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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d7b82bc --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +*.txt text eol=lf +*.htm text eol=lf +*.html text eol=lf +*.md text eol=lf diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5c539cd --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #62032 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62032) diff --git a/old/62032-0.txt b/old/62032-0.txt deleted file mode 100644 index a97ab62..0000000 --- a/old/62032-0.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1785 +0,0 @@ -The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hypnotic Experiment of Dr. Reeves, by -Charlotte Rosalys Jones - -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and -most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll -have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using -this ebook. - - - -Title: The Hypnotic Experiment of Dr. Reeves - and Other stories - -Author: Charlotte Rosalys Jones - -Release Date: May 5, 2020 [EBook #62032] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: UTF-8 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HYPNOTIC EXPERIMENT *** - - - - -Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net - - - - - - - - - - _The Hypnotic - Experiment of - Dr. Reeves_ - - _And other Stories_ - - -[Illustration] - - - - - THE - HYPNOTIC EXPERIMENT - OF - DR. REEVES - And other Stories - - - BY - - _CHARLOTTE ROSALYS JONES_ - - - London - BLISS, SANDS AND FOSTER - CRAVEN STREET, STRAND - 1894 - - - - - I. - The Hypnotic Experiment of Dr. Reeves. - - -Dr. Edward Reeves, the celebrated Rheumatism Specialist, is not a -favourite with the members of his profession. His methods of treatment -being unknown, coupled with his refusal as yet to divulge them, have -given his enemies and rivals a chance to accuse him of charlatanism; but -to the great rheumatic public he has become a demi-god; and as long as -our changeable climate continues to nurture this disease, his -idiosyncrasies will be overlooked by the multitudes whom he relieves. - -In his genial moods, the doctor tells many curious anecdotes, and how -some of his daring experiments were made under rather romantic -circumstances. One of the strangest of them can best be told in his own -language: - -“Some time ago, I had, among my patients, a young man who interested me -from the first. He came to my private hospital for treatment of a severe -form of rheumatism of the heart; he was attended by a younger brother, -whose devotion struck me as remarkable, until I became better acquainted -with the invalid, and discovered how worthy he was of it all. He seldom -spoke of himself, except his one great desire to get rid of the subtle -disease that overshadowed his life, and he seemed anxious to aid me in -every way with the treatment Evidently wealthy, gifted, and just about -eight-and-twenty, it seemed almost impossible to believe his bright -young life was constantly threatened by the convulsive attacks which had -become more and more frequent. - -“Unlike most of my patients afflicted by the same trouble, he did not -respond to the usual remedies; and I realized that if his life were -saved at all it must be by employing heroic measures. However, sure that -the disease was lessening its hold in general, and only needed driving -away from a vital point, I awaited developments. - -“Late one evening, as I was seated in my study, puzzling my brain with -some questions of hypnotic influence over patients at critical moments, -my night bell rang. I went to the door myself, and found there the nurse -of my young friend, who told me my presence was desired at once, as the -most alarming symptoms had reappeared. Stepping back for my hat, my eyes -fell upon the book of _Experiments in Hypnotism_, which an old Professor -in Paris had sent me, remembering my absorbing interest in Charcot’s -specialty, and a certain power I had developed when a student in the -Latin quarter. This power I had used to tranquillise nervous patients, -or to play practical jokes on my friends, after the manner of most young -medical students who discover they have any skill in this direction. An -idea occurred to me—Why not inoculate my patient with the powerful -amount of virus required to drive the disease finally from the dangerous -region of the heart, _while he is in a hypnotic condition_? - -“In an instant after, all the perils of the situation presented -themselves: Do remedies act if the patient is under this influence? Will -the final result be the desired one? Providing the pain be temporarily -stilled, would it re-occur after the hypnotic influence had been -removed? - -“These and other doubts so disturbed me, that on my way to the hospital -I determined to avoid taking any such measures, unless I found the -patient actually dying. - -“As I entered, I was met by the brother. He seemed plunged in despair. - -“‘He is going fast, doctor,’ he said. ‘Can you do nothing?’ - -“Without a word I stepped to the bedside. I found my worst fears -realized. At a glance I saw he would not survive the night unless the -frightful spasms that were fast sapping his strength were arrested. - -“As I took his hand and felt his pulse, he looked up past me at his -brother, and gasped the one word ‘Annie.’ - -“‘Whom does he want?’ I asked. - -“‘His _fiancée_, doctor. My brother was to have been married in a month; -but when he knew that he was threatened with a probably fatal disease, -he begged me to help him quite secretly to try this last chance for -recovery; and so, although he is within a mile of his own house and that -of his intended wife, no one but myself and his faithful servant is -aware of it. To all our friends we are hundreds of miles away, looking -after business interests. And now it has grown worse and worse, until he -is dying, absolutely within reach of Annie, to whom he is madly -devoted.’ - -“‘Will you be calm, and help me to make one last great trial?’ I asked. - -“‘Great heavens! What can I do?’ he replied. - -“‘Take my carriage; it is at the door; tell the coachman to drive his -fastest to Annie’s house. Bring her back with you; and, above all, -explain to her the situation, so that I can count on perfect calmness.’” - -“Without a word he was gone, and as I heard the wheels leaving the door, -I turned back to collect my thoughts for a moment before returning to -the sick-room. I had to count on at least half-an-hour’s delay, and -meanwhile to quiet this horrible pain and wait for Annie to help me. - -“Once back in my patient’s presence, I took his hand, looked fixedly at -him until his eyes caught mine. Then I said, ‘You must sleep now; Annie -is coming, and you must be strong to see her.’ - -“At once a look of surprise, of joy, followed by one of despair, passed -over his face. ‘I am dying, and you have sent for her,’ he murmured. - -“‘Sleep,’ I said, this time completely fixing his gaze. Almost instantly -the spasms ceased, and he sank back among his pillows like a tired -child. Not noticing the look of astonishment in the face of the nurse -(who was a faithful old valet of the invalid), I ordered him to send me -the assistant-surgeon and a bright young woman nurse, whom I often -selected for urgent cases. They came at once. It was the work of a few -moments to inoculate the greatest quantity of the powerful poison that I -had ever used at any one time. I then made the usual passes, and awoke -the patient, resolved not to risk any unnecessary complications. I knew -if his strength could be kept up for three, or at the most four hours, -the battle was ours. But could he fight it out alone? I did not dare to -guarantee the usual result of the virus if he were asleep. I could only -count on Annie’s support to help him out, for he seemed at last ready to -give up the fight. Even now the impression that his sweetheart was -coming, added to the rest secured by the little respite from pain, -seemed to be sustaining him, and all I dreaded was that he would be too -feeble to bear the effects of the remedy in its later processes, when -the convulsive attacks were liable to be especially violent, as if they -knew they were losing their power over their victim. - -“A half hour passed, then three quarters, and I heard the wheels stop -outside. I opened the door, went softly into the hall, and met the -brother, pale, anxious, and—alone! - -“‘She is not at home, doctor. She is at a ball, believing my brother -well and hundreds of miles away. I explained all to her father. He has -gone to fetch her. Am I too late?’ - -“Just then a moan from the adjoining room told that my patient was -suffering. I returned quickly to his bedside, and found the old symptoms -reviving. Again the temptation beset me. I argued: ‘I influenced him -easily, he certainly feels no pain while hypnotised, he cannot live -unaided through another convulsive attack. To be sure, I have to fear -that he can never be awakened, and that the final effects of the remedy -may be lessened. At least two hours must elapse before he is safe, -providing no new complications set in; and meanwhile what an opportunity -to see if hypnotism prevents or aids inoculation! He has no other -chance. The plan of fighting it out on natural lines, aided by his own -desire to live for his love’s sake, has failed.’ - -“I hesitated no longer. Again taking his hand, I uttered the magic word -‘sleep,’ and he sank back as before. - -“‘Now for the great _coup_,’ I said, and, turning to my young nurse, I -ordered her to take off her cap, put on a hat and cloak, and follow -exactly the few directions I gave her. She seemed to grasp my idea, and -left me free to follow out my experiment. - -“‘Annie is coming,’ I said, looking straight into the poor fellow’s -eyes. ‘In a few minutes she will be here.’ I hesitated even as I spoke. -Can a hypnotised patient be made to believe that a _substituted_ person -is the one he expects to see? But even as the thought flashed across my -mind the door opened and the brother entered, with the young nurse on -his arm dressed in walking costume. - -“‘Here is Annie,’ I said. There was a moment of horrible suspense. Then -at a sign from me the young woman approached the bed, sank down on her -knees, and took both his hands in hers. A look of incredulity, of -wonder, of hope, and then one of ineffable peace shone on his face. - -“‘Annie, dearest, I tried to keep it from you and to come back to you -free from this terrible trouble,’ he whispered. - -“‘Yes, dear. You must not talk to me. See, I am with you, I shall not -stir.’ - -“‘Kiss me once,’ he murmured. - -“The woman reached gently over and kissed him, and with his hands still -in hers he relapsed into unconsciousness. In an hour more the danger -would be over, but I must then awaken him, and unless the real Annie -were present the shock might ruin everything. The moments went by—the -sick man sleeping, the tireless nurse kneeling in her strained position -by his bed, the brother pacing up and down outside the door, and I, -watch in hand, dreading the last act in this exciting night’s drama. - -“Fifteen minutes more and I heard a rustle, a murmur of voices broken by -sobs, and then silence. Suddenly and quickly the door opened; a -beautiful woman in ball costume, with jewels gleaming in her hair and on -her neck, glided like a spirit to the bedside. The nurse, with a woman’s -quick intuition, softly withdrew her hands; the other knelt and took her -place, and with her eyes fixed on the face of him whom she had thought -far away and in perfect health, she waited. ‘She is worthy of him,’ I -thought, as I saw her attitude and her wonderful self-possession. - -“Now for the test. Motioning the others to leave the room, I awoke the -sleeper. His gaze instantly fell upon his Annie’s loved face. ‘Hush!’ -she said; ‘you have been very ill; I know all about it; but the danger -is over; all will be well, and I shall not leave you.’ A puzzled look -swept over his countenance. Then he feebly whispered, ‘I was dreaming -you were here; but you had your hat on, dear; you had just come in from -the street and found me.’ - -“‘I am _really_ here,’ Annie replied, ‘and you must reward me by not -saying another word.’ She smiled at him, a brave smile, through the -tears that were coming now. This time, with a satisfied look, he fell -into a natural sleep. I knew the danger was over, and that I could -safely leave him with his own. - -“As I passed out into the early misty morning, I confess the thought of -the success of my part of the experiment was rather swallowed up by my -admiration for that woman, and for the love, the great unselfish, -protecting love, she had won from that man. Visions of lost happiness -came before me, and it seemed to me I had missed something which might -have been mine, had I been less absorbed in other ways; but just then I -reached my own door, and caught sight of the name on the small silver -plate, _Dr. Edward Reeves_. And I thought of the material I had -collected for a medical paper on that night’s work, so I dropped the -sentiment, and went in to make a record of the facts in the case (which -has interested the scientific world ever since) of a patient actually -getting the full benefit of a remedy while in an undisturbed, hypnotized -state, despite all theories to the contrary.” - - - - - II. - An International Courtship. - - -In seven minutes the great steamer _Lahn_ would slip her moorings and -sail for Southampton. - -Already the more cautious friends of the departing passengers had left -the ship, and were finding places on the dock whence they might wave -their final messages. The decks were clearing fast, leaving mournful -groups of travellers, who were beginning to realize how soon they would -form a little world of their own; and so they were making quiet -observations of each other. - -A tall, sturdy, young Englishman was leaning over the rail, looking a -trifle amused at the scene about him, and occasionally waving his hand -to two men on the wharf, who were evidently “seeing him off.” He did not -look particularly sad, or as if he had any especial interest in the -voyage beyond reaching his destination. That he was distinctly a -well-bred Englishman, who knew his London well, one could not doubt; -that he was also a trifle obstinate, might be surmised from the pose of -the intellectual head upon the square shoulders, and the determined look -about the firm, well-shaped mouth. Just now, he has screwed an eye-glass -into his eye, and is looking at two ladies who have crossed the plank, -and are being greeted by two elderly gentlemen, each of whom presents -them with bunches of flowers. - -Something about them strikes the young man’s fancy; perhaps he is -interested in seeing that they seem quite oblivious of the fact that the -warning bell is ringing, and he is wondering if the two men are to sail -also, when suddenly, just as the gangway is to be removed, he sees them -all shake hands, and the two women are left standing alone. - -After a final look at his friends on the dock, he takes a turn about the -steamer, and far off on the side, quite removed from the harbour, he -sees the younger woman standing, looking out—not behind, at what she is -leaving, but before her. _Why_ it is that he cares at all what a -perfectly unknown young woman is doing or thinking puzzles Mr. -Gordon-Treherne. In his five-and-thirty years, he has known a great many -of the fair sex; he has had several rather close love affairs—with -various results. He was rescued from what might have terminated in an -unfortunate marriage when in Cambridge. The Gordon-Trehernes considered -that the heir of the family had no right to throw himself away upon a -modest little English girl, even if she were the daughter of the rector, -and deeply in love with the fascinating young collegian. - -After that experience, young Mr. Gordon-Treherne, or “The Arab,” as his -chums called him, from his love of travel, determined not to hurry -himself about marrying. One or two charming Frenchwomen almost destroyed -this resolution, and once he was decidedly fascinated with the daughter -of an English general out in India. But he had travelled the length and -breadth of the United States, and never felt inclined to fall in love -with an American girl. Several of his friends had married American -belles; and when young Lord Clanmore’s engagement was announced to the -beautiful and wealthy Miss Lawson, of New York, everyone envied him; but -Treherne had not cared to enter the lists, although he knew Miss Lawson -well. Women said he was a man with a history, but he was all the more -fascinating for that. Men called him a good fellow, and said “The Arab” -was the best shot and the coolest rider in the club, only he was always -running off to some outlandish place, where his accomplishments were -lost. - -Just now his friends might have been surprised to see him arranging a -steamer chair for the elder of the two women who had caught his -attention on the dock. The steamer has left the quay only a half hour, -and already an opportunity has presented itself to make their -acquaintance. Etiquette at sea is very elastic, and it only needed the -usual attentions to the comfort of the elder woman to attract the notice -of the younger. She has turned now, and with her hands still full of -flowers, comes toward them—a tall, slim girl, possibly four-and-twenty -he thinks. He is dimly conscious that both ladies are quietly but -elegantly dressed. Americans, he fancies; and then the elder woman -speaks,—“Thanks, so much.” The voice is low and musical. She must be -French, he thinks. She is a brunette, and he decides that she cannot be -the mother of the tall, fair girl who seats herself next to her. - -“Let me arrange your rug also,” Mr. Gordon-Treherne says, as he raises -his hat. - -“Oh, thank you; that is very comfortable.” - -And again he is struck with the well-modulated tones, which he scarcely -associates with American voices. - -Still they must be Americans, the young man argues to himself, but no -longer finding an excuse to tarry in their vicinity, he moves off, and -they meet no more till dinner-time. - -Meanwhile, with the philosophy of an old traveller, Mr. Gordon-Treherne -has interviewed the head steward, and, foregoing the honour of sitting -at the captain’s table, he has asked to be placed at a small one with a -sofa-seat. Experience during previous voyages has taught him that there -are certain comforts not to be despised in a side seat under a strong -light. He sees several prospective lonely evenings, when he may not feel -inclined to hunt about for a good place to read. - -At dinner Mr. Gordon-Treherne notices two elderly men and a small boy at -his table, and remarks two vacant places. Presently his two interesting -acquaintances of the morning appear, and he has just time to read the -cards on the plates on either side of him—“Mrs. Barry” on one, and “Miss -Stuyvesant” on the other—and to comprehend that by some blunder he is -separating them, and that he can only remedy the matter by giving up his -cherished seat, when the two ladies arrive at their places. There is a -moment’s hesitation, and Mr. Gordon-Treherne remarks, “Allow me to -change my place.” Suiting the action to the word, he steps past and -allows Mrs. Barry to take his seat, which brings him opposite Miss -Stuyvesant. Both ladies express their thanks, and then, naturally, they -fall into conversation. They speak of the steamers; Mr. Gordon-Treherne -prefers a larger boat, and refers to several “ocean greyhounds” he has -personally known. Curiously enough the ladies have made the same -crossings, but prefer even smaller steamers than the _Lahn_. “Americans, -surely; ‘Globe Trotters,’” he thinks. - -He mentions that he has just been to the Exhibition at Chicago. Miss -Stuyvesant says that in point of exhibits she preferred the Paris -Exposition of ’89, and so on, until it seems as if there were no place -this young woman had not seen and about which she had not formed her -conclusions. He doesn’t care for it though, Arab that he is; he likes to -travel, but the women of his family have never expressed a desire to go -beyond Paris, and he thinks promiscuous sight-seeing outside a woman’s -province. He shows a little of this in his manner, for as he leaves the -table, the elder woman says: - -“How glad I am, Helen, that you do not believe in International -marriages. Now here is a well-bred, intelligent Englishman, yet he shows -insensibly what narrow ideas he has about women. I admit he is polite, -and careful in small details of manner, but an American girl of spirit -could never be happily married to him. Their ideas of life are too -opposed.” - -Miss Stuyvesant has evidently not thought much about him, for she only -smiles in a vague way, and says she has learned not to quarrel with the -old-fashioned notions of English people. - -“Why, I pride myself in actually leading them, when they start in a -tirade against the very things I do myself!” she said. - -“You are a sadly worldly young woman,” Mrs. Barry rejoins, “and I wish -you would marry and settle in your own country.” - -Meanwhile Mr. Gordon-Treherne was idly pacing the deck, smoking his -cigar, and wondering if the self-possessed young woman would appear -later on. “If ever I marry,” he resolves, “it will be to some woman who -has _not_ been everywhere and seen everything. I should feel as if I -were travelling with an animated guide-book. I wonder if that girl has a -home?” - -Then it occurred to him that Miss Stuyvesant had merely answered his -questions, and as these had been restricted to quite impersonal topics, -he only knew her name after all. - -That she was good-looking, agreeable, and witty, he had already -observed, but she did not seem to thrust any information about herself -upon him, as he had supposed an American girl would. He did not see her -again that day, nor till the next afternoon, when she was walking up and -down the deck with the captain of the steamer, and as she passed him -with a little nod of recognition he heard her speaking German. - -“Surely American,” he thinks, “knows the captain already, and speaks his -language.” - -At dinner Mrs. Barry was missing, but Miss Stuyvesant appeared looking -as calm and “well-groomed” as if a heavy sea were not tossing everything -about, and obliging the passengers to eat over racks. - -“You are an old sailor, I see,” began Mr. Gordon-Treherne, “but I fear -Mrs. Barry is ill.” - -“Yes, quite seriously ill,” Miss Stuyvesant replied. “It is always an -ordeal for her to cross the ocean.” - -“And has she done so frequently?” he asked. - -“Nine times with me,” the young woman coolly replied. - -“Really,” he said with a smile, “one might infer you had some designs on -her life, did you not look so anxious about her.” - -“Oh, no, we usually have some excellent reason, we do not take this -voyage in order to martyrize Mrs. Barry,” she replied. - -“I shall have to ask her nationality outright,” he thought. - -“Then you do not live in America all the time?” he said. - -“Not now, we are ‘birds of passage,’ and, like them, follow the -spring-time; our habitation is usually settled by the climate.” - -“And do you know England?” he asked. - -“Quite well, I was at school in England, and some of my dearest friends -are living there.” - -“Some church school,” he mentally remarked. - -“Ah, then, perhaps you do not altogether despise our little island, and -look down upon us from your bigness with the scorn that most of your -compatriots do?” - -“He is trying to make sport. I shall foil him,” she thought, and quite -calmly said— - -“Look down upon a country upon whose possessions ‘the sun never sets’? -Besides, the fact that I stay so much in England ought to prove how much -I admire most of its institutions.” - -“Clever girl!” he thought, “trying to be a little satirical, and doesn’t -commit herself as to _all_ of our ‘institutions.’ I must make her angry -to get her real opinion.” - -And then he said, “You should see our English home-life. I am sure -_that_ appeals to every American woman.” - -There was a patronising tone about this remark that Mr. Gordon-Treherne -felt would effect his purpose. - -“Indeed,” she said slowly, and went on eating, as if the conversation -were beginning rather to bore her. Now, why Mr. Gordon-Treherne should -assume that Miss Stuyvesant had not seen this phase of England as well -as others cannot be imagined; but there he overstepped the line, and -soon after the decidedly cool “Indeed,” Miss Stuyvesant left the table -to look after her _chaperone_. - -“An egotistical man,” she thought, as she went to her state-room. She -had liked Mr. Gordon-Treherne’s appearance, and being a cosmopolitan -young woman, was prepared to find him agreeable. Now she thinks him -distinctly aggressive, with his old conservative ideas of women and -English superiority. - -He, for his part, feels he does not understand this American girl, who -refused to quarrel with him, but suddenly turned and left him. He knows -he has not shown himself in his most brilliant colours. - -The days passed rapidly. Mr. Treherne and Miss Stuyvesant saw each other -at table, walked the deck together, and to the casual observer seemed to -be mutually entertained. But although they were in so many ways -companionable, they both felt an intangible barrier between them in the -national prejudice that their first conversation had developed—a -prejudice probably latent in every person, however cultivated or -travelled, although in this particular case both of these young people -flattered themselves that they were singularly broad-minded. - -The last evening of the voyage, as they were walking up and down the -deck, Mr. Gordon-Treherne determined to broach the subject which he felt -they had both avoided. - -A larger acquaintance had brought out the fact that Miss Stuyvesant had -read for honours at an English University, and Mr. Treherne was obliged -to admit that in this case the higher education of women (which never -strongly appealed to him), had not detracted from her personal charm. -She, on the other hand, discovered that he knew a great deal about _her_ -country, and considered its possibilities almost unlimited; but she felt -that he looked down upon its newness, and she resented his opinion of -American men, whom he described as clever and agreeable in their -relations with each other, but servile in their attitude toward women. -The dangerous topic of national characteristics had not been touched -upon until to-night. - -Now Mr. Treherne is saying, “I hope you have forgiven my frankness in -telling you exactly what my impressions were of America. I could not -help seeing how charming and bright the women were, and I wondered if -they did not despise the slavishness of their husbands and lovers. While -the men are toiling to get rich, their families come abroad, their wives -thus educating themselves beyond their husbands, and returning home, -find themselves less than ever in sympathy with their surroundings. I -never wonder when an American girl, who has had a chance to see the -world, marries a foreigner of family and education.” - -If Mr. Treherne had been closely observing his companion, he might have -remarked an ominous expression crossing her face, but she only said— - -“I have had several friends in Europe whose fathers’ fortunes have found -them titles, and on the occasions that I have stayed with them, they did -not seem wildly enthusiastic over the equality of companionship. The -head of the house had generally gone to town, or was taking a run over -to Paris, and I wondered if it suited a woman very well who had been -accustomed to have a small court about her at home, to find herself -restricted to a husband so little her companion that she scarcely ever -saw him.” - -“But then you see, Miss Stuyvesant, she knows he is not down in Wall -Street, or in some exchange, staking all his fortune on the rise and -fall of stocks.” - -“No,” she rejoined; “in the cases of my friends the women have to -consider that their husbands are probably at Monte Carlo or Ostend. But -really, why should we discuss it, Mr. Treherne? No one would ever fancy -_you_ admiring an American woman, and I, for my part, if I marry at all, -would only marry an American man.” - -With which delightfully feminine declaration, Miss Stuyvesant says -“Good-night,” and abruptly leaves the astonished Treherne to realise -that he has not made a good finish. Not that he cares seriously for Miss -Stuyvesant; but Treherne is accustomed to find that women like him, and -this girl, his instinct warns him, does _not_ approve of him and his -opinions. He feels annoyed, but there seems to be nothing to explain; -his training and the circumstances of his life have made him -conservative. He does not wish to love, nor does he especially approve -of a young woman, however attractive, whose ideas differ from his own so -materially. - -And so next day, when he bids a formal “good-bye” to Mrs. Barry and Miss -Stuyvesant, he tries to feel that in England he has more manly -occupations than doing the agreeable to a young woman, and that woman an -American. This is exactly what Mr. Treherne does _not_ feel, nor does he -mean to indicate it by his manner at parting. And so he goes off, -consoling himself with the reflection that he certainly has found Miss -Stuyvesant a pleasant companion for a sea voyage. - -Three weeks later, in London, when the season is at its height, Miss -Stuyvesant, who is looking radiant in a French gown, meets Mr. -Gordon-Treherne at Lady Clanmore’s ball. She is on the arm of the -American ambassador, and as she crosses the room with that unconscious -grace of hers he feels that every man present would be glad to know her, -to talk with her as he has talked, and something at that moment tells -him that she interests him more than any woman has ever interested him -before. Just then she sees him, and he fancies that a rather annoyed -look crosses her face. Then she smiles, and he comes over and speaks to -her and to her escort, who seems to know everyone. - -“Will you give me a dance, Miss Stuyvesant?” - -“Yes, but I have only this one waltz left. You see, you Englishmen _do_ -think that American girls are good partners—in a ball-room,” she adds -slyly. - -“I see I am not forgiven,” he says; and then the waltz begins. - -What a waltz! Gordon-Treherne has had many good partners in his day, for -he has always been a dancing man; but never has he seen anyone dance -like this girl. When they stop she is scarcely out of breath, and he has -only time to say, “Let me thank you.” For her next partner had already -claimed her, when she turned back and mischievously remarked, “And you, -you dance extremely well—for an Englishman.” - -It occurred several times afterward to Miss Stuyvesant that he could do -a great many things extremely well; and if he had only been born in -America she might have preferred him to honest Jack Hamilton, who had -loved her since she was a school girl, and who was doing exactly what -Mr. Treherne had described in that last obnoxious conversation—staking -his fortune in an Oil Exchange, hoping that some day he could induce -Miss Stuyvesant to give up her Bohemian life for the luxuries of a -wealthy American home. In an indefinite way she had thought she might do -so in the end, but, while she gave no promise, she was sure that Jack -would never change. And so she had drifted on pleasantly and -thoughtlessly, caring nothing for the men she met until this one, with -his strong opinions, crossed her path, and for _him_ she believed she -entertained the most indifferent feelings. He had simply disturbed her. -She did not think his ideas correct, but there was a sense of justice in -the girl that made her think herself narrow and bigoted for not being -able to judge things from other standpoints than her own. It was exactly -what she was criticizing in Mr. Gordon-Treherne. - -“It will be better to avoid any more discussions,” she thought, and so -the two did not meet again until one glorious autumn morning, when the -house party at Lady Clanmore’s rode out to the first meet of the season. -Miss Stuyvesant headed the cavalcade, escorted by Lord Clanmore, and as -they came up to the meet she saw Mr. Gordon-Treherne, who was riding a -restive thoroughbred, and looking what he was—an excellent rider. He was -talking to a handsome woman, beautifully gowned, who was driving a -perfectly appointed trap. - -“That is Lady Diana Gordon,” Lord Clanmore is saying. “She is Treherne’s -cousin, and rumour has it that the old estates of Gordon and Treherne -are liable to be joined.” - -Miss Stuyvesant feels for a moment as if she were slipping from her -saddle, and then Treherne sees her. He raises his hat, and she smiles -back an odd, unconsciously sad little smile, which he has only time to -remark, when the hounds move off. And now all the recklessness in the -girl is aroused; she knows she rides as few women can, and during the -run she follows her pilot, Lord Clanmore, so straight that the whole -field is lost in admiration of her. - -Treherne alone has noticed the set look in her face. “Is she ill?” he -wonders, and he determines to keep her well in view. He has hard work, -for she is on a vicious little mare which she insisted upon riding, and -as she takes fence after fence Treherne grows more and more anxious. The -hounds have come to a check just beyond a clump of trees in the next -field. Miss Stuyvesant turns her horse’s head, and Treherne sees she -intends to take a short cut through a dangerous low-boughed copse which -intervenes. “Stop!” he calls, but she does not hear him, and he knows -his only plan is to head her off, if possible. Turning sharply, he -enters the field from the other side; as he does so, he hears the -crashing of boughs, and sees Miss Stuyvesant’s mare coming straight -towards him. Each moment he expects to see her swept from her saddle, -but she keeps her seat bravely. He calls out to her to turn to the -right, for before her in her present path is a strong low-hanging branch -of an old oak, which Treherne knows she cannot pass safely. An instant -after, he sees she has lost control over the mare, and he heads his own -horse straight towards her. With a quick, skilful motion he grasps her -bridle just as the horses meet. There is a mad plunge, and Mr. Treherne, -still clinging to the other reins, has dropped his own and is dragged -from his saddle. He helps the girl to dismount from her now subdued, but -trembling animal. Miss Stuyvesant looks very white, and Mr. Treherne is -offering her his hunting flask, when Lord Clanmore gallops back to them. - -“Your empty saddle gave us a great scare, Treherne. Are you hurt?” - -For Mr. Treherne, too, has suddenly grown very pale. - -“It’s nothing, Clanmore, just a little wrench I gave my arm; that’s -all.” - -And Miss Stuyvesant remembers how skilfully that arm had lifted her from -her saddle. In that moment she knows she loves him. Every vestige of -national prejudice is swept away, and poor Jack Hamilton’s chances are -gone for ever. - -The next day Mr. Treherne managed to write a few words with his left -hand and send them back by Miss Stuyvesant’s messenger, who came to -enquire after him. He said— - - “DEAR MISS STUYVESANT, - - “Many thanks for your kind enquiries. I shall be restricted to using - my left hand for a time, but I must tell you how plucky I thought - you yesterday. The stupid doctor has forbidden me to leave the - house, but unless you wish to increase my feverish symptoms please - send me some token by this messenger to assure me you have forgotten - my first impressions of your country. As soon as I am able I shall - beg you in person to reconsider your decision about marrying ‘only - an American.’ My happiness depends upon your marrying an Englishman - who is - - “Entirely yours, - “E. GORDON-TREHERNE.” - -When Miss Stuyvesant read this note she took two beautiful little silk -flags—one a Union Jack, the other the Stars and Stripes, and tying them -together with a lover’s knot she sent them to Treherne. - - * * * * * - -In after years Mr. and Mrs. Gordon-Treherne’s friends remark the -deference which they pay to each other’s ideas; and the entwined -banners, which occupy a conspicuous place in the library, are called the -“FLAGS OF TRUCE.” - - - - - III. - One Woman’s History out of Many. - - -“Sister Faithful” she was called by the Edgecombe people. Her name was -really Faithful Farrington, but no one ever said “Miss Farrington.” She -had been born in the old Manor House, where for fifty years she had -spent the most of her time. Her father, old Nathan Farrington, had been -content to live the life of a recluse after his wife’s death, finding -his greatest happiness among his books, and in directing the education -of his two children. Francis Farrington, the son, had gone out to India -in early life, and had risen high in the Civil Service. He had lost his -young wife, and after many years of valuable work had returned, an -invalid, to Edgecombe, where he found in his sister the most tender and -sympathetic of companions. He was content enough to allow the whole -responsibility of the estate to rest upon her patient shoulders. She, -for her part, grew up to know a great deal about science and literature, -but absolutely nothing of society or the world. When she was thirty her -father died, and, besides her brother out in India, and a distant -cousin, who was a Professor in some London college, she had no one -nearer than the old nurse who had tried to fill the place of a mother to -her. - -Having a considerable fortune, she lived on in her old home, attended by -the same faithful servants, exactly as she had always done, except that -when the long winter evenings became tedious, and books failed her, she -invited some of her townswomen in to tea and played a rubber of whist. -Her days were filled with good works; every cottager in the -neighbourhood knew her, and she knew them and sympathized with all their -sorrows. Wise in her charities, she was the vicar’s most invaluable -assistant, and it is to be doubted whether he, in his _rôle_ of -spiritual adviser, was as much loved and revered as “Sister Faithful,” -whose tireless hands constructed wonderful garments for the babies, and -whose name was borne by half the children in consequence. - -No breath from the outside world had ever touched this woman. Once she -had gone to Paris with her father, but it remained in her mind simply a -lovely picture, a little larger and more daring in colour than the -pictures she had seen at the Louvre. She had been up to London several -times, but that was to make notes at the British Museum. Her life was in -no way different from that of most of the women she had known. - -Once she had seen an item in a journal that struck her forcibly; it -mentioned that there were eight hundred thousand more women than men in -Great Britain, and that a good proportion of them were matrimonially -eligible women as regarded property and accomplishments, but that they -were of the middle classes, where marriage was most infrequent. Sister -Faithful had remarked then that she knew a great many attractive women -who were not liable to marry. She wondered why, for her education had -made her logical. And then she reviewed her own life. All the male -members of the families of her friends had gone to larger towns as soon -as they were old enough; the girls, after a touch of boarding-school, -had come home to assume simple household duties, and, an occasional -curate excepted, they did not often meet young men. - -“Sister Faithful,” having for her constant companion a man who lived in -books, had rather a better-trained mind than most women. It had not been -allowed to wander, and her greatest weakness was her way of bestowing -charity. She did not like to account to anyone for it, and so tired -mothers, who sent their offspring to her for a holiday, were apt to have -them returned in new and wholesome garments, which showed that a heart -calculated by nature to be a motherly one was bestowing its bounty -quietly on other women’s children. Strange to say, Sister Faithful had -not given any thought to marriage for herself. That she should ever -leave her father, marry, and have children of her own seemed impossible. -She was quite content to accept life as she found it, and improve the -morals and manners of the children of the lower classes about her. And -now she was fifty, and until her brother’s return she had lived alone. - -She had remembered yesterday that it was her birthday and had celebrated -it by inviting the school children to tea in her garden, which was in -its loveliest summer dress. In the evening she had received a letter -from her distant and unknown cousin, the Professor, whom she had only -met in those long ago excursions to London, saying he was “tired”—“worn -out,” his doctor said—and he had written to see if his cousin would take -him in for a few weeks’ vacation. “I shall live out-of-doors,” he wrote, -“and I promise in no way to disturb your life. I want only my books, and -to wander about over your beautiful country.” She wondered if she had -been hasty when she wrote back to bid “welcome to our nearest of kin and -our father’s friend.” She remembered that after all he was really a -cousin once removed, and a little younger than herself, and that when -her father had liked him he was very young indeed. A glance at the -mirror re-assured her. She was very free from vanity, and she realized -she was no longer young. The villagers called her beautiful, but perhaps -their sensibilities, sharpened by the lack of beauty about them, were -keener in detecting their benefactress’ fine points. - -Thanks to her healthy, regular life, Sister Faithful at fifty was very -good to look upon. The soft hair, worn lightly back from the low, -well-shaped forehead, was only faintly tinged with grey, and her skin -was as smooth and fresh as that of a woman of half her age. It was not -the firm, quiet mouth, nor even the gentle, sweet brown eyes that -attracted one most; it was the unconsciousness of the woman, the very -annihilation of self, as it were, without affectation, that made one -long to know _why_ she was constantly giving without any question of -return. No man had ever told her she was beautiful; her father’s friends -had approved of her, but then she ministered to their comfort, when they -came to stay at Edgecombe. She attended to everyone’s wants, and seemed -to have gone through life without dreaming that in some larger sphere -she would have been considered a very attractive woman. Not that she was -perfect; she had her idiosyncrasies—as who has not? but she had a -disciplined, well-trained, unselfish nature, that overbalanced any -faults. Even now her one consideration was for Cousin Emerson, who was -to arrive the following day. Would he be comfortable in Edgecombe? Would -he not be lonely with her and only an invalid host to look after him? -These, and other doubts crossed her mind, and, as a relief, she spent -the entire day overlooking the sweeping and dusting of the already clean -house. - -Next day, the evening train brought Cousin Emerson. As he alighted from -the carriage, Sister Faithful thought him only an older edition of the -intellectual-looking man she had met in London. He was evidently still -ill, and looked as if he had burned too much midnight oil. Her practical -mind immediately swept over the entire list of nourishing dishes that -she might concoct for him. He, half-an-hour later, glanced over his -well-appointed room, and thanked fortune that it had occurred to him to -stay with his good cousins. - -After dinner this occurred to him again as he stretched himself on the -comfortable library lounge, and let the smoke of his cigar curl up in -slow, bewitching rings about his head, while Cousin Faithful read aloud -in that well-modulated voice of hers. - -And so the days went on, bringing health and strength to Cousin Emerson, -and great, unspeakable content to “Sister Faithful,” as he too called -her. - -“Somehow,” he said, after he had been at Edgecombe for several weeks, -“it seems as if we were more than cousins. I shall reverse your name; -you shall be my Faithful Sister, as you have been nurse and friend.” - -At first he had accompanied her in her long afternoon walks, when she -visited her cottage people, but after a while he persuaded her to take -all sorts of short excursions on foot, or again they would drive over -the hills about the estate. - -The evenings were perhaps the sweetest of all to Sister Faithful, for -then her interests in the outer world ceased, and, until her cousin -came, she had often felt very lonely. Now, they read aloud, played a -friendly game of cribbage, or strolled about the garden when the nights -were fine. Autumn was drawing near. Cousin Emerson’s visit had -lengthened to two months, and still he said nothing about going. He was -quite strong again, and seemed to have lost the melancholy that at first -overshadowed him. Faithful’s heart rejoiced as she looked at him, and -she did not allow herself to think that it might end. - -One morning, in early September, the post brought several letters. They -were breakfasting. Faithful remembered every detail afterwards. The -pungent odour of chrysanthemums always carried her back to that morning. -Cousin Emerson had gathered for the breakfast-table the splendid bunch -that adorned it. - -Suddenly a look of intense happiness lighted up his face. “Faithful -Sister,” he said, looking across at her, “I want you to be the first to -congratulate me. At last the woman whom I adore, for love of whom I have -been so miserable, has consented to marry me. I doubt whether, if I had -not fallen into your dear hospitable hands, I could have struggled so -well to recover.” - -In his excitement, Cousin Emerson did not notice the pallor that swept -over Faithful’s face. Her voice was steady as she said, “Why have you -not let us sympathize with you all along?” - -“Oh, it all seemed so hopeless,” he said, “and I could not bear to open -the old wound; but I am to go up to London at once, and I shall bring my -bride straight to Edgecombe, if I may.” - -That night he left, after many cordial expressions of gratitude, and -Sister Faithful, apparently unmoved, saw him go; but afterward she had -no mind to wander about the garden, or read a favourite book. She went -quietly to her room, and, for the first time, wept. - -She knew she had been companionable to this man; that in her society he -had found peace and content. And yet—in a moment—he had forgotten it -all; he had gone to win some other woman, impelled by what he called -love. Was it love she felt for him? Even then, in her loneliness, with a -grey-skyed future before her, and no prospect of change, she felt only -her own inconsistency. “He was my kinsman and guest; he never asked me -to love him, and he never knew my feeling for him,” she argued, and so -the night passed, a night of unselfish sorrow for the lonely woman, -while the man was being whirled towards the one being who engrossed -_his_ thoughts. - -Afterward, when Cousin Emerson and his wife came to Edgecombe to visit, -he remarked, in the privacy of their room, that Cousin Faithful had aged -terribly; but to the poor people she seemed more saintly than ever, for -after that one happy summer—the only time she had ever allowed herself -any personal happiness—she had returned to her charities as if she -wished to make up for some neglect. And when the villagers called her -“Sister Faithful,” she felt it almost as a reproach that she had dared -hope for any other name. - - - - - IV. - Miss Cameron’s Art Sale. - - -Katherine Cameron was spending her third winter in Paris. The first year -she had led a quiet, uneventful student’s life. The second season she -launched out a little into society as represented by the English and -American colonies, and now she was spoken of as that “clever and rich -Miss Cameron,” whom the English-speaking residents remembered to have -seen at various _musicales_ the year before. - -On her return from America, with the reputation of added wealth, she -found herself invited everywhere. Everyone wondered that she did not -marry, for she was a young woman whom men admired apart from her money -and accomplishments. But although she went out a great deal, and was -usually surrounded by a little court of struggling tenors and -impecunious titles, she seemed unmoved by all the attention she -received, and apparently was not even greatly amused. - -The truth was, Katherine Cameron, being a clever girl, had seen through -the artificiality of it all, and still could not bear to give up the -illusion she had cherished all her life, that she should find her _real_ -sphere in the society she would meet in Paris; it might be among her own -country people, but they would be broadened by travel and study until -all desirable and agreeable qualities would be blended into a harmonious -whole. - -When she decided to pass the winter with her aunt, Mrs. Montgomery, it -was with the sweet hope that she should be able to realise her dreams of -a little “Salon”—a revival of that delightful French institution and -formulated on the same lines, but having American cleverness and -adaptability added to it. It seemed feasible. Mrs. Montgomery had lived -in Paris for years, and she knew all the resident society people, the -rest of the “floating population” were usually provided with letters of -introduction to her. Her “Tuesdays At Home” were delightful functions. -Katherine Cameron had great respect for her aunt’s discrimination, which -often seemed prophetic, and caused uninitiated people to wonder _how_ -Mrs. Montgomery happened to have “taken up” some artist or singer who -afterwards became famous. - -Still Katherine was not entirely satisfied. Men liked her, but thought -her cold; at any rate, she never fulfilled any promise of a flirtation -that her agreeable manners might suggest. Women said she was ambitious, -that she would only marry some distinguished foreigner, and yet Miss -Cameron, who sometimes used forcible expressions, had been heard to say, -“She would marry a ‘Hottentot’ if she loved him.” She was honestly -trying to get some good out of her surroundings, and was perfectly -willing to fall in love, or to gratify her intellectual tastes, just as -it might happen. Up to this time, however, she had been distinctly -heart-whole, and aside from an occasional charming man or woman whom she -met in society, or the interesting art students whom she knew (and liked -best of all), it seemed to her clear and practical mind that there was a -great deal of “padding,” as she expressed it. - -She resented, as a patriotic American woman of culture and refinement, -that the so-called “exclusive” circles in the American quarter accepted -some of the families who would not occupy conspicuous positions in their -own free and enlightened country. She could not help comparing certain -wealthy young society women with a clever but poor friend of hers, whose -artistic talent had been recognized by her own warm-hearted Southern -townspeople, who had contributed a sufficient sum to send Miss Paterson -abroad, confident that her brush would one day repay them. The two young -women had met at the studio of a common friend, and Miss Cameron, who -professed to know nothing of art, had asked such intelligent questions -of the young student that Miss Paterson, with a woman’s quick intuition, -had surmised that her fashionable countrywoman had a more artistic -nature than she admitted. A friendship was begun, and Katherine Cameron -became the _confidante_ and admirer of the rising young artist. - -Just now she has returned from a musicale at the hotel of one of the -famous teachers, and she is describing it to Miss Paterson, who has come -in for a chat and a quiet cup of tea. - -“It makes me so indignant,” she is saying, “when I think what an -impression we must make on intelligent French people. Why this -afternoon, at Madame de la Harpe’s, it was simply one medley of -disputing mothers and jealous pupils. Madame herself is so distinctly a -lady, that when two irate mothers appealed to her as to which of their -daughters should sing _first_, she shrugged her shoulders in true French -fashion and said, ‘They will both sing many times; they will sing so -well that it will be doubtless required’—a diplomatic answer! She knew -her audience, and felt that a programme of twenty-three numbers could -not admit of many encores in one afternoon. I noticed she did not -deviate from the original plan. Then that vulgar Mrs. Booth, from -somewhere out west, who has the gorgeous apartment, and the family of -extremely pretty daughters, asked me if I would join their French class. -‘We have an actor, M. de Valle, to teach us,’ she said, ‘he is just -splendid—so handsome and so polite; only he will make us _congregate_ -verbs.’ To my horror, Mr. Vincent, of the English Embassy, who is so -coldly critical of everything American, overheard her, and I saw him -trying to suppress a smile, which made me indignant, so I impulsively -replied, ‘I shall be charmed, Mrs. Booth—so kind of you to ask me.’ And -now I shall have to extricate myself from that situation, for, although -I have a certain appreciation of the ludicrous, I cannot sacrifice one -night of every week, even to show Mr. Vincent that I despise his -criticism.” - -“But I have rather thought Mr. Vincent one of your admirers,” Miss -Paterson returns. - -“Admirer? He sees in me a young person who will not be apt to make any -very ridiculous blunders, and as he _has_ to appear occasionally, being -in the diplomatic service, he talks to me as a sort of compromise -between the tourist element and his own fixed aristocracy. I _love_ to -shock him. Why, to-day, he said, in that deliberate tone he employs when -he wishes to be particularly patronizing, ‘I suppose you go in for all -sorts of things, Miss Cameron. I hear you are artistic, and know the -Latin Quarter better than this side of the river. When do you get it all -in?’ I told him to behold a young person positively unique in Paris—one -who was actively pursuing _nothing_. And then he actually remarked that -‘in an age where all the young women were running mad with _fads_ it was -refreshing to find one so confessedly idle.’ He aggravates me so that I -always lose my head, and get the worst of the argument. But here I am -talking away, and forgetting that I am to hear all about you and your -plans.” - -Miss Cameron soon proved that she could listen as well as talk, for she -was most attentive while Miss Paterson told her about a letter which she -had received that day, and which had disturbed her not a little. In the -midst of their displeasure both girls saw the ludicrous side of it, for -it was nothing less than a letter from Miss Paterson’s townspeople -_forbidding_ her marriage to the penniless young sculptor with whom she -had fallen in love. - -“What impertinence!” Miss Cameron remarks; “talk about the tyranny of -European courts! Here you are, an orphan, without a relative in the -world to restrain you, and these people fancy they _own_ you, and can -control your liberty just because they have furnished you with funds -which they ought to know will be returned to them.” - -“But there _is_ a moral obligation,” Miss Paterson replied. “I shall -send them back every penny of their money as soon as possible, and I -shall always feel a debt of gratitude which no pecuniary remuneration -can cover.” - -“Little saint!” Miss Cameron exclaims, but she respects her brave little -countrywoman all the more, because she is so visibly distressed at the -situation. - -“Let us go over the facts,” adds Miss Cameron. “Here they are briefly: A -number of your townspeople, seeing in you evidences of talent, raised a -sum of money and sent you to Paris two years ago. Two of these people -selected your masters (fortunately they made no mistake there); you have -worked faithfully and conscientiously, and have accomplished more than -most art students do in twice the time. This year two of your studies -have been in the Salon, one of them was bought by a Frenchman of -critical taste; and you have a number of charming saleable studies, -besides your large picture of the garden-party intended for next year’s -Salon, in which festive scene your humble servant poses as the hostess -serving tea to a group of _fin-de-siècle_ society people. You are sure -to make a hit with that, so many of the figures are actual portraits, -and Paris dotes on personalities. It is conceded that merit no longer -wins, but to be ‘received’ one must be a friend of some member of the -jury, or paint the people whose vanity moves them to pull some wire, so -that they may gaze down from the Salon walls upon an inquisitive and -envious public.” - -“And in this case can I count on _you_ or some of your admirers to pull -the wires, Katherine?” Miss Paterson mischievously asks. - -“Yes; that picture shall hang ‘on the line,’ even if I have to lobby for -it; but you know all the artists think it splendidly treated,” said Miss -Cameron. - -“I hoped it would be received this year, but, do you know, I have been -considering all day whether I had better not sell it now, and send back -as much money as I can raise immediately; for I intend to marry Edgar -McDowald, with the benediction of my patrons if possible—without it if -necessary,” emphatically declares Miss Paterson. - -“And I shall aid and abet you, especially if you intend to show them -that ‘love laughs at locksmiths’—and creditors. But, seriously, why not -have an art sale? I am off to a musicale at that extraordinary Mrs. -Smyth’s (formerly spelt with an i), who begins every Monday morning -sending letters, followed during the week by three-cornered notes marked -‘_pressée_,’ in which she ‘begges’ her dear friend, whoever it may be, -to run in Saturday afternoon, and casually remarks that some ‘celebrated -musicien’ will perform. The joke is they usually do, and we all find -ourselves there once or twice a season. To-night the American Minister -has promised to be present, and I shall profit by the occasion to invite -everyone to your studio next week to see some charming studies which -will be for sale.” - -Miss Paterson knew Miss Cameron’s influence, and felt that she was quite -safe in letting her friend have her way; so after talking over the -details they separated. - -That evening Miss Cameron succeeded in quietly scattering the -information through the crowded rooms that a very charming friend of -hers, the Miss Paterson, who occasionally received with her, would have -a little private art sale the following week. Among the attentive -listeners was Mr. Vincent, who casually asked if Miss Paterson had -finished her Salon picture which she had described to him. - -“She has,” Miss Cameron replied, and suddenly added, “And you know, Mr. -Vincent, I cannot offer my friend money, nor would she sell me so -important a picture as her large one, for she would think I did it to -help her; now, I want to ask you, as the person she would think of as -being the last one connected with me (here Mr. Vincent smiled a rather -melancholy but affirmative smile), to buy two of her studies for me in -some other name. I can easily dispose of them as presents, and she will -never be the wiser.” - -“Miss Cameron’s wishes are my commands. I will call on Miss Paterson -before Wednesday, and on the day when the exhibition takes place, you -can be sure that at least two pictures will be marked ‘Sold.’” - -“That will give a business-like air to the whole arrangement, Mr. -Vincent, and suggest to any possible buyers that other equally -attractive studies are for sale. This must be a profound secret. Do you -promise?” - -“Certainly,” Mr. Vincent replied, and Miss Cameron knew she could trust -him. - -“He is really very likeable, when one sees him alone,” Miss Cameron -soliloquizes; and then she reflects that it is decidedly her fault that -she does not see Mr. Vincent more frequently in his best light; she -remembers various occasions when she has made their duet a trio by -addressing some third person, thus preventing a possible tête-à-tête. - -The afternoon selected by Miss Paterson arrived, and as Miss Cameron -alighted from her coupé in the humble street where art and poor students -hold sway, she remarked with pleasure a goodly line of private -carriages, and knew that her scheme had succeeded, and that Miss -Paterson was the fashion—at least of the hour. The question was, Would -they buy her pictures? And then she added to herself, “They must be -sold, even if I have to find other agents, and buy them all in.” But the -loyal girl might have spared herself any anxiety. As she entered the -room, which was artistically draped and hung with numerous -strongly-executed sketches, she saw the magic word “Sold,” not only on -several of the small studies, but conspicuously placed at the base of -the largest canvas, Miss Paterson’s salon picture, in which Miss Cameron -is the central and principal figure. - -“Isn’t it too delightful, dear?” Miss Paterson whispers to her. “An -Englishman, a friend of Mr. Vincent’s, came here with him yesterday, saw -my canvas, liked it, asked my price, and actually took it. Mr. Vincent -also bought two other studies, and several have gone to-day. Edgar has -lost no time. He has disappeared now to cable to my esteemed -benefactors, ‘_Marriage will take place; cheque for full amount on -way_.’ Extravagant of us, I know, and of course it’s extremely -‘_previous_,’ but we really see our way clear to happiness, and I shall -always feel _you_ did it all.” - -As Miss Cameron shook hands with Mr. Vincent that day she told him that -he had been instrumental in making two deserving people happy. - -“It was so thoughtful to bring your friend here, who bought the large -picture,” she says. And then she adds, “Did I ever see him?” - -“I think you have seen him,” Mr. Vincent replies. Something in his -manner betrays him, and Miss Cameron, guessing the truth, impulsively -says: - -“You bought it yourself, Mr. Vincent.” - -“Hush!” he softly whispers, with his finger on his lips. “We are -fellow-conspirators, and cannot betray each other.” - -Next year, when a great American city gave Edgar McDowald the order for -a State monument, the beauty of his designs having distanced all -competitors, Parisians remarked that Mrs. Montgomery’s discrimination, -as regarded celebrities, seemed to have fallen upon her niece. - -Mr. and Mrs. McDowald delight in telling of their romantic courtship, -and how Miss Cameron’s scheme of an art sale brought about their -marriage; but Miss Cameron always affirms that its success was not due -to her, but to Mr. Vincent’s tact in exhibiting that expensive canvas to -his friend. - -Miss Cameron, being a worldly-wise young woman, tries to feel that Mr. -Vincent’s motives were wholly generous and disinterested; but if what -rumour says is true, Mr. Vincent would do more than that for the -charming central figure in Mrs. McDowald’s Salon picture, which now -looks down from a good position in the library of his own English home, -and which never hung “on the line” after all. - - - - - V. - A Complex Question. - - -There were a half-dozen or more good riders in Tangier that winter, but -Bob Travers was the acknowledged leader. At every annual race-meeting he -proved to his backers that their confidence in him was not misplaced, -for, brave fellows as they were, none of them rode so hard, or cared to -take the risks which Bob cheerfully ran. - -Robert MacNeil Travers, familiarly known as “Bob,” was spending his -second season in Africa. The first time he had run across from “Gib” to -look up something in the way of horseflesh, and once there he had easily -fallen in with a set of men whose society he enjoyed extremely. They -were dashing fellows, several of them young English noblemen, who found -the free, bold life they could lead in this lawless place too -fascinating to leave. It was very agreeable in that delicious winter -climate to dash off over the wild country on a surefooted Barb horse, or -to join some caravan for a few weeks’ excursion in the interior, while -in England everyone was freezing, or at least imbedded in fog. - -They had their little glimpses of civilization—the Tangerines—for the -few resident Europeans were very glad to entertain any interesting -visitors from the outside world. Bob Travers was as much liked by the -wives and sisters of his friends as any gallant, well-bred Englishman -deserves to be, and every one was pleased when his engagement was -announced to pretty Mabel Burke, the sister of Boardman Burke, the -artist, whose Eastern scenes, painted under the clear skies of Morocco, -have won for him the reputation of being one of the foremost exponents -in the new “Impressionist School.” - -The occasions were rare when Bob Travers was not included, whether it -was for a boar hunt, a day with the fox hounds, or a little dance, at -any one of the half-dozen hospitable European houses. - -One night he was late in arriving at a dinner-party given in honour of -some Americans, whose yacht had appeared in Tangier Bay that day; they -were already seated at the table when Bob slipped quietly in, and, at a -little nod from Miss Burke, found his place beside her. He was conscious -that his other neighbour was a woman—a young and attractive one. He had -time to observe that, when his obliging hostess, in reply to his -apologies, said, “You are punished enough, for you have lost at least -ten minutes of Miss Schuyler’s society.” This, with a knowing little -look at Miss Burke, which seemed to say, “To be sure he is your -property, but if you are engaged to the most presentable man in Tangier, -you must pay the penalty, and give him up to occasional and fastidious -visitors.” - -Modest little Mabel Burke, who simply basked in “Bob’s” smiles, and -wondered at her own good luck in ever winning his love, gave her hostess -a proud, happy glance that spoke volumes for her sense of security. - -A closer look at Miss Schuyler convinced Mr. Travers that he had never -met anyone at all like her; she was so self-possessed and clever that -they were soon talking as freely as if they had been old acquaintances. -She was not so pretty as his _fiancée_, but she was very fascinating (a -charm that even Bob had not attributed to Miss Burke), and her -versatility amazed him. It did not seem to matter whether they discussed -horses, religion, or politics—Miss Schuyler had her opinions, and she -expressed them without conceit or aggressiveness. During the fortnight -that the smart little yacht _Liberty_ was anchored in the waters of -Tangier Bay, and its merry party were devoting their days to long -country rides, excursions to Cape Spartel, or cantering along the sandy -beach, Travers found Miss Schuyler the most interesting of companions; -he seemed to have become her acknowledged escort, and (since one night, -when he had nearly killed his best horse by galloping several miles for -a doctor to come to the rescue of one of the ladies who had broken her -arm while the party were making an excursion) Miss Schuyler had singled -him out for all sorts of delicate favours. He, on the other hand, -discovered that this woman, with her grace and culture, was just such a -woman as he had pictured he should eventually take to Travers Towers as -its mistress. For in less than a fortnight he realized that in his -happy-go-lucky way he had drifted into that engagement with the pretty -sister of his dearest friend. What could be more natural? All the -conditions had favoured his courtship, and until he saw Miss Schuyler it -had seemed very agreeable to possess the affections of the nicest girl -in Tangier. - -He knew she was not the wife he had dreamt of, but then, he reasoned, -one never marries one’s ideal. Mabel Burke was sweet and good, and loved -him; so one delicious, star-lit night, after a cosy dinner, he found -himself alone with her in the quiet little Moorish court of the Burkes’ -villa, and as Mabel gave him his second cup of coffee he looked at her -approvingly, and on the impulse of the moment told her he should like to -have her always with him. He meant it then; and after that it was all -easy sailing, for Boardman Burke was delighted to give his sister to a -man whom he already loved as a brother. The gossip of the town had not -reached the visitors in the yacht, and Miss Schuyler only heard -accidentally that Mr. Travers was engaged to Miss Burke, for Bob had -felt a reluctance to tell her—had supposed someone else would—and, -finally, seeing she believed him to be free, he had _dreaded_ to tell -her. And so their relations progressed undisturbed, and, like all things -under an Oriental sun, developed rapidly. - -They had been taking tea at Mr. Boardman Burkes and looking at his -pictures, when suddenly the artist said: - -“I must show you the one I am doing for Travers’ wedding present.” - -And when someone remarked that he could take his time to finish the -painting, Boardman Burke had said very distinctly: - -“Oh, no! I expect to have to give my sister, as well as that best -picture of mine, to Travers before the year is out.” - -It is just possible that Mr. Burke thought it wise to make this -statement, for occupied though he was in his work, he had observed that -his sister looked troubled. Although Travers dropped in every day, he, -too, seemed pre-occupied, or was in a hurry, and he was seen constantly -riding with Miss Schuyler. Little Mabel was too seriously in love with -him, and believed in him too deeply, to admit that he had been the least -remiss in his attentions to her, but she felt relieved, all the same, to -hear that the _Liberty_ would hoist anchor and go over to Gibraltar the -next morning, and from there continue her course along the coast of -Spain and the Riviera. Even when she heard Travers and the American -Consul accept an invitation to go to Gibraltar with the party, she felt -no uneasiness, for he would return the following noon by the regular -steamer. So she let her accepted lover stroll off with Miss Schuyler, -only saying a quiet “good-bye.” - -When she looked out from her window the next morning the pretty little -yacht had disappeared, and all day she fancied Bob buying up supplies, -which he said he wanted for an expedition into the interior. - -In reality, when Mr. Travers had glanced at Miss Schuyler, after the -announcement made by Mr. Burke of his engagement, he thought she looked -a trifle pale, but then there is such a peculiar light when the African -sun comes down into a Moorish garden through the waving palms that one -gets strange impressions. - -Miss Schuyler was very silent on her way to the beach, and Travers did -not see her again till morning, when he crossed on the yacht to -Gibraltar. During the night a sense of all he had lost flashed upon him; -he could see no way out of it. He was a man who prided himself upon -keeping his word; that word was given to Miss Burke, whom he liked and -respected, but whom he now knew he did not love. And he had allowed -himself to drift on through two happy weeks, devoting himself to this -stranger, who in return must certainly despise him for his cowardice. -Distinctly, it was an awkward position. He felt confident that, given -his freedom, he might win the woman of his choice, for she was the kind -of woman to inspire him to do his best, and Bob Travers’ best was very -good indeed, but his freedom was just what he could not ask for, so he -finally decided to tell Miss Schuyler the exact truth, and thus at least -feel he had her respect. - -On the yacht he told her his story, and she listened, as a woman listens -who has had many disillusionments, and accepts them as necessities. - -He thought her very cold when she only said: - -“We have been very good friends, Mr. Travers. It will be enough to tell -you first that I should have preferred to hear of your plans from your -own lips. It all seemed so natural in Tangier, so far from the -conventional outside world, that I allowed myself to give way to -impulses which I thought under perfect discipline.” - -“But you must know, you _shall_ know, that my heart is yours, that you -are my _ideal_ woman, the one I should have married,” Travers earnestly -pleaded. - -“If that is so, let it encourage you to be strong. Go back, marry your -little girl, and forget one who has suffered too much to judge anyone.” -Then Travers went down the side of the yacht into a small boat, and -could only say “God bless you” over her extended hand before the steps -were pulled up, and the yacht steamed out on her way to Malaga. - -A few days after at Marseilles the papers were brought on board, and an -article in them instantly attracted their attention. It graphically -described a fatal accident that had befallen Robert MacNeil Travers, who -had just landed from a yacht at Gibraltar evidently in perfect health. -He had gone up to the summit of the rock, and stood at the edge of its -dangerous eastern face. His companion, the American Consul at Tangier, -had stopped a moment to look out to sea with his glass, and when he -turned round poor Travers had disappeared, “probably seized with -vertigo,” the paper said; for Mr. Travers was heir to a large estate, -and about to be married to the sister of the celebrated artist, Boardman -Burke, so no idea of suicide was entertained. - -Who shall say whether Miss Schuyler believed this newspaper version? -Perhaps she remembered Travers’ last impassioned word, “You _shall_ know -my heart is yours,” and he had taken this way, the only possible way, to -show her his devotion without being dishonourable. - - * * * * * - -Poor little Mabel Burke wept grievously, but she is again engaged, this -time to a man who is far more domestic than poor Travers. - -And Miss Schuyler? She continues to be Miss Schuyler, although she is as -fascinating as ever. A woman who has tested one man’s affection to the -death and not found it wanting, is not easily won! - - - PLYMOUTH: - WILLIAM BRENDON AND SON, - PRINTERS. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------- - - - - - TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES - - - 1. Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling. - 2. Archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings retained as printed. - 3. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_. - - - - - -End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hypnotic Experiment of Dr. Reeves, by -Charlotte Rosalys Jones - -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HYPNOTIC EXPERIMENT *** - -***** This file should be named 62032-0.txt or 62032-0.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - http://www.gutenberg.org/6/2/0/3/62032/ - -Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net - - -Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will -be renamed. - -Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright -law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, -so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United -States without permission and without paying copyright -royalties. 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font-size: x-large; margin: .75em auto; - page-break-before: always; } - p,h1,div { clear: both; } - </style> - </head> - <body> - - -<pre> - -The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hypnotic Experiment of Dr. Reeves, by -Charlotte Rosalys Jones - -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and -most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll -have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using -this ebook. - - - -Title: The Hypnotic Experiment of Dr. Reeves - and Other stories - -Author: Charlotte Rosalys Jones - -Release Date: May 5, 2020 [EBook #62032] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: UTF-8 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HYPNOTIC EXPERIMENT *** - - - - -Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net - - - - - - -</pre> - - -<div class='tnotes covernote'> - -<p class='c000'><b>Transcriber’s Note:</b></p> - -<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p> - -</div> - -<div class='section ph1'> - -<div class='lg-container-l c001'> - <div class='linegroup'> - <div class='group'> - <div class='line'><em>The Hypnotic</em></div> - <div class='line'><em>Experiment of</em></div> - <div class='line'><em>Dr. Reeves</em></div> - </div> - <div class='group'> - <div class='line'><em>And other Stories</em></div> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -</div> - -<div class='figright id001'> -<img src='images/i_002.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /> -</div> - -<div class='titlepage'> - -<div> - <h1 class='c002'><span class='xlarge'>THE</span><br /> <span class='sc'>Hypnotic Experiment</span><br /> <span class='small'>OF</span><br /> <span class='sc'>Dr. Reeves</span><br /> <span class='xlarge'>And other Stories</span></h1> -</div> - -<div class='nf-center-c0'> -<div class='nf-center c003'> - <div><span class='xsmall'>BY</span></div> - <div class='c004'><span class='large'><em>CHARLOTTE ROSALYS <span class='under'>J</span>ONES</em></span></div> - <div class='c003'><span class='large'>London</span></div> - <div><span class='large'>BLISS, SANDS AND FOSTER</span></div> - <div>CRAVEN STREET, STRAND</div> - <div>1894</div> - </div> -</div> - -</div> - -<div class='chapter'> - <span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span> - <h2 class='c005'>I.<br /> The Hypnotic Experiment of Dr. Reeves.</h2> -</div> - -<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>Dr. Edward Reeves, the celebrated -Rheumatism Specialist, -is not a favourite with the members of -his profession. His methods of treatment -being unknown, coupled with -his refusal as yet to divulge them, -have given his enemies and rivals a -chance to accuse him of charlatanism; -but to the great rheumatic public he -has become a demi-god; and as long -as our changeable climate continues to -nurture this disease, his idiosyncrasies -will be overlooked by the multitudes -whom he relieves.</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>In his genial moods, the doctor -tells many curious anecdotes, and how -some of his daring experiments were -made under rather romantic circumstances. -One of the strangest of -them can best be told in his own -language:</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Some time ago, I had, among my -patients, a young man who interested -me from the first. He came to my -private hospital for treatment of a -severe form of rheumatism of the -heart; he was attended by a younger -brother, whose devotion struck me -as remarkable, until I became better -acquainted with the invalid, and -discovered how worthy he was of -it all. He seldom spoke of himself, -except his one great desire to get -rid of the subtle disease that overshadowed -his life, and he seemed -anxious to aid me in every way -with the treatment Evidently wealthy, -gifted, and just about eight-and-twenty, -<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>it seemed almost impossible to believe -his bright young life was constantly -threatened by the convulsive attacks -which had become more and more -frequent.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Unlike most of my patients afflicted -by the same trouble, he did not respond -to the usual remedies; and I -realized that if his life were saved at -all it must be by employing heroic -measures. However, sure that the -disease was lessening its hold in -general, and only needed driving away -from a vital point, I awaited developments.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Late one evening, as I was seated -in my study, puzzling my brain with -some questions of hypnotic influence -over patients at critical moments, my -night bell rang. I went to the door -myself, and found there the nurse of -my young friend, who told me my -presence was desired at once, as the -most alarming symptoms had reappeared. -<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>Stepping back for my hat, -my eyes fell upon the book of <cite>Experiments -in Hypnotism</cite>, which an old -Professor in Paris had sent me, remembering -my absorbing interest in -Charcot’s specialty, and a certain -power I had developed when a student -in the Latin quarter. This power -I had used to tranquillise nervous -patients, or to play practical jokes -on my friends, after the manner of -most young medical students who -discover they have any skill in this -direction. An idea occurred to me—Why -not inoculate my patient with -the powerful amount of virus required -to drive the disease finally from the -dangerous region of the heart, <em>while -he is in a hypnotic condition</em>?</p> - -<p class='c007'>“In an instant after, all the perils -of the situation presented themselves: -Do remedies act if the patient is -under this influence? Will the final -result be the desired one? Providing -<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>the pain be temporarily stilled, would it -re-occur after the hypnotic influence -had been removed?</p> - -<p class='c007'>“These and other doubts so disturbed -me, that on my way to the -hospital I determined to avoid taking -any such measures, unless I found the -patient actually dying.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“As I entered, I was met by the -brother. He seemed plunged in despair.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘He is going fast, doctor,’ he said. -‘Can you do nothing?’</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Without a word I stepped to the -bedside. I found my worst fears -realized. At a glance I saw he would -not survive the night unless the -frightful spasms that were fast sapping -his strength were arrested.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“As I took his hand and felt his -pulse, he looked up past me at his -brother, and gasped the one word -‘Annie.’</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘Whom does he want?’ I asked.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘His <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancée</span></i>, doctor. My brother -<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>was to have been married in a month; -but when he knew that he was threatened -with a probably fatal disease, he begged -me to help him quite secretly to try -this last chance for recovery; and so, -although he is within a mile of his own -house and that of his intended wife, -no one but myself and his faithful -servant is aware of it. To all our -friends we are hundreds of miles away, -looking after business interests. And -now it has grown worse and worse, -until he is dying, absolutely within -reach of Annie, to whom he is madly -devoted.’</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘Will you be calm, and help me -to make one last great trial?’ I -asked.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘Great heavens! What can I do?’ -he replied.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘Take my carriage; it is at the -door; tell the coachman to drive his -fastest to Annie’s house. Bring her -back with you; and, above all, explain -<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>to her the situation, so that I can -count on perfect calmness.’”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Without a word he was gone, and -as I heard the wheels leaving the door, -I turned back to collect my thoughts -for a moment before returning to the -sick-room. I had to count on at least -half-an-hour’s delay, and meanwhile to -quiet this horrible pain and wait for -Annie to help me.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Once back in my patient’s presence, -I took his hand, looked fixedly at him -until his eyes caught mine. Then I -said, ‘You must sleep now; Annie is -coming, and you must be strong to see -her.’</p> - -<p class='c007'>“At once a look of surprise, of joy, -followed by one of despair, passed -over his face. ‘I am dying, and you -have sent for her,’ he murmured.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘Sleep,’ I said, this time completely -fixing his gaze. Almost instantly the -spasms ceased, and he sank back -among his pillows like a tired child. -<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>Not noticing the look of astonishment -in the face of the nurse (who was a -faithful old valet of the invalid), I -ordered him to send me the assistant-surgeon -and a bright young woman -nurse, whom I often selected for urgent -cases. They came at once. It was -the work of a few moments to inoculate -the greatest quantity of the powerful -poison that I had ever used at any -one time. I then made the usual -passes, and awoke the patient, resolved -not to risk any unnecessary complications. -I knew if his strength could -be kept up for three, or at the most -four hours, the battle was ours. But -could he fight it out alone? I did -not dare to guarantee the usual result -of the virus if he were asleep. I -could only count on Annie’s support -to help him out, for he seemed at -last ready to give up the fight. Even -now the impression that his sweetheart -was coming, added to the rest secured -<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>by the little respite from pain, seemed -to be sustaining him, and all I dreaded -was that he would be too feeble to -bear the effects of the remedy in its -later processes, when the convulsive -attacks were liable to be especially -violent, as if they knew they were -losing their power over their victim.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“A half hour passed, then three -quarters, and I heard the wheels stop -outside. I opened the door, went -softly into the hall, and met the brother, -pale, anxious, and—alone!</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘She is not at home, doctor. She -is at a ball, believing my brother well -and hundreds of miles away. I explained -all to her father. He has gone -to fetch her. Am I too late?’</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Just then a moan from the adjoining -room told that my patient was -suffering. I returned quickly to his -bedside, and found the old symptoms reviving. -Again the temptation beset me. -I argued: ‘I influenced him easily, he -<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>certainly feels no pain while hypnotised, -he cannot live unaided through another -convulsive attack. To be sure, I have -to fear that he can never be awakened, -and that the final effects of the remedy -may be lessened. At least two hours -must elapse before he is safe, providing -no new complications set in; and -meanwhile what an opportunity to see -if hypnotism prevents or aids inoculation! -He has no other chance. The -plan of fighting it out on natural lines, -aided by his own desire to live for his -love’s sake, has failed.’</p> - -<p class='c007'>“I hesitated no longer. Again taking -his hand, I uttered the magic word -‘sleep,’ and he sank back as before.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘Now for the great <em>coup</em>,’ I said, -and, turning to my young nurse, I -ordered her to take off her cap, put -on a hat and cloak, and follow exactly -the few directions I gave her. She -seemed to grasp my idea, and left me -free to follow out my experiment.</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>“‘Annie is coming,’ I said, looking -straight into the poor fellow’s eyes. -‘In a few minutes she will be here.’ -I hesitated even as I spoke. Can a -hypnotised patient be made to believe -that a <em>substituted</em> person is the one he -expects to see? But even as the -thought flashed across my mind the -door opened and the brother entered, -with the young nurse on his arm -dressed in walking costume.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘Here is Annie,’ I said. There -was a moment of horrible suspense. -Then at a sign from me the young -woman approached the bed, sank down -on her knees, and took both his hands -in hers. A look of incredulity, of -wonder, of hope, and then one of -ineffable peace shone on his face.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘Annie, dearest, I tried to keep -it from you and to come back to -you free from this terrible trouble,’ -he whispered.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘Yes, dear. You must not talk to -<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>me. See, I am with you, I shall not -stir.’</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘Kiss me once,’ he murmured.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“The woman reached gently over -and kissed him, and with his hands -still in hers he relapsed into unconsciousness. -In an hour more the -danger would be over, but I must -then awaken him, and unless the real -Annie were present the shock might -ruin everything. The moments went by—the -sick man sleeping, the tireless -nurse kneeling in her strained position -by his bed, the brother pacing up and -down outside the door, and I, watch -in hand, dreading the last act in this -exciting night’s drama.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Fifteen minutes more and I -heard a rustle, a murmur of voices -broken by sobs, and then silence. -Suddenly and quickly the door opened; -a beautiful woman in ball costume, -with jewels gleaming in her hair and -on her neck, glided like a spirit to the -<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>bedside. The nurse, with a woman’s -quick intuition, softly withdrew her -hands; the other knelt and took her -place, and with her eyes fixed on the -face of him whom she had thought -far away and in perfect health, she -waited. ‘She is worthy of him,’ I -thought, as I saw her attitude and her -wonderful self-possession.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Now for the test. Motioning the -others to leave the room, I awoke the -sleeper. His gaze instantly fell upon -his Annie’s loved face. ‘Hush!’ she -said; ‘you have been very ill; I know -all about it; but the danger is over; -all will be well, and I shall not leave -you.’ A puzzled look swept over his -countenance. Then he feebly whispered, -‘I was dreaming you were here; -but you had your hat on, dear; you -had just come in from the street and -found me.’</p> - -<p class='c007'>“‘I am <em>really</em> here,’ Annie replied, -‘and you must reward me by not -<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>saying another word.’ She smiled at -him, a brave smile, through the tears -that were coming now. This time, -with a satisfied look, he fell into a -natural sleep. I knew the danger was -over, and that I could safely leave him -with his own.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“As I passed out into the early misty -morning, I confess the thought of the -success of my part of the experiment -was rather swallowed up by my admiration -for that woman, and for the love, -the great unselfish, protecting love, she -had won from that man. Visions of lost -happiness came before me, and it seemed -to me I had missed something which -might have been mine, had I been less -absorbed in other ways; but just then -I reached my own door, and caught -sight of the name on the small silver -plate, <em>Dr. Edward Reeves</em>. And I -thought of the material I had collected -for a medical paper on that night’s -work, so I dropped the sentiment, and -<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>went in to make a record of the facts -in the case (which has interested the -scientific world ever since) of a patient -actually getting the full benefit of a -remedy while in an undisturbed, hypnotized -state, despite all theories to the -contrary.”</p> - -<div class='chapter'> - <span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span> - <h2 class='c005'>II.<br /> An International Courtship.</h2> -</div> - -<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>In seven minutes the great steamer -<em>Lahn</em> would slip her moorings and -sail for Southampton.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Already the more cautious friends -of the departing passengers had left -the ship, and were finding places on -the dock whence they might wave -their final messages. The decks were -clearing fast, leaving mournful groups -of travellers, who were beginning to -realize how soon they would form a -little world of their own; and so they -were making quiet observations of each -other.</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>A tall, sturdy, young Englishman -was leaning over the rail, looking a -trifle amused at the scene about him, -and occasionally waving his hand to -two men on the wharf, who were -evidently “seeing him off.” He did -not look particularly sad, or as if he -had any especial interest in the voyage -beyond reaching his destination. That -he was distinctly a well-bred Englishman, -who knew his London well, one -could not doubt; that he was also a -trifle obstinate, might be surmised -from the pose of the intellectual head -upon the square shoulders, and the -determined look about the firm, well-shaped -mouth. Just now, he has -screwed an eye-glass into his eye, and -is looking at two ladies who have -crossed the plank, and are being -greeted by two elderly gentlemen, -each of whom presents them with -bunches of flowers.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Something about them strikes the -<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>young man’s fancy; perhaps he is -interested in seeing that they seem -quite oblivious of the fact that the -warning bell is ringing, and he is wondering -if the two men are to sail also, -when suddenly, just as the gangway is -to be removed, he sees them all shake -hands, and the two women are left -standing alone.</p> - -<p class='c007'>After a final look at his friends on -the dock, he takes a turn about the -steamer, and far off on the side, quite -removed from the harbour, he sees -the younger woman standing, looking -out—not behind, at what she is leaving, -but before her. <em>Why</em> it is that he -cares at all what a perfectly unknown -young woman is doing or thinking -puzzles Mr. Gordon-Treherne. In his -five-and-thirty years, he has known a -great many of the fair sex; he has -had several rather close love affairs—with -various results. He was rescued -from what might have terminated in -<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>an unfortunate marriage when in Cambridge. -The Gordon-Trehernes considered -that the heir of the family had -no right to throw himself away upon a -modest little English girl, even if she -were the daughter of the rector, and -deeply in love with the fascinating -young collegian.</p> - -<p class='c007'>After that experience, young Mr. -Gordon-Treherne, or “The Arab,” as -his chums called him, from his love -of travel, determined not to hurry -himself about marrying. One or two -charming Frenchwomen almost destroyed -this resolution, and once he -was decidedly fascinated with the -daughter of an English general out -in India. But he had travelled the -length and breadth of the United -States, and never felt inclined to fall -in love with an American girl. Several -of his friends had married American -belles; and when young Lord Clanmore’s -engagement was announced to -<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>the beautiful and wealthy Miss Lawson, -of New York, everyone envied -him; but Treherne had not cared -to enter the lists, although he knew -Miss Lawson well. Women said he -was a man with a history, but he was -all the more fascinating for that. Men -called him a good fellow, and said -“The Arab” was the best shot and the -coolest rider in the club, only he was -always running off to some outlandish -place, where his accomplishments were -lost.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Just now his friends might have -been surprised to see him arranging -a steamer chair for the elder of the -two women who had caught his attention -on the dock. The steamer -has left the quay only a half hour, -and already an opportunity has presented -itself to make their acquaintance. -Etiquette at sea is very elastic, -and it only needed the usual attentions -to the comfort of the elder woman to -<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>attract the notice of the younger. She -has turned now, and with her hands -still full of flowers, comes toward them—a -tall, slim girl, possibly four-and-twenty -he thinks. He is dimly conscious -that both ladies are quietly -but elegantly dressed. Americans, he -fancies; and then the elder woman -speaks,—“Thanks, so much.” The -voice is low and musical. She must -be French, he thinks. She is a -brunette, and he decides that she -cannot be the mother of the tall, -fair girl who seats herself next to -her.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Let me arrange your rug also,” -Mr. Gordon-Treherne says, as he -raises his hat.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Oh, thank you; that is very comfortable.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>And again he is struck with the -well-modulated tones, which he -scarcely associates with American -voices.</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>Still they must be Americans, the -young man argues to himself, but no -longer finding an excuse to tarry in -their vicinity, he moves off, and they -meet no more till dinner-time.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Meanwhile, with the philosophy of -an old traveller, Mr. Gordon-Treherne -has interviewed the head steward, and, -foregoing the honour of sitting at the -captain’s table, he has asked to be -placed at a small one with a sofa-seat. -Experience during previous voyages -has taught him that there are -certain comforts not to be despised -in a side seat under a strong light. -He sees several prospective lonely -evenings, when he may not feel inclined -to hunt about for a good place -to read.</p> - -<p class='c007'>At dinner Mr. Gordon-Treherne -notices two elderly men and a small -boy at his table, and remarks two -vacant places. Presently his two -interesting acquaintances of the morning -<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>appear, and he has just time to -read the cards on the plates on either -side of him—“Mrs. Barry” on one, -and “Miss Stuyvesant” on the other—and -to comprehend that by some -blunder he is separating them, and -that he can only remedy the matter by -giving up his cherished seat, when the -two ladies arrive at their places. There -is a moment’s hesitation, and Mr. -Gordon-Treherne remarks, “Allow me -to change my place.” Suiting the -action to the word, he steps past and -allows Mrs. Barry to take his seat, -which brings him opposite Miss -Stuyvesant. Both ladies express their -thanks, and then, naturally, they fall -into conversation. They speak of the -steamers; Mr. Gordon-Treherne prefers -a larger boat, and refers to several -“ocean greyhounds” he has personally -known. Curiously enough the ladies -have made the same crossings, but -prefer even smaller steamers than the -<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span><em>Lahn</em>. “Americans, surely; ‘Globe -Trotters,’” he thinks.</p> - -<p class='c007'>He mentions that he has just been -to the Exhibition at Chicago. Miss -Stuyvesant says that in point of -exhibits she preferred the Paris Exposition -of ’89, and so on, until it -seems as if there were no place this -young woman had not seen and about -which she had not formed her conclusions. -He doesn’t care for it though, -Arab that he is; he likes to travel, but -the women of his family have never -expressed a desire to go beyond -Paris, and he thinks promiscuous -sight-seeing outside a woman’s province. -He shows a little of this in his manner, -for as he leaves the table, the elder -woman says:</p> - -<p class='c007'>“How glad I am, Helen, that you -do not believe in International marriages. -Now here is a well-bred, -intelligent Englishman, yet he shows -insensibly what narrow ideas he has -<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>about women. I admit he is polite, -and careful in small details of manner, -but an American girl of spirit -could never be happily married to -him. Their ideas of life are too -opposed.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>Miss Stuyvesant has evidently not -thought much about him, for she -only smiles in a vague way, and says -she has learned not to quarrel with -the old-fashioned notions of English -people.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Why, I pride myself in actually -leading them, when they start in a -tirade against the very things I do -myself!” she said.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“You are a sadly worldly young -woman,” Mrs. Barry rejoins, “and I -wish you would marry and settle in -your own country.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>Meanwhile Mr. Gordon-Treherne -was idly pacing the deck, smoking -his cigar, and wondering if the self-possessed -young woman would appear -<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>later on. “If ever I marry,” he resolves, -“it will be to some woman -who has <em>not</em> been everywhere and -seen everything. I should feel as if -I were travelling with an animated -guide-book. I wonder if that girl has -a home?”</p> - -<p class='c007'>Then it occurred to him that Miss -Stuyvesant had merely answered his -questions, and as these had been -restricted to quite impersonal topics, -he only knew her name after all.</p> - -<p class='c007'>That she was good-looking, agreeable, -and witty, he had already observed, -but she did not seem to thrust any -information about herself upon him, -as he had supposed an American girl -would. He did not see her again -that day, nor till the next afternoon, -when she was walking up and down -the deck with the captain of the -steamer, and as she passed him with a -little nod of recognition he heard her -speaking German.</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>“Surely American,” he thinks, -“knows the captain already, and -speaks his language.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>At dinner Mrs. Barry was missing, -but Miss Stuyvesant appeared looking -as calm and “well-groomed” as if a -heavy sea were not tossing everything -about, and obliging the passengers -to eat over racks.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“You are an old sailor, I see,” -began Mr. Gordon-Treherne, “but I -fear Mrs. Barry is ill.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Yes, quite seriously ill,” Miss -Stuyvesant replied. “It is always an -ordeal for her to cross the ocean.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“And has she done so frequently?” -he asked.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Nine times with me,” the young -woman coolly replied.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Really,” he said with a smile, -“one might infer you had some designs -on her life, did you not look -so anxious about her.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Oh, no, we usually have some -<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>excellent reason, we do not take this -voyage in order to martyrize Mrs. -Barry,” she replied.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“I shall have to ask her nationality -outright,” he thought.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Then you do not live in America -all the time?” he said.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Not now, we are ‘birds of passage,’ -and, like them, follow the spring-time; -our habitation is usually settled by the -climate.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“And do you know England?” he -asked.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Quite well, I was at school in -England, and some of my dearest -friends are living there.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Some church school,” he mentally -remarked.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Ah, then, perhaps you do not -altogether despise our little island, -and look down upon us from your -bigness with the scorn that most of -your compatriots do?”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“He is trying to make sport. I -<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>shall foil him,” she thought, and quite -calmly said—</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Look down upon a country upon -whose possessions ‘the sun never -sets’? Besides, the fact that I stay -so much in England ought to prove -how much I admire most of its institutions.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Clever girl!” he thought, “trying -to be a little satirical, and doesn’t -commit herself as to <em>all</em> of our ‘institutions.’ -I must make her angry to get -her real opinion.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>And then he said, “You should -see our English home-life. I am -sure <em>that</em> appeals to every American -woman.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>There was a patronising tone about -this remark that Mr. Gordon-Treherne -felt would effect his purpose.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Indeed,” she said slowly, and went -on eating, as if the conversation were -beginning rather to bore her. Now, -why Mr. Gordon-Treherne should -<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>assume that Miss Stuyvesant had not -seen this phase of England as well as -others cannot be imagined; but there -he overstepped the line, and soon after -the decidedly cool “Indeed,” Miss -Stuyvesant left the table to look after -her <em>chaperone</em>.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“An egotistical man,” she thought, -as she went to her state-room. She -had liked Mr. Gordon-Treherne’s -appearance, and being a cosmopolitan -young woman, was prepared to find -him agreeable. Now she thinks him -distinctly aggressive, with his old -conservative ideas of women and -English superiority.</p> - -<p class='c007'>He, for his part, feels he does not -understand this American girl, who -refused to quarrel with him, but -suddenly turned and left him. He -knows he has not shown himself in -his most brilliant colours.</p> - -<p class='c007'>The days passed rapidly. Mr. -Treherne and Miss Stuyvesant saw -<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>each other at table, walked the deck -together, and to the casual observer -seemed to be mutually entertained. -But although they were in so many -ways companionable, they both felt an -intangible barrier between them in the -national prejudice that their first conversation -had developed—a prejudice -probably latent in every person, however -cultivated or travelled, although -in this particular case both of these -young people flattered themselves that -they were singularly broad-minded.</p> - -<p class='c007'>The last evening of the voyage, as -they were walking up and down the -deck, Mr. Gordon-Treherne determined -to broach the subject which he felt -they had both avoided.</p> - -<p class='c007'>A larger acquaintance had brought -out the fact that Miss Stuyvesant had -read for honours at an English -University, and Mr. Treherne was -obliged to admit that in this case the -higher education of women (which -<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>never strongly appealed to him), had -not detracted from her personal charm. -She, on the other hand, discovered -that he knew a great deal about <em>her</em> -country, and considered its possibilities -almost unlimited; but she felt that -he looked down upon its newness, and -she resented his opinion of American -men, whom he described as clever and -agreeable in their relations with each -other, but servile in their attitude -toward women. The dangerous topic -of national characteristics had not -been touched upon until to-night.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Now Mr. Treherne is saying, “I -hope you have forgiven my frankness -in telling you exactly what my impressions -were of America. I could -not help seeing how charming and -bright the women were, and I -wondered if they did not despise the -slavishness of their husbands and -lovers. While the men are toiling to -get rich, their families come abroad, -<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>their wives thus educating themselves -beyond their husbands, and returning -home, find themselves less than ever -in sympathy with their surroundings. -I never wonder when an American -girl, who has had a chance to see the -world, marries a foreigner of family and -education.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>If Mr. Treherne had been closely -observing his companion, he might -have remarked an ominous expression -crossing her face, but she only said—</p> - -<p class='c007'>“I have had several friends in -Europe whose fathers’ fortunes have -found them titles, and on the occasions -that I have stayed with them, they did -not seem wildly enthusiastic over the -equality of companionship. The head -of the house had generally gone to -town, or was taking a run over to -Paris, and I wondered if it suited a -woman very well who had been -accustomed to have a small court -about her at home, to find herself -<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>restricted to a husband so little her -companion that she scarcely ever saw -him.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“But then you see, Miss Stuyvesant, -she knows he is not down in Wall Street, -or in some exchange, staking all his -fortune on the rise and fall of stocks.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“No,” she rejoined; “in the cases -of my friends the women have to -consider that their husbands are -probably at Monte Carlo or Ostend. -But really, why should we discuss it, -Mr. Treherne? No one would ever -fancy <em>you</em> admiring an American -woman, and I, for my part, if I marry -at all, would only marry an American -man.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>With which delightfully feminine -declaration, Miss Stuyvesant says -“Good-night,” and abruptly leaves -the astonished Treherne to realise -that he has not made a good finish. -Not that he cares seriously for Miss -Stuyvesant; but Treherne is accustomed -<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>to find that women like -him, and this girl, his instinct warns -him, does <em>not</em> approve of him and his -opinions. He feels annoyed, but -there seems to be nothing to explain; -his training and the circumstances of -his life have made him conservative. -He does not wish to love, nor does he -especially approve of a young woman, -however attractive, whose ideas differ -from his own so materially.</p> - -<p class='c007'>And so next day, when he bids a -formal “good-bye” to Mrs. Barry and -Miss Stuyvesant, he tries to feel that in -England he has more manly occupations -than doing the agreeable to a -young woman, and that woman an -American. This is exactly what Mr. -Treherne does <em>not</em> feel, nor does he -mean to indicate it by his manner at -parting. And so he goes off, consoling -himself with the reflection that he certainly -has found Miss Stuyvesant a -pleasant companion for a sea voyage.</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>Three weeks later, in London, when -the season is at its height, Miss Stuyvesant, -who is looking radiant in a -French gown, meets Mr. Gordon-Treherne -at Lady Clanmore’s ball. -She is on the arm of the American -ambassador, and as she crosses the -room with that unconscious grace of -hers he feels that every man present -would be glad to know her, to talk -with her as he has talked, and something -at that moment tells him that -she interests him more than any -woman has ever interested him before. -Just then she sees him, and he -fancies that a rather annoyed look -crosses her face. Then she smiles, -and he comes over and speaks to her -and to her escort, who seems to know -everyone.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Will you give me a dance, Miss -Stuyvesant?”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Yes, but I have only this one -waltz left. You see, you Englishmen -<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span><em>do</em> think that American girls are -good partners—in a ball-room,” she -adds slyly.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“I see I am not forgiven,” he says; -and then the waltz begins.</p> - -<p class='c007'>What a waltz! Gordon-Treherne -has had many good partners in his -day, for he has always been a dancing -man; but never has he seen anyone -dance like this girl. When they stop -she is scarcely out of breath, and he -has only time to say, “Let me thank -you.” For her next partner had -already claimed her, when she turned -back and mischievously remarked, -“And you, you dance extremely well—for -an Englishman.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>It occurred several times afterward -to Miss Stuyvesant that he could do -a great many things extremely well; -and if he had only been born in -America she might have preferred him -to honest Jack Hamilton, who had -loved her since she was a school -<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>girl, and who was doing exactly what -Mr. Treherne had described in that -last obnoxious conversation—staking -his fortune in an Oil Exchange, hoping -that some day he could induce Miss -Stuyvesant to give up her Bohemian -life for the luxuries of a wealthy -American home. In an indefinite -way she had thought she might do -so in the end, but, while she gave -no promise, she was sure that Jack -would never change. And so she had -drifted on pleasantly and thoughtlessly, -caring nothing for the men -she met until this one, with his strong -opinions, crossed her path, and for -<em>him</em> she believed she entertained the -most indifferent feelings. He had -simply disturbed her. She did not -think his ideas correct, but there was -a sense of justice in the girl that made -her think herself narrow and bigoted -for not being able to judge things from -other standpoints than her own. It -<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>was exactly what she was criticizing in -Mr. Gordon-Treherne.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“It will be better to avoid any more -discussions,” she thought, and so the -two did not meet again until one -glorious autumn morning, when the -house party at Lady Clanmore’s rode -out to the first meet of the season. -Miss Stuyvesant headed the cavalcade, -escorted by Lord Clanmore, and as -they came up to the meet she saw Mr. -Gordon-Treherne, who was riding a -restive thoroughbred, and looking what -he was—an excellent rider. He was -talking to a handsome woman, beautifully -gowned, who was driving a perfectly -appointed trap.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“That is Lady Diana Gordon,” -Lord Clanmore is saying. “She is -Treherne’s cousin, and rumour has it -that the old estates of Gordon and -Treherne are liable to be joined.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>Miss Stuyvesant feels for a moment -as if she were slipping from her saddle, -<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>and then Treherne sees her. He -raises his hat, and she smiles back an -odd, unconsciously sad little smile, -which he has only time to remark, -when the hounds move off. And -now all the recklessness in the girl is -aroused; she knows she rides as few -women can, and during the run she -follows her pilot, Lord Clanmore, so -straight that the whole field is lost in -admiration of her.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Treherne alone has noticed the set -look in her face. “Is she ill?” he -wonders, and he determines to keep -her well in view. He has hard work, -for she is on a vicious little mare which -she insisted upon riding, and as she -takes fence after fence Treherne grows -more and more anxious. The hounds -have come to a check just beyond a -clump of trees in the next field. Miss -Stuyvesant turns her horse’s head, and -Treherne sees she intends to take a -short cut through a dangerous low-boughed -<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>copse which intervenes. -“Stop!” he calls, but she does not -hear him, and he knows his only plan -is to head her off, if possible. Turning -sharply, he enters the field from the -other side; as he does so, he hears -the crashing of boughs, and sees Miss -Stuyvesant’s mare coming straight -towards him. Each moment he -expects to see her swept from her -saddle, but she keeps her seat bravely. -He calls out to her to turn to the right, -for before her in her present path is a -strong low-hanging branch of an old -oak, which Treherne knows she cannot -pass safely. An instant after, he sees -she has lost control over the mare, and -he heads his own horse straight towards -her. With a quick, skilful motion he -grasps her bridle just as the horses -meet. There is a mad plunge, and -Mr. Treherne, still clinging to the -other reins, has dropped his own and -is dragged from his saddle. He helps -<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>the girl to dismount from her now -subdued, but trembling animal. Miss -Stuyvesant looks very white, and Mr. -Treherne is offering her his hunting -flask, when Lord Clanmore gallops -back to them.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Your empty saddle gave us a -great scare, Treherne. Are you -hurt?”</p> - -<p class='c007'>For Mr. Treherne, too, has suddenly -grown very pale.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“It’s nothing, Clanmore, just a -little wrench I gave my arm; that’s -all.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>And Miss Stuyvesant remembers -how skilfully that arm had lifted her -from her saddle. In that moment she -knows she loves him. Every vestige -of national prejudice is swept away, -and poor Jack Hamilton’s chances are -gone for ever.</p> - -<p class='c007'>The next day Mr. Treherne managed -to write a few words with his left -hand and send them back by Miss -<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>Stuyvesant’s messenger, who came to -enquire after him. He said—</p> - -<div class='lg-container-l c008'> - <div class='linegroup'> - <div class='group'> - <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Dear Miss Stuyvesant</span>,</div> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<p class='c009'>“Many thanks for your kind -enquiries. I shall be restricted to -using my left hand for a time, but I -must tell you how plucky I thought -you yesterday. The stupid doctor has -forbidden me to leave the house, but -unless you wish to increase my feverish -symptoms please send me some token -by this messenger to assure me you -have forgotten my first impressions -of your country. As soon as I am -able I shall beg you in person to -reconsider your decision about marrying -‘only an American.’ My happiness -depends upon your marrying an -Englishman who is</p> - -<div class='lg-container-r c008'> - <div class='linegroup'> - <div class='group'> - <div class='line in2'>“Entirely yours,</div> - <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>E. Gordon-Treherne</span>.”</div> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<p class='c007'>When Miss Stuyvesant read this -note she took two beautiful little silk -<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>flags—one a Union Jack, the other -the Stars and Stripes, and tying them -together with a lover’s knot she sent -them to Treherne.</p> - -<hr class='c010' /> - -<p class='c007'>In after years Mr. and Mrs. Gordon-Treherne’s -friends remark the deference -which they pay to each other’s ideas; -and the entwined banners, which -occupy a conspicuous place in the -library, are called the “<span class='sc'>Flags of -Truce</span>.”</p> - -<div class='chapter'> - <span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span> - <h2 class='c005'>III.<br /> One Woman’s History out of Many.</h2> -</div> - -<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>“Sister Faithful” she was -called by the Edgecombe people. -Her name was really Faithful Farrington, -but no one ever said “Miss -Farrington.” She had been born in -the old Manor House, where for fifty -years she had spent the most of her -time. Her father, old Nathan Farrington, -had been content to live the life -of a recluse after his wife’s death, -finding his greatest happiness among -his books, and in directing the education -of his two children. Francis -Farrington, the son, had gone out to -India in early life, and had risen high -in the Civil Service. He had lost his -<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>young wife, and after many years of -valuable work had returned, an invalid, -to Edgecombe, where he found in his -sister the most tender and sympathetic -of companions. He was content -enough to allow the whole responsibility -of the estate to rest upon her -patient shoulders. She, for her part, -grew up to know a great deal about -science and literature, but absolutely -nothing of society or the world. When -she was thirty her father died, and, -besides her brother out in India, and a -distant cousin, who was a Professor in -some London college, she had no one -nearer than the old nurse who had tried -to fill the place of a mother to her.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Having a considerable fortune, she -lived on in her old home, attended by -the same faithful servants, exactly as -she had always done, except that when -the long winter evenings became -tedious, and books failed her, she -invited some of her townswomen in to -<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>tea and played a rubber of whist. -Her days were filled with good works; -every cottager in the neighbourhood -knew her, and she knew them and -sympathized with all their sorrows. -Wise in her charities, she was the -vicar’s most invaluable assistant, and -it is to be doubted whether he, in his -<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">rôle</span></i> of spiritual adviser, was as much -loved and revered as “Sister Faithful,” -whose tireless hands constructed wonderful -garments for the babies, and -whose name was borne by half the -children in consequence.</p> - -<p class='c007'>No breath from the outside world -had ever touched this woman. Once -she had gone to Paris with her father, -but it remained in her mind simply a -lovely picture, a little larger and more -daring in colour than the pictures she -had seen at the Louvre. She had -been up to London several times, but -that was to make notes at the British -Museum. Her life was in no way -<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>different from that of most of the -women she had known.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Once she had seen an item in a -journal that struck her forcibly; it -mentioned that there were eight hundred -thousand more women than men -in Great Britain, and that a good -proportion of them were matrimonially -eligible women as regarded property -and accomplishments, but that they -were of the middle classes, where -marriage was most infrequent. Sister -Faithful had remarked then that she -knew a great many attractive women -who were not liable to marry. She -wondered why, for her education had -made her logical. And then she -reviewed her own life. All the male -members of the families of her friends -had gone to larger towns as soon as -they were old enough; the girls, after -a touch of boarding-school, had come -home to assume simple household -duties, and, an occasional curate excepted, -<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>they did not often meet young -men.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Sister Faithful,” having for her constant -companion a man who lived in -books, had rather a better-trained mind -than most women. It had not been -allowed to wander, and her greatest -weakness was her way of bestowing -charity. She did not like to account -to anyone for it, and so tired mothers, -who sent their offspring to her for a -holiday, were apt to have them returned -in new and wholesome garments, -which showed that a heart calculated -by nature to be a motherly one was -bestowing its bounty quietly on other -women’s children. Strange to say, -Sister Faithful had not given any -thought to marriage for herself. That -she should ever leave her father, marry, -and have children of her own seemed -impossible. She was quite content to -accept life as she found it, and improve -the morals and manners of the children -<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>of the lower classes about her. And -now she was fifty, and until her brother’s -return she had lived alone.</p> - -<p class='c007'>She had remembered yesterday that -it was her birthday and had celebrated -it by inviting the school children to tea -in her garden, which was in its loveliest -summer dress. In the evening she -had received a letter from her distant -and unknown cousin, the Professor, -whom she had only met in those long -ago excursions to London, saying he -was “tired”—“worn out,” his doctor -said—and he had written to see if his -cousin would take him in for a few -weeks’ vacation. “I shall live out-of-doors,” -he wrote, “and I promise in -no way to disturb your life. I want -only my books, and to wander about -over your beautiful country.” She wondered -if she had been hasty when she -wrote back to bid “welcome to our -nearest of kin and our father’s friend.” -She remembered that after all he was -<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>really a cousin once removed, and a -little younger than herself, and that -when her father had liked him he was -very young indeed. A glance at the -mirror re-assured her. She was very -free from vanity, and she realized she -was no longer young. The villagers -called her beautiful, but perhaps their -sensibilities, sharpened by the lack of -beauty about them, were keener in -detecting their benefactress’ fine points.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Thanks to her healthy, regular life, -Sister Faithful at fifty was very good -to look upon. The soft hair, worn -lightly back from the low, well-shaped -forehead, was only faintly tinged with -grey, and her skin was as smooth and -fresh as that of a woman of half her -age. It was not the firm, quiet mouth, -nor even the gentle, sweet brown eyes -that attracted one most; it was the -unconsciousness of the woman, the -very annihilation of self, as it were, -without affectation, that made one -<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>long to know <em>why</em> she was constantly -giving without any question of return. -No man had ever told her she was -beautiful; her father’s friends had -approved of her, but then she ministered -to their comfort, when they came -to stay at Edgecombe. She attended to -everyone’s wants, and seemed to have -gone through life without dreaming -that in some larger sphere she would -have been considered a very attractive -woman. Not that she was perfect; -she had her idiosyncrasies—as who -has not? but she had a disciplined, -well-trained, unselfish nature, that overbalanced -any faults. Even now her -one consideration was for Cousin -Emerson, who was to arrive the following -day. Would he be comfortable in -Edgecombe? Would he not be lonely -with her and only an invalid host to -look after him? These, and other -doubts crossed her mind, and, as a -relief, she spent the entire day overlooking -<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>the sweeping and dusting of -the already clean house.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Next day, the evening train brought -Cousin Emerson. As he alighted -from the carriage, Sister Faithful -thought him only an older edition of -the intellectual-looking man she had -met in London. He was evidently -still ill, and looked as if he had -burned too much midnight oil. Her -practical mind immediately swept over -the entire list of nourishing dishes -that she might concoct for him. He, -half-an-hour later, glanced over his -well-appointed room, and thanked -fortune that it had occurred to him to -stay with his good cousins.</p> - -<p class='c007'>After dinner this occurred to him -again as he stretched himself on the -comfortable library lounge, and let the -smoke of his cigar curl up in slow, -bewitching rings about his head, while -Cousin Faithful read aloud in that -well-modulated voice of hers.</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>And so the days went on, bringing -health and strength to Cousin Emerson, -and great, unspeakable content to -“Sister Faithful,” as he too called -her.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Somehow,” he said, after he had -been at Edgecombe for several weeks, -“it seems as if we were more than -cousins. I shall reverse your name; -you shall be my Faithful Sister, as you -have been nurse and friend.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>At first he had accompanied her in -her long afternoon walks, when she -visited her cottage people, but after a -while he persuaded her to take all -sorts of short excursions on foot, or -again they would drive over the hills -about the estate.</p> - -<p class='c007'>The evenings were perhaps the -sweetest of all to Sister Faithful, for -then her interests in the outer world -ceased, and, until her cousin came, -she had often felt very lonely. Now, -they read aloud, played a friendly -<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>game of cribbage, or strolled about -the garden when the nights were fine. -Autumn was drawing near. Cousin -Emerson’s visit had lengthened to two -months, and still he said nothing -about going. He was quite strong -again, and seemed to have lost the -melancholy that at first overshadowed -him. Faithful’s heart rejoiced as she -looked at him, and she did not allow -herself to think that it might end.</p> - -<p class='c007'>One morning, in early September, -the post brought several letters. They -were breakfasting. Faithful remembered -every detail afterwards. The -pungent odour of chrysanthemums -always carried her back to that -morning. Cousin Emerson had -gathered for the breakfast-table the -splendid bunch that adorned it.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Suddenly a look of intense happiness -lighted up his face. “Faithful Sister,” -he said, looking across at her, “I want -you to be the first to congratulate me. -<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>At last the woman whom I adore, for -love of whom I have been so miserable, -has consented to marry me. I doubt -whether, if I had not fallen into your -dear hospitable hands, I could have -struggled so well to recover.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>In his excitement, Cousin Emerson -did not notice the pallor that swept -over Faithful’s face. Her voice was -steady as she said, “Why have you -not let us sympathize with you all -along?”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Oh, it all seemed so hopeless,” he -said, “and I could not bear to open -the old wound; but I am to go up to -London at once, and I shall bring my -bride straight to Edgecombe, if I -may.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>That night he left, after many cordial -expressions of gratitude, and Sister -Faithful, apparently unmoved, saw -him go; but afterward she had no -mind to wander about the garden, or -read a favourite book. She went -<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>quietly to her room, and, for the first -time, wept.</p> - -<p class='c007'>She knew she had been companionable -to this man; that in her -society he had found peace and -content. And yet—in a moment—he -had forgotten it all; he had gone to -win some other woman, impelled -by what he called love. Was it love -she felt for him? Even then, in her -loneliness, with a grey-skyed future -before her, and no prospect of change, -she felt only her own inconsistency. -“He was my kinsman and guest; he -never asked me to love him, and he -never knew my feeling for him,” she -argued, and so the night passed, a -night of unselfish sorrow for the lonely -woman, while the man was being -whirled towards the one being who -engrossed <em>his</em> thoughts.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Afterward, when Cousin Emerson -and his wife came to Edgecombe to -visit, he remarked, in the privacy of -<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>their room, that Cousin Faithful had -aged terribly; but to the poor people -she seemed more saintly than ever, for -after that one happy summer—the -only time she had ever allowed herself -any personal happiness—she had -returned to her charities as if she -wished to make up for some neglect. -And when the villagers called her -“Sister Faithful,” she felt it almost as -a reproach that she had dared hope -for any other name.</p> - -<div class='chapter'> - <span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span> - <h2 class='c005'>IV.<br /> Miss Cameron’s Art Sale.</h2> -</div> - -<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>Katherine Cameron was -spending her third winter in -Paris. The first year she had led a -quiet, uneventful student’s life. The -second season she launched out a -little into society as represented by -the English and American colonies, -and now she was spoken of as that -“clever and rich Miss Cameron,” -whom the English-speaking residents -remembered to have seen at various -<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">musicales</span></i> the year before.</p> - -<p class='c007'>On her return from America, with -the reputation of added wealth, she -found herself invited everywhere. -Everyone wondered that she did not -marry, for she was a young woman -<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>whom men admired apart from her -money and accomplishments. But -although she went out a great deal, -and was usually surrounded by a -little court of struggling tenors and -impecunious titles, she seemed unmoved -by all the attention she received, and -apparently was not even greatly -amused.</p> - -<p class='c007'>The truth was, Katherine Cameron, -being a clever girl, had seen through -the artificiality of it all, and still could -not bear to give up the illusion she -had cherished all her life, that she -should find her <em>real</em> sphere in the -society she would meet in Paris; it -might be among her own country -people, but they would be broadened -by travel and study until all desirable -and agreeable qualities would be -blended into a harmonious whole.</p> - -<p class='c007'>When she decided to pass the -winter with her aunt, Mrs. Montgomery, -it was with the sweet hope that she -<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>should be able to realise her dreams -of a little “Salon”—a revival of that -delightful French institution and formulated -on the same lines, but having -American cleverness and adaptability -added to it. It seemed feasible. Mrs. -Montgomery had lived in Paris for -years, and she knew all the resident -society people, the rest of the “floating -population” were usually provided -with letters of introduction to her. -Her “Tuesdays At Home” were delightful -functions. Katherine Cameron -had great respect for her aunt’s discrimination, -which often seemed prophetic, -and caused uninitiated people -to wonder <em>how</em> Mrs. Montgomery -happened to have “taken up” some -artist or singer who afterwards became -famous.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Still Katherine was not entirely -satisfied. Men liked her, but thought -her cold; at any rate, she never -fulfilled any promise of a flirtation that -<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>her agreeable manners might suggest. -Women said she was ambitious, that -she would only marry some distinguished -foreigner, and yet Miss Cameron, who -sometimes used forcible expressions, -had been heard to say, “She would -marry a ‘Hottentot’ if she loved him.” -She was honestly trying to get some -good out of her surroundings, and was -perfectly willing to fall in love, or to -gratify her intellectual tastes, just as -it might happen. Up to this time, -however, she had been distinctly -heart-whole, and aside from an occasional -charming man or woman whom -she met in society, or the interesting -art students whom she knew (and liked -best of all), it seemed to her clear and -practical mind that there was a great -deal of “padding,” as she expressed -it.</p> - -<p class='c007'>She resented, as a patriotic American -woman of culture and refinement, that -the so-called “exclusive” circles in the -<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>American quarter accepted some of -the families who would not occupy -conspicuous positions in their own free -and enlightened country. She could -not help comparing certain wealthy -young society women with a clever -but poor friend of hers, whose artistic -talent had been recognized by her own -warm-hearted Southern townspeople, -who had contributed a sufficient sum -to send Miss Paterson abroad, confident -that her brush would one day repay -them. The two young women had -met at the studio of a common friend, -and Miss Cameron, who professed to -know nothing of art, had asked such -intelligent questions of the young -student that Miss Paterson, with a -woman’s quick intuition, had surmised -that her fashionable countrywoman had -a more artistic nature than she admitted. -A friendship was begun, and Katherine -Cameron became the <em>confidante</em> and -admirer of the rising young artist.</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>Just now she has returned from a -musicale at the hotel of one of the -famous teachers, and she is describing -it to Miss Paterson, who has come in -for a chat and a quiet cup of tea.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“It makes me so indignant,” she is -saying, “when I think what an impression -we must make on intelligent -French people. Why this afternoon, -at Madame de la Harpe’s, it was simply -one medley of disputing mothers and -jealous pupils. Madame herself is so -distinctly a lady, that when two irate -mothers appealed to her as to which -of their daughters should sing <em>first</em>, she -shrugged her shoulders in true French -fashion and said, ‘They will both sing -many times; they will sing so well -that it will be doubtless required’—a -diplomatic answer! She knew her -audience, and felt that a programme -of twenty-three numbers could not -admit of many encores in one afternoon. -I noticed she did not deviate -<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>from the original plan. Then that -vulgar Mrs. Booth, from somewhere -out west, who has the gorgeous apartment, -and the family of extremely -pretty daughters, asked me if I would -join their French class. ‘We have an -actor, M. de Valle, to teach us,’ she -said, ‘he is just splendid—so handsome -and so polite; only he will make us -<em>congregate</em> verbs.’ To my horror, Mr. -Vincent, of the English Embassy, who -is so coldly critical of everything -American, overheard her, and I saw -him trying to suppress a smile, which -made me indignant, so I impulsively -replied, ‘I shall be charmed, Mrs. -Booth—so kind of you to ask me.’ -And now I shall have to extricate myself -from that situation, for, although -I have a certain appreciation of the -ludicrous, I cannot sacrifice one night -of every week, even to show Mr. -Vincent that I despise his criticism.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“But I have rather thought Mr. -<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>Vincent one of your admirers,” Miss -Paterson returns.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Admirer? He sees in me a young -person who will not be apt to make -any very ridiculous blunders, and as -he <em>has</em> to appear occasionally, being -in the diplomatic service, he talks to -me as a sort of compromise between -the tourist element and his own fixed -aristocracy. I <em>love</em> to shock him. -Why, to-day, he said, in that deliberate -tone he employs when he wishes to be -particularly patronizing, ‘I suppose -you go in for all sorts of things, Miss -Cameron. I hear you are artistic, and -know the Latin Quarter better than -this side of the river. When do you -get it all in?’ I told him to behold -a young person positively unique in -Paris—one who was actively pursuing -<em>nothing</em>. And then he actually remarked -that ‘in an age where all the -young women were running mad with -<em>fads</em> it was refreshing to find one so -<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>confessedly idle.’ He aggravates me -so that I always lose my head, and get -the worst of the argument. But here -I am talking away, and forgetting that -I am to hear all about you and your -plans.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>Miss Cameron soon proved that she -could listen as well as talk, for she was -most attentive while Miss Paterson -told her about a letter which she had -received that day, and which had -disturbed her not a little. In the -midst of their displeasure both girls -saw the ludicrous side of it, for it was -nothing less than a letter from Miss -Paterson’s townspeople <em>forbidding</em> her -marriage to the penniless young -sculptor with whom she had fallen in -love.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“What impertinence!” Miss Cameron -remarks; “talk about the tyranny -of European courts! Here you are, -an orphan, without a relative in the -world to restrain you, and these people -<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>fancy they <em>own</em> you, and can control -your liberty just because they have -furnished you with funds which they -ought to know will be returned to -them.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“But there <em>is</em> a moral obligation,” -Miss Paterson replied. “I shall send -them back every penny of their money -as soon as possible, and I shall always -feel a debt of gratitude which no -pecuniary remuneration can cover.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Little saint!” Miss Cameron exclaims, -but she respects her brave little -countrywoman all the more, because -she is so visibly distressed at the situation.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Let us go over the facts,” adds -Miss Cameron. “Here they are -briefly: A number of your townspeople, -seeing in you evidences of talent, raised -a sum of money and sent you to Paris -two years ago. Two of these people -selected your masters (fortunately they -made no mistake there); you have -<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>worked faithfully and conscientiously, -and have accomplished more than -most art students do in twice the time. -This year two of your studies have -been in the Salon, one of them was -bought by a Frenchman of critical -taste; and you have a number of -charming saleable studies, besides your -large picture of the garden-party intended -for next year’s Salon, in which -festive scene your humble servant poses -as the hostess serving tea to a group of -<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fin-de-siècle</span></i> society people. You are -sure to make a hit with that, so many -of the figures are actual portraits, and -Paris dotes on personalities. It is -conceded that merit no longer wins, -but to be ‘received’ one must be a -friend of some member of the jury, or -paint the people whose vanity moves -them to pull some wire, so that they -may gaze down from the Salon walls -upon an inquisitive and envious -public.”</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>“And in this case can I count on -<em>you</em> or some of your admirers to pull -the wires, Katherine?” Miss Paterson -mischievously asks.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Yes; that picture shall hang ‘on -the line,’ even if I have to lobby for -it; but you know all the artists think -it splendidly treated,” said Miss -Cameron.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“I hoped it would be received this -year, but, do you know, I have been -considering all day whether I had better -not sell it now, and send back as much -money as I can raise immediately; for -I intend to marry Edgar McDowald, -with the benediction of my patrons if -possible—without it if necessary,” emphatically -declares Miss Paterson.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“And I shall aid and abet you, -especially if you intend to show them -that ‘love laughs at locksmiths’—and -creditors. But, seriously, why not -have an art sale? I am off to a -musicale at that extraordinary Mrs. -<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>Smyth’s (formerly spelt with an i), who -begins every Monday morning sending -letters, followed during the week by -three-cornered notes marked ‘<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pressée</span></i>,’ -in which she ‘begges’ her dear friend, -whoever it may be, to run in Saturday -afternoon, and casually remarks that -some ‘celebrated musicien’ will perform. -The joke is they usually do, -and we all find ourselves there once or -twice a season. To-night the American -Minister has promised to be present, -and I shall profit by the occasion to -invite everyone to your studio next -week to see some charming studies -which will be for sale.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>Miss Paterson knew Miss Cameron’s -influence, and felt that she was quite -safe in letting her friend have her way; -so after talking over the details they -separated.</p> - -<p class='c007'>That evening Miss Cameron succeeded -in quietly scattering the -information through the crowded -<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>rooms that a very charming friend -of hers, the Miss Paterson, who -occasionally received with her, would -have a little private art sale the following -week. Among the attentive listeners -was Mr. Vincent, who casually asked -if Miss Paterson had finished her -Salon picture which she had described -to him.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“She has,” Miss Cameron replied, -and suddenly added, “And you know, -Mr. Vincent, I cannot offer my friend -money, nor would she sell me so -important a picture as her large one, -for she would think I did it to help -her; now, I want to ask you, as the -person she would think of as being -the last one connected with me (here -Mr. Vincent smiled a rather melancholy -but affirmative smile), to buy two of -her studies for me in some other -name. I can easily dispose of them -as presents, and she will never be the -wiser.”</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>“Miss Cameron’s wishes are my -commands. I will call on Miss -Paterson before Wednesday, and on -the day when the exhibition takes -place, you can be sure that at least -two pictures will be marked ‘Sold.’”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“That will give a business-like air -to the whole arrangement, Mr. Vincent, -and suggest to any possible buyers that -other equally attractive studies are for -sale. This must be a profound secret. -Do you promise?”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Certainly,” Mr. Vincent replied, and -Miss Cameron knew she could trust him.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“He is really very likeable, when -one sees him alone,” Miss Cameron -soliloquizes; and then she reflects -that it is decidedly her fault that she -does not see Mr. Vincent more -frequently in his best light; she -remembers various occasions when -she has made their duet a trio by -addressing some third person, thus -preventing a possible tête-à-tête.</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>The afternoon selected by Miss Paterson -arrived, and as Miss Cameron -alighted from her coupé in the humble -street where art and poor students -hold sway, she remarked with pleasure -a goodly line of private carriages, and -knew that her scheme had succeeded, -and that Miss Paterson was the -fashion—at least of the hour. The -question was, Would they buy her -pictures? And then she added to -herself, “They must be sold, even -if I have to find other agents, and -buy them all in.” But the loyal girl -might have spared herself any anxiety. -As she entered the room, which was -artistically draped and hung with -numerous strongly-executed sketches, -she saw the magic word “Sold,” not -only on several of the small studies, -but conspicuously placed at the base -of the largest canvas, Miss Paterson’s -salon picture, in which Miss Cameron is -the central and principal figure.</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>“Isn’t it too delightful, dear?” Miss -Paterson whispers to her. “An Englishman, -a friend of Mr. Vincent’s, -came here with him yesterday, saw -my canvas, liked it, asked my price, -and actually took it. Mr. Vincent -also bought two other studies, and -several have gone to-day. Edgar has -lost no time. He has disappeared -now to cable to my esteemed benefactors, -‘<em>Marriage will take place; -cheque for full amount on way</em>.’ Extravagant -of us, I know, and of course -it’s extremely ‘<em>previous</em>,’ but we really -see our way clear to happiness, and I -shall always feel <em>you</em> did it all.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>As Miss Cameron shook hands with -Mr. Vincent that day she told him -that he had been instrumental in -making two deserving people happy.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“It was so thoughtful to bring your -friend here, who bought the large -picture,” she says. And then she -adds, “Did I ever see him?”</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>“I think you have seen him,” Mr. -Vincent replies. Something in his manner betrays him, and Miss Cameron, -guessing the truth, impulsively says:</p> - -<p class='c007'>“You bought it yourself, Mr. Vincent.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Hush!” he softly whispers, with -his finger on his lips. “We are -fellow-conspirators, and cannot betray -each other.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>Next year, when a great American -city gave Edgar McDowald the order -for a State monument, the beauty of -his designs having distanced all competitors, -Parisians remarked that Mrs. -Montgomery’s discrimination, as regarded -celebrities, seemed to have -fallen upon her niece.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Mr. and Mrs. McDowald delight in -telling of their romantic courtship, and -how Miss Cameron’s scheme of an art -sale brought about their marriage; but -Miss Cameron always affirms that its -success was not due to her, but to -<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>Mr. Vincent’s tact in exhibiting that -expensive canvas to his friend.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Miss Cameron, being a worldly-wise -young woman, tries to feel that Mr. -Vincent’s motives were wholly generous -and disinterested; but if what rumour -says is true, Mr. Vincent would do -more than that for the charming -central figure in Mrs. McDowald’s -Salon picture, which now looks down -from a good position in the library -of his own English home, and which -never hung “on the line” after all.</p> - -<div class='chapter'> - <span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span> - <h2 class='c005'>V.<br /> A Complex Question.</h2> -</div> - -<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c006'>There were a half-dozen or -more good riders in Tangier -that winter, but Bob Travers was the -acknowledged leader. At every annual -race-meeting he proved to his backers -that their confidence in him was not -misplaced, for, brave fellows as they -were, none of them rode so hard, or -cared to take the risks which Bob -cheerfully ran.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Robert MacNeil Travers, familiarly -known as “Bob,” was spending his -second season in Africa. The first -time he had run across from “Gib” -to look up something in the way of -horseflesh, and once there he had -easily fallen in with a set of men -<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>whose society he enjoyed extremely. -They were dashing fellows, several of -them young English noblemen, who -found the free, bold life they could -lead in this lawless place too fascinating -to leave. It was very agreeable -in that delicious winter climate to dash -off over the wild country on a surefooted -Barb horse, or to join some -caravan for a few weeks’ excursion -in the interior, while in England -everyone was freezing, or at least -imbedded in fog.</p> - -<p class='c007'>They had their little glimpses of -civilization—the Tangerines—for the -few resident Europeans were very -glad to entertain any interesting -visitors from the outside world. Bob -Travers was as much liked by the -wives and sisters of his friends as -any gallant, well-bred Englishman -deserves to be, and every one was -pleased when his engagement was -announced to pretty Mabel Burke, -<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>the sister of Boardman Burke, the -artist, whose Eastern scenes, painted -under the clear skies of Morocco, -have won for him the reputation of -being one of the foremost exponents -in the new “Impressionist School.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>The occasions were rare when Bob -Travers was not included, whether -it was for a boar hunt, a day with -the fox hounds, or a little dance, at -any one of the half-dozen hospitable -European houses.</p> - -<p class='c007'>One night he was late in arriving -at a dinner-party given in honour of -some Americans, whose yacht had -appeared in Tangier Bay that day; -they were already seated at the table -when Bob slipped quietly in, and, at -a little nod from Miss Burke, found -his place beside her. He was conscious -that his other neighbour was -a woman—a young and attractive one. -He had time to observe that, when his -obliging hostess, in reply to his apologies, -<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>said, “You are punished enough, -for you have lost at least ten minutes -of Miss Schuyler’s society.” This, -with a knowing little look at Miss -Burke, which seemed to say, “To -be sure he is your property, but if -you are engaged to the most presentable -man in Tangier, you must pay -the penalty, and give him up to -occasional and fastidious visitors.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>Modest little Mabel Burke, who -simply basked in “Bob’s” smiles, and -wondered at her own good luck in -ever winning his love, gave her hostess -a proud, happy glance that spoke -volumes for her sense of security.</p> - -<p class='c007'>A closer look at Miss Schuyler -convinced Mr. Travers that he had -never met anyone at all like her; she -was so self-possessed and clever that -they were soon talking as freely as if -they had been old acquaintances. -She was not so pretty as his <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiancée</span></i>, -but she was very fascinating (a charm -<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>that even Bob had not attributed to -Miss Burke), and her versatility amazed -him. It did not seem to matter -whether they discussed horses, religion, -or politics—Miss Schuyler had her -opinions, and she expressed them -without conceit or aggressiveness. -During the fortnight that the smart -little yacht <em>Liberty</em> was anchored in -the waters of Tangier Bay, and its -merry party were devoting their days -to long country rides, excursions to -Cape Spartel, or cantering along the -sandy beach, Travers found Miss -Schuyler the most interesting of companions; -he seemed to have become -her acknowledged escort, and (since -one night, when he had nearly killed -his best horse by galloping several -miles for a doctor to come to the -rescue of one of the ladies who had -broken her arm while the party were -making an excursion) Miss Schuyler -had singled him out for all sorts of -<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>delicate favours. He, on the other -hand, discovered that this woman, with -her grace and culture, was just such a -woman as he had pictured he should -eventually take to Travers Towers as -its mistress. For in less than a fortnight -he realized that in his happy-go-lucky -way he had drifted into that -engagement with the pretty sister of -his dearest friend. What could be -more natural? All the conditions had -favoured his courtship, and until he -saw Miss Schuyler it had seemed very -agreeable to possess the affections of the -nicest girl in Tangier.</p> - -<p class='c007'>He knew she was not the wife -he had dreamt of, but then, he reasoned, -one never marries one’s ideal. -Mabel Burke was sweet and good, and -loved him; so one delicious, star-lit -night, after a cosy dinner, he found -himself alone with her in the quiet -little Moorish court of the Burkes’ -villa, and as Mabel gave him his -<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>second cup of coffee he looked at her -approvingly, and on the impulse of the -moment told her he should like to -have her always with him. He meant -it then; and after that it was all easy -sailing, for Boardman Burke was -delighted to give his sister to a man -whom he already loved as a brother. -The gossip of the town had not -reached the visitors in the yacht, and -Miss Schuyler only heard accidentally -that Mr. Travers was engaged to -Miss Burke, for Bob had felt a reluctance -to tell her—had supposed someone -else would—and, finally, seeing -she believed him to be free, he had -<em>dreaded</em> to tell her. And so their -relations progressed undisturbed, and, -like all things under an Oriental sun, -developed rapidly.</p> - -<p class='c007'>They had been taking tea at Mr. -Boardman Burkes and looking at his -pictures, when suddenly the artist -said:</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>“I must show you the one I am -doing for Travers’ wedding present.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>And when someone remarked that -he could take his time to finish the -painting, Boardman Burke had said -very distinctly:</p> - -<p class='c007'>“Oh, no! I expect to have to -give my sister, as well as that best -picture of mine, to Travers before the -year is out.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>It is just possible that Mr. Burke -thought it wise to make this statement, -for occupied though he was in his -work, he had observed that his sister -looked troubled. Although Travers -dropped in every day, he, too, seemed -pre-occupied, or was in a hurry, and -he was seen constantly riding with -Miss Schuyler. Little Mabel was too -seriously in love with him, and believed -in him too deeply, to admit that -he had been the least remiss in his -attentions to her, but she felt relieved, -all the same, to hear that the <em>Liberty</em> -<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>would hoist anchor and go over to -Gibraltar the next morning, and from -there continue her course along the -coast of Spain and the Riviera. Even -when she heard Travers and the -American Consul accept an invitation -to go to Gibraltar with the party, -she felt no uneasiness, for he would -return the following noon by the -regular steamer. So she let her -accepted lover stroll off with Miss -Schuyler, only saying a quiet “good-bye.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>When she looked out from her window -the next morning the pretty little -yacht had disappeared, and all day -she fancied Bob buying up supplies, -which he said he wanted for an -expedition into the interior.</p> - -<p class='c007'>In reality, when Mr. Travers had -glanced at Miss Schuyler, after the -announcement made by Mr. Burke of -his engagement, he thought she looked -a trifle pale, but then there is such a -<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>peculiar light when the African sun -comes down into a Moorish garden -through the waving palms that one -gets strange impressions.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Miss Schuyler was very silent on -her way to the beach, and Travers did -not see her again till morning, when -he crossed on the yacht to Gibraltar. -During the night a sense of all he had -lost flashed upon him; he could see -no way out of it. He was a man who -prided himself upon keeping his word; -that word was given to Miss Burke, -whom he liked and respected, but -whom he now knew he did not love. -And he had allowed himself to drift -on through two happy weeks, devoting -himself to this stranger, who in return -must certainly despise him for his -cowardice. Distinctly, it was an -awkward position. He felt confident -that, given his freedom, he might win -the woman of his choice, for she was -the kind of woman to inspire him to -<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>do his best, and Bob Travers’ best -was very good indeed, but his freedom -was just what he could not ask for, so -he finally decided to tell Miss Schuyler -the exact truth, and thus at least feel -he had her respect.</p> - -<p class='c007'>On the yacht he told her his story, -and she listened, as a woman listens -who has had many disillusionments, -and accepts them as necessities.</p> - -<p class='c007'>He thought her very cold when she -only said:</p> - -<p class='c007'>“We have been very good friends, -Mr. Travers. It will be enough -to tell you first that I should have -preferred to hear of your plans from -your own lips. It all seemed so -natural in Tangier, so far from the -conventional outside world, that I -allowed myself to give way to impulses -which I thought under perfect discipline.”</p> - -<p class='c007'>“But you must know, you <em>shall</em> -know, that my heart is yours, that you -<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>are my <em>ideal</em> woman, the one I should -have married,” Travers earnestly -pleaded.</p> - -<p class='c007'>“If that is so, let it encourage you -to be strong. Go back, marry your -little girl, and forget one who has -suffered too much to judge anyone.” -Then Travers went down the side of -the yacht into a small boat, and could -only say “God bless you” over her -extended hand before the steps were -pulled up, and the yacht steamed out -on her way to Malaga.</p> - -<p class='c007'>A few days after at Marseilles the -papers were brought on board, and an -article in them instantly attracted their -attention. It graphically described -a fatal accident that had befallen -Robert MacNeil Travers, who had -just landed from a yacht at Gibraltar -evidently in perfect health. He had -gone up to the summit of the rock, -and stood at the edge of its dangerous -eastern face. His companion, the -<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>American Consul at Tangier, had -stopped a moment to look out to sea -with his glass, and when he turned -round poor Travers had disappeared, -“probably seized with vertigo,” the -paper said; for Mr. Travers was heir -to a large estate, and about to be -married to the sister of the celebrated -artist, Boardman Burke, so no idea of -suicide was entertained.</p> - -<p class='c007'>Who shall say whether Miss Schuyler -believed this newspaper version? -Perhaps she remembered Travers’ last -impassioned word, “You <em>shall</em> know -my heart is yours,” and he had taken -this way, the only possible way, to -show her his devotion without being -dishonourable.</p> - -<hr class='c010' /> - -<p class='c007'>Poor little Mabel Burke wept grievously, -but she is again engaged, this -time to a man who is far more domestic -than poor Travers.</p> - -<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>And Miss Schuyler? She continues -to be Miss Schuyler, although she is -as fascinating as ever. A woman who -has tested one man’s affection to the -death and not found it wanting, is not -easily won!</p> - -<div class='nf-center-c0'> -<div class='nf-center c003'> - <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span><span class='small'>PLYMOUTH:</span></div> - <div><span class='small'>WILLIAM BRENDON AND SON,</span></div> - <div><span class='small'>PRINTERS.</span></div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class='pbb'> - <hr class='pb c004' /> -</div> -<div class='tnotes'> - -<div class='section ph2'> - -<div class='nf-center-c0'> -<div class='nf-center c001'> - <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div> - </div> -</div> - -</div> - - <ol class='ol_1 c003'> - <li>Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling. - - </li> - <li>Archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings retained as printed. - </li> - </ol> - -</div> - - - - - - - - -<pre> - - - - - -End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hypnotic Experiment of Dr. Reeves, by -Charlotte Rosalys Jones - -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HYPNOTIC EXPERIMENT *** - -***** This file should be named 62032-h.htm or 62032-h.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - http://www.gutenberg.org/6/2/0/3/62032/ - -Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net - - -Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will -be renamed. - -Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright -law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, -so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United -States without permission and without paying copyright -royalties. 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