+bracelets, drinking-vessels, and vases that glitter in the narratives of
+all the chroniclers, and embody the pomp and luxury of all the ages.
+
+"My silver dollar here, which I ring upon Gruyère's table, and with
+which, had it not been for your amiable politeness, I should have paid
+for my frugal lunch, has haply been moulded in Cellini's dagger-hilts or
+crucifixes, or formed part of a pirate's booty from a scuttled galleon
+on the Spanish Main. For aught I know, it was current money in Nineveh
+and Babylon. Perhaps it is one of the pieces paid by Abraham to the
+children of Heth for the double cave that looked towards Mamre."
+
+"Or one of the pieces for which Judas betrayed the Master," suggested
+Barwood.
+
+Megilp looked startled, and involuntarily pushed the money away from
+him. "That is a singular fancy of yours."
+
+"It came to me quite spontaneously this moment," said Barwood. "I don't
+know but it is, and yet it was a very natural sequence from what
+preceded."
+
+Both were abstracted for some moments, and contemplated in silence the
+bubbles twisting up the stems of the delicate wine-glasses.
+
+"Do you suppose," finally said Barwood, "that those coins, if extant,
+carry with them an enduring curse?"
+
+"There's no good in them, you may depend," said the other. By this time
+both bottle and plates were empty. The train of thought they had been
+pursuing seemed to have found its climax in the turn given it by
+Barwood. Over their coffee and dessert they discussed more cheerful
+topics.
+
+"Come around to my place before you leave town," said Megilp, as they
+shook hands at parting. "I have a one-legged bronze Hercules from
+Pompeii. I think ye'll enjoy it."
+
+As he hobbled away he muttered to himself more than once, "It's the
+divil's own fancy, so it is."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+II.
+
+ETHEREAL CLAIMS.
+
+The business of the Bureau of Ethereal Claims at Washington was
+conducted by a moderate force of clerks, under the direction of General
+Bellwether. The general had been a little of everything in his time. At
+the outbreak of the war he abandoned an unprofitable insurance agency to
+raise a company. He displayed considerable courage and strategic talent
+in his campaigning, came out a brevet brigadier, and had been making a
+good thing of it ever since in the government service. The office
+bristled with military titles. Everybody except Barwood and Judge
+Montane was either colonel, major, or captain. As to the judge, a
+middle-aged, uncommunicative man who was known to be supporting a large
+family, he confessed one day over a bottle, ordered in by the bureau
+during the general's absence, that his title was chiefly honorary.
+
+"What court did you used to be judge of, Montane?" inquired young Mars
+Brown.
+
+"I'll tell you, boys," replied the judge, yielding to the genial
+influences of the occasion; "I'm just no judge at all, do you see,
+except may be as I'd be a good judge of whiskey or the like."
+
+It was doubtful whether the claims of some others of the number could
+have been much better established.
+
+Mars Brown, son of the senator of that name,--a man whose influence few
+generals or bureaus of claims could afford to disregard,--was naturally
+the most privileged character in the office. He chatted familiarly with
+the general when that irregular chief was present, absented himself for
+several days at a time with perfect unconcern, came late in the morning,
+and went early, as he explained, to make up for it. He was a handsome
+fellow, thoroughly confident of himself, and companionable. He
+displayed, among other accomplishments, an acquaintance with the manners
+and customs of horses and dogs, and a facility in the management of
+boats, guns, and fishing tackle that made him an indisputable authority
+on all matters of the sort. His stock of stories was immense, his wit
+always ready and very comical. He could convulse a dinner-party when
+everything else failed, by making ridiculous faces. Among ladies of all
+ages he was a sort of conquering hero. He was consequently in general
+social demand as the life of the company.
+
+Such was Mars Brown, whom Barwood, shortly after his return to
+Washington, began to regard with distrust and dislike, as a possible
+rival in the quarter where his affections were chiefly centred.
+
+It might have been expected, from the general's excessive preoccupation
+with lobbyists and politicians, that the business of the bureau should
+languish, and so it did. The brunt of it was borne by a few clerks--of
+whom Barwood was not one--whose tenure of office depended upon efficient
+work rather than upon influential backing. Government work must be
+performed by somebody, and it happens that, in spite of the great
+principle of rotation, the heads of men of undeniable usefulness rest
+firm upon their shoulders while hundreds are toppling all about them.
+
+The bureau was not without spasmodic attempts at discipline. The general
+spent an occasional forenoon in lying in wait for delinquents, whose
+shortcomings he made the text for some very forcible remarks. The
+business of the office, he would state warmly, should be attended to, or
+he would make unpleasant theological arrangements for himself if he
+didn't know the reason why. With Brown he never went much further than
+to request, as a personal favor, that he would try to be on hand a
+little oftener and rather earlier, to which Brown always acceded quite
+cordially.
+
+Admirable punctuality of attendance and of office hours was almost
+always observed for a couple of days after these formalities, and then
+things resumed the even tenor of their way.
+
+Whatever might be the effect of this state of affairs upon the other
+employés of the office and upon the general public, it was certainly
+disastrous to the private interests of Henry Barwood. Naturally of an
+unpractical, somewhat morbid disposition, he needed the stimulus of a
+business life in which the necessity for action and its results when
+performed were constantly apparent. If engaged in his own ventures,
+taking risks and devising plans, he might have abandoned his
+speculations and fancies, and become a man of affairs. As it was, he
+found too much opportunity for their indulgence.
+
+Every day from nine to three he assorted, copied, and made abstracts of
+applications and reports, the objects of which were remote, their
+expediency questionable, and their ultimate fate problematical. Without
+interest in the work and without any particular pressure for its
+performance, he dreamed over it, and often awoke from his reveries to
+find his figures inaccurate and his sentences meaningless.
+
+Morbid people are probably as incomprehensible to themselves as to
+others. The world is viewed by each through the medium of his own
+ill-adjusted temperament. Objects are seen in a strangely tinted light,
+which is more than suspected to be delusive, yet cannot be decolorized.
+Barwood's vision was affected by such a distorting influence. He
+discovered subtle meanings in ordinary things or circumstances, in the
+manner of a nod from an acquaintance or the tone of a remark, and
+brooded over them. He continually scrutinized and questioned his own
+motives and those of others.
+
+The mind of every human being is a puzzle to every other. With what is
+it occupied when left to its own devices? There is, in Barwood's
+handwriting,[1] proof that his brain was filled with a procession of
+changing activities and impressions which were for the most part
+melancholy,--aspirations for fame, distrust in his own powers,
+forecasting of probabilities, repining for past sins and follies, rage
+and epithets for imaginary meetings with enemies. In the midst of all
+there were moments of perfect peace made up of reminiscences of a
+high-porticoed house, the grass-grown wheel-tracks and the sandy beach
+of the village on the Connecticut coast where his early home had been.
+His fancies were rich and full, but slightly chaotic. So also his will
+was strong and imperious at times, but vacillating.
+
+It could not be said that he was not ambitious He would have desired
+success in order to secure a kindly recognition and to obviate the jars
+and harshness of life. But no one prevailing impulse had ever enlisted
+his full powers. He saved money, with a general indefinite notion of
+some day becoming a capitalist, and also gave much time to studies of
+various sorts. He learned music among the rest, after coming of age, and
+composed music of his own, using as an inspiration a favorite poem,
+picture, or character. These compositions were marked by a quaintness
+like that--if a comparison may be made to something tangible--, of a
+Chinese vase or a broken bronze figure. His family, the Barwoods, had
+been from the earliest times a race of shrewd and driving New England
+storekeepers, the very antipodes of sentiment and dilettanteism. Such
+incongruities are among the compensations of nature. The Holbrook farm
+was the one locality, and Nina Holbrook the one figure, in the generally
+sombre prospect which Barwood saw about him, that gleamed in sunshine.
+By the interposition of Mars Brown these also were presently shadowed.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: From entries in a carefully kept diary.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+III.
+
+THE SEARCH.
+
+It would have been strange, with Barwood's habits of retrospection and
+continual casting about for the rare and curious, if the subject matter
+of his conversation with the old painter at Gruyère's had not taken some
+hold upon his imagination. But to explain the rapidity with which the
+notion there suggested grew, and the absorbing interest with which it
+finally held him, would be difficult. The influence of the mind upon the
+body is known. By persistent direction of thought one can both create
+and cure a pain in any specific spot of his organism. The mind has a
+similar power over itself. By intense concentration upon one subject it
+may suspend and finally destroy its faculty of interest in any and all
+others.
+
+The idea that the price of the treason of Judas is still extant and
+current in these every-day, commonplace times is at first sight utterly
+incongruous and incredible, perhaps a little sacrilegious. Yet it is
+evidently plausible. "The precious metals are indeed indestructible, as
+Megilp has said," soliloquized Barwood. "They do not oxidize. The most
+violent excesses of the elements have no effect upon them. If not still
+extant, where then are the treasures of the ages?
+
+"Buried under ground or in the ocean.
+
+"What proportion of the whole has been thus disposed of?
+
+"In the absence of statistics a definite amount cannot be stated, but
+from the nature of the case it cannot be large. This form of wealth has
+been too highly esteemed, too jealously guarded, and too rigorously
+sought for when lost. In the wars and convulsions of society it has
+changed hands but it could not be destroyed. Alexander and Tamerlane and
+Timour the Tartar and Mahomet might overrun the world, burning and
+destroying, and melting its more fragile riches like frost-work. But the
+money of the vanquished was useful to the victor for his own purposes.
+Rome took from Alexander, the barbarians from Rome, and modern
+civilization from the barbarians. The waves of time roll over and engulf
+all the monuments of men, all that gold and silver buy and sell, and, as
+it were, create; but these irrepressible tokens themselves float and
+glitter in the foam-crests upon those very billows. It cannot, then, be
+doubted that the instruments and accompaniments of most of the pomp and
+luxury, the war, treasons, and varied mercenary crimes of the world, are
+still acting their part in it.
+
+"And why not with the rest the fatal money which Judas cast down before
+the chief priests in his remorse, going out to destroy himself?"
+
+These were the reflections that recurred again and again to Barwood, and
+possessed him with a strange fascination. All coins acquired a new and
+intense interest. He saw in each the exponent of centuries of human
+passions and activities. It is true that in a country like our own a
+large part of the coinage is fresh from the mine. Yet his occasional
+encounters with foreign, especially Mexican and Canadian pieces, and a
+consideration of the immense sums received at the great ports of entry,
+were, in his regard, sufficient to leaven the whole.
+
+Is there anywhere in literature an account of the subsequent career of
+the thirty pieces?
+
+The Capitol library, one of the most complete collections in the world,
+offers unlimited facilities for research. There Barwood was to be found
+some part of every day for months.
+
+The writer has seen a list of the works consulted by him in his singular
+investigation. It numbers some hundreds, and includes commentaries of
+all sorts upon the Gospels, lives of the apostles, collections of
+apocryphal Gospels and Scriptural traditions, the works of the early
+fathers, chronicles of the Middle Ages, treatises upon Oriental life and
+customs, histories of symbolism and Christian art, a great number of
+works upon numismatics, and, finally, accounts of great crimes and
+calamities. For Barwood took a new view of history: he looked to find
+that the great treasons, briberies, betrayals of trust, murders from
+mercenary motives, and perhaps financial troubles, had been set in
+motion by this fatal money, made the instrument of divine vengeance.
+
+"It has mown a swath through history," he said, "like a discharge of
+grape."
+
+He believed it would appear, if the truth were known, in the bank
+accounts of Manuel Comnenus, of Egmont, Benedict Arnold, and the
+Hungarian Gorgey.
+
+His progress was by no means rapid. Much of the literature among which
+he delved, musty with age, written in mediaeval Latin and in obsolete
+characters, gave up its secrets with reluctance. Nevertheless he found
+definite replies to the questions which he propounded to himself. A
+collection of apocryphal Gospels "printed," according to the quaint
+title-page, "for Richard Royston at the Angle in Amen Corner, MDCLXX,"
+relates particulars about Judas, among the rest, which do not appear in
+the Scriptures. He was when young, it was said, a playmate of the boy
+Jesus, who delivered him from a devil by which he was even then
+possessed. The chief value of this book to Barwood was in a reference it
+contained to a fuller Gospel of Judas Iscariot, not now extant with the
+exception of some passages quoted in the writings of Irenaeus. But these
+passages were upon the very subject of which he was in search. In a
+treatise of Irenaeus's, therefore, of about the second century, Barwood
+found the first definite mention of the coins.
+
+The main part of the story is that of the authorized version, but after
+the account of the relinquishment of the coins by Judas, saying that he
+had betrayed innocent blood, and of their use in the purchase of the
+potter's field, occurs a passage translated[2] by Barwood as follows:--
+
+"Now the shekels were of the coinage of Simon, the high priest, which
+Antiochus authorized him to issue. They bore the pot of manna and the
+flowering rod of Aaron, the high priest. But he to whom they were given
+knew that they were the price of blood, and was afraid. And _he stamped
+them with a mark in shape like a cross_. And great tribulations came
+upon him, and tribulation came upon all that bought and sold with the
+money of Judas." Later on, Leontinus, a Byzantine writer of the sixth
+century, in a treatise devoted to showing the efficacy of certain forms
+and processes in imparting virtue to inanimate matter, instances as well
+known the malevolence inherent in the thirty pieces of silver of Judas,
+which carry ruin wherever they go. From this time the legend is traced
+down through successive periods. The Middle Ages, which so delighted in
+the romantic, the mysterious, the portentous, received it implicitly.
+Eginhard, abbot of Seligenstadt under Charlemagne, William of
+Malmesbury, the English chronicler of the twelfth century, Roger Bacon
+of the thirteenth, Malespini, the Italian chronicler of the same period,
+and many others of equal note mention as fully established that the
+coins of Judas were in circulation, and were inflicting serious injury
+upon those into whose possession they came. It was said to be
+impossible to amalgamate them with any other silver. They either would
+not melt or in melting remained distinct. This, however, was a disputed
+point. Some of the alchemists in their writings seem disposed to
+attribute the ill success of their efforts at transmutation to the
+presence of some taint of these pieces in the silver upon which they
+were experimenting.
+
+Matthew Paris, who first popularized the legend of the Wandering Jew, as
+now received, strangely enough makes no mention of them.
+
+The conclusions arrived at by Barwood were these:--
+
+1. There was for hundreds of years a general belief in the existence and
+active circulation of the thirty pieces paid to Judas.
+
+2. They were supposed to be sent as a divine judgment, and to leave ruin
+in their track.
+
+3. The tradition gradually disappeared and cannot be traced in the
+literature of modern times.
+
+Here was a valuable pursuit for a young American treasury clerk of the
+nineteenth century! It would have been interesting to have got the
+general's opinion upon it, if it could have been sought in some hurried
+interval of his confidential transactions with Richard Roe, claim agent
+and brother-in-law, or his attention to addition and division with
+Congressman Doublegame.
+
+Barwood did not stop here. Now that his belief was put into tangible
+shape, he felt impelled onward to its realization. He examined minutely
+every coin collection in Washington. Then, as he could, he made journeys
+to several of the great cities. Very seldom did he find a specimen of
+Jewish money of any kind. Jewish coins are rare. "It is known that the
+Jews had no coinage of their own until the time of Maccabeus. Simon
+Maccabeus, by virtue of a decree of Antiochus (1 Macc. xv. 6) issued a
+shekel and also a half-shekel. These with the exception of some brass
+coins of the Herods, Archelaus, and Agrippa, and a doubtful piece
+attributed to Bar Cochba, the leader in the last rising against the
+Romans, are the only coins of Judea extant."
+
+Barwood began to be affected by a nervous dread brought on by his too
+close study and constant preoccupation with this subject. As he alone
+had felt this interest and prosecuted this strange inquiry, might it not
+be that he was being drawn in some mysterious way within the influence
+of the fatal money? Perhaps he himself was to be involved in its
+relentless course. He shuddered at the thought, and yet was borne
+irresistibly on, as he believed, in his pursuit. He imagined at times
+that he felt a peculiar influence from the touch of certain pieces. This
+he held to be a clairvoyant sense that they had figured in crimes.
+Perhaps contact with a hand affected by powerful passion had imparted to
+them subtle properties capable of being detected by a sensitive
+organization.
+
+In such study and speculation Barwood passed the spring and summer of
+1870. Towards the middle of August occurred the well-remembered flurry
+in Wall Street consequent upon the breaking out of the French and
+Prussian War. Gold jumped up to one hundred and twenty-three. Money was
+loaned at ruinous rates. The whole financial system was disturbed.
+Silver, then withdrawn from circulation, has not reappeared to this day.
+
+The effect of these events upon Barwood although not immediately
+apparent, was highly important. With the disappearance of specie, the
+daily sight and handling of which had given his conception a tangible
+support, its strength declined. It was not forgotten at once, nor indeed
+at all. But time drew it away by little and little. It threw mists of
+distance and hues of strangeness about it, until at length Barwood
+looked back upon it, far remote, as a vague object of wonderment.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 2: Diary, June, 1870.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IV.
+
+THE HOLBROOK FARM.
+
+The day had been sultry. Even after sunset the atmosphere was
+oppressive, and pavements and railings in the city were warm to the
+touch from the steady blaze to which they had been subjected. At the
+Holbrook farm, however, occasional puffs of air stirred the silver
+poplars skirting the road, and waved the brown timothy grass that grew
+knee-deep up to the veranda.
+
+Porto Rico and Carter's boy turning somersaults in the grass--entirely
+without the knowledge of the discreet Carter himself, it may be
+assumed--suddenly relinquished this fascinating sport to rush for the
+privilege of holding Barwood's horse, Porto Rico's longer legs and
+general force of character gave him the preference. He jumped into the
+saddle as soon as Barwood was out of it, and trotted off to the stable
+with Carter's boy whooping and bobbing his woolly head in the rear.
+
+"Never you mine," said Carter's boy, "I'll have the other gen'l'm'n."
+
+"No other gen'l'm'n a'n't comin'," said Porto Rico. "Don't I done tole
+you dey don't bofe come de same day?"
+
+The Holbrook house, three miles from the Capitol, of the dome of which
+it commands a pretty glimpse across an expanse of foliage, is one of the
+old residences remaining from the days of the slave-holders. Like many
+such places it has been much altered and improved. It seems to have been
+originally a one and-a-half-story stone dwelling, to which some later
+proprietor has added a high-peaked roof, dormer windows, and ample
+piazzas. It stands half-way up a slope, near the top of which is a
+grove. A brook runs down through the woods on the other side of the
+road, and beyond that rises a steep little bluff crowned with scrub-oaks
+and chestnuts.
+
+The attraction that drew people to Holbrook farm was not the proprietor
+himself, nor very much his maiden sister, the housekeeper, nor yet
+Carter, the farmer and manager who came with them from Richmond. It was
+rather the engaging manners and amiable beauty of Nina Holbrook, the
+daughter of the house. The old gentleman was a partial paralytic,
+whimsical, and not especially sociable. He was known to have lived in
+princely style at Richmond, formerly. He was said to have met for some
+years past with continual reverses, in the loss of property, in
+sickness, and in the death of friends. The farm was bought with almost
+the last remnants of a great fortune.
+
+As Barwood strode down the piazza, a young lady rose from her reading to
+give him her hand.
+
+Blonde beauty is slightly indefinite. The edges are, as it were, too
+much softened off into the background. The figure before Barwood was
+fresh, distinct, clear-cut,--pre-Raphaelitish, to take a word from
+painting. In all the details, from the ribbon in her feathery brown hair
+to the pretty buttoned boot, there was the ineffable aroma of a pure,
+delicate taste.
+
+To a man of Barwood's temperament falling in love was difficult. He
+analyzed too closely. To ask the tender passion too many questions is to
+repel its advances.
+
+Nevertheless, after two years of intimate association, in which he had
+discovered in Nina Holbrook a frankness and loveliness of character
+commensurate with her personal graces, he had arrived at this
+condition. First, He believed that her permanent influence upon his
+character could cure his moodiness and his unpractical tendencies, and
+enable him to exert his fullest powers. Second, By making the
+supposition that anything should intervene to limit or break off their
+intercourse, he found that she had become indispensable to him.
+
+Their acquaintance had begun in some one of the ordinary ways in which
+people meet. It might have been at a tea-party, or a secretary's
+reception, or a boat excursion up the Potomac. They discovered that they
+had mutual acquaintances to talk about. His evening rides began to be
+directed through the pretty lanes that led to Holbrook. She loaned him a
+book; he brought her confectionery; they played some piano duets
+together.
+
+On her side the sentiment was different. She respected Barwood for fine
+traits and was grateful for his many kindnesses to her. But certain
+peculiar moods of his made her uncomfortable. His interest also was too
+much occupied with books, speculations about the anomalies and problems
+of life, and similar serious matters. She found it wearisome and often
+difficult to follow him. She admired such things, but had not as much
+head for them as he gave her credit for. Her taste was more practical,
+commonplace, and cheerful. She was satisfied with people and things in
+their ordinary aspects.
+
+She got on much better with Mars Brown, exchanging comments with him
+upon the affairs of her friends and his, discussing the last party and
+the next wedding, or laughing at his drollery. She confessed her
+stupidity and frivolity with charming frankness.
+
+Barwood was conscious that he did not always interest her, although she
+never showed anything but the most ladylike attention. He often went
+away lamenting the destiny that had fashioned his nature to run in so
+small and rigid a groove. His happiness, therefore, did not consist in
+being with her, for then he was oppressed by a consciousness of not
+entirely pleasing her. It was rather in retrospect, in his memory of her
+sweet and earnest face, the tones of her voice, the shine of her hair.
+He gave her such small gifts as he might within the restraints of social
+propriety. It would have consisted with his notion of the fitness of
+things to give her everything he had and leave himself a beggar.
+
+Barwood rode to Holbrook to-day with a definite purpose. He was aware,
+although, as Porto Rico said, both gentlemen did not come on the same
+day, that Mars Brown was devoting more attention in this direction of
+late than the exigencies of his boat and ball clubs, his shooting and
+fishing, and the claims of the social world in town would seem to
+warrant. He did not yet really fear him as a rival. His presence was
+only a suggestion of possibilities. There might at some time be rivals.
+He had determined to forestall possibilities, and tell her of his
+affection at once.
+
+Mars Brown was, however, a dangerous rival, although himself perhaps as
+little aware of it as Barwood. He also had met Nina and been impressed
+by her animated beauty. Accustomed to success, he had ridden out to
+Holbrook to add one more to his list of flirtations and conquests. The
+results had by no means answered his expectations. When he approached
+sentiment Nina laughed at him. By degrees he had been piqued into
+earnestness, and had for the first time in his life approximated to a
+serious esteem and attachment.
+
+Although Nina laughed at first, later on she sometimes blushed at his
+voice or his step, or when she put her hand into his. If his customary
+shrewd vision had not been disturbed by some unusual influences at work
+within himself, he would have seen it.
+
+He had the audacity that charms women, and with it a frank, open face, a
+hearty laugh, an entirely healthy, cheerful disposition, and an air of
+strength under all his frivolity.
+
+It has been said that Barwood had come to the farm to-day with a
+definite purpose. He drew up one of the comfortable chairs at hand, and
+sat down near to Nina. They talked at first of ordinary things, the
+unusual heat, the news of the day, and what each had been doing since
+their last meeting.
+
+The secluded prospect before them was very peaceful. Barwood felt its
+soothing influence acting upon the perturbation of his spirit.
+
+"I am improving my mind, you see," said Nina, holding up to him one of
+Motley's histories, which she had apparently been reading. "I do not
+believe even you can find fault with this."
+
+"Am I in the habit of finding fault with anybody, Miss Nina?"
+
+"Oh no, I don't mean that exactly, but you know so much, you know, that
+you frighten one."
+
+"Thank you," said Barwood with a grave smile, "you flatter me."
+
+"Why were you not at the Hoyts' last Tuesday?" said she.
+
+"I was not invited, and, strange to state, I am a little diffident about
+going under such circumstances."
+
+"Ah, you are! how singular! But I wish you had been there, if it was
+only to see Betty Goodwin. You used to know her. It is such a short time
+ago that she was a little girl. Now she is out of school and as
+important as anybody. You should have seen the attention she had, and
+her perfect self-possession. It makes me feel extremely antiquated. Am I
+very much wrinkled?"
+
+Barwood gazed with admiration at her animated face. She was to him the
+personification of youth and beauty. The notion of age and wrinkles in
+her regard was inconceivable.
+
+"Why, of course," said he; "Methuselah wasn't a circumstance."
+
+She dismissed the subject with a little pout.
+
+"I am so glad you have come early," she resumed. "I wish the others
+would imitate your example."
+
+"The others? What others?"
+
+"Mr. Hyson, the Hoyt boys, Mr. Brown, Fanny Davis, and the rest. You did
+not suppose you were to do them alone, I hope."
+
+"Do what alone? I don't understand."
+
+"Why, the tableaux--Evangeline. Did you not get my message yesterday?"
+
+"I got no message. Am I to be implicated in tableaux?"
+
+"Why, certainly. You are to be Evangeline's father. They are for the
+benefit of the French wounded. I sent Carter to tell you yesterday. We
+are to arrange the preliminaries this evening."
+
+Barwood saw that if he would not postpone his purpose no time was to be
+lost. The visitors might arrive at any moment.
+
+Literature is full of the embarrassments of the marriage proposal. To
+all who are not borne along by an impetuous impulse it is a trying
+ordeal. Barwood was too self-conscious ever to be transported out of
+himself.
+
+"I have something to say to you, Miss Nina," he began, "which I have
+come from town expressly to say. It is of the greatest moment to me."
+
+She continued to look straight before her at the glowing evening sky,
+and so did he. The crickets and katydids had commenced their chorus and
+the tree-toads their long rhythm. Fire-flies flitted in the uncertain
+light. There came from the woods the call of the owl and the
+whippoorwill.
+
+"We have sometimes laughed together at sentiment," he continued, "and
+voted it an invention of the story-books; but there are times--there is
+a sentiment--which--in short, dear Nina, I have come to ask you to be my
+little wife. I have loved you almost since our first meeting."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Barwood," said she, looking hastily towards him, with
+heightened color and a tone of regret, "you must not say so. I cannot
+let you go on."
+
+"I must go on," said he. "I have never felt so strongly upon any subject
+as this. I know I am not worthy of such happiness, yet I cannot bear the
+thought of losing it. Consider our long friendship. You will be mine?
+Oh, say so, Nina!" In the terrible dread that his petition was already
+refused, he became a little incoherent.
+
+Nina, a tender-hearted young lady, was by this time in tears. His
+evident distress, and her recognition of the great compliment he had
+paid her, would have commanded almost any return save the one he asked.
+But the sacrifice was too great. She had not thought it would ever be
+necessary to change their relation of friendship.
+
+"I am very sorry to have to say what is painful to you," said she, with
+a sob only half repressed. "I want you to be always my friend. I shall
+be very unhappy if our friendship is to be broken, but _I_ cannot--you
+will find some other"--
+
+"Do not speak further," he interrupted, impetuously. "You have not yet
+said no. Reserve your answer; take time to consider. Let me still hope."
+
+"No," she began, "I ought"--but wheels and merry voices were heard at
+the gate. "Oh! I cannot let them see me now," she said, and hurried
+away. In a moment more the Robinsons' carriage was at the steps. When
+Nina came down with a sweet, subdued manner, there was a jolly party of
+ten or twelve in the drawing-room. Mars Brown was already amusing
+everybody with his absurd posturing.
+
+"I want to be Evangeline," said he, wrapping a lady's shawl about him
+and sitting on the arm of a chair in a collapsed attitude. "No, on
+second thought, I want to be Basil the blacksmith." He made imitations
+of tremendous muscular power with a tack-hammer that happened in his way
+for a sledge. Everybody on such occasions has his own notions of the
+picturesque. A deal of talking was required in arranging the various
+scenes. Evangeline must manifest a "celestial brightness," according to
+the lines. "I don't think you do it quite right," said Julia Robinson.
+"You should smile a little."
+
+"Oh no, not at all; she should have an earnest, far off look," said
+another critic.
+
+"Of course she should," said Mars Brown, rumpling his hair and
+contorting his features into an expression of idiotic vacancy;
+"something this way."
+
+"We ought to have a real artist to arrange them," said Nina; "what
+would I give if old Mr. Megilp were here."
+
+"Did you know Megilp?" exclaimed Barwood.
+
+"Why, of course I did. He was my drawing teacher at Richmond for years."
+
+"What a small world it is, to be sure," said Barwood, giving vent to a
+favorite reflection. The mention of Megilp brought back for a moment a
+remembrance of their last meeting and conversation, and the strange
+pursuit into which it had led him.
+
+The signing of the marriage contract was selected by the amateurs as an
+appropriate subject for illustration.
+
+"We must have a table," said Miss Travers. "At one side sits the notary,
+lifting his pen from the document which he has just signed, and at the
+other her father, pushing toward the notary a roll of money in payment."
+
+"Here you are," said George Wigwag, taking his place and assuming the
+appropriate gesture; "here's your notary; bring on your old gentleman
+and his money."
+
+"A roll of old copper cents would be just the thing," said Miss Travers.
+"They look antique enough."
+
+"Will some gentleman deposit with the treasurer a roll of antique copper
+cents?" said Brown, passing a hat. "No gentleman deposits a roll of
+copper cents. Very well, then the wedding can't go on."
+
+"Do you think I'll sign marriage contracts for copper?" said Wigwag.
+"No indeed; I'm not that kind of a notary."
+
+"I will bring down some of papa's curiosity coins from his cabinet,"
+said Nina. "I don't believe he will scold me, just for once."
+
+She returned in a moment with a dozen or more silver pieces, and placed
+them on the table by Barwood. He began to examine them carelessly.
+
+"I did not know your father was a numismatist," said he.
+
+"Oh yes," said Nina, "he always had a great taste in that way. His
+collection now is nothing. When we broke up in Richmond most of it was
+sold off. He retained only a few of the most valuable pieces, which he
+keeps in a case in his room. I don't know much about such things, for my
+part. Here is one that is considered curious. It was taken out of a
+wreck on the California coast, I believe, and was the last papa bought
+before his failure. I think it is Russian, perhaps, or Arabic--no, let
+me see"--
+
+Barwood, with an abstracted air, took it to examine. Suddenly he uttered
+a strange exclamation and fell back in his chair, pale, trembling,
+almost fainting.
+
+_The coin was a Jewish shekel, with a cross cut through at one side._
+
+He pleaded sudden illness, and rode hastily homeward in a state of
+indescribable agitation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+V.
+
+YOUNG FORTINBRAS.
+
+Barwood's strange and almost forgotten conception was thus at length
+realized, and the interest with which it had inspired him intensely
+revived. One of the fatal pieces was found. He would now fain have
+overthrown the structure of probabilities which he had labored so
+painfully to elaborate. He reviewed step by step all the details of his
+former study; but no argument availed in the face of the extraordinary
+corroboration now offered. The piece was "stamped with a mark in shape
+like a cross," and the account of Irenaeus was verified.
+
+That this fatal piece should appear in the hands of the people whom of
+all others he most esteemed and with whom his own fortunes were most
+intimately bound up, was a terrible shock. This, then, was the clew to
+the catalogue of Holbrook's misfortunes. What surpassing crime could the
+old man have committed to be so signally marked out for vengeance? But
+the question of most vital interest was what could be done to save the
+family so dear to him from their impending fate.
+
+With the recovery of some calmness, he felt that his first duty was to
+remove the coin from their possession. But how was it to be done? He
+could not disclose his knowledge of its baleful properties. It would be
+set down as the vagary of a disordered brain; nobody would entertain it
+for an instant. His object must be accomplished, if at all, by artifice.
+
+When he next rode to the farm, nearly a week had elapsed since the
+evening into which so many distracting emotions had been crowded. He
+exerted himself to display unusual cheerfulness, with the double object
+of removing any disagreeable impression which might have been the result
+of his sudden departure on that occasion, and also of finding means to
+forward his purpose. The subject uppermost in the thoughts of both was
+at first carefully avoided, and they talked much in their usual fashion.
+
+"Those coins, Miss Nina, which were used the other evening in the
+tableau," said he, with a careless air, "can I see them again? I found
+them interesting, but owing to my sudden illness, as you know, had
+scarcely time to examine them."
+
+"My father was displeased at me for taking them," said she, "and has
+forbidden me to do so again. I think he would show them to you himself
+with pleasure, if he were here, but he went North yesterday on business
+which will detain him a week. He took the key of his cabinet with him."
+
+Disappointed in this, there seemed to be for the present no resource. He
+recurred again to his love. If she would consent to be his, he thought,
+he might disclose the danger, and they could plan together to avert it.
+He told her with what anxiety he had been awaiting her decision, and
+then once more made his appeal with all the ardor at his command. As he
+finished, standing close beside her, he took her hand.
+
+She did not withdraw it, but still went on to tell him with great
+calmness and dignity that what he desired could never be. She hoped
+their friendship might always continue, but as for a closer relation, it
+would be unjust to him as well as herself to enter into it without the
+affection which she could not give.
+
+He went away apparently very much broken down, saying that his life was
+a burden to him, and that he had no use for it. The next day he came
+again and acted so strangely, mingling appeals to her with talk about
+her father's coins, that she was a little frightened.
+
+The few days that succeeded made a striking change in the appearance of
+Barwood. He became pale and haggard, and seemed to have lost his
+capacity for business and fixed attention. He sat staring helplessly at
+his papers for an hour at a time. The general, who with all his
+iniquities was a good-hearted chief, thought he was sick, and told him
+to stay at home and take care of himself. His reflections at this time
+were tormenting. He saw that he had indeed been drawn within the
+influence of the fatal coin. It was at him that its malignity was
+directed, and he believed that his doom was approaching, as indeed it
+was. Sometimes he gazed at his altered face in the glass, while tears
+streamed down his cheeks. He said aloud, in a piteous tone, "Poor Henry
+Barwood."
+
+The sympathy of the world is generally upon the side of the unsuccessful
+lover. He is considered to have been defrauded of happiness which should
+by right have been his. But is it fair? Because her face is sweet, her
+manners are amiable, her form is slender and graceful, and her hair has
+a golden shine, and Barwood or Brown or Travers, as the case may be, in
+common with all the world, recognizes it, does that establish a claim
+upon her? Just as likely as not he has a snub nose and only fifteen
+hundred a year, and cannot dance the Boston. No! sympathy is well
+enough, but let not the blame be cast upon Chloe every time that Daphnis
+goes off in despair to the Sandwich Islands, or the war in Cuba, or
+turns out a good-for-nothing sot. Let it rather be set down as one of
+the ill-adjustments of which there are so many in life, and the
+endurance of which is no doubt of service in some direction not yet
+fully understood.
+
+In about a week there came from Holbrook Farm a message which was not
+needed to complete the measure of Barwood's unhappiness.
+
+"My father," wrote Nina, "has just returned. He has decided that we are
+to remove permanently to Connecticut, where my aunt has fallen heir to
+the Holbrook homestead. We shall leave next Monday. Will you let us see
+you before we go?"
+
+He mounted his horse and started at once. He did not know exactly what
+he should do or say. His ideas were in a state of confusion, and there
+was a numbness over all his sensations. He gave himself up blindly to
+his destiny.
+
+He saw Nina sitting in the shade of an apple-tree, half-way down the
+lawn, near a little plateau which served for a croquet ground. He tied
+his horse to the fence outside, much to the disappointment of the
+rollicking negro boys, and walked up. Nina held in her lap a tray of
+coins which she was engaged in brightening. She assumed a sprightliness
+not quite natural, and evidently designed to obviate the awkwardness of
+their peculiar relation.
+
+"We have had an accident," said she. "One of our chimneys fell through
+the roof during the storm last night. It shook down the plaster upon
+papa's cabinet. The glass was broken and the rain came in so that this
+morning it was in a sorry condition. I am repairing damages, you see. If
+I were superstitious," she continued, "I should fear that something was
+going to happen. I meet with so many omens lately. I spill salt, cross
+funerals, and make one of thirteen at dinner parties."
+
+Barwood replied as best he could; he did not know exactly what. He was
+in no mood for flippancy. He assumed a dozen different positions in a
+short space: first sitting on a camp-chair beside her, then hurried
+walking up and down, then careless prostration upon the grass. The old,
+useless argument was gone through with again. She told him at last that
+it annoyed her, that he was very inconsiderate. Then again he paced up
+and down the little croquet ground. She saw him twisting and clutching
+his hands together behind him. At the fifth or sixth turn as he came by
+she had the marked shekel in her hand. He took it from her and looked at
+it curiously.
+
+"Yes, it is indeed," said he in an unnatural voice, "fatal money, and I
+am its latest victim!"
+
+He threw it towards the woods with great force.
+
+It rose high in the air, skimmed the trees, and they saw it twinkle into
+the brook.
+
+It was a very little incident. No magic hand arose from the water. The
+beauty of the August day was not marred. The rain of the past night had
+swollen the brook, which ran hurriedly on to the Potomac, making little
+of this trivial addition to its burdens.
+
+Nina did not reproach him. She felt that her father would consider the
+loss irreparable, yet she had no words for this extraordinary rudeness.
+After two or three turns more in his walk he stopped close beside her.
+
+"For the last time," said he, "have I urged everything, and is it of no
+use?"
+
+She made no answer.
+
+"You have said so?" he persisted.
+
+"Yes, I have said so," she replied, with a touch of impatience, and
+without raising her eyes. "I am engaged to Mars Brown."
+
+He went forward several steps and stood still. Glancing up she saw him
+hold a little revolver to his temple. It was one she had known him to
+carry for protection when riding late in the evening. He seemed to
+deliberate one terrible moment while she sat spell-bound as if by
+nightmare, and then he fired and fell.
+
+She tried to reach his body, but fainted on the way. Mars Brown, riding
+to Holbrook for a half-holiday, was almost within sight.
+
+Upon the closing scene of Hamlet, where the characters, after a period
+of stormy conflict and exquisite anguish, lie strewn by violent death,
+arrives young Fortinbras at the head of his marching army. Tall, sturdy,
+elastic, dressed in chain-mail, victorious, careless, the impersonation
+of ruddy life, the young Norway conqueror leans upon his sword above the
+pitiable sight.
+
+So this brilliant young man, elegant in figure, well dressed, joyous,
+cynical, came whistling up the path. He cut off the clover tops with his
+walking-stick. The butterflies, the pleasant aromas, and all the
+manifestations of rural beauty pleased him.
+
+"Egad," said he, "this isn't so bad, you know."
+
+In a moment he stood by the apple-tree, and the whole sad spectacle was
+before him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The telegraphic column of a New York newspaper gave the story next
+morning, in the conventional manner, as follows:
+
+ "Henry Barwood, a treasury clerk, was killed
+ yesterday at the Holbrook estate near Washington,
+ by the discharge of a pistol in his own hands. The
+ shooting is thought to have been accidental,
+ although he had been ill and depressed for some
+ days, and is said to have shown symptoms of insanity
+ on former occasions."
+
+
+
+
+BALACCHI BROTHERS.
+
+
+BY REBECCA HARDING DAVIS.
+
+"There's a man, now, that has been famous in his time," said Davidge, as
+we passed the mill, glancing in at the sunny gap in the side of the
+building.
+
+I paused incredulously: Phil's lion so often turned out to be Snug the
+joiner. Phil was my chum at college, and in inviting me home to spend
+the vacation with him I thought he had fancied the resources of his
+village larger than they proved. In the two days since we came we had
+examined the old doctor's cabinet, listened superciliously to a debate
+in the literary club upon the Evils of the Stage, and passed two solid
+afternoons in the circle about the stove in the drug-shop, where the
+squire and the Methodist parson, and even the mild, white-cravated young
+rector of St. Mark's, were wont to sharpen their wits by friction. What
+more was left? I was positive that I knew the mental gauge of every man
+in the village.
+
+A little earlier or later in life a gun or fishing-rod would have
+satisfied me. The sleepy, sunny little market-town was shut in by the
+bronzed autumn meadows, that sent their long groping fingers of grass or
+parti-colored weeds drowsily up into the very streets: there were ranges
+of hills and heavy stretches of oak and beech woods, too, through which
+crept glittering creeks full of trout. But I was just at that age when
+the soul disdains all aimless pleasures: my game was Man. I was busy in
+philosophically testing, weighing, labelling human nature.
+
+"Famous, eh?" I said, looking after the pursy figure of the miller in
+his floury canvas round-about and corduroy trowsers, trotting up and
+down among the bags.
+
+"That is one of the Balacchi Brothers," Phil answered as we walked on.
+"You've heard of them when you were a boy?"
+
+I had heard of them. The great acrobats were as noted in their line of
+art as Ellsler and Jenny Lind in theirs. But acrobats and danseuses had
+been alike brilliant, wicked impossibilities to my youth, for I had been
+reared a Covenanter of the Covenanters. In spite of the doubting
+philosophies with which I had clothed myself at college, that old
+Presbyterian training clung to me in everyday life close as my skin.
+
+After that day I loitered about the mill, watching this man, whose life
+had been spent in one godless theatre after another, very much as the
+Florentine peasants looked after Dante when they knew he had come back
+from hell. I was on the lookout for the taint, the abnormal signs, of
+vice. It was about that time that I was fevered with the missionary
+enthusiasm, and in Polynesia, where I meant to go (but where I never did
+go), I declared to Phil daily that I should find in every cannibal the
+half-effaced image of God, only waiting to be quickened into grace and
+virtue. That was quite conceivable. But that a flashy, God-defying actor
+could be the same man at heart as this fat, good-tempered, gossiping
+miller, who jogged to the butcher's every morning for his wife, a basket
+on one arm and a baby on the other, was not conceivable. He was a close
+dealer at the butcher's, too, though dribbling gossip there as
+everywhere; a regular attendant at St. Mark's, with his sandy-headed
+flock about him, among whom he slept comfortably enough, it is true, but
+with as pious dispositions as the rest of us.
+
+I remember how I watched this man, week in and week out. It was a
+trivial matter, but it irritated me unendurably to find that this
+circus-rider had human blood precisely like my own it outraged my early
+religion.
+
+We talk a great deal of the rose-colored illusions in which youth wraps
+the world, and the agony it suffers as they are stripped from its bare,
+hard face. But the fact is, that youth (aside from its narrow-passionate
+friendships) is usually apt to be acrid and watery and sour in its
+judgment and creeds--it has the quality of any other unripe fruit: it is
+middle age that is just and tolerant, that has found room enough in the
+world for itself and all human flies to buzz out their lives
+good-humoredly together. It is youth who can see a tangible devil at
+work in every party or sect opposed to its own, whose enemy is always a
+villain, and who finds treachery and falsehood in the friend who is
+occasionally bored or indifferent: it is middle age that has discovered
+the reasonable sweet _juste milieu_ of human nature--who knows few
+saints perhaps, but is apt to find its friend and grocer and shoemaker
+agreeable and honest fellows. It is these vehement illusions, these
+inherited bigotries and prejudices, that tear and cripple a young man as
+they are taken from him one by one. He creeps out of them as a crab from
+the shell that has grown too small for him, but he thinks he has left
+his identity behind him.
+
+It was such a reason as this that made me follow the miller assiduously,
+and cultivate a quasi intimacy with him, in the course of which I picked
+the following story from him. It was told at divers times, and with many
+interruptions and questions from me. But for obvious reasons I have made
+it continuous. It had its meaning to me, coarse and common though it
+was--the same which Christ taught in the divine beauty of His parables.
+Whether that meaning might not be found in the history of every human
+life, if we had eyes to read it, is matter for question.
+
+Balacchi Brothers? And you've heard of them, eh? Well, well! (with a
+pleased nod, rubbing his hands on his knees). Yes, sir. Fifteen years
+ago they were known as The Admirable Crichtons of the Ring. It was
+George who got up that name: I did not see the force of it. But no name
+could claim too much for us. Why, I could show you notices in the
+newspapers that--I used to clip them out and stuff my pocket-book with
+them as we went along, but after I quit the business I pasted them in an
+old ledger, and I often now read them of nights. No doubt I lost a good
+many, too.
+
+Yes, sir: I was one of Balacchi Brothers. My name _is_ Zack Loper. And
+it was then, of course.
+
+You think we would have plenty of adventures? Well, no--not a great
+many. There's a good deal of monotony in the business. Towns seem always
+pretty much alike to me. And there was such a deal of rehearsing to be
+done by day and at night. I looked at nothing but the rope and George:
+the audience was nothing but a packed flat surface of upturned, staring
+eyes and half-open mouths. It was an odd sight, yes, when you come to
+think of it. I never was one for adventures. I was mostly set upon
+shaving close through the week, so that when Saturday night came I'd
+have something to lay by: I had this mill in my mind, you see. I was
+married, and had my wife and a baby that I'd never seen waiting for me
+at home. I was brought up to milling, but the trapeze paid better. I
+took to it naturally, as one might say.
+
+But George!--he had adventures every week. And as for acquaintances!
+Why, before we'd be in a town two days he'd be hail-fellow-well-met with
+half the people in it. That fellow could scent a dance or a joke half a
+mile off. You never see such wide-awake men nowadays. People seem to me
+half dead or asleep when I think of him.
+
+Oh, I thought you knew. My partner Balacchi. It was Balacchi on the
+bill: the actors called him Signor, and people like the manager, South,
+and we, who knew him well, George. I asked him his real name once or
+twice, but he joked it off. "How many names must a man be saddled with?"
+he said. I don't know it to this day, nor who he had been. They hinted
+there was something queer about his story, but I'll go my bail it was a
+clean one, whatever it was.
+
+You never heard how "Balacchi Brothers" broke up? That was as near to an
+adventure as I ever had. Come over to this bench and I'll tell it to
+you. You don't dislike the dust of the mill? The sun's pleasanter on
+this side.
+
+It was early in August of '56 when George and I came to an old town on
+the Ohio, half city, half village, to play an engagement. We were under
+contract with South then, who provided the rest of the troupe, three or
+four posture-girls, Stradi the pianist, and a Madame Somebody, who gave
+readings and sang. "Concert" was the heading in large caps on the
+bills, "Balacchi Brothers will give their aesthetic _tableaux vivants_
+in the interludes," in agate below.
+
+"I've got to cover you fellows over with respectability here," South
+said. "Rope-dancing won't go down with these aristocratic church-goers."
+
+I remember how George was irritated. "When I was my own agent," he said,
+"I only went to the cities. Educated people can appreciate what we do,
+but in these country towns we rank with circus-riders."
+
+George had some queer notions about his business. He followed it for
+sheer love of it, as I did for money. I've seen all the great athletes
+since, but I never saw one with his wonderful skill and strength, and
+with the grace of a woman too, or a deer. Now that takes hard, steady
+work, but he never flinched from it, as I did; and when night came, and
+the people and lights, and I thought of nothing but to get through, I
+used to think he had the pride of a thousand women in every one of his
+muscles and nerves: a little applause would fill him with a mad kind of
+fury of delight and triumph. South had a story that George belonged to
+some old Knickerbocker family, and had run off from home years ago. I
+don't know. There was that wild restless blood in him that no home could
+have kept him.
+
+We were to stay so long in this town that I found rooms for us with an
+old couple named Peters, who had but lately moved in from the country,
+and had half a dozen carpenters and masons boarding with them. It was
+cheaper than the hotel, and George preferred that kind of people to
+educated men, which made me doubt that story of his having been a
+gentleman. The old woman Peters was uneasy about taking us, and spoke
+out quite freely about it when we called, not knowing that George and I
+were Balacchi Brothers ourselves.
+
+"The house has been respectable so far, gentlemen," she said. "I don't
+know what about taking in them half-naked, drunken play-actors. What do
+you say, Susy?" to her granddaughter.
+
+"Wait till you see them, grandmother," the girl said gently. "I should
+think that men whose lives depended every night on their steady eyes and
+nerves would not dare to touch liquor."
+
+"You are quite right--nor even tobacco," said George. It was such a
+prompt, sensible thing for the little girl to say that he looked at her
+attentively a minute, and then went up to the old lady smiling: "We
+don't look like drinking men, do we, madam?"
+
+"No, no, sir. I did not know that you were the I-talians." She was quite
+flustered and frightened, and said cordially enough how glad she was to
+have us both. But it was George she shook hands with. There was
+something clean and strong and inspiring about that man that made most
+women friendly to him on sight.
+
+Why, in two days you'd have thought he'd never had another home than the
+Peters's. He helped the old man milk, and had tinkered up the broken
+kitchen-table, and put in half a dozen window-panes, and was intimate
+with all the boarders; could give the masons the prices of job-work at
+the East, and put Stoll the carpenter on the idea of contract houses,
+out of which he afterward made a fortune. It was nothing but jokes and
+fun and shouts of laughter when he was in the house: even the old man
+brightened up and told some capital stories. But from the first I
+noticed that George's eye followed Susy watchfully wherever she went,
+though he was as distant and respectful with her as he was with most
+women. He had a curious kind of respect for women, George had. Even the
+Slingsbys, that all the men in the theatre joked with, he used to pass
+by as though they were logs leaning against the wall. They were the
+posture-girls, and anything worse besides the name _I_ never saw.
+
+There was a thing happened once on that point which I often thought
+might have given me a clew to his history if I'd followed it up. We were
+playing in one of the best theatres in New York (they brought us into
+some opera), and the boxes were filled with fine ladies beautifully
+dressed, or, I might say, half dressed.
+
+George was in one of the wings. "It's a pretty sight," I said to him.
+
+"It's a shameful sight," he said with an oath. "The Slingsbys do it for
+their living, but these women--"
+
+I said they were ladies, and ought to be treated with respect. I was
+amazed at the heat he was in.
+
+"I had a sister, Zack, and there's where I learned what a woman should
+be."
+
+"I never heard of your sister, George," said I. I knew he would not have
+spoken of her but for the heat he was in.
+
+"No. I'm as dead to her, being what I am, as if I were six feet under
+ground."
+
+I turned and looked at him, and when I saw his face I said no more, and
+I never spoke of it again. It was something neither I nor any other man
+had any business with.
+
+So, when I saw how he was touched by Susy and drawn toward her, it
+raised her in my opinion, though I'd seen myself how pretty and sensible
+a little body she was. But I was sorry, for I knew twan't no use. The
+Peterses were Methodists, and Susy more strict than any of them; and I
+saw she looked on the theatre as the gate of hell, and George and me
+swinging over it.
+
+I don't think, though, that George saw how strong her feeling about it
+was, for after we'd been there a week or two he began to ask her to go
+and see us perform, if only for once. I believe he thought the girl
+would come to love him if she saw him at his best. I don't wonder at it,
+sir. I've seen those pictures and statues they've made of the old gods,
+and I reckon they put in them the best they thought a man could be; but
+I never knew what real manhood was until I saw my partner when he stood
+quiet on the stage waiting the signal to begin the light full on his
+keen blue eyes, the gold-worked velvet tunic, and his perfect figure.
+
+He looked more like other men in his ordinary clothing. George liked a
+bit of flash, too, in his dress--a red necktie or gold chain stretched
+over his waistcoat.
+
+Susy refused at first, steadily. At last, however, came our final night,
+when George was to produce his great leaping feat, never yet performed
+in public. We had been practising it for months, and South judged it
+best to try it first before a small, quiet audience, for the risk was
+horrible. Whether, because it was to be the last night, and her kind
+heart disliked to hurt him by refusal, or whether she loved him better
+than either she or he knew, I could not tell, but I saw she was strongly
+tempted to go. She was an innocent little thing, and not used to hide
+what she felt. Her eyes were red that morning, as though she had been
+crying all the night. Perhaps, because I was a married man, and quieter
+than George, she acted more freely with me than him.
+
+"I wish I knew what to do," she said, looking up to me with her eyes
+full of tears. There was nobody in the room but her grandmother.
+
+"I couldn't advise you, Miss Susy," says I. "Your church discipline goes
+against our trade, I know."
+
+"I know what's right myself: I don't need church discipline to teach
+me," she said sharply.
+
+"I think I'd go, Susy," said her grandmother. "It is a concert, after
+all: it's not a play."
+
+"The name doesn't alter it."
+
+Seeing the temper she was in, I thought it best to say no more, but the
+old lady added, "It's Mr. George's last night. Dear, dear! how I'll miss
+him!"
+
+Susy turned quickly to the window. "Why does he follow such godless ways
+then?" she cried. She stood still a good while, and when she turned
+about her pale little face made my heart ache. "I'll take home Mrs.
+Tyson's dress now, grandmother," she said, and went out of the room. I
+forgot to tell you Susy was a seamstress. Well, the bundle was large,
+and I offered to carry it for her, as the time for rehearsal did not
+come till noon. She crept alongside of me without a word, looking weak
+and done-out: she was always so busy and bright, it was the more
+noticeable. The house where the dress was to go was one of the largest
+in the town. The servant showed us into a back parlor, and took the
+dress up to her mistress. I looked around me a great deal, for I'd never
+been in such a house before; but very soon I caught sight of a lady who
+made me forget carpets and pictures. I only saw her in the mirror, for
+she was standing by the fireplace in the front room. The door was open
+between. It wasn't that she was especially pretty, but in her white
+morning-dress, with lace about her throat and her fair hair drawn back
+from her face, I thought she was the delicatest, softest, finest thing
+of man- or woman-kind I ever say.
+
+"Look there, Susy! look there!" I whispered.
+
+"It is a Mrs. Lloyd from New York. She is here on a visit. That is her
+husband;" and then she went down into her own gloomy thoughts again.
+
+The husband was a grave, middle-aged man. He had had his paper up before
+his face, so that I had not seen him before.
+
+"You will go for the tickets, then, Edward?" she said.
+
+"If you make a point of it, yes," in an annoyed tone. "But I don't know
+why you make a point of it. The musical part of the performance is
+beneath contempt, I understand, and the real attraction is the
+exhibition of these mountebanks of trapezists, which will be simply
+disgusting to you. You would not encourage such people at home: why
+would you do it here?"
+
+"They are not necessarily wicked." I noticed there was a curious
+unsteadiness in her voice, as though she was hurt and agitated. I
+thought perhaps she knew I was there.
+
+"There is very little hope of any redeeming qualities in men who make a
+trade of twisting their bodies like apes," he said. "Contortionists and
+ballet-dancers and clowns and harlequins--" he rattled all the names
+over with a good deal of uncalled-for sharpness, I thought, calling them
+"dissolute and degraded, the very offal of humanity." I could not
+understand his heat until he added, "I never could comprehend your
+interest and sympathy for that especial class, Ellinor."
+
+"No, you could not, Edward," she said quietly.
+
+"But I have it. I never have seen an exhibition of the kind. But I want
+to see this to-night, if you will gratify me. I have no reason." she
+added when he looked at her curiously. "The desire is unaccountable to
+myself."
+
+The straightforward look of her blue eyes as she met his seemed
+strangely familiar and friendly to me.
+
+At that moment Susy stood up to go. Her cheeks were burning and her eyes
+sparkling. "Dissolute and degraded!" she said again and again when we
+were outside. But I took no notice.
+
+As we reached the house she stopped me when I turned off to go to
+rehearsal. "You'll get seats for grandmother and me, Mr. Balacchi?" she
+said.
+
+"You're going, then, Susy?"
+
+"Yes, I'm going."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now the house in which we performed was a queer structure. A stock
+company, thinking there was a field for a theatre in the town, had taken
+a four-story building, gutted the interior, and fitted it up with tiers
+of seats and scenery. The stock company was starved out, however, and
+left the town, and the theatre was used as a gymnasium, a concert-room,
+or a church by turns. Its peculiarity was, that it was both exceedingly
+lofty and narrow, which suited our purpose exactly.
+
+It was packed that night from dome to pit. George and I had rehearsed
+our new act both morning and afternoon, South watching us without
+intermission. South was terribly nervous and anxious, half disposed, at
+the last minute, to forbid it, although it had been announced on the
+bills for a week. But a feat which is successful in an empty house, with
+but one spectator, when your nerves are quiet and blood cool, is a
+different thing before an excited, terrified, noisy audience, your whole
+body at fever heat. However, George was cool as a cucumber, indeed
+almost indifferent about the act, but in a mad, boyish glee all day
+about everything else. I suppose the reason was that Susy was going.
+
+South had lighted the house brilliantly and brought in a band. And all
+classes of people poured into the theatre until it could hold no more. I
+saw Mrs. Peters in one of the side-seats, with Susy's blushing,
+frightened little face beside her. George, standing back among the
+scenes, saw her too: I think, indeed, it was all he did see.
+
+There were the usual readings from Shakespeare at first.
+
+While Madame was on, South came to us. "Boys," said he, "let this matter
+go over a few weeks. A little more practice will do you no harm. You can
+substitute some other trick, and these people will be none the wiser."
+
+George shrugged his shoulders impatiently: "Nonsense! When did you grow
+so chicken-hearted, South? It is I who have to run the risk, I fancy."
+
+I suppose South's uneasiness had infected me.
+
+"I am quite willing to put it off," I said. I had felt gloomy and
+superstitious all day. But I never ventured to oppose George more
+decidedly than that.
+
+He only laughed by way of reply, and went off to dress. South looked
+after him, I remember, saying what a magnificently-built fellow he was.
+If we could only have seen the end of that night's work!
+
+As I went to my dressing-room I saw Mrs. Lloyd and her husband in one of
+the stage-boxes, with one or two other ladies and gentlemen. She was
+plainly and darkly dressed, but to my mind she looked like a princess
+among them all. I could not but wonder what interest she could have in
+such a rough set as we, although her husband, I confess, did judge us
+hardly.
+
+After the readings came the concert part of the performance, and then
+what South chose to call the Moving Tableaux, which was really nothing
+in the world but ballet-dancing. George and I were left to crown the
+whole. I had some ordinary trapeze-work to do at first, but George
+was reserved for the new feat, in order that his nerves might be
+perfectly unshaken. When I went out alone and bowed to the audience, I
+observed that Mrs. Lloyd was leaning eagerly forward, but at the first
+glance at my face she sank back with a look of relief, and turned away,
+that she might not see my exploits. It nettled me a little, I think, yet
+they were worth watching.
+
+Well, I finished, and then there was a song to give me time to cool. I
+went to the side-scenes where I could be alone, for that five minutes. I
+had no risk to run in the grand feat, you see, but I had George's life
+in my hands. I haven't told you yet--have I?--what it was he proposed to
+do.
+
+A rope was suspended from the centre of the dome, the lower end of which
+I held, standing in the highest gallery opposite the stage. Above the
+stage hung the trapeze on which George and the two posture-girls were to
+be. At a certain signal I was to let the rope go, and George, springing
+from the trapeze across the full width of the dome, was to catch it in
+mid-air, a hundred feet above the heads of the people. You understand?
+The mistake of an instant of time on either his part or mine, and death
+was almost certain. The plan we had thought surest was for South to give
+the word, and then that both should count--One, Two, Three! At Three the
+rope fell, and he leaped. We had practised so often that we thought we
+counted as one man.
+
+When the song was over the men hung the rope and the trapeze. Jenny and
+Lou Slingsby swung themselves up to it, turned a few somersaults and
+then were quiet. They were only meant to give effect to the scene in
+their gauzy dresses and spangles. Then South came forward and told the
+audience what we meant to do. It was a feat, he said, which had never
+been produced before in any theatre, and in which failure was death. No
+one but that most daring of all acrobats, Balacchi, would attempt it.
+Now I knew South so well that I saw under all his confident, bragging
+tone he was more anxious and doubtful than he had ever been. He
+hesitated a moment, and then requested that after we took our places the
+audience should preserve absolute silence, and refrain from even the
+slightest movement until the feat was over. The merest trifle might
+distract the attention of the performers and render their eyes and hold
+unsteady, he said. He left the stage, and the music began.
+
+I went round to take my place in the gallery. George had not yet left
+his room. As I passed I tapped at the door and called, "Good luck, old
+fellow!"
+
+"That's certain now, Zack," he answered, with a joyous laugh. He was so
+exultant, you see, that Susy had come.
+
+But the shadow of death seemed to have crept over me. When I took my
+stand in the lofty gallery, and looked down at the brilliant lights and
+the great mass of people, who followed my every motion as one man, and
+the two glittering, half-naked girls swinging in the distance, and heard
+the music rolling up thunders of sound, it was all ghastly and horrible
+to me, sir. Some men have such presentiments, they say: I never had
+before or since. South remained on the stage perfectly motionless, in
+order, I think, to maintain his control over the audience.
+
+The trumpets sounded a call, and in the middle of a burst of triumphant
+music George came on the stage. There was a deafening outbreak of
+applause and then a dead silence, but I think every man and woman felt a
+thrill of admiration of the noble figure Poor George! the new,
+tight-fitting dress of purple velvet that he had bought for this night
+set off his white skin, and his fine head was bare, with no covering but
+the short curls that Susy liked.
+
+It was for Susy! He gave one quick glance up at her, and a bright,
+boyish smile, as if telling her not to be afraid, which all the audience
+understood, and answered by an involuntary, long-drawn breath. I looked
+at Susy. The girl's colorless face was turned to George, and her hands
+were clasped as though she saw him already dead before her; but she
+could be trusted, I saw. _She_ would utter no sound. I had only time to
+glance at her, and then turned to my work. George and I dared not take
+our eyes from each other.
+
+There was a single bugle note, and then George swung himself up to the
+trapeze. The silence was like death as he steadied himself and slowly
+turned so as to front me. As he turned he faced the stage-box for the
+first time. He had reached the level of the posture-girls, who fluttered
+on either side, and stood on the swaying rod poised on one foot, his
+arms folded, when in the breathless stillness there came a sudden cry
+and the words, "Oh, Charley! Charley!"
+
+Even at the distance where I stood I saw George start and a shiver pass
+over his body. He looked wildly about him.
+
+"To me! to me!" I shouted.
+
+He fixed his eye on mine and steadied himself. There was a terrible
+silent excitement in the people, in the very air.
+
+There was the mistake. We should have stopped then, shaken as he was,
+but South, bewildered and terrified, lost control of himself: he gave
+the word.
+
+I held the rope loose--held George with my eyes--One!
+
+I saw his lips move: he was counting with me.
+
+Two!
+
+His eye wandered, turned to the stage-box.
+
+Three!
+
+Like a flash, I saw the white upturned faces below me, the
+posture-girls' gestures of horror, the dark springing figure through the
+air, that wavered--and fell a shapeless mass on the floor.
+
+There was a moment of deathlike silence, and then a wild outcry--women
+fainting, men cursing and crying out in that senseless, helpless way
+they have when there is sudden danger. By the time I had reached the
+floor they had straightened out his shattered limbs, and two or three
+doctors were fighting their way through the great crowd that was surging
+about him.
+
+Well, sir, at that minute what did I hear but George's voice above all
+the rest, choked and hollow as it was, like a man calling out of the
+grave: "The women! Good God! don't you see the women?" he gasped.
+
+Looking up then, I saw those miserable Slingsbys hanging on to the
+trapeze for life. What with the scare and shock, they'd lost what little
+sense they had, and there they hung helpless as limp rags high over our
+heads.
+
+"Damn the Slingsbys!" said I. God forgive me! But I saw this battered
+wreck at my feet that had been George. Nobody seemed to have any mind
+left. Even South stared stupidly up at them and then back at George. The
+doctors were making ready to lift him, and half of the crowd were gaping
+in horror, and the rest yelling for ladders or ropes, and scrambling
+over each other, and there hung the poor flimsy wretches, their eyes
+starting out of their heads from horror, and their lean fingers loosing
+their hold every minute. But, sir--I couldn't help it--I turned from
+them to watch George as the doctors lifted him.
+
+"It's hardly worth while," whispered one.
+
+But they raised him and, sir--the body went one way and the legs
+another.
+
+I thought he was dead. I couldn't see that he breathed, when he opened
+his eyes and looked up for the Slingsbys. "Put me down," he said, and
+the doctors obeyed him. There was that in his voice that they had to
+obey him, though it wasn't but a whisper.
+
+"Ladders are of no use," he said. "Loper!"
+
+"Yes, George"
+
+"You can swing yourself up. Do it."
+
+I went. I remember the queer stunned feeling I had: my joints moved like
+a machine.
+
+When I had reached the trapeze, he said, as cool as if he were calling
+the figures for a Virginia reel, "Support them, you--Loper. Now, lower
+the trapeze, men--carefully!"
+
+It was the only way their lives could be saved, and he was the only man
+to see it. He watched us until the girls touched the floor more dead
+than alive, and then his head fell back and the life seemed to go
+suddenly out of him like the flame out of a candle, leaving only the
+dead wick.
+
+As they were carrying him out I noticed for the first time that a woman
+was holding his hand. It was that frail little wisp of a Susy, that used
+to blush and tremble if you spoke to her suddenly, and here she was
+quite quiet and steady in the midst of this great crowd.
+
+"His sister, I suppose" one of the doctors said to her.
+
+"No, sir. If he lives I will be his wife." The old gentleman was very
+respectful to her after that, I noticed.
+
+Now, the rest of my story is very muddled, you'll say, and confused. But
+the truth is, I don't understand it myself. I ran on ahead to Mrs.
+Peters's to prepare his bed for him, but they did not bring him to
+Peters's. After I waited an hour or two I found George had been taken to
+the principal hotel in the place, and a bedroom and every comfort that
+money could buy were there for him. Susy came home sobbing late in the
+night, but she told me nothing, except that those who had a right to
+have charge of him had taken him. I found afterward the poor girl was
+driven from the door of his room, where she was waiting like a faithful
+dog. I went myself, but I fared no better. What with surgeons and
+professional nurses, and the gentlemen that crowded about with their
+solemn looks of authority, I dared not ask to see him. Yet I believe
+still George would rather have had old Loper by him in his extremity
+than any of them. Once, when the door was opened, I thought I saw Mrs.
+Lloyd stooping over the bed between the lace curtains, and just then her
+husband came out talking to one of the surgeons.
+
+He said: "It is certain there were here the finest elements of manhood.
+And I will do my part to rescue him from the abyss into which he has
+fallen."
+
+"Will you tell me how George is, sir?" I asked, pushing up. "Balacchi?
+My partner?"
+
+Mr. Lloyd turned away directly, but the surgeon told me civilly enough
+that if George's life could be saved, it must be with the loss of one or
+perhaps both of his legs.
+
+"He'll never mount a trapeze again, then," I said, and I suppose I
+groaned; for to think of George helpless--
+
+"God forbid!" cried Mr. Lloyd, sharply. "Now look here, my good man: you
+can be of no possible use to Mr.--Balacchi as you call him. He is in the
+hands of his own people, and he will feel, as they do, that the kindest
+thing you can do is to let him alone."
+
+There was nothing to be done after that but to touch my hat and go out,
+but as I went I heard him talking of "inexplicable madness and years of
+wasted opportunities."
+
+Well, sir, I never went again: the words hurt like the cut of a whip,
+though 'twan't George that spoke them. But I quit business, and hung
+around the town till I heard he was going to live, and I broke up my
+contract with South. I never went on a trapeze again. I felt as if the
+infernal thing was always dripping with his blood after that day.
+Anyhow, all the heart went out of the business for me with George. So I
+came back here and settled down to the milling, and by degrees I learned
+to think of George as a rich and fortunate man.
+
+I've nearly done now--only a word or two more. About six years afterward
+there was a circus came to town, and I took the wife and children and
+went. I always did when I had the chance. It was the old Adam in me yet,
+likely.
+
+Well, sir, among the attractions of the circus was the great and
+unrivalled Hercules, who could play with cannon-balls as other men would
+with dice. I don't know what made me restless and excited when I read
+about this man. It seemed as though the old spirit was coming back to me
+again. I could hardly keep still when the time drew near for him to
+appear. I don't know what I expected, but when he came out from behind
+the curtain I shouted out like a madman, "Balacchi! George! George!"
+
+He stopped short, looked about, and catching sight of me tossed up his
+cap with his old boyish shout; then he remembered himself and went on
+with his performance.
+
+He was lame--yes, in one leg. The other was gone altogether. He walked
+on crutches. Whether the strength had gone into his chest and arms, I
+don't know; but there he stood tossing about the cannon-balls as I might
+marbles. So full of hearty good-humor too, joking with his audience, and
+so delighted when they gave him a round of applause.
+
+After the performance I hurried around the tent, and you may be sure
+there was rejoicing that made the manager and other fellows laugh.
+
+George haled me off with him down the street. He cleared the ground with
+that crutch and wooden leg like a steam-engine. "Come! come along!" he
+cried; "I've something to show you, Loper."
+
+He took me to a quiet boarding-house, and there, in a cosey room, was
+Susy with a four-year-old girl.
+
+"We were married as soon as I could hobble about," he said, "and she
+goes with me and makes a home wherever I am."
+
+Susy nodded and blushed and laughed. "Baby and I," she said. "Do you see
+Baby? She has her father's eyes, do you see?"
+
+"She _is_ her mother, Loper," said George--"just as innocent and pure
+and foolish--just as sure of the Father in heaven taking care of her.
+They've made a different man of me in some ways--a different man,"
+bending his head reverently.
+
+After a while I began, "You did not stay with--?" But Balacchi
+frowned. "I knew where _I_ belonged," he said.
+
+Well, he's young yet. He's the best Hercules in the profession, and has
+laid up a snug sum. Why doesn't he invest it and retire? I doubt if
+he'll ever do that, sir. He may do it, but I doubt it. He can't change
+his blood, and there's that in Balacchi that makes me suspect he will
+die with the velvet and gilt on, and in the height of good-humor and fun
+with his audience.
+
+
+
+
+AN OPERATION IN MONEY.
+
+BY ALBERT WEBSTER.
+
+I.
+
+In an elegant and lofty bank-parlor there sat in council, on an autumn
+morning, fourteen millionaires. They reposed in deep arm-chairs, and
+their venerable faces were filled with profound gravity. Before them,
+upon a broad mahogany table, were piles of books, sheaves of paper in
+rubber bands, bundles of quill pens, quires of waste paper for
+calculations, and a number of huge red-covered folios, containing the
+tell-tale reports of the mercantile agencies. They had just completed
+the selections from the list of applicants for discount, and were now in
+that state of lethargy that commonly follows a great and important act.
+
+The president, with his hands pressed together before him, was looking
+at the fresco of Commerce upon the ceiling; his ponderous right-hand
+neighbor was stumbling feebly over an addition that one of the
+bookkeepers had made upon one of the papers--he hoped to find it wrong;
+his left-hand neighbor was doubling his under-lip with his stout
+fingers; an octogenarian beyond had buried his chin in his immense neck,
+and was going to sleep; another was stupidly blinking at the nearest
+coal-fire; two more were exchanging gasping whispers; another was wiping
+his gold spectacles with a white handkerchief, now and then stopping to
+hold them unsteadily up to the light; and another was fingering the
+polished lapel of his old black coat, and saying, with asthmatic
+hoarseness to all who would look at him, "F-o-u-r-teen years!
+f-o-u-r-teen years!"
+
+A tall regulator-clock, with its mercury pendulum, ticked upon the wall;
+the noise of the heavy rumbling in the streets was softened into a low
+monotone, and now and then a bit of coal rattled upon the fender.
+
+The oil-portraits of four former presidents looked thoughtfully down on
+the scene of their former labors; the polished wainscots reflected
+ragged pictures of the silent fourteen, and all was perfectly in order
+and perfectly secure.
+
+Presently, however, there was an end to the stagnation; the white heads
+began to move and to look around.
+
+The president's eyes came gradually down from the Commerce, and, after
+travelling over the countenances of his stirring _confrères,_ they
+settled by accident upon the table before him. There they encountered a
+white envelope, inscribed "to the President and Honorable Board of
+Directors--Present."
+
+"Oh gentlemen! gentlemen!" cried the president, seizing the letter, "one
+moment more, I beg of you. Here's a--a--note--a communication--a--I
+don't know what it is myself, I'm sure, but"--the thirteen sank back
+again, feeling somewhat touched that they should be so restrained. The
+president ran his eye over the missive. He smiled as one does sometimes
+at the precocity of an infant. "The letter, gentlemen," said he,
+slipping the paper through his fingers, "is from the paying teller. It
+is a request for"--here the president delayed as if about making a
+humorous point--"for a larger salary." Then he dropped his eyes and
+lowered his head, as he might have done had he confessed that somebody
+had kissed him. He seemed to be the innocent mouthpiece of a piece of
+flagrant nonsense.
+
+There was a moment's silence. Then a heavy-voiced gentleman took up a
+pen and said:
+
+"Is this man's name Dreyfus--or--or what is it?"
+
+"Let me think," returned the president, returning once more to the
+Commerce; "Dreyfus?--no--not Dreyfus--yes--no. Paying teller--hum--it's
+curious I can't recall--it commences with an F--FIELDS--yes, Fields!
+that's his name--Fields, to be sure!"
+
+The questioner at once wrote down the word on the paper.
+
+"This is the second time that he has applied for this favor, is it not?"
+formally inquired another of the thirteen, in the tone that a judge uses
+when he asks the clerk, "Has he not been before me on a former
+occasion?"
+
+"Yes," replied the president, "this is a renewal of an effort made six
+months ago."
+
+There was a general movement. Several chairs rolled back, and their
+occupants exchanged querulous glances.
+
+"Suppose we hear the letter read," suggested a fair soul. "Perhaps"--a
+septuagenarian, with snowy hair and a thin body, clad in the clerical
+guise of the old school, and who had made a fortune by inventing a
+hat-block, arose hastily to his feet, and said:
+
+"I cannot stay to listen to a dun!"
+
+A chorus from the majority echoed the exclamation. All but four
+staggered to their feet, and tottered off in various directions; some to
+pretend to look out at the window, and some to the wardrobes, where was
+deposited their outer clothing.
+
+"Clarks," stammered the feeble hatter, feeling vainly for the arm-holes
+in his great-coat--"clarks presume on their value. Turn 'em out, say I.
+Give 'em a chance to rotate. You've got my opinion, Mr. President.
+Refuse what's-his-name, Fields. Tell him he's happy and well off now,
+without knowing it. Where _can_ be the sleeves to--to this"--his
+voice expired in his perplexity.
+
+Fields's cause looked blue. One director after another groped to the
+door, saying, as he went, "I can't encourage it, Mr. President--tell him
+'No,' Mr. President--it would only make the rest uneasy if we allowed
+it--plenty more to fill his place."
+
+The hatter's voice stopped further mention of the subject. He stood at
+one end of the apartment in a paroxysm of laughter. Tears filled his
+eyes. He pointed to another director, who, at the other extremity of the
+room, was also puzzling over a coat. "There's Stuart with my mackintosh!
+He's trying to _put it on--_and here am I with _his_ coat trying to put
+_that_ on. I--I said to myself, 'This is pretty large for a slim man
+like you.'--Great God, Stuart, if I hadn't been quick-sighted we might
+have stayed here all night!" He immediately fell into another fit of
+laughter, and so did his friend. They exchanged coats with great
+hilarity, and those who had gone out of the door lumbered back to learn
+the cause of it. The story went round from one to the other, "Why,
+Stuart had Jacobs's coat, and Jacobs had Stuart's coat!" Everybody went
+into convulsions, and the president drew out his pocket-handkerchief and
+shrieked into it.
+
+The board broke up with great good feeling, and Jacobs went away very
+weak, saying that he was going to tell the joke against Stuart on the
+street--if he lived to get there.
+
+Three gentlemen remained, professedly to hear Fields's letter read. Two
+staid because the room was comfortable, and the other because he wanted
+to have a little private conversation with the president afterward.
+
+Therefore the president wiped away the tears that Stuart's humor had
+forced from his eyes, and opened the crumpled letter, and, turning his
+back to the light, read it aloud, while the rest listened with looks of
+great amusement in their wrinkled faces.
+
+ "_To the President and Directors of the ---- National Bank._
+
+ "GENTLEMEN: I most respectfully renew my application for an increase
+ of my salary to five thousand dollars per annum, it now being four
+ thousand. I am impelled to do this because I am convinced that I am
+ not sufficiently recompensed for the labor I perform; and because
+ other tellers, having the same responsibilities, receive the larger
+ sum per annum; and, lastly, because I am about to be married.
+
+ "I remember that your answer to my first application was a definite
+ refusal, and I blamed myself for not having presented the case more
+ clearly to your distinguished notice. Will you permit me to rectify
+ that fault now, and to state briefly why I feel assured that my
+ present claim is not an unreasonable one?
+
+ "1. While ten years ago we agreed that three thousand dollars was a
+ fair compensation for the work I was then called upon to perform,
+ and four years later agreed that four thousand dollars was then fair
+ pay for my increased tasks, caused by the increase of your business,
+ is it not just that I should now ask for a still further advance in
+ view of the fact that your business has doubled since the date of
+ our last contract?
+
+ "It has been necessary for me to acquaint myself with the signatures
+ and business customs and qualifications of twice the former number
+ of your customers, and my liability to error has also become greater
+ in like ratio. But I have committed no errors, which argues that I
+ have kept up an equal strain of care. This has made demands upon my
+ brain and my bodily strength, which I think should be requited for.
+
+ "2. I, like each of you, will one day reach an age when the body and
+ mind will no longer be able to provide for themselves. But between
+ us, should we continue our present relations, there would be this
+ vital difference: You would have made an accumulation of wealth that
+ would be sufficient for your wants, while I would be poor in spite
+ of the fact that I labored with you, and next to yourselves did the
+ most to protect your interests. In view of my approaching
+ incompetence (no matter how far off it is), I am working at a
+ disadvantage. Would it not be right to enable me to protect myself
+ from this disadvantage?
+
+ "3. While you pay me a price for my labor and for my skill as an
+ _expert_, do you compensate me for the trials you put upon my
+ probity? You pay me for what I do, but do you reward me for what I
+ _might_, but do _not_ do? Is what I do _not_ do a marketable
+ quantity? I think that it is. To prove it, inquire of those whose
+ servants have behaved ill, whether they would not have paid
+ something to have forestalled their dishonesty.
+
+ "There is a bad strain to this paragraph, and I will not dwell upon
+ it. I only ask you to remember that enormous sums of money pass
+ through my hands every day, and that the smallest slip of my memory,
+ or of my care, or of my fidelity, might cause you irreparable loss.
+ Familiarity with money and operations in money always tend to lessen
+ the respect for the regard that others hold it in. To resist the
+ subtle influences of this familiarity involves a certain wear and
+ tear of those principles which _must_ be kept intact for your sake.
+
+ "I beg you to accept what is my evident meaning, even if my method
+ of setting it forth has not been particularly happy. I have assured
+ myself that my claim is a valid one, and I await your obliging reply
+ with anxiety.
+
+ "I remain, very respectfully, "Your obedient servant,
+
+ "----FIELDS, _Paying Teller."_
+
+At the end the president suddenly lowered his head with a smile, and
+looked over the top of his glasses at his audience, clearly meaning,
+"There's a letter for you!"
+
+But two of the gentlemen were fast asleep, nodding gently at one another
+across the table, while their hands clasped the arms of their chairs.
+The other one was looking up toward the roofs of the buildings opposite,
+absorbed in speculation.
+
+The president said, aloud:
+
+"I think, as long as Fields has made such a touse about it, that I'd
+better draft a reply, and not give him a verbal an--"
+
+"Draft!" said the speculator, brought to life by the word. "Draft did
+you say, sir? What?--On whom?--"
+
+"I said 'draft a reply' to--to this," returned the other, waving the
+letter.
+
+"Oh, a reply! Draft one. Draft a reply--a reply to the letter about the
+salary. Oh, certainly, by all means."
+
+"And read it to the directors at the meeting next Friday," suggested the
+president.
+
+The speculator's eyes turned vacantly upon him, and it was full half a
+minute before he comprehended. "Yes, yes, of course, read it to the
+directors next Friday. They'll approve it, you know. That will be
+regular, and according to rule. But about Steinmeyer, you know. When a
+man like Steinmeyer does such a thing as--but just come to the window a
+minute."
+
+He led the president off by the arm, and that was the last of Fields's
+letter for that day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+II.
+
+Fields was truly on the anxious-seat.
+
+As he had said in his letter, he was engaged to be married, and he
+wanted to be about the consummation of the contract, for he had already
+delayed too long. His _affiancée_ was a sweet girl who lived with her
+widowed mother in the country, where they had a fine house, and a fine
+demesne attached to it. When the time for the marriage was finally
+settled upon, the lady instantly set about remodelling her domicile and
+its surroundings, and making it fit for the new spirits that were soon
+to inhabit it. She drew upon her accumulation of money that had thriven
+long in a private bank, and expended it in laying out new lawns,
+planting new trees, building new stables, erecting tasteful graperies
+and kiosks. This sum was not very large, and it included not only what
+had been saved out of the earnings of the farm, but also what had been
+saved out of the income from the widow's property, which consisted of
+twelve thousand dollars in insurance stock.
+
+Fields had thus far expended nearly all of his salary of four thousand
+dollars. He was accustomed to use a quarter of it for his own purposes,
+and the rest he applied to the comfort of his aged parents, whom he
+maintained. Thus it will be seen that Fields's desire to add to his own
+wealth had reason to be.
+
+Just at this time there stepped in the Chicago fire. On the second day
+Fields began to be frightened about the twelve thousand dollars in
+insurance stock. Telegrams poured into the city by hundreds, and the
+tale grew more dismal with each hour.
+
+His fears were realized. The widow's money was swept away, and a sort of
+paralysis fell upon the country-house and all its surroundings. The
+carpenters went away from the kiosks, the masons from the face-walls,
+the smiths from the graperies, the gardeners from the lawns, and
+everything came to a stand-still. The extra farm-hands were discharged,
+and much of the work was left unfinished.
+
+What was to be done?
+
+The mother and daughter wept in secret. Their careers had been
+interrupted. Desolation was out-of-doors, and desolation was in their
+hearts. The earth lay in ragged heaps; beams and timbers leaned half
+erect; barns were party-colored with the old paint and the new, and the
+shrubbery was bare to the frosts. Joys which had smiled had fled into
+the far distance, and now looked surly enough; all pleasures were
+unhorsed, and hope was down.
+
+It was under these circumstances that Fields wrote a second time to the
+honorable board of directors to ask them to pay him better wages.
+
+Friday came. There was a meeting, and Fields knew that his case must now
+be receiving consideration.
+
+At eleven o'clock the directors emerged from their parlor, and passed
+by his desk in twos and threes, chatting and telling watery jokes, as
+most great men do.
+
+"They look as if they had entirely forgotten me," said Fields to
+himself.
+
+Pretty soon the cashier came and placed a letter upon his counter.
+
+"Ah!" thought the teller, "I was mistaken. I wonder if I can read it
+here without changing countenance?"
+
+He could but try it. He tore off the envelope. It went thus:
+
+ "_Mr.----Fields, Paying Teller._
+
+ "DEAR SIR: The president and directors, to whom you addressed a
+ request for an increase of salary, must beg to criticise the
+ arguments advanced in your polite note.
+
+ "They do not understand why you should place a new value upon your
+ honesty because in other people there happens to be sometimes such a
+ thing as dishonesty. It is a popular notion that honesty among men
+ is rare, but the idea is a mistaken one. Honesty of the purest kind,
+ as honesty is usually understood, is very common. They cannot help
+ feeling, also, that you somewhat overestimate the value of your
+ work, which to them seems to be only a higher sort of routine,
+ calling for no intellectual endeavor, and requiring but little more
+ than an ordinary bookkeeper's care for its perfect performance. But
+ for the differences that _do_ exist between your tasks and those of
+ the bookkeeper you will remember you are already compensated by a
+ salary a fourth larger.
+
+ "Briefly, they consider their bank a piece of money-making
+ mechanism, of which you are an able and respected part; but they
+ cannot understand how you could hope to raise their fear of
+ peculations and villainies when their system of checks and
+ counter-checks is so perfect. They have never lost a dollar by the
+ immorality of any of their employés, and they are sure that matters
+ are so arranged that any such immorality, even of the rankest kind,
+ could occasion them no inconvenience.
+
+ "Nor do they comprehend why your idea that increase of business
+ justifies a request for an increase of salary may not be met with
+ the suggestion that your hours of labor are the same as your former
+ hours, and that all you were able to perform in those hours, to the
+ best of your capacity, was purchased at the beginning of your
+ connection with them.
+
+ "In regard to the pure question of the sufficiency of your salary,
+ they hint in the kindest manner that all expenditures are
+ contractible as well as extensible.
+
+ "They hasten to take this opportunity to express to you their
+ appreciation of your perfect exhibits; and, complimenting you upon
+ the care with which you have fulfilled the duties of your post, they
+ remain your obedient servants."
+
+The teller felt that a more maddening letter could not have been
+written. Its civility seemed to him to be disagreeable suavity; its
+failure to particularize the points he made to be a disgraceful evasion;
+and the liberty it took in generalizing his case to be an enormous
+insult.
+
+The very first sentence on honesty put him in the light of a
+blackmailer--one that threatened mischief if his demands were not
+complied with. The next sentence went to show that he was an egotist,
+because he thought his labors required wear and tear of brain. The third
+called him a sound cog-wheel. The latter part of the same said that a
+villain could do no evil if he wished to, for they (the directors) had
+protected themselves against villains. Then it went on to say that the
+writers did not understand how anxiety and caution could be involved in
+the pursuit of his duties; and then it was thrown out that his marriage
+was _his_ seeking--not theirs. Finally, they patted him on the head.
+
+The devil!
+
+Fields passed a sleepless night. He felt that he had been belittled to
+the extremest point, and that there was not a foothold left for his
+dignity. His soul was incised and chafed, and he lay awake thinking that
+degradation of himself and his office could have proceeded no further.
+
+Toward morning he hit upon a plan to establish himself in what he
+believed to be the proper light. "It will require nerve," reflected he,
+doubtingly, "and not only nerve in itself, but a certain exact quantity
+of it. Too much nerve would destroy me, and too little nerve would do
+the same thing. I think, however, that I can manage it. I feel able to
+do anything. Even a paying teller will turn if--" etc., etc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+III.
+
+On the following Monday there was a special meeting of the directors for
+the purpose of examining the books and accounts of the bank. The
+bank-controller was expected to call for an exhibit within the coming
+week, and it was desirable that the directors should feel assured that
+their institution was in the proper order. The call of the controller
+was always impending. It might come any day, and it would require an
+exhibit of the condition of the bank on any previous day. He was
+permitted to make five of these calls during the year, and, inasmuch as
+he was at liberty to choose his own days, his check upon the banks was
+complete. If he found a bank that had not fulfilled the requirements of
+law, he was obliged to take away its charter, and to close it: hence the
+examination-meeting in the present case. The accounts of the tellers
+were passed upon, the cashier's books were looked over, as were also
+those of the regular bookkeepers. There seemed to be no errors, and the
+contents of the safes were proved. There was perfect order in all the
+departments. The clerks were complimented. "Now," said Fields to
+himself, "is my opportunity."
+
+On the next day at ten o'clock the directors again assembled--this time
+for their regular labors--to examine the proposals for discount.
+
+The day happened to be cold and stormy. The twenty clerks were busily
+and silently at work behind their counters and gratings, and the
+fourteen directors were shut tight in their mahogany room. There was but
+little passing to and fro from the street, though now and then a
+half-frozen messenger came stamping in, and did his errand, with
+benumbed fingers, through the little windows. The tempest made business
+light.
+
+At eleven o'clock Fields wrote a note and sent it to the directors'
+room. The boy who carried it knocked softly, and the president appeared,
+took the letter, and then closed the door again.
+
+Then there was a moment of almost total silence; the clerks wrote, the
+leaves rattled, and it seemed as if it were an instant before an
+expected explosion.
+
+Presently an explosion came. The clerks heard with astonishment a tumult
+in the directors' room--exclamations, hurried questions, the hasty
+rolling of chairs on their casters, and then the sound of feet.
+
+The door was hastily drawn open, and those who were near could see that
+nearly all the directors were clustered around it, straining their eyes
+to look at the paying teller. Most of them were pale and they called,
+in one voice, "Come here!" "Come in here at once!" "Fields!" "Mr.
+Fields!" "Sir, you are wanted!" "Step this way instantly!" Fields put
+down his pen, opened the tall iron gate which separated him from the
+counters, and walked rather quickly toward the den of lions. An opening
+was made for him in the group, and he passed through the door, and it
+was shut once more.
+
+He walked across the room to the fireplace. He took out his
+handkerchief, and, seizing a corner between a thumb and forefinger,
+slowly shook it open, and then turned around.
+
+"This note, sir! What does it mean?" cried the president, advancing upon
+him, waving the paper in his trembling hand.
+
+"Have you read it?" demanded Fields, in a loud voice.
+
+"Yes," said the president. He was astonished at Fields's manner. He cast
+a glance upon his fellow-directors.
+
+"Then what is the use of asking me what I mean? It is as plain as I can
+make it."
+
+"But it says--but it says," faltered the venerable gentleman, turning
+the paper to the light, "that you have only money enough to last until
+twelve o'clock. Your statement yesterday showed a balance to your credit
+of three hundred and fifty-two thousand dollars. That will last at
+least--"
+
+"But I have not got three hundred and seventy-seven thousand dollars. I
+have only got twenty-seven thousand dollars!"
+
+"But we counted three hundred and seventy-seven thousand dollars."
+
+"When?"
+
+"Yesterday."
+
+"Yesterday--yes. But not this morning."
+
+"Great God!" cried Stuart, thrusting himself forward, "what!--" He fixed
+his feeble eyes upon Fields, but could speak no further. His arms fell
+down by his sides, and he began to tremble. He did not have sufficient
+courage to ask the question. Somebody else did.
+
+"What has become of it?"
+
+"That I shall not tell you!" returned Fields, looking defiantly at one
+director after another.
+
+"But is it gone?" cried the chorus. Many of the faces that confronted
+Fields had become waxen. The little group was permeated with a tremor.
+
+"Yes, it is gone; I have taken it."
+
+"You have _taken_ it!" "_You_ have taken it!" "_You have taken it!_"
+
+The directors, overwhelmed and confounded, retreated from Fields as if
+they were in personal danger from him.
+
+"In Heaven's name, Fields!" exclaimed the president, "speak out! Tell
+us! What!--where!--the money! Come, man!"
+
+"You had better lock the door," said the teller; "some one will be
+coming in."
+
+One of the most feeble and aged of the board turned around and
+hastened, as fast as his infirm limbs would permit him, and threw the
+bolt with feverish haste, and then ran back again to hear.
+
+"Yes," said Fields, with deliberation, "I have taken the money. I have
+carried it away and hidden it where no one can lay hands upon it but
+myself."
+
+"Then--then, sir, you have stolen it!"
+
+Fields bowed. "I have stolen it."
+
+"But you have ruined us!"
+
+"Possibly."
+
+"And you have ruined yourself!"
+
+"I am not so sure of that."
+
+"Stop this useless talk!" cried a gentleman, who had heretofore been
+silent. He bent upon Fields a look of great dignity. "Make it clear,
+sir, what you have done."
+
+"Certainly. When I left the bank last night I put into my pockets one
+hundred and fifty thousand dollars in greenbacks of the
+one-thousand-dollar denomination, one hundred thousand dollars in
+national-currency notes of the one-hundred-dollar denomination, and one
+hundred thousand dollars in gold certificates. I left to the credit of
+my account twenty-seven thousand eight hundred and sixty-two dollars and
+some odd cents. Eight thousand of these have been already drawn this
+morning. It is not unlikely that the whole of what is left may be drawn
+within the next five minutes, and the next draft upon you will find you
+insolvent. If the balance is against you at the clearing-house, you
+will undoubtedly be obliged to stop payment before one o'clock."
+
+Fields's interlocutor turned sharply around and sank into his seat. At
+this three of the young members of the board--Slavin, a wool-dealer,
+Debritt, a silk importer, and Saville, an insurance actuary--made a
+violent onslaught upon the teller, but others interposed.
+
+What was to be said? What was to be done? Somebody cried for a
+policeman, and would have thrown up a window and called into the street.
+But the act was prevented. It was denounced as childish. After a moment,
+everybody but Fields had seated himself in his accustomed place,
+overcome with agitation. Those who could see devoured the teller with
+their eyes. Two others wept with puerile fear and anger. They began to
+realize the plight they were in. It began to dawn upon them that an
+immense disaster was hanging over their heads. How were they to escape
+from it? Which way were they to turn to find relief? It was no time for
+brawling and denunciation; they were in the hands of an unscrupulous
+man, who, at this crucial moment, was as cool and implacable as an
+iceberg. They watched him carelessly draw and redraw his handkerchief
+through his fingers; he was unmoved, and entirely at ease.
+
+"Can it be possible!" said a tall and aged director, rising from his
+chair and bending upon the culprit a look of great impressiveness--"can
+it be possible that it is our upright and stainless clerk who confesses
+to such a stupendous villainy as this? Can it be that one who has earned
+so much true esteem from his fellow-men thus turns upon them and--"
+
+"Yes, yes, yes!" replied Fields, impatiently, "that is all true; but it
+is all sentiment. Let us descend to business. I know the extent of my
+wickedness better than you do. I have taken for my own use from your
+bank. I have robbed you of between a quarter and a half million of
+dollars. I am a pure robber. That is the worst you can say of me. The
+worst you can do with me is to throw me into prison for ten years. By
+the National Currency Act of 1865, section 55, you will see that for
+this offence against you I may be incarcerated from five to ten
+years--not more than ten. If you imprison me for ten years, you do your
+worst. During those ten years I shall have ample time to perfect myself
+in at least three languages, and to read extensively, and I shall leave
+the jail at forty-five a polished and learned man, in the prime of life,
+and possessed of enormous wealth. There will be no pleasure that I
+cannot purchase. I shall become a good-natured cynic; I shall freely
+admit that I have disturbed the ordinary relations of labor and
+compensation, but I shall so treat the matter that I shall become the
+subject of a semi-admiration that will relieve me from social ostracism.
+I have carefully reviewed the ground. I shall go to jail, pass through
+my trial, receive my sentence, put on my prisoner's suit, begin my
+daily tasks, and all with as much equanimity as I possess at present.
+There will be no contrition and no shame. Do not hope to recover a
+dollar of your money. I have been careful to secrete it so that the most
+ingenious detectives and the largest rewards will not be able to obtain
+a hint of its whereabouts. It is entirely beyond your reach."
+
+Fields was now an entire master of the situation. The board was filled
+with consternation; its members conferred together in frightened
+whispers.
+
+"But," pursued Fields, "do you properly understand _your_ situation? My
+desk is virtually without money. My assistant at this instant may
+discover that he has not sufficient funds to pay the check he has in his
+hand. In a moment more the street may be in possession of the facts.
+Besides the present danger, have you forgotten the controller?" Nothing
+more could now add to the alarm that filled the room.
+
+"What shall we do, Fields? We cannot go under; we cannot--"
+
+"I will tell you."
+
+The room became silent again. All leaned forward to listen. Some placed
+their hands behind their ears.
+
+"I do not think that the drafts upon us to-day will amount to eighty
+thousand dollars. You might draw that sum from the receiving teller, but
+that would occasion remark. I advise you to draw from your private
+accounts elsewhere one hundred thousand dollars, and quietly place it
+upon my counter. I would do it without an instant's delay."
+
+"But what guarantee have we that you will not appropriate that also?"
+
+"I give you my word," replied Fields, with a smile.
+
+"And to what end do you advise us to keep the bank intact?"
+
+"That we may have time to arrange terms."
+
+"Terms--for what?"
+
+"For a compromise."
+
+"Ah-ha!"
+
+Here was a patch of blue sky--a glimpse of the sun. Fields was not
+insensible to moderation, after all.
+
+"What do you propose?" eagerly demanded three voices.
+
+"I think you had first better insure yourselves against suspension," was
+the reply.
+
+In ten minutes one of the directors hurriedly departed, with five checks
+in his wallet. These were the contributions of his fellows. The
+president passed out to see how matters stood at the paying teller's
+desk. No more drafts had been presented, and the nineteen thousand
+dollars were still undisturbed. He returned reassured. He locked the
+door again.
+
+"Now, sir," said he to the paying teller, "let us go on."
+
+"Very well," was the reply. "I think you all perceive by this time the
+true position of affairs. I possess three hundred and fifty thousand
+dollars, and your bank has lost that sum. I have detailed the benefits
+which will accrue to me, and the trouble which will in all likelihood
+accrue to you. It will be unpleasant for you to throw your selves upon
+the mercies of your stockholders. Stockholders are hard-hearted people.
+Each one of you will, in case this matter is discovered, find his
+financial credit and his reputation for sagacity much impaired; and,
+besides this, there will be incurred the dangers of a 'run' upon you, to
+say nothing of the actual loss to the institution, which will have to be
+made good to the last dollar. But let us see if we cannot do better.
+Notwithstanding the fact that I have fully made up my mind to go to
+prison, I cannot deny that _not_ to go to prison would be an advantage.
+Therefore, if you will promise me immunity from prosecution, I will
+return to you to-morrow morning a quarter of a million dollars. I ask
+you to give me a reply within five minutes. The proposition is a bare
+one, and is sufficiently plain. I shall require your faith as directors
+and individuals, and in return I will give my pledge, as a robber of the
+highest grade--a bond which perhaps is as good as any that can be made
+under the circumstances."
+
+The directors no sooner saw that it lay within their power to regain
+five-sevenths of their money than they began, almost with one voice,
+threaten Fields with punishment if he did not return the whole.
+
+"Gentlemen," cried the paying teller, interrupting their exclamations,
+"I must impose one more condition. It is that you do not mention this
+affair again--that you keep the whole matter secret, and not permit it
+to be known beyond this apartment that I have had any other than the
+most agreeable relations with you. All that is imperative. There remain
+but two more minutes. The president will signify to me your decision."
+
+The time elapsed. Fields put his watch into his pocket.
+
+"Well, sir?" said he.
+
+"We accept the terms," replied the president, bowing stiffly.
+
+Fields also bowed. A silence ensued. Presently a director said to
+Fields:
+
+"May I ask you what led you to this step?"
+
+"Sir," replied the teller, with severity, "you are encroaching upon our
+contract. I may speak of this affair, but you have no right to."
+
+Then he turned to the board:
+
+"Do you wish me to go back to my work?"
+
+There was a consultation. Then the president said:
+
+"If you will be so kind."
+
+Fields complied.
+
+The business of the day went forward as usual. The teller's counter-desk
+was supplied with money, and no suspicion was aroused among his
+fellows.
+
+As each director went out of the bank, he stopped at Fields's window,
+and addressed some set remark to him upon business matters; and so
+intimate did the relations between them seem that the clerks concluded
+that the lucky man was about to be made cashier, and they began to pay
+him more respect.
+
+In the intervening night there again recurred to the directors the
+enormity of the outrage to which they had been subjected. The incident
+of recovering so large a part of what they had originally supposed was
+gone had the effect of making them partially unmindful of the loss of
+the smaller sum which the teller finally agreed to accept in place of
+punishment. But in the lapse between the time of the robbery and the
+time of the promised restitution, their appreciation of their position
+had time to revive again, and when they assembled on the next morning to
+receive the money from Fields, they were anxious and feverish.
+
+Would he come? Was he not at this moment in Canada? Would a man who
+could steal one hundred thousand dollars return a quarter of a million?
+Absurd!
+
+Every moment one of them went to the door to see if Fields had appeared.
+The rest walked about, with their hands behind them, talking together
+incoherently. The air was full of doubts. The teller usually came at a
+quarter past nine, but the hour arrived without the man. Intolerable
+suspense!
+
+Two or three of the directors made paths for themselves amid the chairs,
+and anxiously traversed them. Slavin took a post beside a window and
+gazed into the street. Debritt, with his right hand in his bosom, and
+with his left grasping the upper rail of a seat, looked fixedly into the
+coals. Stuart sipped at a goblet of water, but his trembling hand caused
+him to spill its contents upon the floor. No one now ventured to speak
+except in a whisper; it seemed that a word or a loud noise must disturb
+the poise of matters. The clock ticked, the blue flames murmured in the
+grate, and the pellets of sand thrown up by the wind rattled against the
+windows.
+
+But yet there were no signs of the paying teller.
+
+Was it possible that this immense sum of money was _gone?_ Could it be
+true that they must report this terrible thing to the world? Had they
+permitted themselves to become the lieutenants to a wily scoundrel? Were
+they thus waiting silent and inactive while he was being borne away at
+the speed of the wind, out of their reach?
+
+All at once Fields came in at the door.
+
+He was met with a gladness that was only too perceptible. Every
+gentleman emitted a sigh of relief, and half started, as if to take the
+delinquent by the hand.
+
+Fields had expected this. He was shrewd enough to act before the feeling
+had evaporated.
+
+He advanced to the table. The directors hastened like schoolboys to
+take their accustomed places. They bent upon the teller's face the most
+anxious looks.
+
+"Gentlemen," said he, "I believe that you fully understand that I return
+this large sum of money to you at my own option. You recognize the fact
+that most men would endure, for instance, an imprisonment of ten years
+rather than lose the control of a quarter of a million of dollars."
+
+The directors hastened to signify "Yes!"
+
+"But," continued Fields, taking several large envelopes from his inner
+pockets, "I shall be content with less. There is the sum I mentioned."
+
+The directors fell upon the packages and counted their contents. The
+table was strewed with money. Fields contemplated the scene with
+curiosity. Presently it was announced that the sum was complete.
+
+"Now, gentlemen," said Fields, "you have suffered loss. I have a hundred
+thousand dollars which I have forced you to present me with. That is a
+large sum, though to us who are so familiar with millions it seems
+small, almost insignificant; but, in reality, it has a great importance.
+You now see, my friends, what a part of your money-making mechanism may
+achieve. There is no bank, even of third-rate importance, in this city,
+whose receiving teller or paying teller may not do exactly as I have
+done. On any day, at any hour, they may load themselves with valuables
+and go away. You, and all directors, depend servilely upon the pure
+honesty of your clerks. You can erect no barrier, no guard, no defence,
+that will protect you from the results of decayed principle in them.
+They are deeply involved in dangerous elements. Ease, luxury, life-long
+immunity from toil, wait upon their resolution to do ill. This
+resolution may be the determination of an instant, or the result of
+long-continued sophistical reasoning. You cannot detect the approach to
+such a resolve in your servant, and he, perhaps, can hardly detect it in
+himself. But one day it is complete: he acts upon it. You are bereft of
+your property; he flees, and there is the nine days' stir, and all is
+over. Your greatest surety lies in your appreciation of your danger. I
+have proved to you what that danger consists of; you did not know
+before. Your best means of defence is to respect, to the fullest extent,
+the people upon whom you depend. They are worthy of it. An instant's
+reflection will show you that neither of you would be proof against a
+strong temptation. For the sake of recovering a sum of money you have
+compounded with felony. All of you are at this moment in breach of the
+law. You have submitted without a struggle to the dominant impulse. The
+principle of exact honor which you demand in me does not exist in
+yourselves. But let us end this disagreeable scene. Perhaps I have
+demonstrated something that you never realized. I hope you understand. I
+now surrender to you the one hundred thousand dollars, which you
+thought I had stolen. I had no intention of keeping it; I only pretended
+to take it in order to impress you with my ideas."
+
+Every director arose to his feet in haste. Fields placed another packet
+upon the table, and, in face of the astonished board, left the
+apartment.
+
+An hour afterward he was again summoned to the parlor. He advanced to
+his old position at the end of the table. It was clear that the temper
+of the assembly was favorable to him.
+
+"Mr. Fields," said the president, "your attack upon us was singular and
+rapid, and I think it has made the mark that you intended it should.
+Your mode of convincing us was, one might say, dramatic; and, though I
+believe you might have attained your object in another way, we
+acknowledge that your letter had but little effect. We now wish to
+provide for you as you claim, and as you deserve. But we cannot look
+upon you with quietude. It is almost impossible to see you without
+shuddering. We must place you elsewhere. If you remained here, you would
+always be in close proximity to a quarter of a million dollars."
+
+"But you believe in my integrity?"
+
+"Perfectly."
+
+"You understand my motives?"
+
+"Fully."
+
+"And you acknowledge them to be just?"
+
+"Unqualifiedly just."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"But you personify a terrible threat. You are an exponent of a great
+danger, and you could not ask us to live with one who showed that he
+held a sword above our heads. That would be impossible. We therefore
+offer you the position of actuary in the ---- Life. Mr. Stuart is about
+to resign it, and at our request he has consented to procure you the
+chair. Your salary will be thrice that you now receive. Do you accept?"
+
+"Without an instant's hesitation," replied Fields.
+
+He then shook hands with each director, and they separated excellent
+friends.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Fields winged his way to the farm in the country, and told the news.
+That is, he told the best of it. He told the actual news after hours,
+when there was but one to tell it to.
+
+There was a shriek.
+
+"Oh, if they _had_!"
+
+"Had what--Sun and Moon!"
+
+"Why, sent you to prison."
+
+"Well, we should have had to wait ten years, that's all. After that, we
+should have been worth, with interest added to the capital, five hundred
+and sixty thousand dollars."
+
+"Sir! Can you suppose that I would ever marry a robber, a wretched
+robber?"
+
+"Never! But it is different where one robs for the sake of principle."
+
+"Y--yes, that is true; I forgot that. I think that principle is a great
+thing. Don't you?"
+
+"Exceedingly great."
+
+In the spring the face-walls and the lawns and the kiosks went forward
+according to the original design, and the actuary frequently brought his
+city friends, directors and all, down to look at them.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Stories by American Authors, Volume 1, by Various
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