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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Loveliness, by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps,
+Illustrated by Sarah S. Stilwell
+
+
+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: Loveliness
+ A Story
+
+
+Author: Elizabeth Stuart Phelps
+
+
+
+Release Date: April 25, 2011 [eBook #35966]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOVELINESS***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Kerry Tani, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 35966-h.htm or 35966-h.zip:
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/35966/35966-h/35966-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/35966/35966-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: LOVELINESS]
+
+
+LOVELINESS
+
+A Story
+
+by
+
+ELIZABETH STUART PHELPS
+
+
+
+ "Be my benediction said,
+ With my hand upon thy head,
+ Gentle fellow-creature!"
+ E. B. BROWNING.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Boston and New York
+Houghton, Mifflin and Company
+The Riverside Press, Cambridge
+1900
+
+The Illustrations Are by Sarah S. Stilwell
+
+Copyright, 1899, by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward
+and Houghton, Mifflin and Co.
+All Rights Reserved
+
+
+
+
+_For the smoke of their torment ascendeth._
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ PAGE
+
+ LOVELINESS _Frontispiece_
+
+ THE MAID STOOD LOOKING IDLY ABOUT 14
+
+ "TILL LOVELINESS COMES HOME" 20
+
+ THROUGH THE BENDING SHRUBBERY 40
+
+
+
+
+LOVELINESS.
+
+
+Loveliness sat on an eider-down cushion embroidered with cherry-colored
+puppies on a pearl satin cover. The puppies had gold eyes. They were
+drinking a saucer of green milk. Loveliness wore a new necktie, of
+cherry, a shade or two brighter than the puppies, and a pearl-gray, or
+one might call it a silver-gray jacket. He was sitting in the broad
+window sill, with his head tipped a little, thoughtfully, towards the
+left side, as the heads of nervous people are said to incline. He was
+dreamily watching the street, looking for any one of a few friends of
+his who might pass by, and for the letter-carrier, who was somewhat
+late.
+
+Loveliness had dark, brilliant eyes, remarkably alert, but reflective
+when in repose. Part of their charm lay in the fact that one must watch
+for their best expression; for Loveliness wore bangs. He had a small and
+delicate nose, not guiltless of an aristocratic tip, with a suspicion of
+a sniff at the inferior orders of society. In truth, Loveliness was an
+aristocrat to the end of his tongue, which curled daintily against his
+opalescent teeth. At this moment it lay between his teeth, and hung
+forward as if he held a roseleaf in his lips; and this was the final
+evidence of his birth and breeding.
+
+For Loveliness was a little dog; a silver Yorkshire, blue of blood and
+delicately reared,--a tiny creature, the essence of tenderness; set,
+soul and body, to one only tune. To love and to be beloved,--that was
+his life. He knew no other, nor up to this time could he conceive of any
+other; for he was as devotedly beloved as he was passionately loving.
+His brain was in his heart. In saying this one does not question the
+quality of the brain, any more than one does in saying a similar thing
+of a woman. Indeed, considered as an intellect, his was of the highest
+order known to his race. Loveliness would have been interesting as a
+psychological study, had he not been absorbing as an affectional
+occupation. His family and friends often said, "How clever!" but not
+until after they had said, "How dear he is!" The order of precedence in
+this summary of character is the most enviable that can be experienced
+by human beings. But the dog took it as a matter of course.
+
+This little creature loved a number of people on a sliding scale of
+intimacy, carefully guarded, as the intimacies of the high-born usually
+are; but one he loved first, most, best of all, and profoundly. I have
+called him Loveliness because it was the pet name, the "little name,"
+given to him by this person. In point of fact, he answered to a variety
+of appellations, more or less recognized by society; of these the most
+lawful and the least agreeable to himself was Mop. It was a disputed
+point whether this were an ancestral name, or whether he had received it
+from the dog store, whence he had emerged at the beginning of
+history,--the shaggiest, scrubbiest, raggedest, wildest little terrier
+that ever boasted of a high descent.
+
+People of a low type, those whose imagination was bounded by menial
+similes, or persons of that too ready inclination to the humorous which
+fails to consider the possible injustice or unkindness that it may
+involve, had in Mop's infancy found a base pleasure in attaching to him
+such epithets as window-washer, scrubbing-brush, feather-duster, and
+footmuff. But these had not adhered. Loveliness had. It bade fair, at
+the time of our story, to outlive every other name.
+
+The little dog had both friends and acquaintances on the street where
+the professor lived; and he watched for them from his cushion in the
+window, hours at a time. There was the cabman, the academic-looking
+cabman, who was the favorite of the faculty, and who hurrahed and
+snapped his whip at the Yorkshire as he passed by; there was the newsboy
+who brought the Sunday papers, and who whistled at Loveliness, and made
+faces, and called him Mop.
+
+To-day there was a dark-faced man, a stranger, standing across the
+street, and regarding the professor's house with the unpleasant look of
+the foreign and ill-natured. This man had eyebrows that met in a
+straight, black line upon his forehead, and he wore a yellow jersey. The
+dog threw back his supercilious little head and barked at the yellow
+jersey severely. But at that moment he saw the carrier, who ran up the
+steps laughing, and brought a gumdrop in a sealed envelope addressed to
+Loveliness. There was a large mail that afternoon, including a pile of
+pamphlets and circulars of the varied description that haunts
+professors' houses. Kathleen, the parlor maid,--another particular
+friend of the terrier's--took the mail up to the study, but dropped one
+of the pamphlets on the stairs. The dog rebuked her carelessness (after
+he had given his attention to the carrier's gumdrop) by picking the
+pamphlet up and bringing it back to the window seat, where he opened
+and dog-eared it with a literary manner for a while, until suddenly
+he forgot it altogether, and dropped it on the floor, and sprang,
+bounding. For the dearest person in the world had called him in a
+whisper,--"Love-li-ness!" And the dearest face in the world appeared
+above him and melted into laughing tenderness. "Loveliness! Where's my
+_Love_-li-ness?"
+
+A little girl had come into the room, a girl of between five and six
+years, but so small that one would scarcely have guessed her to be
+four,--a beautiful child, but transparent of coloring, and bearing in
+her delicate face the pathetic patience which only sick children, of all
+human creatures, ever show. She was exquisitely formed, but one little
+foot halted and stepped weakly on the thick carpet. Her organs of speech
+were perfect in mechanism, but often she did not speak quite aloud.
+Sometimes, on her weaker days, she carried a small crutch. They called
+her Adah.
+
+She came in without her crutch that afternoon; she was feeling quite
+strong and happy. The little dog sprang to her heart, and she crooned
+over him, sitting beside him on the window seat and whispering in her
+plaintive voice: "Love-li-ness! I can't live wivout you anover _min_ute,
+Loveliness! I can't _live_ wivout you!"
+
+She put her head down on the pearl-gray satin pillow with the cherry
+puppies, and the dog put his face beside hers. He was kept as sweet and
+clean as his little mistress, and he had no playfellow except herself,
+and never went away from home unless at the end of a gray satin ribbon
+leash. At all events, the two _would_ occupy the same pillow, and all
+idle effort to struggle with this fact had ceased in the household.
+Loveliness sighed one of the long sighs of perfect content recognized by
+all owners and lovers of dogs as one of the happiest sounds in this sad
+world, and laid his cheek to hers quietly. He asked nothing more of
+life. He had forgotten the world and all that was therein. He looked no
+longer for the cabman, the newsboy, or the carrier, and the man with the
+eyebrows had gone away. The universe did not exist; he and she were
+together. Heaven had happened. The dog glanced through half-closed,
+blissful eyes at the yellow hair--"eighteen carats fine"--that fell
+against his silver bangs. His short ecstatic breath mingled with the
+gentle breathing of the child. She talked to him in broken rhapsodies. She
+called him quaint, pet names of her own,--"Dearness" and "Daintiness,"
+"Mopsiness" and "Preciousness," and "Dearest-in-the-World," and who knew
+what besides? Only the angels who are admitted to the souls of children
+and the hearts of little dogs could have understood that interview.
+
+No member of the professor's household ever interfered with the
+attachment between the child and the dog, which was set apart as one of
+the higher facts in the family life. Indeed, it had its own page of
+sacred history, which read on this wise:--
+
+When Adah was a walking baby, two and a half years before the time of
+which we tell, the terrier was in the first proud flush of enthusiasm
+which an intelligent dog feels in the mastery of little feats and
+tricks. Of these he had a varied and interesting repertoire. His
+vocabulary, too, was large. At the date of our story it had reached one
+hundred and thirty words. It was juvenile and more limited at the time
+when the sacred page was written, but still beyond the average canine
+proficiency. Loveliness had always shown a genius for the English
+language. He could not speak it, but he tried harder than any other dog
+I ever knew to do so; and he grew to understand with ease an incredibly
+large part of the usual conversation of the family. It could never be
+proved that he followed--or did not follow--the professor of psychology
+in a discussion on the Critique of Pure Reason; but his mental grasp of
+ordinary topics was alert and logical. He sneezed when he was cold and
+wanted a window shut, and barked twice when his delicate china water-cup
+was empty. When the fire department rang by, or a stove in the house was
+left on draught too long, and he wished to call attention to the
+circumstance, he barked four times. Besides the commonplace
+accomplishments of turning somersaults, being a dead dog, sitting up to
+beg for things, and shaking hands, Loveliness had some attainments
+peculiar to himself.
+
+One of these was in itself scientifically interesting. This luxurious,
+daintily fed little creature, who had never known an hour's want nor any
+deprivation that he could remember, led by the blind instinct of
+starving, savage ancestors skulking in forests where the claw and tooth
+of every living thing were against every other, conscientiously sought
+to bury, against future exigencies, any kind of food for which he had no
+appetite. The remnants of his dog biscuit, his saucer of weak tea, an
+unpalatable dinner, alike received the treatment given to the bare bone
+of his forefathers when it was driven into the ground.
+
+Anything served the purpose of the earth,--the rough, wild earth of
+whose real nature the house pet knew so little. A newspaper, a glove, a
+handkerchief, a sheet of the professor's manuscript, a hearth brush, or
+a rug would answer. Drag these laboriously, and push them perseveringly
+to their places! Cover the saucer or the plate from sight with a solemn
+persistence that the starving, howling ancestor would have respected!
+Thus Loveliness recognized the laws of heredity. But the corners of rugs
+were, and remained, the favorite burying sod.
+
+On that black day when the baby girl had used her white apron by way of
+blowers before the reluctant nursery fire, the little dog was alone in
+the room with her. It had so happened.
+
+Suddenly, through the busy house resounded four shrill, staccato barks.
+In the vocabulary of Loveliness this meant, "Fire! Fire! Fire! Fire!"
+Borne with them came the terrible cries of the child. When the mother
+and the nursemaid got to the spot, the baby was ablaze from her white
+apron to her yellow hair. She was writhing on the floor. The terrier,
+his own silver locks scorching, and his paws in the flame, was trying to
+cover his young mistress with the big Persian rug, in itself a load for
+a collie. He had so far succeeded that the progress of the flames had
+been checked.
+
+For years the professor speculated on the problems raised by this
+tremendous incident. Whether the Yorkshire regarded the fire as a
+superfluity, like a dinner one does not want,--but that was far-fetched.
+Whether he knew that wool puts out fire,--but that was incredible.
+Whether this, that, or the other, no man could say, or ever has. Perhaps
+the intellect of the dog, roused to its utmost by the demand upon his
+heart, blindly leaped to its most difficult exertion. It was always hard
+to cover things with rugs. In this extremity one must do the hardest. Or
+did sheer love teach him to choose, in a moment that might have made a
+fool or a lunatic of a man, the only one or two of several processes
+which could by any means reach the emergency?
+
+At all events, the dog saved the child. And she became henceforth the
+saint and idol of the family, and he its totem and its hero. The two
+stood together in one niche above the household altar. It was impossible
+to separate them. But after that terrible hour little Adah was as she
+was: frail, uncertain of step, scarred on the pearl of her neck and the
+rose of her cheek; not with full command of her voice; more nervously
+deficient than organically defective,--but a perfect being marred. Her
+father said, "She goeth lame and lovely."
+
+On the afternoon when our story began, the child and the Yorkshire sat
+cuddled together in the broad window seat for a long time. Blessedness
+sat with them. Adah talked in low love tones, using a language as
+incomprehensible to other people as the tongue in which the dog replied
+to her. They carried on long conversations, broken only by caresses, and
+by barks of bliss or jets of laughter. The child tired herself with
+laughing and loving, and the dog watched her; he did not sleep; he
+silently lapped the fingers of her little hand that lay like a cameo
+upon the silken cushion.
+
+Some one came in and said in a low voice: "She is tired out. She must
+have her supper and be put to bed."
+
+Afterwards it was remembered that she clung to Loveliness and cried a
+little, foolishly; fretting that she did not want her supper, and
+demanding that the dog should go up to bed with her and be put at once
+into his basket by her side. This was gently refused.
+
+"You shall see him in the morning," they told her. Kathleen put the
+little dog down forcibly from the arms of the child, who wailed at the
+separation. She called back over the balusters: "_Love_-li-ness!
+Good-by, Loveliness! When we're grown up, we'll _al_ways be togever,
+Loveliness!"
+
+The dog barked rebelliously for a few minutes; then sighed, and accepted
+the situation. He ran back and picked up the pamphlet which Kathleen had
+dropped, and carried it upstairs to the professor's study, where he laid
+it on the lowest shelf of the revolving bookcase. The professor glanced
+at the dog-eared pages and smiled. The pamphlet was one of the
+innumerable throng issued by some philanthropic society devoted to
+improving the condition of animals.
+
+When Kathleen came downstairs she found the dog standing at the front
+door, patiently asking that it might be opened for him. She went down
+the steps; for it was the rule of the house never to allow the most
+helpless member of the family at liberty unguarded. The evening was
+soft, and the maid stood looking idly about. A man in a yellow jersey,
+and with straight, black eyebrows, was on the other side of the street;
+but he did not look over. The suburban town was still and pleasant;
+advancing spring was in the air; no one was passing; only a negro boy
+lolled on the old-fashioned fence, and shouted: "Hi! Yi! Yi! Look a' dem
+crows carryin' off a b'iled pertater 'n' a piecer squushed pie!"
+
+[Illustration: THE MAID STOOD LOOKING IDLY ABOUT]
+
+Kathleen, for very vacuity of mind, turned to look. Neither potatoes nor
+squash pie were to be seen careering through the skies; nor, in fact,
+were there any crows.
+
+"I'll have yez arrested for sarse and slander!" cried Kathleen
+vigorously.
+
+But the negro boy had disappeared. So had the man in the yellow jersey.
+
+"Where's me dog?" muttered Kathleen. It was dipping dusk; it was
+deepening to dark. She called. Loveliness was an obedient little fellow
+always; but he did not reply. The maid called again; she examined the
+front yard and the premises,--slowly, for she was afraid to go in and
+tell. With the imbecility of the timid and the erring, she took too much
+time in a fruitless and unintelligent search before she went, trembling,
+into the house. Kathleen felt that this was the greatest emergency that
+had occurred since the baby was burned. She went straight to the
+master's door.
+
+"God have mercy on me, but I've lost the little dog, sir!"
+
+The professor wheeled around in his study chair.
+
+"There was a nigger and a squashed crow--but indeed I never left the
+little dog, as you bid me, sir--I never left him for the space of me
+breath between me lips--and when I draws it in the little dog warn't
+nowhere.... Oh, whatever'll _she_ say? Whatever'll _she_ do? Mother of
+God, forgive me soul! Who'll tell _her_?"
+
+Who indeed?
+
+The professor of psychology turned as pale as the paper on which he was
+about to write his next famous and inexplicable lecture. He pushed by
+Kathleen and sprang for his hat.
+
+But the child's mother had already run out, bareheaded, into the street,
+calling the dog as she ran. Nora, the cook, left the dinner to burn, and
+followed. Kathleen softly shut the nursery door, "So _she_ won't hear,"
+and, sobbing, crept downstairs. The family gathered as if under the
+black wing of an unspeakable tragedy. They scoured the premises and the
+street, while the professor rang in the police call. But Loveliness was
+not to be found.
+
+The carrier came by, on his way home after his day's work was over.
+
+"Great Scott!" he cried. "I'd rather have lost a month's pay. Does _she_
+know?"
+
+The newsboy trotted up, and stopped whistling.
+
+"Hully gee!" he said. "What'll the little _gell_ dew?"
+
+The popular cabman came by; he was driving the president, who let down
+the window and asked what had happened. The driver uttered a mild and
+academic oath.
+
+"Me 'n' my horse, we're at your disposal as soon as me and the president
+have got to faculty meeting."
+
+But the president of the University of St. George put his long legs out
+of the carriage, and bowed the professor into it.
+
+"The cab is at your service now," he said anxiously, "and so am I. They
+can get along without us for a while, to-night. Anything that I can do
+to help you, Professor Premice, in this--real calamity--How does the
+child bear it?"
+
+"Poor little kid!" muttered the cabman. "And to think how I used to snap
+my whip at 'em in the window!"
+
+"An' how I used to bring him candy, contrary to the postal laws!" sighed
+the carrier. The cab driver and the postman spoke as if the dog and the
+child were both already dead.
+
+The group broke slowly and sadly at last. The mother and the maids crept
+tearfully into the house. The professor, the carrier, the newsboy, and
+the president threw themselves into the matter as if they had been
+hunting for a lost child. The president deferred his engagement at the
+faculty meeting for two hours,--which gave about time for a faculty
+meeting to get under way. The professor and the cab driver and the
+police ransacked the town till nearly dawn. It began to rain, and the
+night grew chilly. The carrier went home, looking like a man in the
+shade of a public calamity. The newsboy ran around in the storm,
+shadowing all the negro boys he met, and whistling for Loveliness in
+dark places where low-bred curs answered him, and yellow mongrels
+snarled at his soaked heels. But the professor had the worst of it; for
+when he came in, drenched and tired, in the early morning, a little
+figure in a lace-trimmed nightgown stood at the head of the stairs,
+waiting for him.
+
+The professor gave one glance at the child's face, and instinctively
+covered his own. He could not bear to look at her.
+
+"Papa," said Adah, limping down the stairs, "where is Loveliness? I
+can't find him! Oh, I _can_not find him! And nobody will tell me where
+he's gone to. Papa? I arxpect _you_ to tell me 'e trufe. WHERE is my
+Loveliness?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Her mother could not comfort or control her. She clung to her father's
+heart the remainder of the night; moaning at intervals, then unnaturally
+and piteously still. The rain dashed on the windows, for the storm
+increased; the child shrank and shivered.
+
+"He's _never_ been out in 'e rain, Papa! He will be wet--and frightened.
+Papa, who will give him his little baxet, and cover him up warm? Papa!
+Papa! who will be _kind_ to Loveliness?"
+
+In the broad daylight Adah fell into a short sleep. She woke with a
+start and a cry, and asked for the dog. "He'll come home to breakfust,"
+she said, with quivering lip. "Tell Nora to have some sugar on his mush
+when he comes home."
+
+But Loveliness did not come home to breakfast. The child refused to eat
+her own. She hurried down and crept to the broad window seat, to watch
+the street. When she saw the empty gray satin cushion, she flung herself
+face down with a heart-rending cry.
+
+"Papa! Papa! Papa! I never had a 'fliction before. Oh, Papa, my heart
+will break itself apart. Papa, can't you know enough to comfort you
+little girl? I can't _live_ wivout my Loveliness. Oh, Papa! Papa!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This was in the decline of March. The winds went down, and the rains
+came on. The snow slid from the streets of the university town, and
+withdrew into dingy patches about the roots of trees and fences, and in
+the shady sides of cold back yards. The mud yawned ankle-deep, and
+dried, and was not, and was dust beneath the foot. Crocuses blazed in
+the gardens of the faculty,--royal purple, gold, and wax-white lamps
+set in the young and vivid grass. The sun let down his mask and looked
+abroad, and it was April. The newsboy, the carrier and the cab-driver
+laughed for very joy of living. But when they passed the professor's
+house they did not laugh. It came on to be the heart and glory of the
+spring, and the warm days melted into May. But the little dog had not
+been found.
+
+The professor had exhausted hope and ingenuity in the dreary quest. The
+State, one might say without exaggeration, had been dragged for that
+tiny dumb thing,--seven pounds' weight of life and tenderness. Money had
+been poured like love upon the vain endeavor. Rewards of reckless
+proportion appealed from public places and from public columns to the
+blank eyes that could not or did not read. The great detective force,
+whose name is familiar from sea to sea, had supplemented the useless
+search of the local police and of the city press. And all had equally
+failed. The "dog banditti" had done their work too well.
+
+Loveliness had sunk out of sight like forgotten suffering in a scene of
+joy.
+
+In the window seat, propped with white pillows, "lame and lovely," Adah
+sat. The empty embroidered gray cushion lay beside her. Sometimes she
+patted the red puppies softly with one thin little hand; she allowed no
+one else to touch the cushion.
+
+"Till Loveliness comes home," she said. In the window, silent, pale, and
+seeing everything, she watched. But Loveliness did not come home.
+
+[Illustration: "TILL LOVELINESS COMES HOME"]
+
+The pitiful thing was that the child herself was so changed. She had
+wasted to a little wraith. For some time she had not walked without her
+crutch. Now she scarcely walked at all. At the first she had sobbed a
+good deal, in downright childish fashion; then she wept silently; but
+now she did not cry any more,--she did but watch. Her sight had grown
+unnaturally keen, like that of pilots; she gazed out of great eyes,
+bright, and dry, and solemn. Already she had taken on the look of
+children whose span of time is to be short. She weakened visibly.
+
+At first, her father took her out with him in the cab, so she should
+feel that she was conducting the search herself. But she had grown too
+feeble for this exertion. Sometimes, on such drives, she saw cruel
+sights,--animals suffering at the black tempers of men or the
+diabolic jests of boys; and she was hurried home, shivering and sobbing.
+When night came she would ask for the Yorkshire's bed to be put beside
+her own, and with trembling fingers would draw up the crimson blankets
+over the crimson mattress, as if the dog had been between them. Then she
+would ask the question that haunted her most:--
+
+"Mamma, who will put Loveliness into a little baxet to sleep, and cover
+him up? Papa, Papa, will they be _kind_ to Loveliness?"
+
+Stormy nights and days were always the hardest.
+
+"Will Loveliness be out and get wet? Will he shiver like 'e black dog I
+saw to-day? Will he have warm milk for his supper? Is there anybody to
+rub him dry and cuddle my Loveliness?"
+
+To divert the child from her grief proved impossible. They took her
+somewhere, in the old, idle effort to change the place and help the
+pain; but she mourned so, "because he might come home, and nobody see
+him but me," that they brought her back.
+
+The president of the university, who was a dogless and childless man,
+presented the bereaved household with a mongrel white puppy, purchased
+under the amiable impression that it was of a rare, Parisian breed. The
+distinguished man cherished the ignorant hope of bestowing consolation.
+But the invalid child, with the sensitiveness of invalid children,
+refused to look at the puppy, who was returned to his donor, and
+constituted himself henceforth the tyrant and terror of that scholastic
+household.
+
+As the weather grew warmer, little Adah failed and sank. It came on to
+be the bloom of the year, and she no longer left the house.
+
+The carrier and the cab driver lifted their hats in silence now, when
+they passed the window where the little girl sat, and the newsboy looked
+up with a sober face, like that of a man. The faculty and the neighbors
+did not ask, "How is the child?" but always, "Have you heard from the
+dog?" The doctor began to call daily. He did not shake his head,--no
+doctor does outside of an old-fashioned story,--and he smiled cheerfully
+enough inside the house; but when he came out of it, to his carriage, he
+did not smile. So the spring mellowed, and it was the first of June.
+
+One night, the poor professor sat trying to put into shape an impossible
+thesis on an incomprehensible subject (it was called The Identity of
+Identity and Non-Identity), for Commencement delivery in his department.
+Pulling aside some books of reference that he needed, he dragged to view
+a pamphlet from the lowest shelf of the revolving bookcase. Then he saw
+the marks of the Yorkshire's teeth and claws on the pamphlet corners,
+and, sadly smiling, he opened and read.
+
+The Commencement thesis on The Identity of Identity and Non-Identity was
+not corrected that night. The professor of psychology sat moulded into
+his study chair, rigid, with iron lips and clenched hands, and read the
+pamphlet through, every word, from beginning to end. For the first time
+in his life, this eminent man, wise in the wisdom of the world of mind,
+and half educated in the practical affairs of the world of matter,
+studied for himself the authenticated records of the torments imposed
+upon dumb animals in the name of science.
+
+As an instructed man, of course this subject was not wholly unfamiliar
+to him, but it was wholly foreign. Hitherto he had given it polite and
+indifferent attention, and had gone his ways. Now he read like a man
+himself bound, without anęsthesia, beneath the knife. Now he read for
+the child's sake, with the child's mind, with the child's nerves, and
+with those of the little helpless thing for whom her life was wasting.
+He tore from his shelves every volume, every pamphlet that he owned upon
+the direful subject which that June night opened to his consciousness;
+and he read until the birds sang.
+
+With brain on fire, he crept, in the brightness of coming day, to his
+wife's side.
+
+"Tired out, dear?" she asked gently. Then he saw that she too had not
+slept.
+
+"Adah has such dreams," she explained; "cruel things,--all the same
+kind."
+
+"About the dog?"
+
+"Always about the dog. I have been sitting up with her. She is--not as
+strong as--not quite"--
+
+The professor set his teeth when he heard the mother's moan. When she
+had sunk into broken rest he stole back to his study, and locked out of
+sight the pamphlet which Loveliness had chewed. So, with the profound
+and scientific treatises on the subject, arguing and illustrating this
+way and that (some of these had cuts and photogravures which would haunt
+the imagination for years), he crowded the whole out of reach. His own
+brain was reeling with horrors which it would have driven the woman or
+the child mad to read. Scenes too ghastly for a strong mind to dwell
+upon, incidents too fearful for a weak one to conceive, flitted before
+the sleepless father.
+
+Now the professor began to do strange and secretive things. Unknown to
+his wife, unsuspected by his fading child, he began to cause the
+laboratories of the city and its environs to be searched. In the
+process, curious trades developed themselves to his astonished
+ignorance: the tricks of boys who supply the material of anguish; the
+trade of the janitor who sells it to the demonstrator; the trade of the
+brute who allures his superior, the dog, to the lairs of medical
+students. Dark arts started to the foreground, like imps around
+Mephistopheles concealed. From such repellent education the professor
+came home and took his little girl into his arms, and did not speak, but
+laid his cheek to hers, and heard the piteous, familiar question, "Papa,
+did you promise me they'd be kind to Loveliness?" It was always a
+whispered question now; for Adah had entirely lost command of her voice,
+partly from weakness, partly from the old injury to the vocal organs;
+and this seemed, somehow, to make it the harder to answer her.
+
+So there fell a day when the child in the window, propped by more than
+the usual pillows, sat watching longer than usual, or more sadly, or
+more eagerly,--who can say what it was? Or did she look so much more
+translucent, more pathetic, than on another day? She leaned her cheek on
+one little wasted hand. Her great eyes commanded the street. She had her
+pilot's look. Now and then, if a little dog passed, and if he were gray,
+she started and leaned forward, then sank back faintly. The sight of her
+would have touched a savage; and one beheld it.
+
+A man in a yellow jersey passed by upon the other side of the street,
+and glanced over. His straight, black brows contracted, and he looked at
+the child steadily. As he walked on, it might have been noticed that his
+brutal head hung to his breast. But he passed, and that cultivated
+street was clean of him. The carrier met him around the corner, and
+glanced at him with coldness.
+
+"What's de matter of de kid yonder, in de winder?" asked the foreigner.
+
+"Dyin'," said the carrier shortly.
+
+"Looks she had--what you call him?--gallopin' consum'tion," observed the
+man with the eyebrows.
+
+"Gallopin' heartbreak," replied the carrier, pushing by. "There's a
+devil layin' round loose outside of hell that stole her dog,--and she a
+little sickly thing to start with, ---- him! There's fifty men in this
+town would lynch him inside of ten minutes, if they got a clue to him,
+---- him to ----!"
+
+That afternoon, when the professor left the house, the newsboy ran up
+eagerly. "There's a little nigger wants yez, perfesser, downstreet. He's
+in wid the dog robbers, that nigger is. Jes' you arsk him when he see
+Mop las' time. Take him by the scruff the neck, an' wallop like hell
+till he tells. Be spry, now, perfesser!"
+
+The professor hurried down the street, fully prepared to obey these
+directions, and found the negro boy, as he had been told.
+
+"Come along furder," said the boy, looking around uneasily. He spoke a
+few words in a hoarse whisper.
+
+The blood leaped to the professor's wan cheeks, and back again.
+
+"I'll show ye for a V," suggested the boy cunningly. "But I won't take
+no noter hand. Make it cash, an' I'll show yer. Ye ain't no time to be
+foolin'," added the gamin. "It's sot for termorrer 'leven o'clock. He's
+down for the biggest show of the term, _he_ is. The students is all
+gwineter go, an' the doctors along of 'em."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+His own university! His own university! The professor repeated the three
+words, as he dashed into the city with the academic cabman's fastest
+horse. For weeks his detectives had watched every laboratory within
+fifty miles. But--his own college! With the density which sometimes
+submerges a superior intellect, it had never occurred to him that he
+might find his own dog in the medical school of his own institution.
+Stupidly he sat gazing at the back of the gamin who slunk beside the
+aversion of the driver on the box. The professor seemed to himself to be
+driving through the terms of a false syllogism.
+
+The cabman drew up in a filthy and savage neighborhood, in whose grim
+purlieus the St. George professors did not take their walks abroad. The
+negro boy tumbled off the box.
+
+The professor sat, trembling like a woman. The boy went into the
+tenement, whistling. When he came out he did not whistle. His evil
+little face had fallen. His arms were empty.
+
+"The critter's dum gone," he said.
+
+"_Gone?_"
+
+"He's dum goneter de college. Dey'se tuk him, sah. Dum dog to go so
+yairly."
+
+The countenance of the professor blazed with the mingling fires of
+horror and of hope. The excited driver lashed the St. George horse to
+foam; in six minutes the cab drew up at the medical school. The
+passenger ran up the walk like a boy, and dashed into the building. He
+had never entered it before. He was obliged to inquire his way, like a
+rustic on a first trip to town. After some delay and difficulty he found
+the janitor, and, with the assurance of position, stated his case.
+
+But the janitor smiled.
+
+"I will go now--at once--and remove the dog," announced the professor.
+"In which direction is it? My little girl--There is no time to lose.
+Which door did you say?"
+
+But now the janitor did not smile. "Excuse me, sir," he said frigidly,
+"I have no orders to admit strangers." He backed up against a closed
+door, and stood there stolidly. The professor, burning with human rage,
+leaned over and shook the door. It was locked.
+
+"Man of darkness!" cried the professor. "You who perpetrate"--Then he
+collected himself. "Pardon me," he said, with his natural dignity; "I
+forget that you obey the orders of your chiefs, and that you do not
+recognize me. I am not accustomed to be refused admittance to the
+departments of my own university. I am Professor Premice, of the Chair
+of Mental Philosophy,--Professor Theophrastus Premice." He felt for his
+cards, but he had used the last one in his wallet.
+
+"You might be, and you mightn't," replied the janitor grimly. "I never
+heard tell of you that I know of. My orders are not to admit, and I do
+not admit."
+
+"You are unlawfully detaining and torturing my dog!" gasped the
+professor. "I demand my property at once!"
+
+"We have such a lot of these cases," answered the janitor wearily. "We
+hain't got your dog. We don't take gentlemen's dogs, nor ladies' pets.
+And we always etherize. We operate very tenderly. You hain't produced
+any evidence or authority, and I can't let you in without."
+
+"Be so good," urged the professor, restraining himself by a violent
+effort, "as to bear my name to some of the faculty. Say that I am
+without, and wish to see one of my colleagues on an urgent matter."
+
+"None of 'em's in just now but the assistant demonstrator," retorted the
+janitor, without budging. "_He_'s experimenting on a--well, he's engaged
+in a very pretty operation just now, and cannot be disturbed. No, sir.
+You had better not touch the door. I tell you, I do not admit nor
+permit. Stand back, sir!"
+
+The professor stood back. He might have entered the lecture room by
+other doors, but he did not know it; and they were not visible from the
+spot where he stood. He had happened on the laboratory door, and that
+refused him. He staggered out to his cab, and sank down weakly.
+
+"Drive me to my lawyer!" he cried. "Do not lose a moment--if you love
+her!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was eleven o'clock of the following morning; a dreamy June day,
+afloat with color, scent, and warmth, as gentle as the depths of
+tenderness in the human heart, and as vigorous as its noblest
+aspirations.
+
+The students of the famous medical school of the University of St.
+George were crowding up the flagged walk and the old granite steps of
+the college; the lecture room was filling; the students chatted and
+joked profusely, as medical students do, on occasions least productive
+of amusement to the non-professional observer. There chanced to be some
+sprays of lily of the valley in a tumbler set upon the window sill of
+the adjoining physiological laboratory, and the flower seemed to stare
+at something which it saw within the room. Now and then, through the
+door connecting with the lecture room, a faint sound penetrated the
+laughter and conversation of the students,--a sound to hear and never to
+forget while remembrance rang through the brain, but not to tell of.
+
+The room filled; the demonstrator appeared suddenly, in his fresh, white
+blouse; the students began to grow quiet. Some one had already locked
+the door leading from the laboratory to the hallway. The lily in the
+window looked, and seemed, in the low June wind, to turn its face away.
+
+"Gentlemen," began the operator, "we have before us to-day a
+demonstration of unusual beauty and interest. It is our intention to
+study"--here he minutely described the nature of the operation. "There
+will be also some collateral demonstrations of more than ordinary value.
+The material has been carefully selected. It is young and healthy,"
+observed the surgeon. "We have not put the subject under the usual
+anęsthesia,"--he motioned to his assistant, who at this point went into
+the laboratory,--"because of the importance of some preliminary
+experiments which were instituted yesterday, and to the perfection of
+which consciousness is conditional. Gentlemen, you see before you"--
+
+The assistant entered through the laboratory door at this moment,
+bearing something which he held straight out before him. The students,
+on tiered and curving benches, looked down from their amphitheatre,
+lightly, as they had been trained to look.
+
+"It is needless to say," proceeded the lecturer, "that the subject will
+be mercifully disposed of as soon as the demonstration is completed. And
+we shall operate with the greatest tenderness, as we always do.
+Gentlemen, I am reminded of a story"--
+
+The demonstrator indulged in a little persiflage at this point, raising
+a laugh among the class; he smiled himself; he gestured with the
+scalpel, which he had selected while he was talking; he made three or
+four sinister cuts with it in the air, preparatory cuts,--an awful
+rehearsal. He held the instrument suspended, thoughtfully.
+
+"The first incision"--he began. "Follow me closely, now. You
+see--Gentlemen? Gentlemen! Really, I cannot proceed in such a
+disturbance--What _is_ that noise?" With the suspended scalpel in his
+hand, the demonstrator turned impatiently.
+
+"It's a row in the corridor," said one of the students. "We hope you
+won't delay for that, doctor. It's nothing of any consequence. Please go
+ahead."
+
+But the locked door of the laboratory shook violently, and rattled in
+unseen hands. Voices clashed from the outside. The disturbance
+increased.
+
+"Open! Open the door!" Heavy blows fell upon the panels.
+
+"In the name of humanity, in the name of mercy, open this door!"
+
+"It must be some of those fanatics," said the operator, laying down his
+instrument. "Where is the janitor? Call him to put a stop to this."
+
+He took up the instrument with an impetuous motion; then laid it
+irritably down again. The attention of his audience was now concentrated
+upon the laboratory door, for the confusion had redoubled. At the same
+time feet were heard approaching the students' entrance to the lecture
+room. One of the young men took it upon himself to lock that door also,
+which was not the custom of the place; but he found no key, and two or
+three of his classmates joined him in standing against the door, which
+they barricaded. Their blood was up,--they knew not why; the fighting
+animal in them leaped at the mysterious intrusion. There was every
+prospect of a scene unprecedented in the history of the lecture room.
+
+The expected did not happen. It appeared that some unsuccessful effort
+was made to force this door, but it was not prolonged; then the
+footsteps retreated down the stairs, and the demand at the laboratory
+entrance set in again,--this time in a new voice:--
+
+"It is an officer of the court! There is a search-warrant for stolen
+property! Open in the name of the Law! _Open this door in the name of
+the Commonwealth!_"
+
+Now the door sank open, was burst open, or was unlocked,--in the
+excitement, no one knew which or how,--and the professor and the lawyer,
+the officer and the search-warrant, fell in.
+
+The professor pushed ahead, and strode to the operating table.
+
+There lay the tiny creature, so daintily reared, so passionately
+beloved; he who had been sheltered in the heart of luxury, like the
+little daughter of the house herself; he who used never to know a pang
+that love or luxury could prevent or cure; he who had been the soul of
+tenderness, and had known only the soul of tenderness. There, stretched,
+bound, gagged, gasping, doomed to a doom which the readers of this page
+would forbid this pen to describe, lay the silver Yorkshire, kissing his
+vivisector's hand.
+
+In the past few months Loveliness had known to the uttermost the
+matchless misery of the lost dog (for he had been sold and restolen more
+than once); he had known the miseries of cold, of hunger, of neglect, of
+homelessness, and other torments of which it is as well not to think;
+the sufferings which ignorance imposes upon animals. He was about to
+endure the worst torture of them all,--that reserved by wisdom and power
+for the dumb, the undefended, and the small.
+
+The officer seized the scalpel which the demonstrator had laid aside,
+and slashed through the straps that bound the victim down. When the gag
+was removed, and the little creature, shorn, sunken, changed, almost
+unrecognizable, looked up into his master's face, those cruel walls rang
+to such a cry of more than human anguish and ecstasy as they had never
+heard before, and never may again.
+
+The operator turned away; he stood in his butcher's blouse and stared
+through out of the laboratory window, over the head of the lily, which
+regarded him fixedly. The students grew rapidly quiet. When the
+professor took Loveliness into his arms, and the Yorkshire, still crying
+like a human child that had been lost and saved, put up his weak paws
+around his master's neck and tried to kiss the tears that fell,
+unashamed, down the cheeks of that eminent man, the lecture room burst
+into a storm of applause; then fell suddenly still again, as if it felt
+embarrassed both by its expression and by its silence, and knew not what
+to do.
+
+"Has the knife touched him--anywhere?" asked the professor, choking.
+
+"No, thank God!" replied the demonstrator, turning around timidly; "and
+I assure you--our regrets--such a mistake"--
+
+"That will do, doctor," said the professor. "Gentlemen, let me pass, if
+you please. I have no time to lose. There is one waiting for this little
+creature who"--
+
+He did not finish his sentence, but went out from among them. As he
+passed with the shorn and quivering dog in his arms, the students rose
+to their feet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He stopped the cab a hundred feet away, went across a neighbor's lot,
+and got into the house by the back door, with the Yorkshire hidden under
+his coat. The doctor's buggy stood at the curbstone in front. The little
+girl was so weak that morning--what might not have happened?
+
+The father felt, with a sudden sickness of heart, that time had hardly
+converged more closely with fate in the operating room than it was
+narrowing in his own home. The cook shrieked when she saw him come into
+the kitchen with the half-hidden burden in his arms; and Kathleen ran
+in, panting.
+
+"Call the doctor," he commanded hoarsely, "and ask him what we shall
+do."
+
+All the stories that he had ever read about joy that killed blazed
+through his brain. He dared neither advance nor retreat, but stood in
+the middle of the kitchen, stupidly. Then he saw that the quick wit of
+Kathleen had got ahead of him; for she was on her knees arranging the
+crimson blankets in the empty basket. Between the three, they gently
+laid the emaciated and disfigured dog into his own bed. Nora cried into
+the milk she was warming for the little thing. And the doctor came in
+while Loveliness feebly drank.
+
+"Wait a minute," he said, turning on his heel. He went back to the room
+where the child lay among the white pillows, with her hand upon the
+empty gray satin cushion. Absently she stroked one of the red puppies
+whose gold eyes gazed forever at the saucer of green milk. She lay with
+her lashes on her cheeks. It was the first day that she had not watched
+the street. Her mother, sitting back at the door, was fanning her.
+
+"Adah!" said the doctor cheerily. "We've got something good to tell you.
+Your father has found--there, there, my child!--yes, your father has
+found him. He looks a little queer and homesick--guess he's missed you
+some--and you mustn't mind how he looks, for--you see, Adah, we think he
+has lived with a--with a barber, and got shaved for nothing!" added the
+doctor stoutly.
+
+The doctor had told his share of professional fibs in his day, like the
+most of his race; but I hope he was forgiven all the others for this
+one's merciful and beautiful sake.
+
+"Come, professor!" he called, courageously enough. But his own heart
+beat as hard as the father's and the mother's, when the professor slowly
+mounted the stairs with the basket bed and the exhausted dog within it.
+
+"LOVE-_li-ness_!" cried the child. It was the first loud word that she
+had spoken for months.
+
+Then they lifted the dog and put him in her arms; and they turned away
+their faces, for the sight of that reunion was all the nerve could bear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So it was as it has been, and ever will be, since the beginning to the
+end of time. Joy, the Angel of Delight and Danger, the most precious and
+the most perilous of messengers to the heart that loves, came to our two
+little friends, and might have destroyed, but saved instead.
+
+The child was strong before the dog was; but both convalesced rapidly
+and sweetly enough. In a week Adah threw away her little crutch. Her
+lost voice returned, to stay. The pearl and the rose of her soft,
+invalid skin browned with the summer sun. Peals of laughter and ecstatic
+barks resounded through the happy house. Little feet and little paws
+trotted together across the dew-touched lawn. Wonderful neck ribbons,--a
+new color every day,--tied by eager, small fingers upon the silver-gray
+throat of the Yorkshire, flashed through the bending shrubbery in
+pursuit of a little glancing white figure in lawn dresses, with shade
+hat hanging down her back. The satin cushion with the embroidered
+puppies was carried out among the blushing weigelia bushes; and the
+twain lived and loved and played, from day-start to twilight, in the
+live, midsummer air.
+
+[Illustration: THROUGH THE BENDING SHRUBBERY]
+
+Sometimes she was overheard conversing with the terrier,--long,
+confidential talks, with which no third person intermeddled.
+
+"Dearness! Daintiness! Loveliness! Did you have a little baxet with
+blankets while you were away? Preciousness! Did they cut you meat and
+warm you soup for you, and comfort you? Did they ever let you out to
+shi-shiver in 'e wet and cold? Tell me, Dearest-in-'e-World! Tell me,
+Love-li-ness! Tell me all about it. Tell me about 'e barber who shaved
+you hair so close,--was he _kind_ to you?"
+
+When Commencement was over, and the town quiet and a little dull,
+something of a festive nature was thought good for Adah; and the doctor,
+who came only as a matter of occasional ceremony now, to see his patient
+running away from him, proposed a party; for he was not an imaginative
+man, and could only suggest the conventional.
+
+"Something to take her mind off the dog for a little," he said. "We must
+avoid anything resembling a fixed idea."
+
+"Love is always a fixed idea," replied the professor of psychology,
+smiling. "But you may try, doctor."
+
+"I will arx Loveliness," said the child quietly. She ran away with the
+Yorkshire, and they sat among the reddening weigelia bushes for some
+time, conversing in low tones. Then they trotted back, laughing and
+barking.
+
+"Yes, Papa, we'll have a party. But it must be a _Love_liness party,
+Mamma. And we've decided who to arx, and all about it. If you would like
+to know, I'll whisper you, for it's a secret to Loveliness and me, until
+we think it over."
+
+Merrily she whispered in her mother's bending ear a list of chosen
+guests. It ran on this wise:--
+
+The family.
+
+The carrier.
+
+Kathleen and Nora.
+
+The newsboy.
+
+The cabman.
+
+The doctor.
+
+Some of the neighbors' little dogs and girls.
+
+Not boys, because they say "Sister boy!" and "Sickum!"
+
+The president's white puppy.
+
+The president.
+
+Nobody else.
+
+Not the barber.
+
+"Here's 'e invitation," she added with dignity, "and we'll have a
+picture of him printed on his puppy cushion at 'e top, Papa."
+
+She put into her father's hand a slip of paper, on which she had
+laboriously and irregularly printed in pencil the following legend:--
+
+ +-----------------------------+
+ | ON SATTERDAY, AFTER NUNE. |
+ | IF NOT STORMY. |
+ | AT 2 O CLUK. |
+ | LOVELINESS |
+ | _At Home._ |
+ +-----------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+ ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED
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+
+ The Riverside Press
+
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+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+The list of the author's other titles (which originally appeared before
+the title page) has been moved to the end.
+
+Page 19, comma added ("The newsboy, the carrier").
+
+Both "cab driver" and "cab-driver" were used in this text.]
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOVELINESS***
+
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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Loveliness, by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+body {
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+<body>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Loveliness, by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps,
+Illustrated by Sarah S. Stilwell</h1>
+<pre>
+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 <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: Loveliness</p>
+<p> A Story</p>
+<p>Author: Elizabeth Stuart Phelps</p>
+<p>Release Date: April 25, 2011 [eBook #35966]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOVELINESS***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Kerry Tani,<br />
+ and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Cover: LOVELINESS" width="557" height="700" />
+</div>
+
+<h1>LOVELINESS</h1>
+
+<h3 class="bl">A Story</h3>
+
+<h4>BY</h4>
+
+<h2>ELIZABETH STUART PHELPS</h2>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr>
+<td><p>"Be my benediction said,<br />
+&#160;With my hand upon thy head,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Gentle fellow-creature!"</span><br /></p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">E. B. Browning.</span></p>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<p class="center">BOSTON AND NEW YORK<br />
+<b>HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY</b></p>
+<p class="center">The Riverside Press, Cambridge</p>
+<p class="center">1900</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr />
+
+<h4>THE ILLUSTRATIONS ARE BY</h4>
+<h2>SARAH S. STILWELL</h2>
+
+<p class="gap">&#160;</p>
+
+<h5>COPYRIGHT, 1899, BY ELIZABETH STUART PHELPS WARD<br />
+AND HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND CO.<br />
+ALL RIGHTS RESERVED<br />
+</h5>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>For the smoke of their torment ascendeth.</i></p>
+
+<hr/>
+
+<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="List of Illustrations">
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><b>Page</b></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Loveliness</span></td><td align="left"><a href='#illus01'><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The maid stood looking idly about</span></td><td align="right"><a href='#illus02'>14</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">"Till Loveliness comes home"</span></td><td align="right"><a href='#illus03'>20</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Through the bending shrubbery</span></td><td align="right"><a href='#illus04'>40</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<hr />
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="illus01" id="illus01">
+<img src="images/illus01.png" alt="LOVELINESS" width="534" height="700" />
+</a>
+<p class="caption">LOVELINESS</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr />
+<h1><a name="LOVELINESS" id="LOVELINESS"></a>LOVELINESS.</h1>
+
+
+<p>Loveliness sat on an eider-down cushion embroidered
+with cherry-colored puppies on a pearl
+satin cover. The puppies had gold eyes. They
+were drinking a saucer of green milk. Loveliness
+wore a new necktie, of cherry, a shade or two
+brighter than the puppies, and a pearl-gray, or one
+might call it a silver-gray jacket. He was sitting
+in the broad window sill, with his head tipped a
+little, thoughtfully, towards the left side, as the
+heads of nervous people are said to incline. He
+was dreamily watching the street, looking for any
+one of a few friends of his who might pass by, and
+for the letter-carrier, who was somewhat late.</p>
+
+<p>Loveliness had dark, brilliant eyes, remarkably
+alert, but reflective when in repose. Part of their
+charm lay in the fact that one must watch for their
+best expression; for Loveliness wore bangs. He
+had a small and delicate nose, not guiltless of an
+aristocratic tip, with a suspicion of a sniff at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
+inferior orders of society. In truth, Loveliness was
+an aristocrat to the end of his tongue, which curled
+daintily against his opalescent teeth. At this moment
+it lay between his teeth, and hung forward as
+if he held a roseleaf in his lips; and this was the
+final evidence of his birth and breeding.</p>
+
+<p>For Loveliness was a little dog; a silver Yorkshire,
+blue of blood and delicately reared,&mdash;a tiny
+creature, the essence of tenderness; set, soul and
+body, to one only tune. To love and to be beloved,&mdash;that
+was his life. He knew no other, nor
+up to this time could he conceive of any other; for
+he was as devotedly beloved as he was passionately
+loving. His brain was in his heart. In saying
+this one does not question the quality of the brain,
+any more than one does in saying a similar thing
+of a woman. Indeed, considered as an intellect,
+his was of the highest order known to his race.
+Loveliness would have been interesting as a psychological
+study, had he not been absorbing as an
+affectional occupation. His family and friends
+often said, "How clever!" but not until after they
+had said, "How dear he is!" The order of precedence
+in this summary of character is the most
+enviable that can be experienced by human beings.
+But the dog took it as a matter of course.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This little creature loved a number of people on
+a sliding scale of intimacy, carefully guarded, as
+the intimacies of the high-born usually are; but
+one he loved first, most, best of all, and profoundly.
+I have called him Loveliness because it
+was the pet name, the "little name," given to him
+by this person. In point of fact, he answered to a
+variety of appellations, more or less recognized by
+society; of these the most lawful and the least
+agreeable to himself was Mop. It was a disputed
+point whether this were an ancestral name, or
+whether he had received it from the dog store,
+whence he had emerged at the beginning of history,&mdash;the
+shaggiest, scrubbiest, raggedest, wildest
+little terrier that ever boasted of a high descent.</p>
+
+<p>People of a low type, those whose imagination
+was bounded by menial similes, or persons of that
+too ready inclination to the humorous which fails
+to consider the possible injustice or unkindness
+that it may involve, had in Mop's infancy found a
+base pleasure in attaching to him such epithets as
+window-washer, scrubbing-brush, feather-duster, and
+footmuff. But these had not adhered. Loveliness
+had. It bade fair, at the time of our story, to outlive
+every other name.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The little dog had both friends and acquaintances
+on the street where the professor lived; and
+he watched for them from his cushion in the window,
+hours at a time. There was the cabman, the
+academic-looking cabman, who was the favorite of
+the faculty, and who hurrahed and snapped his
+whip at the Yorkshire as he passed by; there was
+the newsboy who brought the Sunday papers, and
+who whistled at Loveliness, and made faces, and
+called him Mop.</p>
+
+<p>To-day there was a dark-faced man, a stranger,
+standing across the street, and regarding the professor's
+house with the unpleasant look of the foreign
+and ill-natured. This man had eyebrows that
+met in a straight, black line upon his forehead, and
+he wore a yellow jersey. The dog threw back his
+supercilious little head and barked at the yellow
+jersey severely. But at that moment he saw the
+carrier, who ran up the steps laughing, and brought
+a gumdrop in a sealed envelope addressed to Loveliness.
+There was a large mail that afternoon,
+including a pile of pamphlets and circulars of the
+varied description that haunts professors' houses.
+Kathleen, the parlor maid,&mdash;another particular
+friend of the terrier's&mdash;took the mail up to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+study, but dropped one of the pamphlets on the
+stairs. The dog rebuked her carelessness (after he
+had given his attention to the carrier's gumdrop)
+by picking the pamphlet up and bringing it back
+to the window seat, where he opened and dog-eared
+it with a literary manner for a while, until suddenly
+he forgot it altogether, and dropped it on
+the floor, and sprang, bounding. For the dearest
+person in the world had called him in a whisper,&mdash;"Love-li-ness!"
+And the dearest face in the
+world appeared above him and melted into laughing
+tenderness. "Loveliness! Where's my <i>Love</i>-li-ness?"</p>
+
+<p>A little girl had come into the room, a girl of
+between five and six years, but so small that one
+would scarcely have guessed her to be four,&mdash;a
+beautiful child, but transparent of coloring, and
+bearing in her delicate face the pathetic patience
+which only sick children, of all human creatures,
+ever show. She was exquisitely formed, but one
+little foot halted and stepped weakly on the thick
+carpet. Her organs of speech were perfect in
+mechanism, but often she did not speak quite
+aloud. Sometimes, on her weaker days, she carried
+a small crutch. They called her Adah.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>She came in without her crutch that afternoon;
+she was feeling quite strong and happy. The little
+dog sprang to her heart, and she crooned over him,
+sitting beside him on the window seat and whispering
+in her plaintive voice: "Love-li-ness! I can't
+live wivout you anover <i>min</i>ute, Loveliness! I
+can't <i>live</i> wivout you!"</p>
+
+<p>She put her head down on the pearl-gray satin
+pillow with the cherry puppies, and the dog put his
+face beside hers. He was kept as sweet and clean
+as his little mistress, and he had no playfellow
+except herself, and never went away from home
+unless at the end of a gray satin ribbon leash. At
+all events, the two <i>would</i> occupy the same pillow,
+and all idle effort to struggle with this fact had
+ceased in the household. Loveliness sighed one
+of the long sighs of perfect content recognized by
+all owners and lovers of dogs as one of the happiest
+sounds in this sad world, and laid his cheek to
+hers quietly. He asked nothing more of life. He
+had forgotten the world and all that was therein.
+He looked no longer for the cabman, the newsboy,
+or the carrier, and the man with the eyebrows had
+gone away. The universe did not exist; he and
+she were together. Heaven had happened. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+dog glanced through half-closed, blissful eyes at
+the yellow hair&mdash;"eighteen carats fine"&mdash;that
+fell against his silver bangs. His short ecstatic
+breath mingled with the gentle breathing of the
+child. She talked to him in broken rhapsodies.
+She called him quaint, pet names of her own,&mdash;"Dearness"
+and "Daintiness," "Mopsiness" and
+"Preciousness," and "Dearest-in-the-World," and
+who knew what besides? Only the angels who are
+admitted to the souls of children and the hearts of
+little dogs could have understood that interview.</p>
+
+<p>No member of the professor's household ever
+interfered with the attachment between the child
+and the dog, which was set apart as one of the
+higher facts in the family life. Indeed, it had its
+own page of sacred history, which read on this
+wise:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>When Adah was a walking baby, two and a half
+years before the time of which we tell, the terrier
+was in the first proud flush of enthusiasm which an
+intelligent dog feels in the mastery of little feats
+and tricks. Of these he had a varied and interesting
+repertoire. His vocabulary, too, was large.
+At the date of our story it had reached one hundred
+and thirty words. It was juvenile and more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+limited at the time when the sacred page was written,
+but still beyond the average canine proficiency.
+Loveliness had always shown a genius for the English
+language. He could not speak it, but he tried
+harder than any other dog I ever knew to do so;
+and he grew to understand with ease an incredibly
+large part of the usual conversation of the family.
+It could never be proved that he followed&mdash;or did
+not follow&mdash;the professor of psychology in a discussion
+on the Critique of Pure Reason; but his
+mental grasp of ordinary topics was alert and logical.
+He sneezed when he was cold and wanted a
+window shut, and barked twice when his delicate
+china water-cup was empty. When the fire department
+rang by, or a stove in the house was left on
+draught too long, and he wished to call attention to
+the circumstance, he barked four times. Besides
+the commonplace accomplishments of turning somersaults,
+being a dead dog, sitting up to beg for
+things, and shaking hands, Loveliness had some
+attainments peculiar to himself.</p>
+
+<p>One of these was in itself scientifically interesting.
+This luxurious, daintily fed little creature,
+who had never known an hour's want nor any
+deprivation that he could remember, led by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+blind instinct of starving, savage ancestors skulking
+in forests where the claw and tooth of every living
+thing were against every other, conscientiously
+sought to bury, against future exigencies, any kind
+of food for which he had no appetite. The remnants
+of his dog biscuit, his saucer of weak tea, an
+unpalatable dinner, alike received the treatment
+given to the bare bone of his forefathers when it
+was driven into the ground.</p>
+
+<p>Anything served the purpose of the earth,&mdash;the
+rough, wild earth of whose real nature the house
+pet knew so little. A newspaper, a glove, a handkerchief,
+a sheet of the professor's manuscript, a
+hearth brush, or a rug would answer. Drag these
+laboriously, and push them perseveringly to their
+places! Cover the saucer or the plate from sight
+with a solemn persistence that the starving, howling
+ancestor would have respected! Thus Loveliness
+recognized the laws of heredity. But the
+corners of rugs were, and remained, the favorite
+burying sod.</p>
+
+<p>On that black day when the baby girl had used
+her white apron by way of blowers before the
+reluctant nursery fire, the little dog was alone in
+the room with her. It had so happened.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, through the busy house resounded
+four shrill, staccato barks. In the vocabulary of
+Loveliness this meant, "Fire! Fire! Fire! Fire!"
+Borne with them came the terrible cries of the
+child. When the mother and the nursemaid got
+to the spot, the baby was ablaze from her white
+apron to her yellow hair. She was writhing on the
+floor. The terrier, his own silver locks scorching,
+and his paws in the flame, was trying to cover his
+young mistress with the big Persian rug, in itself a
+load for a collie. He had so far succeeded that the
+progress of the flames had been checked.</p>
+
+<p>For years the professor speculated on the problems
+raised by this tremendous incident. Whether
+the Yorkshire regarded the fire as a superfluity,
+like a dinner one does not want,&mdash;but that was
+far-fetched. Whether he knew that wool puts out
+fire,&mdash;but that was incredible. Whether this,
+that, or the other, no man could say, or ever has.
+Perhaps the intellect of the dog, roused to its utmost
+by the demand upon his heart, blindly leaped
+to its most difficult exertion. It was always hard
+to cover things with rugs. In this extremity one
+must do the hardest. Or did sheer love teach him
+to choose, in a moment that might have made a fool<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+or a lunatic of a man, the only one or two of several
+processes which could by any means reach the emergency?</p>
+
+<p>At all events, the dog saved the child. And she
+became henceforth the saint and idol of the family,
+and he its totem and its hero. The two stood together
+in one niche above the household altar. It
+was impossible to separate them. But after that
+terrible hour little Adah was as she was: frail, uncertain
+of step, scarred on the pearl of her neck and
+the rose of her cheek; not with full command of
+her voice; more nervously deficient than organically
+defective,&mdash;but a perfect being marred. Her father
+said, "She goeth lame and lovely."</p>
+
+<p>On the afternoon when our story began, the child
+and the Yorkshire sat cuddled together in the broad
+window seat for a long time. Blessedness sat with
+them. Adah talked in low love tones, using a language
+as incomprehensible to other people as the
+tongue in which the dog replied to her. They carried
+on long conversations, broken only by caresses,
+and by barks of bliss or jets of laughter. The child
+tired herself with laughing and loving, and the dog
+watched her; he did not sleep; he silently lapped
+the fingers of her little hand that lay like a cameo
+upon the silken cushion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Some one came in and said in a low voice: "She
+is tired out. She must have her supper and be put
+to bed."</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards it was remembered that she clung to
+Loveliness and cried a little, foolishly; fretting that
+she did not want her supper, and demanding that
+the dog should go up to bed with her and be put at
+once into his basket by her side. This was gently
+refused.</p>
+
+<p>"You shall see him in the morning," they told
+her. Kathleen put the little dog down forcibly
+from the arms of the child, who wailed at the separation.
+She called back over the balusters: "<i>Love</i>-li-ness!
+Good-by, Loveliness! When we're grown
+up, we'll <i>al</i>ways be togever, Loveliness!"</p>
+
+<p>The dog barked rebelliously for a few minutes;
+then sighed, and accepted the situation. He ran
+back and picked up the pamphlet which Kathleen
+had dropped, and carried it upstairs to the professor's
+study, where he laid it on the lowest shelf of
+the revolving bookcase. The professor glanced at
+the dog-eared pages and smiled. The pamphlet was
+one of the innumerable throng issued by some philanthropic
+society devoted to improving the condition
+of animals.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When Kathleen came downstairs she found the
+dog standing at the front door, patiently asking that
+it might be opened for him. She went down the
+steps; for it was the rule of the house never to allow
+the most helpless member of the family at liberty
+unguarded. The evening was soft, and the maid
+stood looking idly about. A man in a yellow jersey,
+and with straight, black eyebrows, was on the other
+side of the street; but he did not look over. The
+suburban town was still and pleasant; advancing
+spring was in the air; no one was passing; only a
+negro boy lolled on the old-fashioned fence, and
+shouted: "Hi! Yi! Yi! Look a' dem crows
+carryin' off a b'iled pertater 'n' a piecer squushed
+pie!"</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="illus02" id="illus02">
+<img src="images/illus02.png" alt="THE MAID STOOD LOOKING IDLY ABOUT" width="500" height="700" />
+</a>
+<p class="caption">"THE MAID STOOD LOOKING IDLY ABOUT"</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Kathleen, for very vacuity of mind, turned to
+look. Neither potatoes nor squash pie were to be
+seen careering through the skies; nor, in fact, were
+there any crows.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll have yez arrested for sarse and slander!"
+cried Kathleen vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>But the negro boy had disappeared. So had the
+man in the yellow jersey.</p>
+
+<p>"Where's me dog?" muttered Kathleen. It
+was dipping dusk; it was deepening to dark. She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+called. Loveliness was an obedient little fellow always;
+but he did not reply. The maid called
+again; she examined the front yard and the premises,&mdash;slowly,
+for she was afraid to go in and tell.
+With the imbecility of the timid and the erring, she
+took too much time in a fruitless and unintelligent
+search before she went, trembling, into the house.
+Kathleen felt that this was the greatest emergency
+that had occurred since the baby was burned. She
+went straight to the master's door.</p>
+
+<p>"God have mercy on me, but I've lost the little
+dog, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>The professor wheeled around in his study chair.</p>
+
+<p>"There was a nigger and a squashed crow&mdash;but
+indeed I never left the little dog, as you bid me,
+sir&mdash;I never left him for the space of me breath
+between me lips&mdash;and when I draws it in the little
+dog warn't nowhere.... Oh, whatever'll <i>she</i> say?
+Whatever'll <i>she</i> do? Mother of God, forgive me
+soul! Who'll tell <i>her</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Who indeed?</p>
+
+<p>The professor of psychology turned as pale as
+the paper on which he was about to write his next
+famous and inexplicable lecture. He pushed by
+Kathleen and sprang for his hat.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But the child's mother had already run out, bareheaded,
+into the street, calling the dog as she ran.
+Nora, the cook, left the dinner to burn, and followed.
+Kathleen softly shut the nursery door, "So
+<i>she</i> won't hear," and, sobbing, crept downstairs.
+The family gathered as if under the black wing of
+an unspeakable tragedy. They scoured the premises
+and the street, while the professor rang in the
+police call. But Loveliness was not to be found.</p>
+
+<p>The carrier came by, on his way home after his
+day's work was over.</p>
+
+<p>"Great Scott!" he cried. "I'd rather have lost
+a month's pay. Does <i>she</i> know?"</p>
+
+<p>The newsboy trotted up, and stopped whistling.</p>
+
+<p>"Hully gee!" he said. "What'll the little
+<i>gell</i> dew?"</p>
+
+<p>The popular cabman came by; he was driving
+the president, who let down the window and asked
+what had happened. The driver uttered a mild and
+academic oath.</p>
+
+<p>"Me 'n' my horse, we're at your disposal as soon
+as me and the president have got to faculty meeting."</p>
+
+<p>But the president of the University of St. George
+put his long legs out of the carriage, and bowed the
+professor into it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The cab is at your service now," he said anxiously,
+"and so am I. They can get along without
+us for a while, to-night. Anything that I can
+do to help you, Professor Premice, in this&mdash;real
+calamity&mdash;How does the child bear it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Poor little kid!" muttered the cabman. "And
+to think how I used to snap my whip at 'em in the
+window!"</p>
+
+<p>"An' how I used to bring him candy, contrary
+to the postal laws!" sighed the carrier. The cab
+driver and the postman spoke as if the dog and the
+child were both already dead.</p>
+
+<p>The group broke slowly and sadly at last. The
+mother and the maids crept tearfully into the house.
+The professor, the carrier, the newsboy, and the
+president threw themselves into the matter as if they
+had been hunting for a lost child. The president
+deferred his engagement at the faculty meeting for
+two hours,&mdash;which gave about time for a faculty
+meeting to get under way. The professor and the
+cab driver and the police ransacked the town till
+nearly dawn. It began to rain, and the night grew
+chilly. The carrier went home, looking like a man
+in the shade of a public calamity. The newsboy
+ran around in the storm, shadowing all the negro<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+boys he met, and whistling for Loveliness in dark
+places where low-bred curs answered him, and yellow
+mongrels snarled at his soaked heels. But the professor
+had the worst of it; for when he came in,
+drenched and tired, in the early morning, a little
+figure in a lace-trimmed nightgown stood at the
+head of the stairs, waiting for him.</p>
+
+<p>The professor gave one glance at the child's face,
+and instinctively covered his own. He could not
+bear to look at her.</p>
+
+<p>"Papa," said Adah, limping down the stairs,
+"where is Loveliness? I can't find him! Oh, I
+<i>can</i>not find him! And nobody will tell me where
+he's gone to. Papa? I arxpect <i>you</i> to tell me 'e
+trufe. <span class="smcap">Where</span> is my Loveliness?"</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<p>Her mother could not comfort or control her.
+She clung to her father's heart the remainder of
+the night; moaning at intervals, then unnaturally
+and piteously still. The rain dashed on the windows,
+for the storm increased; the child shrank
+and shivered.</p>
+
+<p>"He's <i>never</i> been out in 'e rain, Papa! He will
+be wet&mdash;and frightened. Papa, who will give
+him his little baxet, and cover him up warm?
+Papa! Papa! who will be <i>kind</i> to Loveliness?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In the broad daylight Adah fell into a short
+sleep. She woke with a start and a cry, and asked
+for the dog. "He'll come home to breakfust,"
+she said, with quivering lip. "Tell Nora to have
+some sugar on his mush when he comes home."</p>
+
+<p>But Loveliness did not come home to breakfast.
+The child refused to eat her own. She hurried
+down and crept to the broad window seat, to watch
+the street. When she saw the empty gray satin
+cushion, she flung herself face down with a heart-rending
+cry.</p>
+
+<p>"Papa! Papa! Papa! I never had a 'fliction
+before. Oh, Papa, my heart will break itself apart.
+Papa, can't you know enough to comfort you little
+girl? I can't <i>live</i> wivout my Loveliness. Oh,
+Papa! Papa!"</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<p>This was in the decline of March. The winds
+went down, and the rains came on. The snow slid
+from the streets of the university town, and withdrew
+into dingy patches about the roots of trees
+and fences, and in the shady sides of cold back
+yards. The mud yawned ankle-deep, and dried,
+and was not, and was dust beneath the foot. Crocuses
+blazed in the gardens of the faculty,&mdash;royal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+purple, gold, and wax-white lamps set in the young
+and vivid grass. The sun let down his mask and
+looked abroad, and it was April. The newsboy,
+the carrier and the cab-driver laughed for very joy
+of living. But when they passed the professor's
+house they did not laugh. It came on to be the
+heart and glory of the spring, and the warm days
+melted into May. But the little dog had not been
+found.</p>
+
+<p>The professor had exhausted hope and ingenuity
+in the dreary quest. The State, one might say
+without exaggeration, had been dragged for that
+tiny dumb thing,&mdash;seven pounds' weight of life
+and tenderness. Money had been poured like love
+upon the vain endeavor. Rewards of reckless proportion
+appealed from public places and from public
+columns to the blank eyes that could not or did
+not read. The great detective force, whose name
+is familiar from sea to sea, had supplemented the
+useless search of the local police and of the city
+press. And all had equally failed. The "dog
+banditti" had done their work too well.</p>
+
+<p>Loveliness had sunk out of sight like forgotten
+suffering in a scene of joy.</p>
+
+<p>In the window seat, propped with white pillows,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+"lame and lovely," Adah sat. The empty embroidered
+gray cushion lay beside her. Sometimes
+she patted the red puppies softly with one thin
+little hand; she allowed no one else to touch the
+cushion.</p>
+
+<p>"Till Loveliness comes home," she said. In the
+window, silent, pale, and seeing everything, she
+watched. But Loveliness did not come home.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="illus03" id="illus03">
+<img src="images/illus03.png" alt="&quot;TILL LOVELINESS COMES HOME&quot;" width="492" height="700" />
+</a>
+<p class="caption">&quot;TILL LOVELINESS COMES HOME&quot;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The pitiful thing was that the child herself was
+so changed. She had wasted to a little wraith.
+For some time she had not walked without her
+crutch. Now she scarcely walked at all. At the
+first she had sobbed a good deal, in downright
+childish fashion; then she wept silently; but now
+she did not cry any more,&mdash;she did but watch.
+Her sight had grown unnaturally keen, like that of
+pilots; she gazed out of great eyes, bright, and dry,
+and solemn. Already she had taken on the look of
+children whose span of time is to be short. She
+weakened visibly.</p>
+
+<p>At first, her father took her out with him in the
+cab, so she should feel that she was conducting the
+search herself. But she had grown too feeble for
+this exertion. Sometimes, on such drives, she saw
+cruel sights,&mdash;animals suffering at the black tempers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+of men or the diabolic jests of boys; and she
+was hurried home, shivering and sobbing. When
+night came she would ask for the Yorkshire's bed
+to be put beside her own, and with trembling fingers
+would draw up the crimson blankets over the
+crimson mattress, as if the dog had been between
+them. Then she would ask the question that
+haunted her most:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Mamma, who will put Loveliness into a little
+baxet to sleep, and cover him up? Papa, Papa,
+will they be <i>kind</i> to Loveliness?"</p>
+
+<p>Stormy nights and days were always the hardest.</p>
+
+<p>"Will Loveliness be out and get wet? Will he
+shiver like 'e black dog I saw to-day? Will he
+have warm milk for his supper? Is there anybody
+to rub him dry and cuddle my Loveliness?"</p>
+
+<p>To divert the child from her grief proved impossible.
+They took her somewhere, in the old, idle
+effort to change the place and help the pain; but
+she mourned so, "because he might come home,
+and nobody see him but me," that they brought
+her back.</p>
+
+<p>The president of the university, who was a dogless
+and childless man, presented the bereaved
+household with a mongrel white puppy, purchased<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+under the amiable impression that it was of a rare,
+Parisian breed. The distinguished man cherished
+the ignorant hope of bestowing consolation. But
+the invalid child, with the sensitiveness of invalid
+children, refused to look at the puppy, who was returned
+to his donor, and constituted himself henceforth
+the tyrant and terror of that scholastic household.</p>
+
+<p>As the weather grew warmer, little Adah failed
+and sank. It came on to be the bloom of the year,
+and she no longer left the house.</p>
+
+<p>The carrier and the cab driver lifted their hats in
+silence now, when they passed the window where
+the little girl sat, and the newsboy looked up with
+a sober face, like that of a man. The faculty and
+the neighbors did not ask, "How is the child?"
+but always, "Have you heard from the dog?"
+The doctor began to call daily. He did not shake
+his head,&mdash;no doctor does outside of an old-fashioned
+story,&mdash;and he smiled cheerfully enough
+inside the house; but when he came out of it, to
+his carriage, he did not smile. So the spring mellowed,
+and it was the first of June.</p>
+
+<p>One night, the poor professor sat trying to put
+into shape an impossible thesis on an incomprehensible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+subject (it was called The Identity of Identity
+and Non-Identity), for Commencement delivery in
+his department. Pulling aside some books of reference
+that he needed, he dragged to view a
+pamphlet from the lowest shelf of the revolving
+bookcase. Then he saw the marks of the Yorkshire's
+teeth and claws on the pamphlet corners,
+and, sadly smiling, he opened and read.</p>
+
+<p>The Commencement thesis on The Identity of
+Identity and Non-Identity was not corrected that
+night. The professor of psychology sat moulded
+into his study chair, rigid, with iron lips and
+clenched hands, and read the pamphlet through,
+every word, from beginning to end. For the first
+time in his life, this eminent man, wise in the wisdom
+of the world of mind, and half educated in the
+practical affairs of the world of matter, studied for
+himself the authenticated records of the torments
+imposed upon dumb animals in the name of science.</p>
+
+<p>As an instructed man, of course this subject was
+not wholly unfamiliar to him, but it was wholly foreign.
+Hitherto he had given it polite and indifferent
+attention, and had gone his ways. Now he read
+like a man himself bound, without anęsthesia, beneath
+the knife. Now he read for the child's sake,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+with the child's mind, with the child's nerves, and
+with those of the little helpless thing for whom her
+life was wasting. He tore from his shelves every
+volume, every pamphlet that he owned upon the
+direful subject which that June night opened to his
+consciousness; and he read until the birds sang.</p>
+
+<p>With brain on fire, he crept, in the brightness of
+coming day, to his wife's side.</p>
+
+<p>"Tired out, dear?" she asked gently. Then he
+saw that she too had not slept.</p>
+
+<p>"Adah has such dreams," she explained; "cruel
+things,&mdash;all the same kind."</p>
+
+<p>"About the dog?"</p>
+
+<p>"Always about the dog. I have been sitting up
+with her. She is&mdash;not as strong as&mdash;not quite"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The professor set his teeth when he heard the
+mother's moan. When she had sunk into broken
+rest he stole back to his study, and locked out of
+sight the pamphlet which Loveliness had chewed.
+So, with the profound and scientific treatises on the
+subject, arguing and illustrating this way and that
+(some of these had cuts and photogravures which
+would haunt the imagination for years), he crowded
+the whole out of reach. His own brain was reeling
+with horrors which it would have driven the woman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+or the child mad to read. Scenes too ghastly for a
+strong mind to dwell upon, incidents too fearful for
+a weak one to conceive, flitted before the sleepless
+father.</p>
+
+<p>Now the professor began to do strange and secretive
+things. Unknown to his wife, unsuspected by
+his fading child, he began to cause the laboratories
+of the city and its environs to be searched. In the
+process, curious trades developed themselves to his
+astonished ignorance: the tricks of boys who supply
+the material of anguish; the trade of the janitor
+who sells it to the demonstrator; the trade of the
+brute who allures his superior, the dog, to the lairs
+of medical students. Dark arts started to the foreground,
+like imps around Mephistopheles concealed.
+From such repellent education the professor came
+home and took his little girl into his arms, and did
+not speak, but laid his cheek to hers, and heard the
+piteous, familiar question, "Papa, did you promise
+me they'd be kind to Loveliness?" It was always
+a whispered question now; for Adah had entirely
+lost command of her voice, partly from weakness,
+partly from the old injury to the vocal organs; and
+this seemed, somehow, to make it the harder to
+answer her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>So there fell a day when the child in the window,
+propped by more than the usual pillows, sat
+watching longer than usual, or more sadly, or more
+eagerly,&mdash;who can say what it was? Or did she
+look so much more translucent, more pathetic, than
+on another day? She leaned her cheek on one little
+wasted hand. Her great eyes commanded the street.
+She had her pilot's look. Now and then, if a little
+dog passed, and if he were gray, she started and
+leaned forward, then sank back faintly. The sight
+of her would have touched a savage; and one beheld
+it.</p>
+
+<p>A man in a yellow jersey passed by upon the
+other side of the street, and glanced over. His
+straight, black brows contracted, and he looked at
+the child steadily. As he walked on, it might have
+been noticed that his brutal head hung to his breast.
+But he passed, and that cultivated street was clean
+of him. The carrier met him around the corner,
+and glanced at him with coldness.</p>
+
+<p>"What's de matter of de kid yonder, in de winder?"
+asked the foreigner.</p>
+
+<p>"Dyin'," said the carrier shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"Looks she had&mdash;what you call him?&mdash;gallopin'
+consum'tion," observed the man with the eyebrows.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Gallopin' heartbreak," replied the carrier, pushing
+by. "There's a devil layin' round loose outside
+of hell that stole her dog,&mdash;and she a little
+sickly thing to start with, &mdash;&mdash; him! There's fifty
+men in this town would lynch him inside of ten minutes,
+if they got a clue to him, &mdash;&mdash; him to &mdash;&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p>That afternoon, when the professor left the house,
+the newsboy ran up eagerly. "There's a little nigger
+wants yez, perfesser, downstreet. He's in wid
+the dog robbers, that nigger is. Jes' you arsk him
+when he see Mop las' time. Take him by the scruff
+the neck, an' wallop like hell till he tells. Be spry,
+now, perfesser!"</p>
+
+<p>The professor hurried down the street, fully prepared
+to obey these directions, and found the negro
+boy, as he had been told.</p>
+
+<p>"Come along furder," said the boy, looking
+around uneasily. He spoke a few words in a hoarse
+whisper.</p>
+
+<p>The blood leaped to the professor's wan cheeks,
+and back again.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll show ye for a V," suggested the boy cunningly.
+"But I won't take no noter hand. Make
+it cash, an' I'll show yer. Ye ain't no time to be
+foolin'," added the gamin. "It's sot for termorrer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+'leven o'clock. He's down for the biggest show of
+the term, <i>he</i> is. The students is all gwineter go,
+an' the doctors along of 'em."</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<p>His own university! His own university! The
+professor repeated the three words, as he dashed
+into the city with the academic cabman's fastest
+horse. For weeks his detectives had watched every
+laboratory within fifty miles. But&mdash;his own college!
+With the density which sometimes submerges
+a superior intellect, it had never occurred to
+him that he might find his own dog in the medical
+school of his own institution. Stupidly he sat gazing
+at the back of the gamin who slunk beside the
+aversion of the driver on the box. The professor
+seemed to himself to be driving through the terms
+of a false syllogism.</p>
+
+<p>The cabman drew up in a filthy and savage neighborhood,
+in whose grim purlieus the St. George professors
+did not take their walks abroad. The negro
+boy tumbled off the box.</p>
+
+<p>The professor sat, trembling like a woman. The
+boy went into the tenement, whistling. When he
+came out he did not whistle. His evil little face
+had fallen. His arms were empty.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The critter's dum gone," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Gone?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"He's dum goneter de college. Dey'se tuk him,
+sah. Dum dog to go so yairly."</p>
+
+<p>The countenance of the professor blazed with the
+mingling fires of horror and of hope. The excited
+driver lashed the St. George horse to foam; in six
+minutes the cab drew up at the medical school.
+The passenger ran up the walk like a boy, and
+dashed into the building. He had never entered it
+before. He was obliged to inquire his way, like a
+rustic on a first trip to town. After some delay and
+difficulty he found the janitor, and, with the assurance
+of position, stated his case.</p>
+
+<p>But the janitor smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go now&mdash;at once&mdash;and remove the dog,"
+announced the professor. "In which direction is it?
+My little girl&mdash;There is no time to lose. Which
+door did you say?"</p>
+
+<p>But now the janitor did not smile. "Excuse me,
+sir," he said frigidly, "I have no orders to admit
+strangers." He backed up against a closed door,
+and stood there stolidly. The professor, burning
+with human rage, leaned over and shook the door.
+It was locked.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Man of darkness!" cried the professor. "You
+who perpetrate"&mdash;Then he collected himself.
+"Pardon me," he said, with his natural dignity; "I
+forget that you obey the orders of your chiefs, and
+that you do not recognize me. I am not accustomed
+to be refused admittance to the departments of my
+own university. I am Professor Premice, of the
+Chair of Mental Philosophy,&mdash;Professor Theophrastus
+Premice." He felt for his cards, but he had
+used the last one in his wallet.</p>
+
+<p>"You might be, and you mightn't," replied the
+janitor grimly. "I never heard tell of you that I
+know of. My orders are not to admit, and I do
+not admit."</p>
+
+<p>"You are unlawfully detaining and torturing my
+dog!" gasped the professor. "I demand my property
+at once!"</p>
+
+<p>"We have such a lot of these cases," answered
+the janitor wearily. "We hain't got your dog.
+We don't take gentlemen's dogs, nor ladies' pets.
+And we always etherize. We operate very tenderly.
+You hain't produced any evidence or authority, and
+I can't let you in without."</p>
+
+<p>"Be so good," urged the professor, restraining
+himself by a violent effort, "as to bear my name to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+some of the faculty. Say that I am without, and
+wish to see one of my colleagues on an urgent
+matter."</p>
+
+<p>"None of 'em's in just now but the assistant demonstrator,"
+retorted the janitor, without budging.
+"<i>He</i>'s experimenting on a&mdash;well, he's engaged
+in a very pretty operation just now, and cannot be
+disturbed. No, sir. You had better not touch the
+door. I tell you, I do not admit nor permit. Stand
+back, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>The professor stood back. He might have entered
+the lecture room by other doors, but he did not
+know it; and they were not visible from the spot
+where he stood. He had happened on the laboratory
+door, and that refused him. He staggered out
+to his cab, and sank down weakly.</p>
+
+<p>"Drive me to my lawyer!" he cried. "Do not
+lose a moment&mdash;if you love her!"</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<p>It was eleven o'clock of the following morning;
+a dreamy June day, afloat with color, scent, and
+warmth, as gentle as the depths of tenderness in the
+human heart, and as vigorous as its noblest aspirations.</p>
+
+<p>The students of the famous medical school of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+University of St. George were crowding up the
+flagged walk and the old granite steps of the college;
+the lecture room was filling; the students
+chatted and joked profusely, as medical students do,
+on occasions least productive of amusement to the
+non-professional observer. There chanced to be
+some sprays of lily of the valley in a tumbler set
+upon the window sill of the adjoining physiological
+laboratory, and the flower seemed to stare at something
+which it saw within the room. Now and then,
+through the door connecting with the lecture room,
+a faint sound penetrated the laughter and conversation
+of the students,&mdash;a sound to hear and never to
+forget while remembrance rang through the brain,
+but not to tell of.</p>
+
+<p>The room filled; the demonstrator appeared suddenly,
+in his fresh, white blouse; the students began
+to grow quiet. Some one had already locked
+the door leading from the laboratory to the hallway.
+The lily in the window looked, and seemed, in the
+low June wind, to turn its face away.</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen," began the operator, "we have before
+us to-day a demonstration of unusual beauty
+and interest. It is our intention to study"&mdash;here
+he minutely described the nature of the operation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+"There will be also some collateral demonstrations
+of more than ordinary value. The material has been
+carefully selected. It is young and healthy," observed
+the surgeon. "We have not put the subject
+under the usual anęsthesia,"&mdash;he motioned to his
+assistant, who at this point went into the laboratory,&mdash;"because
+of the importance of some preliminary
+experiments which were instituted yesterday, and to
+the perfection of which consciousness is conditional.
+Gentlemen, you see before you"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The assistant entered through the laboratory door
+at this moment, bearing something which he held
+straight out before him. The students, on tiered
+and curving benches, looked down from their amphitheatre,
+lightly, as they had been trained to look.</p>
+
+<p>"It is needless to say," proceeded the lecturer,
+"that the subject will be mercifully disposed of
+as soon as the demonstration is completed. And
+we shall operate with the greatest tenderness, as
+we always do. Gentlemen, I am reminded of a
+story"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The demonstrator indulged in a little persiflage at
+this point, raising a laugh among the class; he
+smiled himself; he gestured with the scalpel, which
+he had selected while he was talking; he made three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+or four sinister cuts with it in the air, preparatory
+cuts,&mdash;an awful rehearsal. He held the instrument
+suspended, thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"The first incision"&mdash;he began. "Follow me
+closely, now. You see&mdash;Gentlemen? Gentlemen!
+Really, I cannot proceed in such a disturbance&mdash;What
+<i>is</i> that noise?" With the suspended scalpel
+in his hand, the demonstrator turned impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a row in the corridor," said one of the students.
+"We hope you won't delay for that, doctor.
+It's nothing of any consequence. Please go ahead."</p>
+
+<p>But the locked door of the laboratory shook violently,
+and rattled in unseen hands. Voices clashed
+from the outside. The disturbance increased.</p>
+
+<p>"Open! Open the door!" Heavy blows fell
+upon the panels.</p>
+
+<p>"In the name of humanity, in the name of mercy,
+open this door!"</p>
+
+<p>"It must be some of those fanatics," said the
+operator, laying down his instrument. "Where is
+the janitor? Call him to put a stop to this."</p>
+
+<p>He took up the instrument with an impetuous
+motion; then laid it irritably down again. The attention
+of his audience was now concentrated upon
+the laboratory door, for the confusion had redoubled.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+At the same time feet were heard approaching the
+students' entrance to the lecture room. One of the
+young men took it upon himself to lock that door
+also, which was not the custom of the place; but he
+found no key, and two or three of his classmates
+joined him in standing against the door, which they
+barricaded. Their blood was up,&mdash;they knew not
+why; the fighting animal in them leaped at the
+mysterious intrusion. There was every prospect of
+a scene unprecedented in the history of the lecture
+room.</p>
+
+<p>The expected did not happen. It appeared that
+some unsuccessful effort was made to force this door,
+but it was not prolonged; then the footsteps retreated
+down the stairs, and the demand at the laboratory
+entrance set in again,&mdash;this time in a new
+voice:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is an officer of the court! There is a search-warrant
+for stolen property! Open in the name of
+the Law! <i>Open this door in the name of the
+Commonwealth!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Now the door sank open, was burst open, or was
+unlocked,&mdash;in the excitement, no one knew which
+or how,&mdash;and the professor and the lawyer, the
+officer and the search-warrant, fell in.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The professor pushed ahead, and strode to the
+operating table.</p>
+
+<p>There lay the tiny creature, so daintily reared, so
+passionately beloved; he who had been sheltered in
+the heart of luxury, like the little daughter of the
+house herself; he who used never to know a pang
+that love or luxury could prevent or cure; he who
+had been the soul of tenderness, and had known
+only the soul of tenderness. There, stretched,
+bound, gagged, gasping, doomed to a doom which
+the readers of this page would forbid this pen to
+describe, lay the silver Yorkshire, kissing his vivisector's
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>In the past few months Loveliness had known to
+the uttermost the matchless misery of the lost dog
+(for he had been sold and restolen more than
+once); he had known the miseries of cold, of hunger,
+of neglect, of homelessness, and other torments
+of which it is as well not to think; the sufferings
+which ignorance imposes upon animals. He was
+about to endure the worst torture of them all,&mdash;that
+reserved by wisdom and power for the dumb,
+the undefended, and the small.</p>
+
+<p>The officer seized the scalpel which the demonstrator
+had laid aside, and slashed through the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+straps that bound the victim down. When the gag
+was removed, and the little creature, shorn, sunken,
+changed, almost unrecognizable, looked up into his
+master's face, those cruel walls rang to such a cry
+of more than human anguish and ecstasy as they
+had never heard before, and never may again.</p>
+
+<p>The operator turned away; he stood in his
+butcher's blouse and stared through out of the laboratory
+window, over the head of the lily, which regarded
+him fixedly. The students grew rapidly
+quiet. When the professor took Loveliness into
+his arms, and the Yorkshire, still crying like a human
+child that had been lost and saved, put up his
+weak paws around his master's neck and tried to
+kiss the tears that fell, unashamed, down the cheeks
+of that eminent man, the lecture room burst into a
+storm of applause; then fell suddenly still again, as
+if it felt embarrassed both by its expression and by
+its silence, and knew not what to do.</p>
+
+<p>"Has the knife touched him&mdash;anywhere?"
+asked the professor, choking.</p>
+
+<p>"No, thank God!" replied the demonstrator,
+turning around timidly; "and I assure you&mdash;our
+regrets&mdash;such a mistake"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"That will do, doctor," said the professor.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+"Gentlemen, let me pass, if you please. I have no
+time to lose. There is one waiting for this little
+creature who"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>He did not finish his sentence, but went out
+from among them. As he passed with the shorn
+and quivering dog in his arms, the students rose to
+their feet.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<p>He stopped the cab a hundred feet away, went
+across a neighbor's lot, and got into the house by
+the back door, with the Yorkshire hidden under his
+coat. The doctor's buggy stood at the curbstone
+in front. The little girl was so weak that morning&mdash;what
+might not have happened?</p>
+
+<p>The father felt, with a sudden sickness of heart,
+that time had hardly converged more closely with
+fate in the operating room than it was narrowing in
+his own home. The cook shrieked when she saw
+him come into the kitchen with the half-hidden
+burden in his arms; and Kathleen ran in, panting.</p>
+
+<p>"Call the doctor," he commanded hoarsely,
+"and ask him what we shall do."</p>
+
+<p>All the stories that he had ever read about joy
+that killed blazed through his brain. He dared
+neither advance nor retreat, but stood in the middle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+of the kitchen, stupidly. Then he saw that the
+quick wit of Kathleen had got ahead of him; for
+she was on her knees arranging the crimson blankets
+in the empty basket. Between the three, they
+gently laid the emaciated and disfigured dog into
+his own bed. Nora cried into the milk she was
+warming for the little thing. And the doctor
+came in while Loveliness feebly drank.</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a minute," he said, turning on his heel.
+He went back to the room where the child lay
+among the white pillows, with her hand upon the
+empty gray satin cushion. Absently she stroked
+one of the red puppies whose gold eyes gazed forever
+at the saucer of green milk. She lay with her
+lashes on her cheeks. It was the first day that she
+had not watched the street. Her mother, sitting
+back at the door, was fanning her.</p>
+
+<p>"Adah!" said the doctor cheerily. "We've
+got something good to tell you. Your father has
+found&mdash;there, there, my child!&mdash;yes, your father
+has found him. He looks a little queer and homesick&mdash;guess
+he's missed you some&mdash;and you
+mustn't mind how he looks, for&mdash;you see, Adah,
+we think he has lived with a&mdash;with a barber, and
+got shaved for nothing!" added the doctor stoutly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The doctor had told his share of professional fibs
+in his day, like the most of his race; but I hope he
+was forgiven all the others for this one's merciful
+and beautiful sake.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, professor!" he called, courageously
+enough. But his own heart beat as hard as the
+father's and the mother's, when the professor slowly
+mounted the stairs with the basket bed and the
+exhausted dog within it.</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Love</span>-<i>li</i>-<i>ness</i>!" cried the child. It was the
+first loud word that she had spoken for months.</p>
+
+<p>Then they lifted the dog and put him in her
+arms; and they turned away their faces, for the
+sight of that reunion was all the nerve could bear.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<p>So it was as it has been, and ever will be, since
+the beginning to the end of time. Joy, the Angel
+of Delight and Danger, the most precious and the
+most perilous of messengers to the heart that loves,
+came to our two little friends, and might have destroyed,
+but saved instead.</p>
+
+<p>The child was strong before the dog was; but
+both convalesced rapidly and sweetly enough. In
+a week Adah threw away her little crutch. Her
+lost voice returned, to stay. The pearl and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+rose of her soft, invalid skin browned with the summer
+sun. Peals of laughter and ecstatic barks resounded
+through the happy house. Little feet and
+little paws trotted together across the dew-touched
+lawn. Wonderful neck ribbons,&mdash;a new color
+every day,&mdash;tied by eager, small fingers upon the
+silver-gray throat of the Yorkshire, flashed through
+the bending shrubbery in pursuit of a little glancing
+white figure in lawn dresses, with shade hat
+hanging down her back. The satin cushion with
+the embroidered puppies was carried out among the
+blushing weigelia bushes; and the twain lived and
+loved and played, from day-start to twilight, in the
+live, midsummer air.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="illus04" id="illus04">
+<img src="images/illus04.png" alt="THROUGH THE BENDING SHRUBBERY" width="503" height="700" />
+</a>
+<p class="caption">THROUGH THE BENDING SHRUBBERY</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Sometimes she was overheard conversing with
+the terrier,&mdash;long, confidential talks, with which
+no third person intermeddled.</p>
+
+<p>"Dearness! Daintiness! Loveliness! Did you
+have a little baxet with blankets while you were
+away? Preciousness! Did they cut you meat and
+warm you soup for you, and comfort you? Did
+they ever let you out to shi-shiver in 'e wet and
+cold? Tell me, Dearest-in-'e-World! Tell me,
+Love-li-ness! Tell me all about it. Tell me about
+'e barber who shaved you hair so close,&mdash;was he
+<i>kind</i> to you?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When Commencement was over, and the town
+quiet and a little dull, something of a festive nature
+was thought good for Adah; and the doctor, who
+came only as a matter of occasional ceremony now,
+to see his patient running away from him, proposed
+a party; for he was not an imaginative man, and
+could only suggest the conventional.</p>
+
+<p>"Something to take her mind off the dog for a
+little," he said. "We must avoid anything resembling
+a fixed idea."</p>
+
+<p>"Love is always a fixed idea," replied the professor
+of psychology, smiling. "But you may try,
+doctor."</p>
+
+<p>"I will arx Loveliness," said the child quietly.
+She ran away with the Yorkshire, and they sat
+among the reddening weigelia bushes for some
+time, conversing in low tones. Then they trotted
+back, laughing and barking.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Papa, we'll have a party. But it must be
+a <i>Love</i>liness party, Mamma. And we've decided
+who to arx, and all about it. If you would like to
+know, I'll whisper you, for it's a secret to Loveliness
+and me, until we think it over."</p>
+
+<p>Merrily she whispered in her mother's bending
+ear a list of chosen guests. It ran on this wise:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The family.</p>
+
+<p>The carrier.</p>
+
+<p>Kathleen and Nora.</p>
+
+<p>The newsboy.</p>
+
+<p>The cabman.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the neighbors' little dogs and girls.</p>
+
+<p>Not boys, because they say "Sister boy!" and
+"Sickum!"</p>
+
+<p>The president's white puppy.</p>
+
+<p>The president.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody else.</p>
+
+<p>Not the barber.</p>
+
+<p>"Here's 'e invitation," she added with dignity,
+"and we'll have a picture of him printed on his
+puppy cushion at 'e top, Papa."</p>
+
+<p>She put into her father's hand a slip of paper, on
+which she had laboriously and irregularly printed
+in pencil the following legend:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="1" cellpadding="10" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align="center"><span class="smcap">On Satterday, After Nune.<br />
+if not stormy.<br />
+at 2 o cluk.</span><br />
+LOVELINESS<br />
+<i>At Home.</i></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center">
+ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED<br />
+BY H. O. HOUGHTON AND CO.</p>
+<p class="bl center">The Riverside Press</p>
+<p class="center">CAMBRIDGE, MASS., U. S. A.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="FICTION_AND_BIOGRAPHY" id="FICTION_AND_BIOGRAPHY"></a><i>FICTION AND BIOGRAPHY</i></h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="bl">By Elizabeth Stuart Phelps</span><br />
+<span class="sm">(MRS. WARD)</span></p>
+
+<hr class="med" />
+
+
+<p>THE GATES AJAR. 16mo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>BEYOND THE GATES. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>THE GATES BETWEEN. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>MEN, WOMEN, AND GHOSTS. Stories. 16mo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>HEDGED IN. 16mo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>THE SILENT PARTNER. 16mo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>THE STORY OF AVIS. 16mo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>SEALED ORDERS, and Other Stories. 16mo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>FRIENDS: A Duet. 16mo, $1.25; paper, 50 cents.</p>
+
+<p>DOCTOR ZAY. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>AN OLD MAID'S PARADISE, and BURGLARS IN PARADISE.
+16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>THE MASTER OF THE MAGICIANS. Collaborated with
+<span class="smcap">Herbert D. Ward</span>. 16mo, $1.25; paper, 50 cents.</p>
+
+<p>COME FORTH! Collaborated with <span class="smcap">Herbert D. Ward</span>.
+16mo, $1.25; paper, 50 cents.</p>
+
+<p>FOURTEEN TO ONE. Short Stories. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>DONALD MARCY. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>A SINGULAR LIFE. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>THE SUPPLY AT SAINT AGATHA'S. Illustrated. Square
+12mo, $1.00.</p>
+
+<p>THE MADONNA OF THE TUBS. Illustrated. Square
+12mo, boards, 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>JACK THE FISHERMAN. Illustrated. Square 12mo,
+boards, 50 cents.</p>
+
+<p>LOVELINESS: A Story. Illustrated. Square 12mo, $1.00.</p>
+
+<p>CHAPTERS FROM A LIFE. Illustrated. 12mo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>THE STORY OF JESUS CHRIST: An Interpretation.
+Illustrated. Crown 8vo, $2.00.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN &amp; CO.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Boston and New York.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="notes">
+<h4>Transcriber's Note:</h4>
+
+<p>The list of the author's other titles (which originally
+appeared before the title page) has been moved to the end.</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, comma added ("The newsboy, the carrier").</p>
+
+<p>Both "cab driver" and "cab-driver" were used in this text.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOVELINESS***</p>
+<p>******* This file should be named 35966-h.txt or 35966-h.zip *******</p>
+<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br />
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/3/5/9/6/35966">http://www.gutenberg.org/3/5/9/6/35966</a></p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Loveliness, by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps,
+Illustrated by Sarah S. Stilwell
+
+
+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: Loveliness
+ A Story
+
+
+Author: Elizabeth Stuart Phelps
+
+
+
+Release Date: April 25, 2011 [eBook #35966]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOVELINESS***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Kerry Tani, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 35966-h.htm or 35966-h.zip:
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/35966/35966-h/35966-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/35966/35966-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: LOVELINESS]
+
+
+LOVELINESS
+
+A Story
+
+by
+
+ELIZABETH STUART PHELPS
+
+
+
+ "Be my benediction said,
+ With my hand upon thy head,
+ Gentle fellow-creature!"
+ E. B. BROWNING.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Boston and New York
+Houghton, Mifflin and Company
+The Riverside Press, Cambridge
+1900
+
+The Illustrations Are by Sarah S. Stilwell
+
+Copyright, 1899, by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward
+and Houghton, Mifflin and Co.
+All Rights Reserved
+
+
+
+
+_For the smoke of their torment ascendeth._
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ PAGE
+
+ LOVELINESS _Frontispiece_
+
+ THE MAID STOOD LOOKING IDLY ABOUT 14
+
+ "TILL LOVELINESS COMES HOME" 20
+
+ THROUGH THE BENDING SHRUBBERY 40
+
+
+
+
+LOVELINESS.
+
+
+Loveliness sat on an eider-down cushion embroidered with cherry-colored
+puppies on a pearl satin cover. The puppies had gold eyes. They were
+drinking a saucer of green milk. Loveliness wore a new necktie, of
+cherry, a shade or two brighter than the puppies, and a pearl-gray, or
+one might call it a silver-gray jacket. He was sitting in the broad
+window sill, with his head tipped a little, thoughtfully, towards the
+left side, as the heads of nervous people are said to incline. He was
+dreamily watching the street, looking for any one of a few friends of
+his who might pass by, and for the letter-carrier, who was somewhat
+late.
+
+Loveliness had dark, brilliant eyes, remarkably alert, but reflective
+when in repose. Part of their charm lay in the fact that one must watch
+for their best expression; for Loveliness wore bangs. He had a small and
+delicate nose, not guiltless of an aristocratic tip, with a suspicion of
+a sniff at the inferior orders of society. In truth, Loveliness was an
+aristocrat to the end of his tongue, which curled daintily against his
+opalescent teeth. At this moment it lay between his teeth, and hung
+forward as if he held a roseleaf in his lips; and this was the final
+evidence of his birth and breeding.
+
+For Loveliness was a little dog; a silver Yorkshire, blue of blood and
+delicately reared,--a tiny creature, the essence of tenderness; set,
+soul and body, to one only tune. To love and to be beloved,--that was
+his life. He knew no other, nor up to this time could he conceive of any
+other; for he was as devotedly beloved as he was passionately loving.
+His brain was in his heart. In saying this one does not question the
+quality of the brain, any more than one does in saying a similar thing
+of a woman. Indeed, considered as an intellect, his was of the highest
+order known to his race. Loveliness would have been interesting as a
+psychological study, had he not been absorbing as an affectional
+occupation. His family and friends often said, "How clever!" but not
+until after they had said, "How dear he is!" The order of precedence in
+this summary of character is the most enviable that can be experienced
+by human beings. But the dog took it as a matter of course.
+
+This little creature loved a number of people on a sliding scale of
+intimacy, carefully guarded, as the intimacies of the high-born usually
+are; but one he loved first, most, best of all, and profoundly. I have
+called him Loveliness because it was the pet name, the "little name,"
+given to him by this person. In point of fact, he answered to a variety
+of appellations, more or less recognized by society; of these the most
+lawful and the least agreeable to himself was Mop. It was a disputed
+point whether this were an ancestral name, or whether he had received it
+from the dog store, whence he had emerged at the beginning of
+history,--the shaggiest, scrubbiest, raggedest, wildest little terrier
+that ever boasted of a high descent.
+
+People of a low type, those whose imagination was bounded by menial
+similes, or persons of that too ready inclination to the humorous which
+fails to consider the possible injustice or unkindness that it may
+involve, had in Mop's infancy found a base pleasure in attaching to him
+such epithets as window-washer, scrubbing-brush, feather-duster, and
+footmuff. But these had not adhered. Loveliness had. It bade fair, at
+the time of our story, to outlive every other name.
+
+The little dog had both friends and acquaintances on the street where
+the professor lived; and he watched for them from his cushion in the
+window, hours at a time. There was the cabman, the academic-looking
+cabman, who was the favorite of the faculty, and who hurrahed and
+snapped his whip at the Yorkshire as he passed by; there was the newsboy
+who brought the Sunday papers, and who whistled at Loveliness, and made
+faces, and called him Mop.
+
+To-day there was a dark-faced man, a stranger, standing across the
+street, and regarding the professor's house with the unpleasant look of
+the foreign and ill-natured. This man had eyebrows that met in a
+straight, black line upon his forehead, and he wore a yellow jersey. The
+dog threw back his supercilious little head and barked at the yellow
+jersey severely. But at that moment he saw the carrier, who ran up the
+steps laughing, and brought a gumdrop in a sealed envelope addressed to
+Loveliness. There was a large mail that afternoon, including a pile of
+pamphlets and circulars of the varied description that haunts
+professors' houses. Kathleen, the parlor maid,--another particular
+friend of the terrier's--took the mail up to the study, but dropped one
+of the pamphlets on the stairs. The dog rebuked her carelessness (after
+he had given his attention to the carrier's gumdrop) by picking the
+pamphlet up and bringing it back to the window seat, where he opened
+and dog-eared it with a literary manner for a while, until suddenly
+he forgot it altogether, and dropped it on the floor, and sprang,
+bounding. For the dearest person in the world had called him in a
+whisper,--"Love-li-ness!" And the dearest face in the world appeared
+above him and melted into laughing tenderness. "Loveliness! Where's my
+_Love_-li-ness?"
+
+A little girl had come into the room, a girl of between five and six
+years, but so small that one would scarcely have guessed her to be
+four,--a beautiful child, but transparent of coloring, and bearing in
+her delicate face the pathetic patience which only sick children, of all
+human creatures, ever show. She was exquisitely formed, but one little
+foot halted and stepped weakly on the thick carpet. Her organs of speech
+were perfect in mechanism, but often she did not speak quite aloud.
+Sometimes, on her weaker days, she carried a small crutch. They called
+her Adah.
+
+She came in without her crutch that afternoon; she was feeling quite
+strong and happy. The little dog sprang to her heart, and she crooned
+over him, sitting beside him on the window seat and whispering in her
+plaintive voice: "Love-li-ness! I can't live wivout you anover _min_ute,
+Loveliness! I can't _live_ wivout you!"
+
+She put her head down on the pearl-gray satin pillow with the cherry
+puppies, and the dog put his face beside hers. He was kept as sweet and
+clean as his little mistress, and he had no playfellow except herself,
+and never went away from home unless at the end of a gray satin ribbon
+leash. At all events, the two _would_ occupy the same pillow, and all
+idle effort to struggle with this fact had ceased in the household.
+Loveliness sighed one of the long sighs of perfect content recognized by
+all owners and lovers of dogs as one of the happiest sounds in this sad
+world, and laid his cheek to hers quietly. He asked nothing more of
+life. He had forgotten the world and all that was therein. He looked no
+longer for the cabman, the newsboy, or the carrier, and the man with the
+eyebrows had gone away. The universe did not exist; he and she were
+together. Heaven had happened. The dog glanced through half-closed,
+blissful eyes at the yellow hair--"eighteen carats fine"--that fell
+against his silver bangs. His short ecstatic breath mingled with the
+gentle breathing of the child. She talked to him in broken rhapsodies. She
+called him quaint, pet names of her own,--"Dearness" and "Daintiness,"
+"Mopsiness" and "Preciousness," and "Dearest-in-the-World," and who knew
+what besides? Only the angels who are admitted to the souls of children
+and the hearts of little dogs could have understood that interview.
+
+No member of the professor's household ever interfered with the
+attachment between the child and the dog, which was set apart as one of
+the higher facts in the family life. Indeed, it had its own page of
+sacred history, which read on this wise:--
+
+When Adah was a walking baby, two and a half years before the time of
+which we tell, the terrier was in the first proud flush of enthusiasm
+which an intelligent dog feels in the mastery of little feats and
+tricks. Of these he had a varied and interesting repertoire. His
+vocabulary, too, was large. At the date of our story it had reached one
+hundred and thirty words. It was juvenile and more limited at the time
+when the sacred page was written, but still beyond the average canine
+proficiency. Loveliness had always shown a genius for the English
+language. He could not speak it, but he tried harder than any other dog
+I ever knew to do so; and he grew to understand with ease an incredibly
+large part of the usual conversation of the family. It could never be
+proved that he followed--or did not follow--the professor of psychology
+in a discussion on the Critique of Pure Reason; but his mental grasp of
+ordinary topics was alert and logical. He sneezed when he was cold and
+wanted a window shut, and barked twice when his delicate china water-cup
+was empty. When the fire department rang by, or a stove in the house was
+left on draught too long, and he wished to call attention to the
+circumstance, he barked four times. Besides the commonplace
+accomplishments of turning somersaults, being a dead dog, sitting up to
+beg for things, and shaking hands, Loveliness had some attainments
+peculiar to himself.
+
+One of these was in itself scientifically interesting. This luxurious,
+daintily fed little creature, who had never known an hour's want nor any
+deprivation that he could remember, led by the blind instinct of
+starving, savage ancestors skulking in forests where the claw and tooth
+of every living thing were against every other, conscientiously sought
+to bury, against future exigencies, any kind of food for which he had no
+appetite. The remnants of his dog biscuit, his saucer of weak tea, an
+unpalatable dinner, alike received the treatment given to the bare bone
+of his forefathers when it was driven into the ground.
+
+Anything served the purpose of the earth,--the rough, wild earth of
+whose real nature the house pet knew so little. A newspaper, a glove, a
+handkerchief, a sheet of the professor's manuscript, a hearth brush, or
+a rug would answer. Drag these laboriously, and push them perseveringly
+to their places! Cover the saucer or the plate from sight with a solemn
+persistence that the starving, howling ancestor would have respected!
+Thus Loveliness recognized the laws of heredity. But the corners of rugs
+were, and remained, the favorite burying sod.
+
+On that black day when the baby girl had used her white apron by way of
+blowers before the reluctant nursery fire, the little dog was alone in
+the room with her. It had so happened.
+
+Suddenly, through the busy house resounded four shrill, staccato barks.
+In the vocabulary of Loveliness this meant, "Fire! Fire! Fire! Fire!"
+Borne with them came the terrible cries of the child. When the mother
+and the nursemaid got to the spot, the baby was ablaze from her white
+apron to her yellow hair. She was writhing on the floor. The terrier,
+his own silver locks scorching, and his paws in the flame, was trying to
+cover his young mistress with the big Persian rug, in itself a load for
+a collie. He had so far succeeded that the progress of the flames had
+been checked.
+
+For years the professor speculated on the problems raised by this
+tremendous incident. Whether the Yorkshire regarded the fire as a
+superfluity, like a dinner one does not want,--but that was far-fetched.
+Whether he knew that wool puts out fire,--but that was incredible.
+Whether this, that, or the other, no man could say, or ever has. Perhaps
+the intellect of the dog, roused to its utmost by the demand upon his
+heart, blindly leaped to its most difficult exertion. It was always hard
+to cover things with rugs. In this extremity one must do the hardest. Or
+did sheer love teach him to choose, in a moment that might have made a
+fool or a lunatic of a man, the only one or two of several processes
+which could by any means reach the emergency?
+
+At all events, the dog saved the child. And she became henceforth the
+saint and idol of the family, and he its totem and its hero. The two
+stood together in one niche above the household altar. It was impossible
+to separate them. But after that terrible hour little Adah was as she
+was: frail, uncertain of step, scarred on the pearl of her neck and the
+rose of her cheek; not with full command of her voice; more nervously
+deficient than organically defective,--but a perfect being marred. Her
+father said, "She goeth lame and lovely."
+
+On the afternoon when our story began, the child and the Yorkshire sat
+cuddled together in the broad window seat for a long time. Blessedness
+sat with them. Adah talked in low love tones, using a language as
+incomprehensible to other people as the tongue in which the dog replied
+to her. They carried on long conversations, broken only by caresses, and
+by barks of bliss or jets of laughter. The child tired herself with
+laughing and loving, and the dog watched her; he did not sleep; he
+silently lapped the fingers of her little hand that lay like a cameo
+upon the silken cushion.
+
+Some one came in and said in a low voice: "She is tired out. She must
+have her supper and be put to bed."
+
+Afterwards it was remembered that she clung to Loveliness and cried a
+little, foolishly; fretting that she did not want her supper, and
+demanding that the dog should go up to bed with her and be put at once
+into his basket by her side. This was gently refused.
+
+"You shall see him in the morning," they told her. Kathleen put the
+little dog down forcibly from the arms of the child, who wailed at the
+separation. She called back over the balusters: "_Love_-li-ness!
+Good-by, Loveliness! When we're grown up, we'll _al_ways be togever,
+Loveliness!"
+
+The dog barked rebelliously for a few minutes; then sighed, and accepted
+the situation. He ran back and picked up the pamphlet which Kathleen had
+dropped, and carried it upstairs to the professor's study, where he laid
+it on the lowest shelf of the revolving bookcase. The professor glanced
+at the dog-eared pages and smiled. The pamphlet was one of the
+innumerable throng issued by some philanthropic society devoted to
+improving the condition of animals.
+
+When Kathleen came downstairs she found the dog standing at the front
+door, patiently asking that it might be opened for him. She went down
+the steps; for it was the rule of the house never to allow the most
+helpless member of the family at liberty unguarded. The evening was
+soft, and the maid stood looking idly about. A man in a yellow jersey,
+and with straight, black eyebrows, was on the other side of the street;
+but he did not look over. The suburban town was still and pleasant;
+advancing spring was in the air; no one was passing; only a negro boy
+lolled on the old-fashioned fence, and shouted: "Hi! Yi! Yi! Look a' dem
+crows carryin' off a b'iled pertater 'n' a piecer squushed pie!"
+
+[Illustration: THE MAID STOOD LOOKING IDLY ABOUT]
+
+Kathleen, for very vacuity of mind, turned to look. Neither potatoes nor
+squash pie were to be seen careering through the skies; nor, in fact,
+were there any crows.
+
+"I'll have yez arrested for sarse and slander!" cried Kathleen
+vigorously.
+
+But the negro boy had disappeared. So had the man in the yellow jersey.
+
+"Where's me dog?" muttered Kathleen. It was dipping dusk; it was
+deepening to dark. She called. Loveliness was an obedient little fellow
+always; but he did not reply. The maid called again; she examined the
+front yard and the premises,--slowly, for she was afraid to go in and
+tell. With the imbecility of the timid and the erring, she took too much
+time in a fruitless and unintelligent search before she went, trembling,
+into the house. Kathleen felt that this was the greatest emergency that
+had occurred since the baby was burned. She went straight to the
+master's door.
+
+"God have mercy on me, but I've lost the little dog, sir!"
+
+The professor wheeled around in his study chair.
+
+"There was a nigger and a squashed crow--but indeed I never left the
+little dog, as you bid me, sir--I never left him for the space of me
+breath between me lips--and when I draws it in the little dog warn't
+nowhere.... Oh, whatever'll _she_ say? Whatever'll _she_ do? Mother of
+God, forgive me soul! Who'll tell _her_?"
+
+Who indeed?
+
+The professor of psychology turned as pale as the paper on which he was
+about to write his next famous and inexplicable lecture. He pushed by
+Kathleen and sprang for his hat.
+
+But the child's mother had already run out, bareheaded, into the street,
+calling the dog as she ran. Nora, the cook, left the dinner to burn, and
+followed. Kathleen softly shut the nursery door, "So _she_ won't hear,"
+and, sobbing, crept downstairs. The family gathered as if under the
+black wing of an unspeakable tragedy. They scoured the premises and the
+street, while the professor rang in the police call. But Loveliness was
+not to be found.
+
+The carrier came by, on his way home after his day's work was over.
+
+"Great Scott!" he cried. "I'd rather have lost a month's pay. Does _she_
+know?"
+
+The newsboy trotted up, and stopped whistling.
+
+"Hully gee!" he said. "What'll the little _gell_ dew?"
+
+The popular cabman came by; he was driving the president, who let down
+the window and asked what had happened. The driver uttered a mild and
+academic oath.
+
+"Me 'n' my horse, we're at your disposal as soon as me and the president
+have got to faculty meeting."
+
+But the president of the University of St. George put his long legs out
+of the carriage, and bowed the professor into it.
+
+"The cab is at your service now," he said anxiously, "and so am I. They
+can get along without us for a while, to-night. Anything that I can do
+to help you, Professor Premice, in this--real calamity--How does the
+child bear it?"
+
+"Poor little kid!" muttered the cabman. "And to think how I used to snap
+my whip at 'em in the window!"
+
+"An' how I used to bring him candy, contrary to the postal laws!" sighed
+the carrier. The cab driver and the postman spoke as if the dog and the
+child were both already dead.
+
+The group broke slowly and sadly at last. The mother and the maids crept
+tearfully into the house. The professor, the carrier, the newsboy, and
+the president threw themselves into the matter as if they had been
+hunting for a lost child. The president deferred his engagement at the
+faculty meeting for two hours,--which gave about time for a faculty
+meeting to get under way. The professor and the cab driver and the
+police ransacked the town till nearly dawn. It began to rain, and the
+night grew chilly. The carrier went home, looking like a man in the
+shade of a public calamity. The newsboy ran around in the storm,
+shadowing all the negro boys he met, and whistling for Loveliness in
+dark places where low-bred curs answered him, and yellow mongrels
+snarled at his soaked heels. But the professor had the worst of it; for
+when he came in, drenched and tired, in the early morning, a little
+figure in a lace-trimmed nightgown stood at the head of the stairs,
+waiting for him.
+
+The professor gave one glance at the child's face, and instinctively
+covered his own. He could not bear to look at her.
+
+"Papa," said Adah, limping down the stairs, "where is Loveliness? I
+can't find him! Oh, I _can_not find him! And nobody will tell me where
+he's gone to. Papa? I arxpect _you_ to tell me 'e trufe. WHERE is my
+Loveliness?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Her mother could not comfort or control her. She clung to her father's
+heart the remainder of the night; moaning at intervals, then unnaturally
+and piteously still. The rain dashed on the windows, for the storm
+increased; the child shrank and shivered.
+
+"He's _never_ been out in 'e rain, Papa! He will be wet--and frightened.
+Papa, who will give him his little baxet, and cover him up warm? Papa!
+Papa! who will be _kind_ to Loveliness?"
+
+In the broad daylight Adah fell into a short sleep. She woke with a
+start and a cry, and asked for the dog. "He'll come home to breakfust,"
+she said, with quivering lip. "Tell Nora to have some sugar on his mush
+when he comes home."
+
+But Loveliness did not come home to breakfast. The child refused to eat
+her own. She hurried down and crept to the broad window seat, to watch
+the street. When she saw the empty gray satin cushion, she flung herself
+face down with a heart-rending cry.
+
+"Papa! Papa! Papa! I never had a 'fliction before. Oh, Papa, my heart
+will break itself apart. Papa, can't you know enough to comfort you
+little girl? I can't _live_ wivout my Loveliness. Oh, Papa! Papa!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This was in the decline of March. The winds went down, and the rains
+came on. The snow slid from the streets of the university town, and
+withdrew into dingy patches about the roots of trees and fences, and in
+the shady sides of cold back yards. The mud yawned ankle-deep, and
+dried, and was not, and was dust beneath the foot. Crocuses blazed in
+the gardens of the faculty,--royal purple, gold, and wax-white lamps
+set in the young and vivid grass. The sun let down his mask and looked
+abroad, and it was April. The newsboy, the carrier and the cab-driver
+laughed for very joy of living. But when they passed the professor's
+house they did not laugh. It came on to be the heart and glory of the
+spring, and the warm days melted into May. But the little dog had not
+been found.
+
+The professor had exhausted hope and ingenuity in the dreary quest. The
+State, one might say without exaggeration, had been dragged for that
+tiny dumb thing,--seven pounds' weight of life and tenderness. Money had
+been poured like love upon the vain endeavor. Rewards of reckless
+proportion appealed from public places and from public columns to the
+blank eyes that could not or did not read. The great detective force,
+whose name is familiar from sea to sea, had supplemented the useless
+search of the local police and of the city press. And all had equally
+failed. The "dog banditti" had done their work too well.
+
+Loveliness had sunk out of sight like forgotten suffering in a scene of
+joy.
+
+In the window seat, propped with white pillows, "lame and lovely," Adah
+sat. The empty embroidered gray cushion lay beside her. Sometimes she
+patted the red puppies softly with one thin little hand; she allowed no
+one else to touch the cushion.
+
+"Till Loveliness comes home," she said. In the window, silent, pale, and
+seeing everything, she watched. But Loveliness did not come home.
+
+[Illustration: "TILL LOVELINESS COMES HOME"]
+
+The pitiful thing was that the child herself was so changed. She had
+wasted to a little wraith. For some time she had not walked without her
+crutch. Now she scarcely walked at all. At the first she had sobbed a
+good deal, in downright childish fashion; then she wept silently; but
+now she did not cry any more,--she did but watch. Her sight had grown
+unnaturally keen, like that of pilots; she gazed out of great eyes,
+bright, and dry, and solemn. Already she had taken on the look of
+children whose span of time is to be short. She weakened visibly.
+
+At first, her father took her out with him in the cab, so she should
+feel that she was conducting the search herself. But she had grown too
+feeble for this exertion. Sometimes, on such drives, she saw cruel
+sights,--animals suffering at the black tempers of men or the
+diabolic jests of boys; and she was hurried home, shivering and sobbing.
+When night came she would ask for the Yorkshire's bed to be put beside
+her own, and with trembling fingers would draw up the crimson blankets
+over the crimson mattress, as if the dog had been between them. Then she
+would ask the question that haunted her most:--
+
+"Mamma, who will put Loveliness into a little baxet to sleep, and cover
+him up? Papa, Papa, will they be _kind_ to Loveliness?"
+
+Stormy nights and days were always the hardest.
+
+"Will Loveliness be out and get wet? Will he shiver like 'e black dog I
+saw to-day? Will he have warm milk for his supper? Is there anybody to
+rub him dry and cuddle my Loveliness?"
+
+To divert the child from her grief proved impossible. They took her
+somewhere, in the old, idle effort to change the place and help the
+pain; but she mourned so, "because he might come home, and nobody see
+him but me," that they brought her back.
+
+The president of the university, who was a dogless and childless man,
+presented the bereaved household with a mongrel white puppy, purchased
+under the amiable impression that it was of a rare, Parisian breed. The
+distinguished man cherished the ignorant hope of bestowing consolation.
+But the invalid child, with the sensitiveness of invalid children,
+refused to look at the puppy, who was returned to his donor, and
+constituted himself henceforth the tyrant and terror of that scholastic
+household.
+
+As the weather grew warmer, little Adah failed and sank. It came on to
+be the bloom of the year, and she no longer left the house.
+
+The carrier and the cab driver lifted their hats in silence now, when
+they passed the window where the little girl sat, and the newsboy looked
+up with a sober face, like that of a man. The faculty and the neighbors
+did not ask, "How is the child?" but always, "Have you heard from the
+dog?" The doctor began to call daily. He did not shake his head,--no
+doctor does outside of an old-fashioned story,--and he smiled cheerfully
+enough inside the house; but when he came out of it, to his carriage, he
+did not smile. So the spring mellowed, and it was the first of June.
+
+One night, the poor professor sat trying to put into shape an impossible
+thesis on an incomprehensible subject (it was called The Identity of
+Identity and Non-Identity), for Commencement delivery in his department.
+Pulling aside some books of reference that he needed, he dragged to view
+a pamphlet from the lowest shelf of the revolving bookcase. Then he saw
+the marks of the Yorkshire's teeth and claws on the pamphlet corners,
+and, sadly smiling, he opened and read.
+
+The Commencement thesis on The Identity of Identity and Non-Identity was
+not corrected that night. The professor of psychology sat moulded into
+his study chair, rigid, with iron lips and clenched hands, and read the
+pamphlet through, every word, from beginning to end. For the first time
+in his life, this eminent man, wise in the wisdom of the world of mind,
+and half educated in the practical affairs of the world of matter,
+studied for himself the authenticated records of the torments imposed
+upon dumb animals in the name of science.
+
+As an instructed man, of course this subject was not wholly unfamiliar
+to him, but it was wholly foreign. Hitherto he had given it polite and
+indifferent attention, and had gone his ways. Now he read like a man
+himself bound, without anaesthesia, beneath the knife. Now he read for
+the child's sake, with the child's mind, with the child's nerves, and
+with those of the little helpless thing for whom her life was wasting.
+He tore from his shelves every volume, every pamphlet that he owned upon
+the direful subject which that June night opened to his consciousness;
+and he read until the birds sang.
+
+With brain on fire, he crept, in the brightness of coming day, to his
+wife's side.
+
+"Tired out, dear?" she asked gently. Then he saw that she too had not
+slept.
+
+"Adah has such dreams," she explained; "cruel things,--all the same
+kind."
+
+"About the dog?"
+
+"Always about the dog. I have been sitting up with her. She is--not as
+strong as--not quite"--
+
+The professor set his teeth when he heard the mother's moan. When she
+had sunk into broken rest he stole back to his study, and locked out of
+sight the pamphlet which Loveliness had chewed. So, with the profound
+and scientific treatises on the subject, arguing and illustrating this
+way and that (some of these had cuts and photogravures which would haunt
+the imagination for years), he crowded the whole out of reach. His own
+brain was reeling with horrors which it would have driven the woman or
+the child mad to read. Scenes too ghastly for a strong mind to dwell
+upon, incidents too fearful for a weak one to conceive, flitted before
+the sleepless father.
+
+Now the professor began to do strange and secretive things. Unknown to
+his wife, unsuspected by his fading child, he began to cause the
+laboratories of the city and its environs to be searched. In the
+process, curious trades developed themselves to his astonished
+ignorance: the tricks of boys who supply the material of anguish; the
+trade of the janitor who sells it to the demonstrator; the trade of the
+brute who allures his superior, the dog, to the lairs of medical
+students. Dark arts started to the foreground, like imps around
+Mephistopheles concealed. From such repellent education the professor
+came home and took his little girl into his arms, and did not speak, but
+laid his cheek to hers, and heard the piteous, familiar question, "Papa,
+did you promise me they'd be kind to Loveliness?" It was always a
+whispered question now; for Adah had entirely lost command of her voice,
+partly from weakness, partly from the old injury to the vocal organs;
+and this seemed, somehow, to make it the harder to answer her.
+
+So there fell a day when the child in the window, propped by more than
+the usual pillows, sat watching longer than usual, or more sadly, or
+more eagerly,--who can say what it was? Or did she look so much more
+translucent, more pathetic, than on another day? She leaned her cheek on
+one little wasted hand. Her great eyes commanded the street. She had her
+pilot's look. Now and then, if a little dog passed, and if he were gray,
+she started and leaned forward, then sank back faintly. The sight of her
+would have touched a savage; and one beheld it.
+
+A man in a yellow jersey passed by upon the other side of the street,
+and glanced over. His straight, black brows contracted, and he looked at
+the child steadily. As he walked on, it might have been noticed that his
+brutal head hung to his breast. But he passed, and that cultivated
+street was clean of him. The carrier met him around the corner, and
+glanced at him with coldness.
+
+"What's de matter of de kid yonder, in de winder?" asked the foreigner.
+
+"Dyin'," said the carrier shortly.
+
+"Looks she had--what you call him?--gallopin' consum'tion," observed the
+man with the eyebrows.
+
+"Gallopin' heartbreak," replied the carrier, pushing by. "There's a
+devil layin' round loose outside of hell that stole her dog,--and she a
+little sickly thing to start with, ---- him! There's fifty men in this
+town would lynch him inside of ten minutes, if they got a clue to him,
+---- him to ----!"
+
+That afternoon, when the professor left the house, the newsboy ran up
+eagerly. "There's a little nigger wants yez, perfesser, downstreet. He's
+in wid the dog robbers, that nigger is. Jes' you arsk him when he see
+Mop las' time. Take him by the scruff the neck, an' wallop like hell
+till he tells. Be spry, now, perfesser!"
+
+The professor hurried down the street, fully prepared to obey these
+directions, and found the negro boy, as he had been told.
+
+"Come along furder," said the boy, looking around uneasily. He spoke a
+few words in a hoarse whisper.
+
+The blood leaped to the professor's wan cheeks, and back again.
+
+"I'll show ye for a V," suggested the boy cunningly. "But I won't take
+no noter hand. Make it cash, an' I'll show yer. Ye ain't no time to be
+foolin'," added the gamin. "It's sot for termorrer 'leven o'clock. He's
+down for the biggest show of the term, _he_ is. The students is all
+gwineter go, an' the doctors along of 'em."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+His own university! His own university! The professor repeated the three
+words, as he dashed into the city with the academic cabman's fastest
+horse. For weeks his detectives had watched every laboratory within
+fifty miles. But--his own college! With the density which sometimes
+submerges a superior intellect, it had never occurred to him that he
+might find his own dog in the medical school of his own institution.
+Stupidly he sat gazing at the back of the gamin who slunk beside the
+aversion of the driver on the box. The professor seemed to himself to be
+driving through the terms of a false syllogism.
+
+The cabman drew up in a filthy and savage neighborhood, in whose grim
+purlieus the St. George professors did not take their walks abroad. The
+negro boy tumbled off the box.
+
+The professor sat, trembling like a woman. The boy went into the
+tenement, whistling. When he came out he did not whistle. His evil
+little face had fallen. His arms were empty.
+
+"The critter's dum gone," he said.
+
+"_Gone?_"
+
+"He's dum goneter de college. Dey'se tuk him, sah. Dum dog to go so
+yairly."
+
+The countenance of the professor blazed with the mingling fires of
+horror and of hope. The excited driver lashed the St. George horse to
+foam; in six minutes the cab drew up at the medical school. The
+passenger ran up the walk like a boy, and dashed into the building. He
+had never entered it before. He was obliged to inquire his way, like a
+rustic on a first trip to town. After some delay and difficulty he found
+the janitor, and, with the assurance of position, stated his case.
+
+But the janitor smiled.
+
+"I will go now--at once--and remove the dog," announced the professor.
+"In which direction is it? My little girl--There is no time to lose.
+Which door did you say?"
+
+But now the janitor did not smile. "Excuse me, sir," he said frigidly,
+"I have no orders to admit strangers." He backed up against a closed
+door, and stood there stolidly. The professor, burning with human rage,
+leaned over and shook the door. It was locked.
+
+"Man of darkness!" cried the professor. "You who perpetrate"--Then he
+collected himself. "Pardon me," he said, with his natural dignity; "I
+forget that you obey the orders of your chiefs, and that you do not
+recognize me. I am not accustomed to be refused admittance to the
+departments of my own university. I am Professor Premice, of the Chair
+of Mental Philosophy,--Professor Theophrastus Premice." He felt for his
+cards, but he had used the last one in his wallet.
+
+"You might be, and you mightn't," replied the janitor grimly. "I never
+heard tell of you that I know of. My orders are not to admit, and I do
+not admit."
+
+"You are unlawfully detaining and torturing my dog!" gasped the
+professor. "I demand my property at once!"
+
+"We have such a lot of these cases," answered the janitor wearily. "We
+hain't got your dog. We don't take gentlemen's dogs, nor ladies' pets.
+And we always etherize. We operate very tenderly. You hain't produced
+any evidence or authority, and I can't let you in without."
+
+"Be so good," urged the professor, restraining himself by a violent
+effort, "as to bear my name to some of the faculty. Say that I am
+without, and wish to see one of my colleagues on an urgent matter."
+
+"None of 'em's in just now but the assistant demonstrator," retorted the
+janitor, without budging. "_He_'s experimenting on a--well, he's engaged
+in a very pretty operation just now, and cannot be disturbed. No, sir.
+You had better not touch the door. I tell you, I do not admit nor
+permit. Stand back, sir!"
+
+The professor stood back. He might have entered the lecture room by
+other doors, but he did not know it; and they were not visible from the
+spot where he stood. He had happened on the laboratory door, and that
+refused him. He staggered out to his cab, and sank down weakly.
+
+"Drive me to my lawyer!" he cried. "Do not lose a moment--if you love
+her!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was eleven o'clock of the following morning; a dreamy June day,
+afloat with color, scent, and warmth, as gentle as the depths of
+tenderness in the human heart, and as vigorous as its noblest
+aspirations.
+
+The students of the famous medical school of the University of St.
+George were crowding up the flagged walk and the old granite steps of
+the college; the lecture room was filling; the students chatted and
+joked profusely, as medical students do, on occasions least productive
+of amusement to the non-professional observer. There chanced to be some
+sprays of lily of the valley in a tumbler set upon the window sill of
+the adjoining physiological laboratory, and the flower seemed to stare
+at something which it saw within the room. Now and then, through the
+door connecting with the lecture room, a faint sound penetrated the
+laughter and conversation of the students,--a sound to hear and never to
+forget while remembrance rang through the brain, but not to tell of.
+
+The room filled; the demonstrator appeared suddenly, in his fresh, white
+blouse; the students began to grow quiet. Some one had already locked
+the door leading from the laboratory to the hallway. The lily in the
+window looked, and seemed, in the low June wind, to turn its face away.
+
+"Gentlemen," began the operator, "we have before us to-day a
+demonstration of unusual beauty and interest. It is our intention to
+study"--here he minutely described the nature of the operation. "There
+will be also some collateral demonstrations of more than ordinary value.
+The material has been carefully selected. It is young and healthy,"
+observed the surgeon. "We have not put the subject under the usual
+anaesthesia,"--he motioned to his assistant, who at this point went into
+the laboratory,--"because of the importance of some preliminary
+experiments which were instituted yesterday, and to the perfection of
+which consciousness is conditional. Gentlemen, you see before you"--
+
+The assistant entered through the laboratory door at this moment,
+bearing something which he held straight out before him. The students,
+on tiered and curving benches, looked down from their amphitheatre,
+lightly, as they had been trained to look.
+
+"It is needless to say," proceeded the lecturer, "that the subject will
+be mercifully disposed of as soon as the demonstration is completed. And
+we shall operate with the greatest tenderness, as we always do.
+Gentlemen, I am reminded of a story"--
+
+The demonstrator indulged in a little persiflage at this point, raising
+a laugh among the class; he smiled himself; he gestured with the
+scalpel, which he had selected while he was talking; he made three or
+four sinister cuts with it in the air, preparatory cuts,--an awful
+rehearsal. He held the instrument suspended, thoughtfully.
+
+"The first incision"--he began. "Follow me closely, now. You
+see--Gentlemen? Gentlemen! Really, I cannot proceed in such a
+disturbance--What _is_ that noise?" With the suspended scalpel in his
+hand, the demonstrator turned impatiently.
+
+"It's a row in the corridor," said one of the students. "We hope you
+won't delay for that, doctor. It's nothing of any consequence. Please go
+ahead."
+
+But the locked door of the laboratory shook violently, and rattled in
+unseen hands. Voices clashed from the outside. The disturbance
+increased.
+
+"Open! Open the door!" Heavy blows fell upon the panels.
+
+"In the name of humanity, in the name of mercy, open this door!"
+
+"It must be some of those fanatics," said the operator, laying down his
+instrument. "Where is the janitor? Call him to put a stop to this."
+
+He took up the instrument with an impetuous motion; then laid it
+irritably down again. The attention of his audience was now concentrated
+upon the laboratory door, for the confusion had redoubled. At the same
+time feet were heard approaching the students' entrance to the lecture
+room. One of the young men took it upon himself to lock that door also,
+which was not the custom of the place; but he found no key, and two or
+three of his classmates joined him in standing against the door, which
+they barricaded. Their blood was up,--they knew not why; the fighting
+animal in them leaped at the mysterious intrusion. There was every
+prospect of a scene unprecedented in the history of the lecture room.
+
+The expected did not happen. It appeared that some unsuccessful effort
+was made to force this door, but it was not prolonged; then the
+footsteps retreated down the stairs, and the demand at the laboratory
+entrance set in again,--this time in a new voice:--
+
+"It is an officer of the court! There is a search-warrant for stolen
+property! Open in the name of the Law! _Open this door in the name of
+the Commonwealth!_"
+
+Now the door sank open, was burst open, or was unlocked,--in the
+excitement, no one knew which or how,--and the professor and the lawyer,
+the officer and the search-warrant, fell in.
+
+The professor pushed ahead, and strode to the operating table.
+
+There lay the tiny creature, so daintily reared, so passionately
+beloved; he who had been sheltered in the heart of luxury, like the
+little daughter of the house herself; he who used never to know a pang
+that love or luxury could prevent or cure; he who had been the soul of
+tenderness, and had known only the soul of tenderness. There, stretched,
+bound, gagged, gasping, doomed to a doom which the readers of this page
+would forbid this pen to describe, lay the silver Yorkshire, kissing his
+vivisector's hand.
+
+In the past few months Loveliness had known to the uttermost the
+matchless misery of the lost dog (for he had been sold and restolen more
+than once); he had known the miseries of cold, of hunger, of neglect, of
+homelessness, and other torments of which it is as well not to think;
+the sufferings which ignorance imposes upon animals. He was about to
+endure the worst torture of them all,--that reserved by wisdom and power
+for the dumb, the undefended, and the small.
+
+The officer seized the scalpel which the demonstrator had laid aside,
+and slashed through the straps that bound the victim down. When the gag
+was removed, and the little creature, shorn, sunken, changed, almost
+unrecognizable, looked up into his master's face, those cruel walls rang
+to such a cry of more than human anguish and ecstasy as they had never
+heard before, and never may again.
+
+The operator turned away; he stood in his butcher's blouse and stared
+through out of the laboratory window, over the head of the lily, which
+regarded him fixedly. The students grew rapidly quiet. When the
+professor took Loveliness into his arms, and the Yorkshire, still crying
+like a human child that had been lost and saved, put up his weak paws
+around his master's neck and tried to kiss the tears that fell,
+unashamed, down the cheeks of that eminent man, the lecture room burst
+into a storm of applause; then fell suddenly still again, as if it felt
+embarrassed both by its expression and by its silence, and knew not what
+to do.
+
+"Has the knife touched him--anywhere?" asked the professor, choking.
+
+"No, thank God!" replied the demonstrator, turning around timidly; "and
+I assure you--our regrets--such a mistake"--
+
+"That will do, doctor," said the professor. "Gentlemen, let me pass, if
+you please. I have no time to lose. There is one waiting for this little
+creature who"--
+
+He did not finish his sentence, but went out from among them. As he
+passed with the shorn and quivering dog in his arms, the students rose
+to their feet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He stopped the cab a hundred feet away, went across a neighbor's lot,
+and got into the house by the back door, with the Yorkshire hidden under
+his coat. The doctor's buggy stood at the curbstone in front. The little
+girl was so weak that morning--what might not have happened?
+
+The father felt, with a sudden sickness of heart, that time had hardly
+converged more closely with fate in the operating room than it was
+narrowing in his own home. The cook shrieked when she saw him come into
+the kitchen with the half-hidden burden in his arms; and Kathleen ran
+in, panting.
+
+"Call the doctor," he commanded hoarsely, "and ask him what we shall
+do."
+
+All the stories that he had ever read about joy that killed blazed
+through his brain. He dared neither advance nor retreat, but stood in
+the middle of the kitchen, stupidly. Then he saw that the quick wit of
+Kathleen had got ahead of him; for she was on her knees arranging the
+crimson blankets in the empty basket. Between the three, they gently
+laid the emaciated and disfigured dog into his own bed. Nora cried into
+the milk she was warming for the little thing. And the doctor came in
+while Loveliness feebly drank.
+
+"Wait a minute," he said, turning on his heel. He went back to the room
+where the child lay among the white pillows, with her hand upon the
+empty gray satin cushion. Absently she stroked one of the red puppies
+whose gold eyes gazed forever at the saucer of green milk. She lay with
+her lashes on her cheeks. It was the first day that she had not watched
+the street. Her mother, sitting back at the door, was fanning her.
+
+"Adah!" said the doctor cheerily. "We've got something good to tell you.
+Your father has found--there, there, my child!--yes, your father has
+found him. He looks a little queer and homesick--guess he's missed you
+some--and you mustn't mind how he looks, for--you see, Adah, we think he
+has lived with a--with a barber, and got shaved for nothing!" added the
+doctor stoutly.
+
+The doctor had told his share of professional fibs in his day, like the
+most of his race; but I hope he was forgiven all the others for this
+one's merciful and beautiful sake.
+
+"Come, professor!" he called, courageously enough. But his own heart
+beat as hard as the father's and the mother's, when the professor slowly
+mounted the stairs with the basket bed and the exhausted dog within it.
+
+"LOVE-_li-ness_!" cried the child. It was the first loud word that she
+had spoken for months.
+
+Then they lifted the dog and put him in her arms; and they turned away
+their faces, for the sight of that reunion was all the nerve could bear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So it was as it has been, and ever will be, since the beginning to the
+end of time. Joy, the Angel of Delight and Danger, the most precious and
+the most perilous of messengers to the heart that loves, came to our two
+little friends, and might have destroyed, but saved instead.
+
+The child was strong before the dog was; but both convalesced rapidly
+and sweetly enough. In a week Adah threw away her little crutch. Her
+lost voice returned, to stay. The pearl and the rose of her soft,
+invalid skin browned with the summer sun. Peals of laughter and ecstatic
+barks resounded through the happy house. Little feet and little paws
+trotted together across the dew-touched lawn. Wonderful neck ribbons,--a
+new color every day,--tied by eager, small fingers upon the silver-gray
+throat of the Yorkshire, flashed through the bending shrubbery in
+pursuit of a little glancing white figure in lawn dresses, with shade
+hat hanging down her back. The satin cushion with the embroidered
+puppies was carried out among the blushing weigelia bushes; and the
+twain lived and loved and played, from day-start to twilight, in the
+live, midsummer air.
+
+[Illustration: THROUGH THE BENDING SHRUBBERY]
+
+Sometimes she was overheard conversing with the terrier,--long,
+confidential talks, with which no third person intermeddled.
+
+"Dearness! Daintiness! Loveliness! Did you have a little baxet with
+blankets while you were away? Preciousness! Did they cut you meat and
+warm you soup for you, and comfort you? Did they ever let you out to
+shi-shiver in 'e wet and cold? Tell me, Dearest-in-'e-World! Tell me,
+Love-li-ness! Tell me all about it. Tell me about 'e barber who shaved
+you hair so close,--was he _kind_ to you?"
+
+When Commencement was over, and the town quiet and a little dull,
+something of a festive nature was thought good for Adah; and the doctor,
+who came only as a matter of occasional ceremony now, to see his patient
+running away from him, proposed a party; for he was not an imaginative
+man, and could only suggest the conventional.
+
+"Something to take her mind off the dog for a little," he said. "We must
+avoid anything resembling a fixed idea."
+
+"Love is always a fixed idea," replied the professor of psychology,
+smiling. "But you may try, doctor."
+
+"I will arx Loveliness," said the child quietly. She ran away with the
+Yorkshire, and they sat among the reddening weigelia bushes for some
+time, conversing in low tones. Then they trotted back, laughing and
+barking.
+
+"Yes, Papa, we'll have a party. But it must be a _Love_liness party,
+Mamma. And we've decided who to arx, and all about it. If you would like
+to know, I'll whisper you, for it's a secret to Loveliness and me, until
+we think it over."
+
+Merrily she whispered in her mother's bending ear a list of chosen
+guests. It ran on this wise:--
+
+The family.
+
+The carrier.
+
+Kathleen and Nora.
+
+The newsboy.
+
+The cabman.
+
+The doctor.
+
+Some of the neighbors' little dogs and girls.
+
+Not boys, because they say "Sister boy!" and "Sickum!"
+
+The president's white puppy.
+
+The president.
+
+Nobody else.
+
+Not the barber.
+
+"Here's 'e invitation," she added with dignity, "and we'll have a
+picture of him printed on his puppy cushion at 'e top, Papa."
+
+She put into her father's hand a slip of paper, on which she had
+laboriously and irregularly printed in pencil the following legend:--
+
+ +-----------------------------+
+ | ON SATTERDAY, AFTER NUNE. |
+ | IF NOT STORMY. |
+ | AT 2 O CLUK. |
+ | LOVELINESS |
+ | _At Home._ |
+ +-----------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+ ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED
+ BY H. O. HOUGHTON AND CO.
+
+ The Riverside Press
+
+ CAMBRIDGE, MASS., U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+ _FICTION AND BIOGRAPHY_
+
+ By Elizabeth Stuart Phelps
+ (MRS. WARD)
+
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+FOURTEEN TO ONE. Short Stories. 16mo, $1.25.
+
+DONALD MARCY. 16mo, $1.25.
+
+A SINGULAR LIFE. 16mo, $1.25.
+
+THE SUPPLY AT SAINT AGATHA'S. Illustrated. Square 12mo, $1.00.
+
+THE MADONNA OF THE TUBS. Illustrated. Square 12mo, boards, 75 cents.
+
+JACK THE FISHERMAN. Illustrated. Square 12mo, boards, 50 cents.
+
+LOVELINESS: A Story. Illustrated. Square 12mo, $1.00.
+
+CHAPTERS FROM A LIFE. Illustrated. 12mo, $1.50.
+
+THE STORY OF JESUS CHRIST: An Interpretation. Illustrated. Crown 8vo,
+$2.00.
+
+ HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO.
+ BOSTON AND NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+The list of the author's other titles (which originally appeared before
+the title page) has been moved to the end.
+
+Page 19, comma added ("The newsboy, the carrier").
+
+Both "cab driver" and "cab-driver" were used in this text.]
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOVELINESS***
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