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+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.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68586 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68586)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Smoking flax, by Hallie Erminie Rives
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Smoking flax
-
-Author: Hallie Erminie Rives
-
-Release Date: July 22, 2022 [eBook #68586]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by University of California
- libraries)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SMOKING FLAX ***
-
-
-
-
-
- SMOKING FLAX
-
- BY
-
- HALLIE ERMINIE RIVES
-
-
- _SECOND EDITION_
-
- F. TENNYSON NEELY
- PUBLISHER
- LONDON NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
-=Neely’s Prismatic Library.=
-
-=GILT TOP, 50 CENTS.=
-
-
-“I know of nothing in the book line that equals Neely’s Prismatic
-Library for elegance and careful selection. It sets a pace that others
-will not easily equal and none surpass.”--E. A. ROBINSON.
-
-
- _SOUR SAINTS AND SWEET SINNERS._
- _By Carlos Martyn._
-
- _SEVEN SMILES AND A FEW FIBS._
- _By Thomas J. Vivian. With full-page illustrations by well-known
- artists._
-
- _A MODERN PROMETHEUS._
- _By E. Phillips Oppenheim._
-
- _THE SHACKLES OF FATE._
- _By Max Nordau._
-
- _A BACHELOR OF PARIS._
- _By John W. Harding. With over 50 illustrations by William Hofacher._
-
- _MONTRESOR. By Loota._
-
- _REVERIES OF A SPINSTER._
- _By Helen Davies._
-
- _THE ART MELODIOUS._
- _By Louis Lombard._
-
- _THE HONOR OF A PRINCESS._
- _By F. Kimball Scribner._
-
- _OBSERVATIONS OF A BACHELOR._
- _By Louis Lombard._
-
- _KINGS IN ADVERSITY._
- _By E. S. Van Zile._
-
- _NOBLE BLOOD AND A WEST POINT PARALLEL. By Captain King._
-
- _TRUMPETER FRED._
- _By Captain King. Illustrated._
-
-_ FATHER STAFFORD. By Anthony Hope._
-
- _THE KING IN YELLOW._
- _By R. W. Chambers._
-
- _IN THE QUARTER. By R. W. Chambers._
-
- _A PROFESSIONAL LOVER. By Gyp._
-
- _BIJOU’S COURTSHIPS._
- _By Gyp. Illustrated._
-
- _A CONSPIRACY OF THE CARBONARI._
- _By Louise Muhlbach._
-
- _SOAP BUBBLES. By Dr. Max Nordau._
-
- F. TENNYSON NEELY,
- PUBLISHER,
- NEW YORK, LONDON.
-
-
- _Copyrighted in the United States and
- Great Britain in MDCCCXCVII by
- F. Tennyson Neely._
-
- _All rights reserved._
-
-
-
-
-TO MY MOTHER AND THE SOUTH
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-“Smoking Flax” is a story of the South written by a young Kentucky
-woman. Undoubtedly in the South its advent will be saluted with
-enthusiastic bravos. What will be the nature of its reception in
-the North it is hazardous to predict. One thing, however, can be
-confidently prophesied for it everywhere--consideration. This the
-subject and manner of its treatment assures.
-
-The methods of Judge Lynch viewed from most standpoints are, without
-extenuation, evil; from a few aspects they may appear to be perhaps
-not wholly without justification. Miss Rives, through the medium of
-romance, presents the question as seen from many sides, and then leaves
-to the reader the responsibility of determining “what is truth,” though
-where her own sympathies lie she does not leave much in doubt.
-
-The authoress comes of an old Virginia stock to whom the gift of
-narrative and literary expression seem to be a birthright. Since
-revolutionary days literature has been more or less enriched by
-contributions from successive members of the family--the well known
-contemporary novelist and the youthful author of this book sharing
-at the present time the responsibility of upholding the hereditary
-traditions. It seems, therefore, happily appropriate that Miss Rives
-should have taken upon herself the task of placing before the world
-southern views of the problem of lynching, which, be it understood, are
-far from unanimous. The subject is handled with admirable tact, the
-author steering clear alike from prudish affectations of modesty and
-shocking details of inartistic realism: and throughout is maintained
-a judicial impartiality infrequent in the treatment of such burning
-questions.
-
-Miss Rives will achieve distinction in the South and at least
-notability elsewhere.
-
- H. F. G.
-
- ROCHESTER, N. Y.
- _September 22nd, 97._
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
-The house faced the college campus and was the only one in the block.
-This, in Georgetown, implies a lawn of no small dimensions; the place
-had neither gardener’s house nor porter’s lodge--nothing but that
-old home half hidden by ancient elms. For many a year it had stood
-with closed doors in the very heart of that prosperous Kentucky
-town, presenting a gloomy aspect and exercising for many a singular
-attraction. Near the deep veranda a great tree, whose boughs were
-no longer held in check by trimming, had thrust one of its branches
-through the frontmost window. Dampness had attacked everything.
-The upper balcony was loosened, the roof warped, and lizards sunned
-themselves on the wall.
-
-As for the garden, long ago it had lapsed into a chaotic state. The
-thistle and the pale poppy grew in fragrant tangle with the wild ivy
-and Virginia creeper, and wilful weeds thrust their way across the
-gravel walks.
-
-Sadly old residents saw the place approaching the last stages of
-decay--saw this house, once the pride of the town, in its decrepitude
-and loneliness the plaything of the elements.
-
-“A noble wreck! It must have a history of some kind,” strangers would
-remark.
-
-“Ah, that it has, and a sombre one it is!” any man or woman living near
-would have answered, as they recalled the history of Richard Harding’s
-home. For the fate of Richard Harding was a sad memory to them. They
-remembered how he had been the representative of a fine old family and
-that much of his fortune had been spent in beautifying this place, to
-make it a fitting home for Catharine Field, his bride.
-
-She too had been of gentle birth and held an important place in their
-memory as one who brought with her to this rural community the wider
-experience usual to a young woman educated in Boston, who, after a few
-seasons of social success in an ultra fashionable set, has crowned her
-many achievements by a brilliant marriage.
-
-Her husband adored her and showed his devotion by humoring her
-extravagant tastes and prodigal fancies. He detested gayeties, yet
-complied with her slightest wish for social pleasures.
-
-Although it was generally agreed that this young couple got on well
-together, at the end of two years the husband had to admit to himself
-that his efforts to render his wife happy had not been entirely
-successful. He saw that she fretted for her northern life, was bored
-by everything about her. She cherished a bitter resentment for the
-slaveholders, vowing that it was barbarous and inhuman to own human
-beings as her husband and neighbors did. Though expressing pity for the
-poor, simple, dependent creatures, she did little to make their tasks
-more healthful and reasonable ones, or to render them more capable and
-contented.
-
-Her baby’s nurse was the one servant of her household who met with
-gracious treatment at her hands. This old slave came to her endowed
-with the womanly virtues of honor, self-respect and humility. But in
-marveling at her on these accounts, Mrs. Harding forgot that it was the
-former mistress--her husband’s mother--that had made her what she was.
-
-At length the truth became clearly apparent that she was an obstinate,
-intensely prejudiced and very unreasonable woman, who, having lived for
-a time at a centre of fashionable intelligence in a city of culture,
-supposed herself to be quite beyond the reach of and entirely superior
-to ordinary country folk. Eventually, her morbid dissatisfaction became
-so extreme that her husband yielded to her importunities, closed the
-house, and with her and their baby boy, went to live in Boston.
-
-This sacrifice he made quietly and uncomplainingly, his closest friends
-not then knowing how it wrenched his heart. A year passed, then
-another, and at the end of the third, the papers announced the death of
-Richard Harding.
-
-Though never again seeing his southern home, where he had planned
-to live his life in peace and useful happiness, it had held to the
-end a most sacred place in his memory--a memory which he truly hoped
-would be transmittted to the heart and mind of his son. It was his
-last wish that the old homestead should remain as it was--closed to
-strangers--that no living being, unless of his own blood, should
-inhabit that abode of love and sorrow, that it be kept from the
-careless profanation of aliens.
-
-The world prophesied that his widow would soon forget the wishes of the
-dead, but as witness that she had thus far kept faith, there stood the
-closed, abandoned home, upon which Nature alone laid a destroying hand.
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-
-In process of time, hardly a brick was to be seen in this old house
-that had not grown purple with age and become cloaked with moss and
-ivy. Antiquity looked out from covering to foundation stone. Only the
-flowers were young, and flowers spring from a remote ancestry. This
-house, inlaid in solitude, was as quiet as some cloister hidden away
-within some French forest.
-
-One summer afternoon, the quiet was broken by a group of college girls
-looking for some new flower for their botanical collection. But so full
-of youthful spirits were they that they hardly saw the valley lilies
-with stems so short that they could scarcely bear up their innocent,
-sweet eyes, distressed, and stare like children in a crowd.
-
-Among these girls was one whom the most casual observer would have
-singled out from her companions for a beauty rare even in that land of
-beautiful women. She had wandered off alone and found a sleepy little
-primrose. As she freed the blossom from its stem and held it in her
-hand, a tide of thought surged up from her memory and deepened the
-color of her face. Quietly she dropped down upon the grass and began
-turning the leaves of her floral diary until she came to a similar
-flower pressed between its pages.
-
-In a corner was written: “Gathered in the mountains on the 18th of
-August.”
-
-“How strange,” she thought, “to note how late it was found there, while
-it blooms so early here.”
-
-Commonplace as that discovery seemed to be, the face so radiant a
-moment before, became thoughtfully drawn.
-
-She looked at the name “E. Harding” written below the dry, dead
-blossom, and thought of the time when it had been written, thence
-back to her first meeting with its owner--one of those happy chances
-of travel, which have all the charm of the unexpected--as fresh in
-her memory as though it had been but yesterday. That summer had been
-one of those idyllic periods which are lived so unconsciously that
-their beauty is only realized in memories. To become conscious of such
-charm at the time would be to break the spell which lies in the very
-ignorance of its existence.
-
-She, this ardent novice in learning, fresh from graduating honors, and
-full of unmanageable, new emotions did not comprehend that the same
-youthful impetuosity which had made the two fast friends in so brief
-a time, had also made it possible for a few heedless words even more
-quickly to separate them. An older or more experienced woman would have
-missed the sudden bloom and escaped the no less sudden storm.
-
-“Primroses are his favorite flowers,” she said half aloud, and a
-dainty little smile lifted ever so slightly the corners of her mouth
-as if there were pleasure in the thought. Then she took up her pencil
-and studiously began to jot down the botanical notes concerning the
-primrose. “Primrose, a biennial herb, from three to six inches tall.
-The flower is regular, symmetrical and four parted.”
-
-A twig snapped. The girl looked up quickly. “Welcome to my flowers,”
-said a voice beside her, and a young man smiled frankly, as he bowed
-and raised his white straw hat.
-
-“Mr. Harding!” she exclaimed, opening her eyes in wonder and staring at
-him with the prettiest face of astonishment. Alarm had brought color to
-her cheeks, while the level rays of the sun, which forced her to screen
-her eyes with one hand, clothed her figure in a broad belt of gold.
-“How did you happen to be here?”
-
-“I did not happen. Man comes not to his place by accident.”
-
-His answer, though given with a laugh, had a touch of truth.
-
-Through the bright excitement of her eyes, a sudden gleam of archness
-flashed.
-
-“Have you come to write us up, or rather down?” she asked.
-
-“I have come to help those who won’t help themselves, but first let
-us make peace, if such a thing be necessary between us. Here is my
-offering,” and smilingly he laid two fresh white roses in her hand.
-
-She answered his smile with one of her own as she thrust the long
-generous stems through her waist belt; but she did not thank him with
-words, and he was glad that she did not. Just as he would have spoken
-again, a number of girlish voices called in chorus:
-
-“Come, Dorothy, we are going now.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-
-In the same year that Elliott Harding was graduated from Princeton, he
-came into possession of his estate, which he at once began to share
-with his mother. Her love of good living and luxury, her craving
-for such elegancies as sumptuous furniture, expensive bric-à-brac,
-and stylish equipages had well nigh exhausted her means, and she
-was now almost entirely dependent upon a half-interest in the small
-estate in Kentucky. Considering that Elliott had a leaning towards
-the learned professions and political and social pursuits, added to
-a constitutional abhorrence of a business career, his financial
-condition was not altogether uncomfortable. He longed to own a superb
-library, a collection of books, great both in number and quality, and,
-furthermore, he wanted to complete his education by travel abroad,
-followed by a year or two of serious research in the South. He realized
-how ill these aspirations mated with the pleasure loving habits of his
-mother and how impossible it would be for him to realize his dreams, so
-long as his purse remained the joint source of supply.
-
-To many a young man the outlook would have been deeply discouraging. To
-him it was a means of developing the endurance and the strength of will
-which were among his distinguishing characteristics.
-
-Nature had fashioned Elliott Harding when in one of her kindly moods.
-She had endowed him with many gifts; good birth, sound health of body
-and mind, industry, resolution and ambition. Besides possessing these
-goodly qualifications, he stood six feet in height, and in breadth
-of shoulder, depth of chest, sturdiness of legs and arms, he had few
-superiors. There was, too, a nobility of proportion in his forehead
-that indicated high breeding and broad intellectuality, and his face
-was full of force and refinement. His steel blue eyes gleamed with a
-superb self-confidence.
-
-By profession, Elliott Harding was a lawyer; by instinct, a writer. He
-practiced law for gain. He wrote because it was his ruling passion. He
-was a man who had been early taught to have faith in his own destiny
-and to consider himself an agent called by God to do a great work. When
-he came to his southern home he came with a purpose--a purpose which he
-determined to carry out quietly but with mighty earnestness. When he
-first arrived in the town he was content to rest unheralded, and his
-presence was not understood by the villagers. Nearly every morning now,
-he could be seen from the opposite window of the college to enter the
-old abandoned house and sit for hours near the door, his head bowed,
-his fingers busy with note-book and pencil.
-
-For some weeks this proceeding had continued with little variation.
-People noted it with diverse conjectures. Old men and women feared lest
-this man, whoever he might be,--a real estate agent perhaps--would
-bring about the restoration and sale of the old Harding home. These
-old-time friends, who had known and loved the father, Richard Harding,
-through youth and manhood, now rebelled against the possible disregard
-of his last request, which had become a heritage of the locality. With
-anxiety they watched the maneuvers of this mysterious individual and
-drearily wondered what would result from his stay.
-
-To young Harding the anxiety he had caused was unknown. Absorbed in his
-own affairs, he was too much occupied to think of the impression he
-was creating. His whole thought was given to gleaning the knowledge he
-required for the writing of the book by which he hoped to permanently
-mould southern opinion in conformity with his own against what he
-believed to be the shame of his native land.
-
-It was an evening in the third month of his residence in Georgetown.
-Elliott Harding paused in his walk along the street not quite decided
-which way to go.
-
-“She writes me she has drawn a ten-day draft for twenty-two hundred
-dollars,” he said to himself. “How on earth can I meet it? What shall
-I do about it? Let me think it out.” And checking his steps, which
-had begun to tend towards the college, where a reception to which he
-had been invited was being held, he took a turn or two in the already
-darkening street, and then started back to his rooms. In his mind,
-step by step, he traced out the possible consequences of action in the
-matter, but long consideration only confirmed his first impression that
-it was too late now to change the course of affairs so long existing.
-
-“But how am I to meet this last demand?” he questioned. “There is but
-one way open to me,” he finally thought. “The old home must go.”
-
-He nervously walked on, repeating to himself, “Mother! mother! I could
-never do this for anyone but you.”
-
-With the memory of his beloved father so strong within him, it was
-difficult to bring himself to face the inevitable with composure. The
-turbulent working of his heart contended against the resignation of
-his brain, and, when for a moment he felt resigned, then the memory of
-his dead father’s wish would rise up and protest, and the battle would
-have to be fought over again.
-
-But what he considered to be duty to the living triumphed over
-what he held as loyalty to the dead, so the next time he went to
-the old homestead, “For Sale” glared coldly and, he even imagined,
-reproachfully at him. It was then that Elliott realized the immensity
-of his sacrifice and bowed his head in silent sorrow.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-
-After that one time, Elliott Harding determined to face the inevitable
-and passed into the house without seeming to see the placard.
-
-One day while sitting in his accustomed writing place, which was the
-parlor, now furnished with a table and office chair, a man walked up
-the front steps. Elliott had just finished writing the words “The
-glimpses of light I have gained make the darkness more apparent,” when
-the man entered the doorway.
-
-The stranger was a tall, lean individual with iron gray beard curving
-out from under the chin. Eyes dark, keen and deep set; cheekbones
-as high as an Indian’s; hair iron gray and thick around the base of
-the skull, but thin and tangled over the top of the head, formed a
-combination striking and not unattractive. Though apparently far past
-his prime, he appeared to be as hearty and hale as if half the years of
-his life were yet to come. After gazing a moment at Elliott, he opened
-the conversation by saying:
-
-“Good morning! I suppose you are the agent for this property?”
-
-“I am, sir,” answered Elliott, courteously. “Come in and have a seat,”
-offering him his chair as he stood up and leaned against the writing
-table.
-
-“I have come to make a bid for this place. I would like to buy it, if
-it is to be had at a reasonable figure. It is not for the land value
-alone that I want it,” he went on, “it is the old home of my only
-sister. Besides, for another and more sacred reason, I never want it to
-pass out of the family.”
-
-“Your sister’s old home,” said Elliott, without appearing to have heard
-the offer, “then you are Mr. Field--Philip Field?”
-
-“That is my name--and yours?”
-
-“Elliott Field Harding.”
-
-“My nephew?” questioned the elder.
-
-“Your nephew, I suppose,” assented Elliott.
-
-“And you did not know you had an uncle here?” the old man asked quickly.
-
-“Well, I knew you were living somewhere in the South, but was not
-certain of the exact locality.”
-
-At this, the face of the visitor softened, a strange glow leaping to
-life in his quiet eyes.
-
-“Your mother discarded me years ago for marrying a Southern girl
-not--not exactly up to her ideal, and I thought you might not have
-known she had a cast-off brother, whom she thought had shamed his blood
-and name,” was the low spoken comment.
-
-Then, half-unconsciously he stammered, “Catharine--your mother, is she
-well?”
-
-“Quite well, I thank you,” said Elliott.
-
-“Will she come here to--to see you?”
-
-“Not likely, no; I don’t think she will ever come South again,” was the
-contemplative reply.
-
-“Then she has not changed; she still hates us here!” commented the
-other half sadly.
-
-“Well ‘hate’ is perhaps too strong a word; but I think that her
-inflexible disapproval of the social conditions here will never
-alter. You know her character. Her ideas are not easily changed and
-she thinks little outside of Boston and Boston ideals worthy of much
-consideration.”
-
-“Poor, dear sister! I had hoped that maternity and her early widowhood
-would awake in her a sense of the vast duties and responsibilities
-attached to her position as a southern woman. How I have longed to hear
-that she had learned the blessed lesson.”
-
-To these words Elliott listened intently, his breath coming quick with
-rebellious mortification.
-
-“If she had learned that lesson I might not now have to sacrifice the
-old home,” said Elliott, somewhat impetuously.
-
-“Sacrifice!” repeated the other, “and did you care to hold it?”
-
-“It was the dearest wish of my life to do so,” was the reply.
-
-Mr. Field gazed at the young man with a look of admiration.
-
-“Elliott, my nephew,” he fervently said, holding out his hand as he
-spoke, “if it will please you to call me friend as well as uncle, I
-shall refuse neither the name nor the duties.”
-
-“Uncle Philip, I thank you and accept your kindly offer,” and Elliott’s
-face brightened. The furrow which care had been ploughing between his
-brows the past few days, smoothed itself out. Then in a burst of
-confidence, he continued:
-
-“It has long been my ambition to do something with this place, worthy
-of the memory of my father; but my mother is a little extravagant, I
-am afraid, and I have not as yet been able to carry out my wish. She
-lately drew upon me for twenty-two hundred dollars and it came at a
-time when my only recourse was either to sell the place or dishonor her
-paper.”
-
-“Elliott, it is very pleasing to me that you should speak thus frankly
-with me. Let me help you. I will gladly lend you the money so that you
-may not be forced to sell. I am well-to-do and can afford to help you.”
-
-Elliott listened in pleased surprise. He felt touched beyond
-expression, but emotion irresistibly impelled him to seize his uncle’s
-hand, to bend low and press his lips upon it. This unexpected offer
-again buoyed up the hope of his intense desire to keep the homestead.
-For a time he stared steadily at this friend, his whole soul reflected
-upon his face.
-
-Mr. Field eyed his nephew closely during this silence and noted the
-evidence of strength in the serious young face, and the unmistakable
-air of a thinker it bore, and rightly judged that here was one who had
-given over play for work.
-
-“The memory of your kind offer will live with me forever,” said
-Elliott, his voice full of deep feeling, breaking the silence. “But I
-cannot accept your generosity. I have no assurance that my labors will
-be attended with success, and I have a horror of starting out in debt.”
-
-“Very well, my boy,” kindly spoke the other, “that spirit will win. I
-will buy the place, and it will still be in the family.”
-
-“Thank you, uncle! You don’t know how grateful I am for that.”
-
-“And I am doubly pleased to be the owner since meeting you,”
-interrupted the elder. “This old heart of mine beats warmly for your
-father. He was a good man and I want to see the boy who bears his name
-winning a way up to the level of life which was once Richard’s. Yes, I
-want to see you foremost amongst just and honored men.”
-
-“Uncle Philip,” heartily spoke Elliott, “for the sake of my father’s
-memory, I hope to fulfill that hope.”
-
-“Ah, yes, yes, you will, my boy!” The old man arose to go and as he
-and Elliott clasped hands in a hearty good-bye, he added: “I shall be
-glad to see you at my home, which is two miles south of here, or at
-the Agricultural Bank of which I am president. I am a widower, have
-no children, and your presence in my home would fill a void,” and as
-though not wishing to trust himself further along the mournful trend of
-thought, he hastily withdrew.
-
-As Elliott watched his uncle walking down the gravelled path, his offer
-of friendship took a tempting form. A week before, he would have
-scornfully repelled any such advances.
-
-“Only to think of it!” Elliott soliloquized, “an offer of sympathy and
-help from this man for whom my mother, his sister, has not one gleam of
-sympathy, or even comprehension! It is strange that he should be the
-first to come in when all the world seems gone out.”
-
-Thus, without further heralding and no outward commercial negotiation,
-the old Harding homestead passed quietly into Mr. Field’s possession,
-and this matter once settled, Elliott began in earnest the practice of
-his profession. Accordingly, his law card at once appeared in the local
-papers and his “shingle” was hung out beside another, bearing the name
-“John Holmes, Attorney at Law,” at the door of a building containing
-numerous small offices.
-
-Elliott knew his literary work was not enough to satisfy his insistent
-appetite for occupation, and for this reason, besides the necessity of
-earning something toward his modest expenses, he went into the practice
-of law.
-
-As Mr. Field felt he had been largely instrumental in his nephew’s
-settling here, he took an active interest in furthering his success.
-
-“That is Elliott Harding, my nephew,” he would say, with an
-affectionate familiarity, dashed with pride. “He is a most worthy young
-man, deserving of your confidence,” a commendation usually agreed to,
-with the unspoken thought sometimes, “and a very conceited one.”
-
-Why does the world look with such disapproval on self confidence? When
-a person is endowed with a vigorous brain, there is no better way for
-him to face the world than to start out with a full respect for his own
-talents, and unbounded faith in the possibilities that lie within him.
-
-Elliott Harding’s belief in himself was not small, and the
-consciousness of his ability led him to work diligently for both honor
-and profit. He expected labor and did not shrink from it. Very soon
-he riveted the attention of a few, then of the many, and it was not
-long before he rose to a position of considerable importance in the
-community and began to feel financial ground more solid beneath his
-feet.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-
-It was a glorious morning in August, when summer’s wide-set doors let
-in a torrent of later bloom.
-
-As early as ten o’clock the Riverside road was thronged with all manner
-of conveyances, moving toward the country, bound for an out-of-door
-fête of the character known in that region as a “bran-dance and
-barbecue.” This country road, prodigally overhung with the foliage of
-trees in the very heyday of their southern vigor is bounded on one
-side by goodly acres of farmland, and on the other by the Elkhorn, a
-historic river.
-
-The neighboring farms were still to-day. The light wind rustling the
-silken tassels of the corn was all the sound that would be heard until
-the morrow, unless, maybe, the neighing of the young horses left behind.
-
-From the topic of stock and farming, called forth by what they saw
-in passing, Elliott Harding and his uncle, as they rode along, fell
-to discussing the grim details of a murder and lynching that had but
-recently taken place just over the boundary, in Tennessee.
-
-“What a tremendous problem is this lynching evil,” said Elliott,
-looking keenly at his uncle, who shook his head seriously as he
-answered:
-
-“It is a very grave question that confronts us, and by far the less
-easier of settlement because we are placed in the full light of public
-observation, all our doings heightened by its glare, and the passion
-of the people aroused. It is not that we will, but that we must lynch
-in these extreme cases. There seems no other way, and that is a poor
-enough one.”
-
-“How many persons do you suppose have lost their lives by lynch law in
-the south during the past ten years?” asked Elliott.
-
-“I should say at least a thousand,” replied Mr. Field.
-
-“Heavens! What a record!” exclaimed Elliott, who became silent, a look
-of brooding thoughtfulness taking the place of the happy expression
-that had lighted up his face. His uncle, noticing his preoccupation,
-endeavored to distract his thoughts by calling attention to the
-distant sound of a big bass fiddle and a strong negro voice that called
-out many times, “balance all, swing yo par-d-ners.”
-
-“I suppose on this festive occasion I shall also hear some political
-aspirant promising poor humanity unconditional prosperity and
-deliverance from evil?” asked Elliott, by way of inquiry as to what
-other diversions might be expected.
-
-“Oh, yes, Holmes and Feland, the candidates for prosecuting attorney,
-are sure to be on hand,” replied Mr. Field.
-
-A little further on they came upon the crowd gathered in the woods. On
-the bough-roofed dancing ground the youths were tripping with lissome
-maids, who, with their filmy skirts a little lifted, showed shapely
-ankles at every turn. The lookers-on seemed witched with the rhythmic
-motion and the sensuous music. Old and young women, as well as men,
-the well-to-do and the poor, were there. Neat, nice-looking young
-people, with happy, intelligent faces, kept time to the waltz and the
-cotillion, which were the order of the day. As the graceful figures
-animated the arbor, far away in the depths of the wood could be heard
-echoes of light-hearted talk and happy laughter. The very genius of
-frolic seemed to preside over the gathering.
-
-Elliott stood near one end of the arbor and drew a long breath of
-pure delight at this, to him, truly strange and delightful pastoral.
-The mellow tints of nature’s verdure, the soft languor of the warm
-atmosphere, gave a happy turn to his thoughts as he looked upon his
-first “bran-dance.”
-
-“Come! finish this with me,” cried a sturdy farmer boy.
-
-“Do, dear mamma!” begged the gasping maiden at her side, “I am so
-tired. Do take a round with him.”
-
-Thus appealed to, the stout, handsome matron threw aside her palm-leaf
-fan and held out her hands to the boy. Although she had but reached
-that age when those of the opposite sex are considered just in their
-prime, she, being old enough to be the mother of the twenty-year-old
-daughter at her side, was considered too old to be one of the dancers.
-But at the hearty invitation she too became one of the tripping throng
-and entered into the fun with all the sweetness and spontaneity in
-voice and gesture which made herself and others forget how far her
-Spring was past. The waltz now became a waltz indeed. The musicians
-played faster and faster and the girl clapped her hands as the couple
-whirled round and round, as though nothing on earth could stop them.
-
-“Please let’s stop. I beg you to stop, now!” cried the matron, panting
-for breath but the enraptured youth paid no heed to her pleadings, but
-swifter and swifter grew his pace, wilder and wilder his gyrations,
-till, fortunately for her, he encountered an unexpected post and was
-brought to a sudden halt. The waltz, too, had come to an end, and the
-onlookers clapped their hands in hearty applause. Even the veterans
-of the community seemed to enjoy the spirit of the sport. Elliott
-particularly noted the rapt enjoyment of a group of old men silver
-haired, ruddy skinned, keen eyed, who once seen, remained penciled upon
-the gazer’s memory--each head a worthy sketch.
-
-These patriarchs were bent with toil as well as age, their hands were
-roughened by labor, the Sunday broadcloth became them less than the
-week-day short coat, yet each figure had a dignity of its own. In one
-aged man, with snow-white hair, Roman nose and tawny, beardless face,
-the staunch Southerner of old lived again. Here was that calm and
-resolution betokening the indomitable spirit, the unswerving faith
-that led men to brave fire and sword, ruin and desolation, rather than
-surrender principle.
-
-In strong relief were these sombre figures of the group set forth by
-the light, airy frocks and the young faces and graceful forms of the
-pretty girls, with beflowered hats coquettishly perched above their
-heads, or swinging from their hands. One could step easily from the
-verge of the white holiday keeper to the confines of the pleasure
-loving black. But it was a great distance--like the crossing of a vast
-continent--between the habitats of alien races.
-
-On the outskirts of the crowd, here and there, under the friendly shade
-of some wide spreading tree, could be seen a darkey busily engaged
-in vending watermelons and cool drinks. Coatless and hatless, with
-shirt wide open at neck and chest, and sleeves rolled elbow high, he
-transferred the luscious fruit from his wagon to the eager throng about
-him; while he passed compliments without stint upon the unbleached
-domestics who came to “trade” with him, not forgetting to occasionally
-lift his voice and proclaim the superior quality of his stock,
-verifying his assurances by taking capacious mouthfuls from the severed
-melon lying on the top of the load.
-
-Without ceremony, the darkeys, male and female, swarmed about the
-vender, some seating themselves in picturesque ease upon the ground in
-pairs and groups. There were mulattos and octoroons of light and darker
-shades, to the type of glossy blackness, discussing last week’s church
-“festival,” to-morrow’s funeral, the Methodists’ protracted meeting
-which begins one Christmas and lasts till the next.
-
-In astonishing quantities did the “culled folks” stow away “red meat”
-and “white meat,” and with juice trickling from the corners of their
-mouths down over their best raiment, gave ready ear to the vender’s
-broad jokes and joined in his loud laughter, showing, as only negroes
-can, their ready appreciation of the feast and holiday. Their hilarity
-kept up an undiminished flow until the participants were called to
-serve the midday meal for the “white folks.”
-
-Hundreds partook of the delicious pig which had been roasted whole,
-that meat of which the poet wrote, “Send me, gods, a whole hog
-barbecued.”
-
-Animals spitted on pointed sticks sputtered and fizzled over a hole
-in the ground filled with live coals. Mindful attendants shifted the
-appetizing viands from side to side, seasoning them with salt, pepper,
-vinegar or lemon as the case might require, and when set forth, offered
-a feast as close to primitive nature as the trees under which it was
-served.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-
-Very soon after the feast was ended, Elliott saw John Holmes and a
-party of men coming toward him.
-
-To a casual reader of the human countenance, it would be evident at a
-first glance that Holmes was a man of no small worldly knowledge, and
-as he now appeared with his companions one could discern that this
-superiority was recognized by them and that he held a certain position
-of authority, in fact that he was a man accustomed to rule rather than
-be ruled.
-
-As he approached Elliott, he addressed him with a pleased smile,
-saying: “I am glad to see you here, Mr. Harding. Maybe you can help us
-out of a difficulty.”
-
-“In what way?” asked Elliott, surprised.
-
-“My political opponent was to have been here and we were to briefly
-address the people this afternoon, but, so far, he has failed to put
-in an appearance. The toiling folk have come here to-day, even laying
-aside important work in some instances, to hear a ‘speaking,’ and
-unless they hear some sort of an address (they are not particular about
-the subject) it will be hard to bring them together again when we need
-them more.
-
-“I, as a representative of the committee, request you to lend us a
-helping hand. It is generally desired that you be the orator upon this
-occasion.”
-
-“What! address this gathering offhand and wholly unprepared? It would
-blight my prospects forever with them,” laughed Elliott.
-
-“On the other hand, it would give you an opportunity for a wider
-acquaintance and perhaps elect you to the first office to which you may
-yet aspire. Come! I will take no excuse,” persisted Holmes, while his
-companions seconded his insistence.
-
-After considerable pressing, Elliott was escorted to the platform, from
-which the musicians had moved. Without delay Holmes stepped to the
-front and in a loud, clear voice which hushed the crowd, said:
-
-“Ladies and gentlemen, I have the honor of introducing Mr. Elliott
-Harding, who will speak in place of Mr. Feland, that gentleman, for
-some reason or other, having failed to put in an appearance.”
-
-Amid a storm of cheers, Elliott arose, straightening his eloquent
-shoulders as he came forward. His blonde face was full of eager life
-when he began.
-
-“Ladies and gentlemen: The unexpected compliment paid me by your
-committee has given me the pleasure of addressing you to-day. I accept
-the invitation the more gladly inasmuch as it gives me the opportunity
-of telling you that my heart, linked to the South by birth, has
-retained its old love in spite of absence and distance, and brings me
-back to my own place with a fonder and, if possible, a greater and
-nobler pride in this Southland of yours and mine. And, it _is_ a land
-to be proud of. More magnificent a country God has never made. It has
-seen the fierce harrowing of war. Gazing through the past years my
-fancy sees the ruin that has confronted the home-coming soldier--ashes
-instead of homes, burnt stubble instead of fences, the slaves on
-whose labor he had long depended for the cultivation of his fertile
-fields, with their bonds cast off, meeting him as freemen. Without
-money, provisions or even the ordinary implements of husbandry, he at
-once began the toilsome task of repairing his fallen fortunes. Having
-converted his sword into a plowshare, his spear into a pruning hook, he
-lost no time, but manfully set to work to restore his lost estate, and
-bring a measure of comfort to the dear ones deprived of their former
-luxuries.
-
-“So it is to the soldier of the ‘Lost Cause’ that all honor and praise
-must be given for the present prosperity of the land. And it becomes us
-as heirs of his sacrifice and of the fruits of his toil, to lend our
-every effort to the full garnering of the harvest.
-
-“As the giant West has sprung up from the sap of the East, so must
-the South rise up by strength drawn from the soil of the North. What
-the South needs to-day more than any other one thing is an influx
-of intelligent laborers from the North. It needs its sturdy folk of
-industrious habit, economy and indomitable energy; it needs a more
-profitable system of agriculture. Accustomed as that people is to
-economy, to frugality and to forcing existence out of an unwilling
-soil, if only they could be induced to come here in sufficient numbers,
-the country would soon blossom into mellow prosperity. And, my friends,
-I want to see them coming--coming with their capital to aid us in
-developing the inexhaustible mineral resources of our mines, the timber
-of our forests, to build our mills and rear our infant manufactures to
-the full stature of lusty manhood. Our future with all its limitless
-possibilities--this future which is to warm the great breast of the
-business world toward us, this future which shall shower upon us the
-fullness of earth--is all with you.
-
-“Therefore, with such a vista of promise opening before our gaze, ill
-would it become us to fail in our duty toward ourselves, toward our
-country and toward Him who giveth all. Thus it befits us to lend every
-effort to the furtherance of this, our future salvation. To those upon
-whose coming so much depends, every inducement must be offered. And
-be it remembered that capital seeks its home in sections wherein life
-and prosperity enjoy the greatest security under the law. This is a
-conclusion founded on the great law of caution, upon which intelligent
-capital is planted and reared. It becomes necessary, then, to ask
-ourselves seriously, ‘Are we making every effort to solidify peace and
-order by the protection of life and the supreme establishment of law?’
-
-“I need not answer this question. Circumstances have done so for me.
-The electric wire is still hot from flashing to the furtherest corner
-of our Nation, in all its revolting details, news of the recent awful
-crime in our sister state.
-
-“I am well aware that in touching upon this point I am wounding the
-sensibilities of a people who have been shadowed by personal injury
-and embittered by a natural race prejudice; but I feel that I can
-speak the more boldly because I touch the matter not as an alien whose
-sympathies are foreign and whose theories are theoretical chimeras,
-but as a southerner--one whose interest is the stronger because he
-is a southerner. My audience may refuse to grant the justice of my
-argument, but it must admit the truth of the situation I outline.
-Whichever way we turn the tremendous problem of the lynching evil
-stares us in the face. It baits us, it defies us, it shames us.
-
-“Think of it! More than one thousand human lives forfeited to Judge
-Lynch form the South’s record for the past ten years. What a horrible
-record! It seems almost incredible that such lawlessness can exist
-in communities supposed to be civilized. Would to God it were but an
-evil dream and that I could to-day assure the world that this terrible
-condition is but the unfounded imagining of a nightmared mind.
-
-“Lynching is a peculiarly revolting form of murder, and to tolerate
-it is to pave the way for anarchy and barbarism. It cannot be
-truthfully denied that one of the most potent factors militating
-against the progress of this country is this frequent resort to illegal
-execution, and before we can realize the full benefits of your natural
-inheritance, your laws--our laws--must be impartially enforced,
-property must be protected, and life sacredly guarded by rigid legal
-enforcement, backed by an elevated public conception of duty.
-
-“It is no greater crime for one man to seize a brother man and take his
-life than it is for a lawless multitude to do the same act. The first,
-if there be any difference, is less criminal than the latter for it,
-at least often has the merit of individual courage and the plea for
-revenge on the ground of personal injury. But when a man is deprived of
-his liberty by incarceration in the jail and thus shorn of his power
-of self protection, it is the acme of dishonor and cowardice to wrest
-him from the grasp of the law and deprive him of his life upon evidence
-that possibly might not convict him before a jury.
-
-“I do not wish to be understood as saying that brave and good men do
-not sometimes, under strong excitement, participate in this outrage
-against human rights and organized society, for it is a fact that such
-rebellions are not infrequently led by the most prominent citizens,
-and, from this very fact, it is the more to be deplored.
-
-“My friends, have you never thought to what this practice may lead?
-Has the frequency of mob violence no alarming indications for you?
-Directed, as it more often is, against our negro population, instead of
-making better citizens of the depraved and deterring them from crime,
-it has a tendency to cultivate a race prejudice and stir up the worst
-of human passions. It is inculcating a disregard of law because it
-ignores that greatest principle of freedom--that every man is to be
-considered innocent until proven to be guilty by competent testimony.
-
-“Judge Lynch is the enemy of law and strikes at the very foundation
-of order and civil government. His rule is causing large classes to
-feel that the law of the land affords them no protection. The courts
-furnish an adequate remedy for every wrong. One legal death on the
-scaffold has a more salutary effect than a score of mob executions.
-The former teaches a proper dread of offended law, leaves no unhealing
-wounds in the hearts of the living, stirs up no revengeful impulses,
-creates no feuds and causes no retaliatory murders. What a field of
-home mission stretches before us! We owe it to the South to remove this
-blot on our good name. Let us hasten the day when Judge Lynch shall be
-spoken of with a shudder, as a hideous memory.
-
-“This pitiful people, our former slaves, if instructed by intelligent
-ministers and teachers, might be delivered from the cramped mind,
-freed from the brutalized spirit which causes these crimes among us.
-They are naturally a religious people and this principle, which seems
-to be strong within them, under the guidance of an earnest enlightened
-ministry, might prove to be the key to the race problem find open up a
-social and political reformation, unequalled in modern times.
-
-“Already the negro race is doing much for its own advancement and good.
-To-day there are thirty-five thousand negro teachers in the elementary
-schools of the South. Six hundred ministers of the gospel have been
-educated in their own theological halls. They own and edit more than
-two hundred newspapers. They have equipped and maintain more than three
-hundred lawyers and four hundred doctors and have accumulated property
-which is estimated at more than two hundred and fifty millions. I note
-this fact with pleasure. It makes them better citizens by holding a
-stake in their community. Let us show our appreciation of what they
-have already done by helping them to do more.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-
-The strange faces, the new scene, the suddenness of the call had shaken
-Elliott’s self-possession, and he breathed a sigh of relief as he
-finished his speech.
-
-The mayor and municipal council crowded around him with outstretched
-hands, foremost amongst them, an old man with Roman features.
-
-“I was interested in your speech, young man,” said he, “but wait until
-this thing strikes home before you condemn our code.”
-
-“You’re right, Mr. Carr, you’re right!” cried several voices in chorus.
-
-The old gentleman talked on during the intervals of greetings and
-ended by inviting young Harding to his home, where a lawn party was to
-be held that night.
-
-As the volume of general applause lessened, the cry of “Holmes!
-Holmes!” was kept up with an insistence which might have induced a less
-capable man to respond. Nor would the enthused throng be quieted until
-John Holmes mounted the platform.
-
-“It had not been my purpose, ladies and gentlemen,” said he, “to
-address you to-day upon the subject touched upon by Mr. Harding, but,
-since he has modestly lectured us on our barbarity, I must say a word
-in defense of the South and southerners. He intimates that the curse
-of slavery still rests upon the southern states. I wonder if Mr.
-Harding knows whether or not the curse of slave-trade, which to be
-accurate is called ‘the sum of all villainies,’ really rests upon Great
-Britain, who was the originator of the inhuman system and not upon us
-southerners?
-
-“The most careful statistics show that in the beginning over 19,000,000
-Africans were imported into the British West Indies and so severely
-were they dealt with that when emancipation came, only a little over
-600,000 were left to benefit by it. The slave trade was fastened on the
-American colonies by the greed of English kings, who, over and over
-again, vetoed the restrictive legislation of the Colonial Assemblies on
-the ground that it interfered with the just profits of their sea-faring
-subjects. Is there no work for Nemesis here?
-
-“That the system of slavery, as it existed in the southern states, was
-accompanied by many cases of hardship and cruelty, we freely admit;
-that its abolition is a proper ground for sincere rejoicing, we do not
-hesitate to affirm. But, it is nevertheless true, that, looked at in
-a large way, slavery was a lifting force to the negro race during the
-whole period of its existence here. The proof lies just here--when the
-war of emancipation came, the 4,000,000 negroes in the southern states
-stood on a higher level of civilization than did any other equal number
-of people of the same race anywhere on the globe.
-
-“As to the mental and moral advancement of the negro, we have not done
-enough to render us boastful or self-satisfied, but enough to dull the
-shafts of the mistaken or malicious who would convict us of heathenish
-indifference to his elevation. We have from childhood had a lively
-appreciation of the debt we owe to the race. Nobody owes them as much
-as we do; nobody knows them as well; nobody’s future is so involved in
-their destiny as our own. Is it not natural that we should help them in
-their pathetic struggle against poverty, ignorance and degradation?
-
-“Mr. Harding, in speaking of their progress, intimates that these
-results have been reached by their own unaided efforts. The fact is
-that the elementary schools of which he speaks are sustained almost
-entirely by the southern white people, who, in the midst of their own
-grinding poverty, have taxed themselves to the extent of $50,000,000 to
-educate the children of their former slaves. The colored churches of
-to-day are the legitimate fruit of the faithful work done amongst the
-slaves before the war by white missionaries.
-
-“Two hundred and fifty millions is a vast sum. Could a race gather and
-hold so much in a commonwealth where its rights are being trampled
-upon with impunity? The question answers itself. There is, in truth,
-no place on earth where the common negro laborer has so good an
-opportunity as between the Potomac and Rio Grande. Here he is admitted
-to all the trades, toils side by side with white workmen, and is
-protected in person and property so long as he justifies protection.
-
-“As to the statement that one thousand have been lynched in the past
-ten years, doubtless Mr. Harding accepts without further examination
-the crooked figures of partisan newspapers. But, granting this horrible
-record to be true, it must be acknowledged that the man does something
-to call forth such treatment. Along with the telling of our alleged
-bloodthirstiness, there should be related the frequency and atrocity
-of his outrages against our homes. The south willingly appeals to the
-judgment of civilized mankind as to the truth of her declaration that
-the objects of enlightened government are as well secured here as on
-any portion of the globe.
-
-“That Mr. Harding and his sympathizers are actuated by excellent
-motives, I do not mean to question.
-
-“We are as mindful as others of the dangerous tendency of resorting
-to lawlessness, but strangers cannot understand the situation as
-well as those who are personally familiar with it and have suffered
-by it. It is much to be regretted, of course, that lynchings occur,
-but it is far more to be regretted that there are so many occasions
-for them. When the sanctity of woman is violated, man, if man he be,
-cannot but choose to avenge it. If the villain did not commit the crime
-for which this penalty is inflicted, then we would not be inflamed
-to summary vengeance. The perpetrator of this deed, the most heinous
-of all crimes and to which death is often added, need not complain
-when vengeance is visited upon him in a swift and merciless manner,
-according with the teaching of his own villainy.
-
-“Unquestionably it would be better if judicial formalities could be
-duly observed, but the law should make special provisions for summary
-execution when such grave offenses occur. Then, too, there is something
-to be said for the peculiar indignation which such cases incite. This
-anger is the just indignation of a community against a peculiarly vile
-class of criminal, not against a race, as Mr. Harding and others have
-grown to believe and to set forth. That it has seemed a race question
-with the south, has been because for every negro in the north we have
-one hundred here.
-
-“Mid the stormy scenes a quarter of a century ago, when the bugle
-called the sons of the south to war, they went, leaving their wives,
-mothers, children and homes in the hands of the slaves who, though
-their personal interests were on the other side, were true to their
-trust, protected the helpless women and children and earned for them
-their support by the sweat of their own brow, and with a patience
-unparalleled left the question of freedom to the arbitrament of war.
-Their behavior under manifold temptations was always kindly and
-respectful, and never one raised an arm to molest the helpless. In
-the drama of all humanity, there is not a figure more pathetic or
-touching than the figure of the slave, who followed his master to the
-battle-field, marched, thirsted and hungered with him, nursed, served
-and cheered him--that master who was fighting to keep him in slavery.
-This subject comprises a whole vast field of its own and if the history
-of it is ever written, it will be written in the literature of the
-south, for here alone lies the knowledge and the love.
-
-“Who has taught him to regard liberty as a license? Who has sown
-this seed of animosity in his mind? Until they who have sown the
-seed of discord shall root up and clear away the tares, the peace
-and prosperity that might reign in this southern land can be but a
-hope, a dream. It is this rooting of the tares, and this more surely
-than anything else, that will bring nearer the union and perfect good
-fellowship which is so greatly needed. Sound common sense and sterling
-Americanism can and will find a way to prosperity and peace.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-
-The sun had set; off beyond the glistening green woodline, the sky was
-duskily red. The air was full of that freshness of twilight, which is
-so different from the dew of morning.
-
-Elliott left the bran-dance by a new road which was plain and
-characterless until he had passed through an unpretentious gate and was
-driving along the old elm avenue, a part of the Carr domain, which was
-undeniably picturesque. Shortly the elm branches came to an end and he
-entered a park, indifferently cared for, according to modern ideas, but
-well stocked with timber of magnificent growth and of almost every
-known native variety. Perhaps the oaks dominated in number and majesty,
-but they found worthy rivals in the towering elms.
-
-Neglect is very picturesque in its effect, whether the thing neglected
-be a ruined castle or an unkept tangle. The unpicturesque things are
-those in which man’s artificial selection reigns supreme.
-
-Had Elliott’s order-loving mother been with him, she would have
-observed that this park was ill-maintained, and that she would dearly
-love to have the thinning out and regulating of its trees. Whereas, to
-his less orderly fancy, it presented a most agreeable appearance. There
-was Nature’s charm wholly undisturbed by man, and what perhaps added
-the finishing touch to his satisfaction was the exceeding number of
-maples, in the perfect maturity of their growth. These straight and
-goodly trees so screened the house that he was very close before it
-could be seen. Even at the instant and before he had looked upon more
-than its gray stone frontage almost smothered in Virginia creepers, up
-to the very top of its rounded gables, Elliott was pleased.
-
-It was a secluded place. Its position was, according to his taste,
-perfect. It had the blended charm of simple, harmonious form and
-venerable age. It faced almost southeast, the proper aspect for a
-country house, as it ensures morning cheerfulness all the year round,
-and the full advantage of whatever sunshine there is in winter from
-dawn practically to sundown and the exquisite effects of the rising of
-the moon.
-
-Low-growing lilies breathed seductive fragrance, and the softness of
-the air permitted the gay party assembled to indulge in what would have
-been indiscretion in a more northerly climate. Young girls discarded
-their straw hats and danced upon the smooth, green lawn, while elderly
-chaperons could retire to the halls and porches if they feared the
-chill night air.
-
-As Elliott approached the moonlit crowd of figures, Dorothy Carr came
-out to greet him. A young woman, tall and slight, with a figure lithe
-and graceful, made more perfect by ardent exercise. A skin which had
-never been permitted to lose its infant softness, with lips as pure
-as perfect health and lofty thoughts could make them. Her blown gold
-hair was lustrous and soft, and she carried herself with the modesty of
-the gentlewoman. Her blue eyes were dark, their brows pencilled with
-delicate precision combining a breadth that was both commanding and
-sweet.
-
-“I am delighted to see you again, Mr. Harding,” Dorothy Carr said,
-graciously.
-
-“And I am delighted to be here,” replied Elliott, as he turned with his
-fair hostess to a rude seat fixed about the bole of an oak.
-
-“It was upon your grounds that we last met,” she added after a slight
-pause.
-
-“Yes, and I have waited with some impatience for an invitation here,
-which came just to-day. You see how quickly I accepted.”
-
-“What a dainty reproof,” she said, laughing. “But I have been away all
-the summer or you should have been invited here long ago.”
-
-A few such commonplaces passed between them, then Dorothy referred to
-Elliott’s speech, which she had listened to with interest.
-
-“I was so suddenly called upon that I did little justice to the
-subject, and it is a subject of such grave responsibility. But perhaps
-it is just as well that I did not have time to present it more strongly
-for it appears to have been already misunderstood, and I hear that not
-a few have branded me with all sorts of bad names. I trust I have not
-fallen under your condemnation.”
-
-“Well, to be frank, I think you exhibited a somewhat fanatical anxiety
-to lecture people differently circumstanced,” she answered gravely.
-“Yet I did not condemn you. I hope you give me credit for more
-liberality than that. You are new to our land, and have much to grow
-accustomed to. We should not expect you at once to see this matter as
-we do,” was the evasive reply.
-
-“She certainly does not lack the courage of her convictions,” he
-thought. Then aloud:
-
-“You evidently think I shall alter my views?” this in his airily candid
-manner; “I stated the true conditions of affairs, just as I understand
-them.”
-
-“There is the trouble. The true condition is not as you and many others
-understand it.”
-
-“Then let us hope that I may fully comprehend before a great while. I
-at least intend to make the best of this opportunity, for, as you may
-know, I have settled permanently in Georgetown.”
-
-She looked up with a beautiful aloofness in her eyes. The brave mouth,
-with its full, sensitive lips, was strong, yet delicate.
-
-“I am glad to hear that, for then you can hardly fail, sooner or later,
-to feel as we do about the subject of your to-day’s discussion. I hope
-to help you to think kindly of your new home.”
-
-“Nothing could be more comforting than this from you,” he assured her,
-with that frank manner which suited well the fearless expression of
-his face. “I am now delightfully quartered with my kinsman, Mr. Field,
-whose acres join yours, I believe; so we shall be neighbors.”
-
-Then they laughed. “We are really to be neighbors after all our quarrel
-in the mountains? Well!” she added, hospitably, “a cover will always
-be laid for you at our table, and you shall have due warning of any
-entertainment that may take place. It shall be my duty to see that you
-are thoroughly won over to the South; to her traditions as well as her
-pleasures.”
-
-“But changing this flippant subject to one of graver importance, just
-now; there is one thing absolutely necessary for you Kentuckians to
-learn before you win me.” His face lighted with a charming smile.
-
-“What is that?” she asked.
-
-“You must first know how to make Manhattan cocktails.”
-
-She answered with a pretty pout, “I--we can make them now; why
-shouldn’t we? Doesn’t all the good whiskey you get up North come from
-the bluegrass state?”
-
-Amused at her loyalty, Elliott assented willingly: “That is a fact. And
-I like your whiskey,--a little of it--I like your state--all of it--its
-bluegrass, its thoroughbreds, and its women. But, you will pardon me,
-there is something wanting in its cocktails, perhaps--it’s the cherry!”
-
-“A fault that can be easily remedied, and--suppose we did succeed,
-would you belong to us?”
-
-“I’m afraid I would,” he agreed smilingly.
-
-Here the music of the two-step stopped, and Uncle Josh, the old negro
-fiddler, famous the country over for calling the figures of the dance,
-straightened himself with dignity, and called loudly:
-
-“Pardners for de las’ waltz ’fore supper!”
-
-Dorothy could not keep the mirth from her lips. Uncle Josh was not
-measuring time by heartbeats but the cravings of his stomach; his
-immortal soul was his immortal appetite. However, whatever motive
-inspired him to fix the supper time, it proved efficacious, and
-partners were soon chosen and the dancing began again as vigorously as
-ever.
-
-Dorothy and Elliott were not slow in joining the other dancers and
-glided through the dreamy measures which Uncle Josh, despite his
-longing to eat, drew forth sweetly from his old, worn fiddle. He was
-the soul of melody and had an eye to widening his range of selections
-and his inimitable technique appreciating the demands upon his art.
-When, with an extra flourish, Uncle Josh eventually brought the music
-to an end, Mr. Carr, with his easy Southern manner, courteously invited
-every one in to supper. He led the way, accompanied by Elliott Harding
-and Dorothy.
-
-How pretty the dining-room looked! Its half-light coming through soft
-low tones of pink. Big rosy balls of sweet clover, fresh from the
-home fields, were massed in cream tinted vases, bunched over pictures
-and trailed down in lovely confusion about the window and straggling
-over door frames. Upon the long table stood tall candlesticks and
-candelabras many prismed, with branching vines twisted in and out in
-quaint fashion, bearing tall candles tipped with pink shades. From
-the centre of the ceiling to each corner of the room first, then to
-regular distances, were loosely stretched chains of pink and white
-clovers. Large bows of ribbon held these lengths in place where they
-met the chair board. In each corner close to the wall were jars which,
-in their pretty pink dresses of crinkled paper held in place by broad
-ribbon sashes, would scarcely be recognized as the old butter pots of
-our grandmothers’ days. From these jars grew tufts of rooted clover.
-Even the old fireplace and broad mantel were decked with these blossoms.
-
-At each side of the table stood two glass bowls filled with branches
-of clover leaves only; one lot tied with pink ribbon, the other with
-white. When supper was served these bowls were passed around while
-Dorothy repeated the pretty tradition of the four-leaf clover. Then
-commenced the merry hunt for the prize that only two could win. Bright
-eyes and deft fingers searched their leaves through.
-
-While this went on, in the dining-room just outside, under the moon
-and the maples, near the kitchen door, was another scene as joyous, if
-not so fair. At the head of the musician’s banquetting board sat Uncle
-Josh, hospitably helping each to the good things Aunt Chloe had heaped
-before them in accordance with the orders of “her white folks.” She was
-considered one of the most important members of the Carr household,
-having been in the service of the family for thirty years, being a
-blend of nurse, cook and lady’s maid.
-
-As Uncle Josh’s brown, eager hands greedily grasped the mint julep, and
-held it sparkling between him and the light, with a broad smile on his
-beaming face, he exultantly exclaimed:
-
-“De Lawd love her soul, Miss Dor’thy, nebber is ter fergit we all.
-Talk erbout de stars! She’s ’way ’bove dem.”
-
-While he and his companions drank mint julep in token that his
-grateful sentiment was recognized as a toast to the fine hostess, the
-dining-room was ringing with laughter and congratulations over Elliott
-Harding’s victory, he having found one of the four-leaved trophies.
-
-“Where is its mate?” was the eager question as nimble fingers and sharp
-eyes searched over the little bunches right and left again, anxious to
-find this potent charm against evil. The search, however, was vain.
-Some one asked if its loss meant that Mr. Harding should live unwedded
-for the rest of his days.
-
-The evening closed with jokes of his bachelorhood.
-
-By midnight the dining-room was still, the table cleared, the only sign
-of what had been was the floor with its scattered leaves.
-
-All tired out with the long hours of gayety, Dorothy had hurried off to
-bed. There was a little crushed four-leaved clover fastened upon her
-nightgown as she lay down to her sweet, mysterious, girlish dreams.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-
-Dorothy’s father, Napoleon Carr, was a man well known and greatly
-respected throughout the south country where he had always lived.
-His existence had been a laborious one, for he had entered the lists
-heavily handicapped in the matter of education. Intellectual enjoyment,
-dimly realized, had never been his; but he struggled that his family
-might have a fairer chance. Much of his comfortable income of late
-years had been generously devoted to the education of his daughter.
-
-He had been happily wedded, though long childless. At length, when
-Dorothy was born it was at the price of her mother’s life. This was
-a terrific blow to the husband and father. He was inconsolable with
-grief. The child was sent to a kinsman for a few months, after which
-time Mr. Carr felt that he must have her ever with him. To him there
-was nothing so absorbing as the tender care of Dorothy. He was very
-prideful of her. He watched her daily growth and then, all at once,
-while he scarcely realized that the twilight of childhood was passing,
-the dawn came, and, like the rose vine by his doorway, she burst into
-bloom.
-
-With what a reverential pride he saw her filling the vacant place,
-diffusing a fragrance upon all around like the sweet, wet smell of a
-rose.
-
-He was a splendid horseman and crack shot, and it had been one of his
-pleasures to teach her to handle horse and gun. Together they would
-ride and hunt, and no day’s outing was perfect to him unless Dorothy
-was by his side.
-
-It was not surprising, therefore, to find her a little boyish in her
-fondness for sport. However, as she grew to womanhood, she sometimes,
-from a fancy that it was undignified, would decline to take part in
-these sports. But when he had started off alone with dogs and gun,
-the sound of running feet behind him would cause him to turn to find
-Dorothy with penitent face before him. Then lovingly encircling his
-neck with arms like stripped willow boughs, the repentant words: “I do
-want to go. I was only in fun,” would be a preface to a long day of
-delight.
-
-In time these little moods set him thinking, and he began to realize
-that their beautiful days of sporting comradeship were in a measure
-over. How he wished she might never outgrow this charm of childhood.
-
-Ah! those baby days, not far past! How often of nights the father went
-to her bedroom, just touching his child to find out if the covering was
-right and that she slept well. How many, many times had he leaned over
-her sleeping form in the dim night light, seeming to see a halo around
-her head as he watched the dimpling smile about her infant mouth, and,
-recalling the old nurse saying, that when a baby smiles, angels are
-whispering to it, took comfort in the thought that maybe it was all
-true, that the mother was soothing her child to deeper slumber, and
-so, perhaps, was also beside him. All unconsciously she had slept,
-never hearing the prayer to God that when the day should come when she
-would leave him for the man of her heart, death might claim his lone
-companionship.
-
-How it hurt when the neighbors would says “You have a grown daughter
-now,” or “Dorothy is a full fledged woman.” It was not until then that
-Mr. Carr had let his daughter know that it would almost break his heart
-if she should ever leave him for another. But he made absolutely no
-restrictions against her meeting young men.
-
-Of course this rare creature had sweethearts not a few, for the
-neighboring boys began to nourish a tender sentiment for her before she
-was out of short dresses. Her playmates were free of the house; their
-coming was always welcome to her and encouraged by her father though
-this past year, when a new visitor had found his way there, the father
-took particular note of her manner toward this possible suitor. The
-kind old eyes would follow her with pathetic eagerness, not reproaching
-or reproving, only always questioning: “Is this to be the man who
-shall open the new world’s doors for her; who shall give her the first
-glimpse of that wonderful joy called love?”
-
-Yet so truly unselfish was her nature,--despite the unlimited
-indulgences when, visiting in congenial homes where she was petted and
-admired, full of the intoxication of the social triumphs, she had out
-of the abundance of her heart exclaimed: “Oh, I am so happy! happy!
-happy!”--there was sure to follow a time of anxious solicitude, when
-she asked herself, “But how has it been with him--with dear old father?”
-
-It was so generous of him to spare so much of her society; so good of
-him to make her orphan way so smooth and fair. She could read in his
-pictured face something of the loneliness and the disappointments he
-had borne; something of the heartaches he must have suffered. All this
-she recalled, the pleasure of it and the pain of it, the pride and joy
-of it. What a delight it was to make her visit short, and surprise him
-by returning home before he expected her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-
-Time went swiftly. The seasons followed each other without that
-fierceness in them to which one is accustomed in the North. The very
-frosts were gentle; slowly and kindly they stripped the green robes
-from tree and thicket, gave ample warning to the robin, linnet and
-ruby-throat before taking down the leafy hangings and leaving their
-shelter open to the chill rains of December. The wet kine and horses
-turned away from the North and stood in slanting rains with bowed heads.
-
-Christmas passed, and New Year. Pretty soon spring was in the valleys,
-creeping first for shelter shyly, in the pause of the blustering wind
-that was blowing the last remnants of old winter from the land.
-
-There was a general spreading of dry brush over the spaded farm
-country; then the sweet, clean smell of its burning and a misty veil
-of thin blue smoke hanging everywhere throughout the clearing. As soon
-as the fear of frost was gone, all the air was a fount of freshness.
-The earth smiled its gladness, and the laughing waters prattled of the
-kindness of the sun. When the dappled softness of the sky gave some
-earnest of its mood, a brisk south wind arose and the blessed rain came
-driving cold, yet most refreshing. At its ceasing, coy leaves peeped
-out, and the bravest blossoms; the dogwoods, full-flowered, quivered
-like white butterflies poised to dream. In every wet place the little
-frogs began to pipe to each other their joy that spring was holding her
-revel. The heart of the people was not sluggish in its thankfulness
-to God, for if there were no spring, no seed time, there would be no
-harvest. Now summer was all back again. Song birds awakening at dawn
-made the woods merry carolling to mates and younglings in the nests.
-All nature was in glad, gay earnest. Busy times, corn in blossom
-rustling in the breeze, blackberries were ripe, morning-glories under
-foot, the trumpet flower flaring above some naked girdled tree. Open
-meadows full of sun where the hot bee sucks the clover, the grass tops
-gather purple, and ox-eyed daisies thrive in wide unshadowed acres.
-
-“Just a year ago since I came to the South,” mused Elliott Harding,
-as he walked back and forth in his room, the deep bay window of which
-overlooked a lawn noticeably neat and having a representative character
-of its own.
-
-As a rule, South country places in thickly settled regions are
-pronounced unlovely at a glance, either by reason of the plainness of
-their architecture or by the too close proximity of other buildings.
-Here was an exception for the outhouses were numerous but in excellent
-repair and red-tiled like the house itself. The tiles were silvered
-here and there with the growth and stains of unremoved lichens. There
-was not an eye-sore anywhere about this quiet home of Mr. Field.
-
-Elliott’s intimates had expressed a pity for him. Surely this quiet
-must dull his nerves so used to spurring, and he find the jog-trot of
-the days’ monotony an insupportable experience. That Elliott belonged
-to the world, loved it, none knew better than himself. He had revelled
-in its delights with the indifferent thought, “Time enough for fireside
-happiness by-and-by.” His interest in life had been little more than
-that which a desire for achievement occasions in an energetic mind.
-
-In spite of his past association, his past carelessness, this moment
-found him going over the most trivial event that had the slightest
-connection with Dorothy Carr. He tried to recall every word, every
-look of hers. Often when he had had a particularly hard day’s work,
-it rested him to stop and take supper with the Carrs. The sight of
-their home life fascinated him. He had never known happy family life;
-he had little conception of what a pure, genial home might be. The
-simple country customs, the common interests so keenly shared, the
-home loyalty--all these were new to him, and impressed him forcibly.
-And how like one of them he had got to feel walking in the front hall
-often, hanging up his hat, and reading the evening papers if the folks
-were out, and sometimes when Aunt Chloe told him where Dorothy had
-gone, he felt the natural inclination to go in pursuit of her. He
-remembered once finding her ankle deep in the warm lush garden grasses,
-pulling weeds out from her flowers, and he had actually got down and
-helped her. That was a very happy hour; the freshness of the sweet
-air gave her unconventional garb a genuine loveliness--gave him a
-sense of manliness and mastery which he had not felt in the old life.
-How infinitely sweet she looked! Something about her neatness, grace
-and order typified to him that palladium of man’s honor and woman’s
-affection--the home. She appealed to the heart and that appeal has no
-year, no period, no fashion.
-
-Daylight was dying now; he looked longingly towards the gray gables,
-the only indication of the Carr homestead. Afar beyond the range of
-woodland the day’s great stirrup cup was growing fuller. Up from the
-slow moving river came a breath of cool air, and beyond the landline
-quivered the green of its willows. Dusk had fallen--the odorous dusk of
-the Southland. In the distance somewhere sounds of sweet voices of the
-negroes singing in the summer dark, their music mingling with the warm
-wind under the stars. The night with its soft shadings held him--he
-leaned long against the window and listened.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-
-“Whar’s dat bucket? Whar’s dat bucket? Here it is done sun up an’ my
-cows aint milked yit!”
-
-Aunt Chloe floundered round in a hurry, peering among the butter bowls
-and pans on the bench, in search of her milk bucket.
-
-“I’se ransacked dis place an’ it kyant be paraded,” she said, placing
-her hands on her ample hips to pant and wonder. Meanwhile she could
-hear the impatient lowing of the cows and the hungry bleating of the
-calves from their separate pens. Presently her thick lips broadened
-into a knowing smile.
-
-“Laws ter gracious! If Miss Dorothy aint kyard my las’ ling’rin basket
-an’ bucket to dem cherry trees. She ’lowed to beat de birds dar. Do she
-spec me to milk in my han’? I’m gwine down dar an’ git dat.”
-
-Here she broke off with a second laugh, and with a natural affection in
-the midst of her hilarity, which had its tender touch with it.
-
-“I’se lyin’! I’d do nuthin’ ob de sort. If she’d wanted me ter climb
-dem trees myself I’d done it even if I’d knowed I’d fall out and bust
-my ole haid.”
-
-Again Aunt Chloe looked about her for something which would do service
-for a milkpail. Out in the sun stood the big cedar churn, just where
-she had placed it the night before that it might catch the fresh
-morning air and sunshine. At sight of it she looked relieved.
-
-“Well! dis here doan leak, and aint milk got to go in it arter all?” So
-shouldering the awkward substitute, she hurried to the “cup pen” with
-the thought: “Lemme make ’aste an’ git thro’, I’se gwine ter he’p Miss
-Dorothy put up dem brandy cherries.”
-
-Down in the orchard Dorothy was picking cherries to fill the last
-bucket whose loss had caused Aunt Chloe’s mind such vexation, and whose
-substitute--the churn--was now causing her a vast deal more, as the cow
-refused to recognize any new airs, and so moved away from its vicinity
-as fast as she set it beside her.
-
-Presently Dorothy heard the sound of a horse’s tread, at the same time
-a voice called out:
-
-“Oh, little boy, is this the road to Georgetown?”
-
-Elliott Harding had drawn in rein, and was looking up through the
-leaves.
-
-“How mean of you!” she stammered, her face flushing. “What made you
-come this way?”
-
-He only laughed, and did not dare admit that Aunt Chloe had been the
-traitor, but got down, hitched his horse, and went nearer. Dorothy
-was very lovely as she stood there in the gently swaying tree, one
-arm holding to a big limb, while the other one was reaching out for a
-bunch of cherries. Her white sunbonnet with its long streamers swayed
-over her shoulders. Her plenteous hair, inclined to float, had come
-unplaited at the ends and fell in shimmering gold waves about her blue
-gingham dress. Nothing more fragrant with innocent beauty had Elliott
-ever seen, as her lithe, slim arms let loose their hold to climb down.
-She was excited and trembling as she put out her hands and took both
-his strong ones that he might help her to the ground.
-
-“I suppose it is tomboyish to climb trees,” she commenced, in a
-confused sort of way. “But, the birds eat the cherries almost as fast
-as they ripen, and I wanted to save some nice ones for your cocktails.”
-
-A look of embarrassment had been deepening in Dorothy’s face. Her
-voice sounded tearful, and looking at her he saw that her lips
-quivered and her nostrils dilated, and at once comprehended that the
-frank confession was prompted by embarrassment rather than gayety.
-Remembering her diffidence at times with him, he quickly reassured her,
-feeling brutal for having chaffed her.
-
-“It is all right to climb if you wish,” he said. “I admire your
-spirit of independence as well as your fearlessness. You are a
-wholesome-minded girl; you will never be tempted to do anything
-unbecoming.”
-
-As he stood idly tapping the leaves with his whip, a strange softening
-came over him against which he strove. He wanted to find some excuse
-to get on his horse and ride away without another word. He looked
-off toward the path along which he had come. At the turn of it was
-Aunt Chloe’s cabin, half hidden by a jungle of vines and stalks of
-great sunflowers. Festoons of white and purple morning-glories ran
-over the windows to the sapling porch around which a trellis of gourd
-vines swung their long-necked, grotesque fruit. Flaming hollyhocks
-and other bits of brilliant bloom gave evidence of the warm native
-taste that distinguished the negro of the old regime. The sun flaring
-with blinding brilliancy against the white-washed fence made him turn
-back to the shade where he could see only Dorothy’s blue eyes, with
-just that mingling of love and pain in them; the sweet mouth a little
-tremulous, the color coming and going in the soft cheeks.
-
-“And a cocktail with the cherry will be perfect.” He had almost
-forgotten to take up the conversation where she had left off. “But your
-dear labor has brought a questionable reward. You will remember the
-cherry was the one thing lacking to make me yours?”
-
-“Oh, yes!” her face lightening with a sudden recollection. “Now you do
-belong to us.”
-
-“If ‘us’ means you, I grant you that I have been fairly and squarely
-won.”
-
-Dropping his whip, Elliott leaned over and took Dorothy’s face between
-his hands bringing it close to his own, their hearts and lips together
-for one delicious moment.
-
-“Dorothy, we belong to each other,” he said, gazing straight into her
-eyes.
-
-She had been beautiful to him always, but loveliest now with the look
-of love thrilling her as he felt her tapering wrists close around his
-neck.
-
-“It seems as though I have loved you all my life, Elliott.”
-
-“Oh, if in loving me, the sweetness of you, the youth, the happiness
-should be wasted! Shall I always make you happy, I often ask myself. I
-want to know this, Dorothy, for I hope to make you my wife.”
-
-At the word “wife,” delicate vibrations glided through her, deepening
-into pulsations that were all a wonder and a wild delight, throbbing
-with the vigor of love and youth that drenched her soul with a
-rapturous sense.
-
-“Oh, Elliott! Elliott! You are mine. All mine.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-
-Happy weeks! Happy moons! uncounted days of uncounted joys! For Elliott
-and Dorothy the summer passed away in blissful Arcadian fashion. She
-was to him that most precious and sustaining of all good influences--a
-woman gently wise and kindly sympathetic, an influence such as weans
-men by the beauty of purity from committing grosser sins and elevates
-them above low tastes and its objects by the exquisite ineffable
-loftiness of soul, which is the noblest attribute of pure womanhood.
-
-There was a bond between these two, real eternal, independent of
-themselves, made not by man, but God.
-
-With the hope of sparing her father sorrow over the fact that another
-shared her affection, Dorothy did not at first tell him of her
-engagement, and Elliott was not unnaturally reticent about it, having
-so often heard that Mr. Carr would feel it a heavy blow to have his
-daughter leave him alone.
-
-September was now well advanced and the equinoctial storms were bold
-and bitter on the hills. Many trees succumbed to their violence, broken
-branches filled the roads and tall tree trunks showed their wounds.
-The long blue grass looked like the dishevelled fur of an animal that
-had been rubbed the wrong way. There were many runnels and washouts
-trending riverward in the loose soil. By the time the storm showed
-signs of abating, considerable damage had been done. Many barns, cabins
-and even houses were unroofed or blown down. Among other victims of
-the wind was Mr. Field, inasmuch as the old homestead which he had
-purchased of Elliott was one of the buildings wrecked.
-
-It happened that the morning after the storm, Elliott was to drive into
-town with Dorothy. As they passed along, they noted here and there the
-havoc wrought. Finally, as they approached the old Harding place, they
-saw that the fury of the storm had counted it among its playthings.
-Elliott gazed lingeringly and sadly at the wreck. Then he stopped the
-horses and helping Dorothy out of the vehicle he tied the team and
-together they went up the pathway, looking often at each other in
-mute sorrow. She felt that any words of consolation would be out of
-place while the first shock lasted, so kept silent, letting her eyes
-tell of her sympathy. For a time they stood and looked at the scene
-of devastation, the ruins covered with abundant ivy that gleamed and
-trembled in the light of the sun. Then Elliott said slowly:
-
-“My father’s wish is now beyond the reach of possible denial. Nature
-has destroyed it, just as he wished it should be done.”
-
-Walking about, looking now at this, now at that remnant of the wreck,
-he kept biting his lips to keep back the tears, but the sight was so
-like looking upon a loved one dead, that he could not long keep them
-back--hot tears came in a passionate gush, and he must allow himself
-relief of them.
-
-Business successes eventually rendered it possible for Elliott to
-gratify his old ambition about the homestead and thinking that the
-time for action had come the next day, when his uncle dropped into his
-office to talk over the storm and its destroying of the old homestead,
-Elliott suggested:
-
-“Uncle Philip, I have a mind to buy that lot from you. Would you sell
-it?”
-
-“Why do you ask? Are you going to get married?”
-
-“If I can ever get the father’s blessing of the woman I love, I am,”
-was Elliott’s straightforward reply.
-
-Mr. Field looked solemn. “I am afraid no man will ever get his willing
-consent, if you refer to Mr. Carr,” he remarked.
-
-“Well, never mind, that has no connection with this proposition. I have
-long had a desire to do something to perpetuate my father’s memory.
-Since fate has removed the house, I have an idea of erecting a building
-and presenting it as an institution for the manual education of colored
-children.”
-
-The astonished look on Mr. Field’s face gave place to one of admiration
-as Elliott proceeded and he quickly interrupted:
-
-“My dear boy, I am glad to say I have anticipated you. The bank has in
-its safe keeping a deed already made out in your name. The property
-has always been and now is yours to do with as you please.”
-
-“Uncle Philip, you overwhelm me with surprise and gratitude,” exclaimed
-Elliott grasping the old man’s hand firmly in his. “You are too good to
-me.”
-
-Mr. Field rested his face in his hand and regarded his nephew with all
-the fondness of a parent. After a pause, Elliott continued:
-
-“Since you have so greatly aided me by giving me such a generous start,
-I will myself erect the building, but together we will make the gift of
-it in my father’s name, and call it the ‘Richard Harding Institute.’”
-
-Mr. Field showed the warmth of his appreciation by grasping his
-nephew’s hand, and together they discussed at length the plan of the
-buildings.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-
-As Elliott drove briskly home that evening, hope pointed
-enthusiastically forward. The two ambitions he was about to realize
-had long been interwoven with the whole tenor of his existence. The
-possibility of making a fitting memorial to his father’s name had been
-unexpectedly brought about, and following close upon this good luck
-came the gratifying news that the book he had been so long at work upon
-had been favorably received by the publishers, who were assured not
-only of its literary merit, but of its commercial value as well, since
-it dealt with the popular side of the lynching evil, as viewed by the
-outer world. His subject was at the time attracting so much attention
-and causing so many heated discussions, that he had hardly dared to
-hope that his first attempt in serious literature would meet with the
-success of acceptance.
-
-When he got home he found his uncle looking over the manuscript which
-had been returned to him for final review and quietly took a seat
-beside him to listen to his comments while awaiting the supper hour.
-
-Mr. Field laid the papers on his knee.
-
-“This is very good, as a story. I can truthfully say that I am more
-than pleased with it from a literary standpoint. But that alone is no
-reason for publishing. This haste to rush into print is one of the bad
-signs of the times. Your views as herein expressed are more pardonable
-than reasonable, for they are your inheritance rather than your fault.”
-
-“I have been conscientious, am I to blame for that?”
-
-“Who is to blame?” asked his uncle. “First, your mother had something
-to do with the forming of your opinions. She had the training of your
-mind at that critical age when the bend of the twig forms the shape of
-the tree, and no doubt the society in which you have been thrown has
-helped to make you an agitator.”
-
-“Society must then take the consequences of its own handiwork. As for
-my mother, I will say in her defense, that if her teachings were not
-always the best, she aimed toward what she considered a high ideal.”
-
-Mr. Field knew there was a deep sincerity, an almost fanatical
-earnestness in his nephew, and he respected him none the less for it.
-He was at that critical season of life in which the mind of man is made
-up in nearly equal proportions of depth and simplicity.
-
-“I see your convictions are real, yet I strongly advise you to give
-more time to the matter and make further investigation before you give
-your views to the world.”
-
-“The more I search, the more I find that condemns lynching.” Elliott
-spoke in a deferential tone, for despite his own strong convictions,
-the soundness of his uncle’s views on other matters made him respect
-his opinion of this.
-
-“I wish you would give over reading those unprincipled authors, my boy,
-whose aim is to excite the evil passions of the multitude; and shut
-your ears to the extravagant statements of people who make tools of
-enthusiastic and imaginative minds to further their own selfish ends.
-An intelligent conservatism is one of the needs of the day.”
-
-“I am profoundly sorry that my work is so objectionable to you. My
-publishers tell me it is worth printing, and as evidence of their
-assurance, they offer me a good round sum, besides a royalty.”
-
-“I grant the probabilities of the book being a pecuniary success,
-but there are other considerations. You must recollect that all your
-prospects are centered in the South, and now the affections of your
-heart bind you here; therefore you should give up all this bitter
-feeling against us. As you know more of this race, you will find that
-it is by no means as ill used as you are taught to believe. I advise
-you most earnestly, as you value your future here, to suppress this
-book, which would do the South a great injury and yourself little
-credit.”
-
-Mr. Field leaned wearily back on the high armchair. He had swayed
-Elliott in some things, but it was clear that in one direction one
-would always be opposed to that which the other advocated. They could
-never agree, nor even affect a compromise. The nephew was grieved,
-yet his purpose was fixed, and he fed on the hope of one day winning
-reconciliation through fame if not conviction, and in reuniting the
-sister and brother in the mutual pride of his success.
-
-With half a sigh Elliott began rearranging the pages, when a finely
-written line in an obscure corner of one page caught his eye. Holding
-it toward the light he read:
-
-“Are you my country’s foe, and therefore mine?”
-
-At her urgent request, he had allowed Dorothy to read the manuscript,
-and had been happy in the thought that she had returned it into his own
-hands without a word of criticism. As he read this question, he felt
-and appreciated both her love for him and her loyalty to her people.
-And, while she had not openly condemned his work, he knew he had not
-her approval of its sentiment. He felt a growing knowledge that any
-success, no matter its magnitude, would be hollow unless she shared his
-rejoicings.
-
-As soon as the quiet meal was done, he set out for the Carr’s. Twilight
-was well advanced. A white frost was on the stubble fields and the
-stacked corn and the crimson and russet foliage of the woodside had the
-moist look of colors on a painter’s palette.
-
-At the window, Dorothy stood and watched her sweetheart come. The same
-constancy shone in her gentle face for him as ever and her greeting was
-as warm as his fondest anticipations could have pictured.
-
-“Have I displeased you? You do not share a pride in my work, Dorothy?”
-
-“Since you guess it,” she answered, “I may be spared the pain of
-confessing.”
-
-Elliott was silent for a time, but his expression showed the deep
-disappointment he felt.
-
-At length in an undertone, he said:
-
-“Don’t reproach me. Of course you have not felt this as I feel it,
-being so differently situated and looking at it from another point of
-view.”
-
-Seeing that he paused for her answer, Dorothy replied: “I have
-considered all this. But do you not see what a reflection your clever
-plot is upon us, or what a gross injustice it will do the South?”
-
-“Cold facts may sound harsh, but you will be all the better for your
-chastening. The South will advance under it.”
-
-“I wish I could believe it; the chances are all against us. Why did you
-ever want to take such a risk?” and the air of the little, slender,
-determined maiden marked the uncompromising rebel.
-
-Elliott deliberately arose. His face was earnest and full of a strange
-power.
-
-“It hurts me to displease you, Dorothy, but I must direct my own will
-and conscience. To hold your respect and my own, I must be a man,--not
-a compromise.”
-
-There was such lofty sentiment in that calm utterance from his heart
-that Dorothy, acknowledging the strength of it, could not resist the
-impulse of admiring compassion and stifling any lingering feeling of
-resentment, she quietly laid her hand on his and looked into his face
-with eyes that Fate must have purposed to be wells of comfort to a
-grieving mind. At her touch Elliott started, looked down and met her
-soothing gaze.
-
-“If it were not for our mistakes, failures and disappointments, the
-love we bear our treasures would soon perish for lack of sustenance.
-It is the failures in life that make one gentle and forgiving with the
-weak and I almost believe it is the failures of others that mostly
-endear them to us. Do what you may, let it bring what it will, all my
-love and sanction goes with it,” she said softly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-
-October days! The sumacs drabbled in the summer’s blood flaunt boldly,
-and green, gold and purple shades entrance the eye. The mullein
-stands upon the brown land a lonely sentinel. The thistle-down floats
-ghost-like through the haze, and silvery disks of a spider’s web swing
-twixt the cornrows.
-
-Sunday. Elliott remained at home until late in the afternoon. While
-he feared the result, he still held to his fixed resolve to go that
-day and definitely ascertain what was to come of his love for Dorothy.
-He said to Mr. Field, as he started off, “I shall not be back to
-supper--I am going to see Mr. Carr.” His voice was hopeful and his
-face wore a smile.
-
-His nephew’s assumed hopefulness had long been more painful to Mr.
-Field than this despondency he sought to cover by it. It was so unlike
-hopefulness, had in it something so fierce in its determination--was so
-hungry and eager, and yet carried such a consciousness of being forced,
-that it had long touched his heart.
-
-Dorothy knew the object of this call, and when her father came into the
-parlor she withdrew, full of sweet alarm, and left the two together.
-A tender glance, a soft rustling of pretty garments, and Elliott knew
-that he and her father were alone. He had scarcely taken his chair,
-when he began:
-
-“Mr. Carr, I have come upon the most sacred and important duty of my
-life.”
-
-“Draw your chair closer, I cannot see you well,” said Mr. Carr. “I am
-growing old and my sight is failing me.” And the way his voice faded
-into silence was typical of what he had said.
-
-Elliott obeying his request, continued:
-
-“I have had the honor of being received in this house for some
-time--nearly two years now, and I hope the topic on which I am about to
-speak will not surprise you.”
-
-“Is it about Dorothy?”
-
-“It is. You evidently anticipate what I would say, though you cannot
-realize my hopes and fears. I love her truly, Mr. Carr, and I want to
-make her my wife.”
-
-“I knew it would come. But why not a little later?” he said,
-pathetically.
-
-It was so like a cry of pain, this appeal, that it made Elliott’s
-heart ache and hushed him into silence. After a little, Mr. Carr said,
-solemnly:
-
-“Go on!”
-
-“I know, after seeing you together from day to day, that between you
-and her there is an affection so strong, so closely allied to the
-circumstances in which it has been nurtured, that it has few parallels.
-I know that mingled with the love and duty of a daughter who has
-become a woman, there is yet in her heart all the love and reliance of
-childhood itself. When she is clinging to you the reliance of baby,
-girl and woman in one is upon you. All this I have known since first I
-met you in your home life.”
-
-With an air of perfect patience the old man remained mute, keeping his
-eyes cast down as though, in his habit of passive endurance, it was all
-one to him if it never came his turn to speak.
-
-“Feeling that,” Elliott went on, “I have waited as long as it is in
-the nature of man to do. I have felt, and even now feel, that perhaps
-to interpose my love between you and her is to touch this hallowed
-association with something not so good as itself, but my life is empty
-without her, and I must know now if you will entrust her to my care.”
-
-The old man’s breathing was a little quickened as he asked, mournfully:
-“How could I do without her? What would become of me?”
-
-“Do without her?” Elliott repeated. “I do not mean to stand between you
-two--to separate you. I only seek to share with her her love for you,
-and to be as faithful always as she has been; to add to hers a son’s
-affection and care. I have no other thought in my heart but to double
-with Dorothy her privileges as your child, companion, friend. If I
-harbored any thought of separating her from you, I could not now touch
-this honored hand.” He laid his own upon the wrinkled one as he spoke.
-
-Answering the touch for an instant only, but not coldly, Mr. Carr
-lifted his eyes with one grave look at Elliott, then gazed anxiously
-toward the door. These last words seemed to awaken his subdued lips.
-
-“You speak so manfully, Mr. Harding, that I feel I must treat your
-confidence and sincerity in the same spirit.”
-
-“With all my heart I thank you, Mr. Carr, for I well understand that
-without you I have no hope. She, I feel sure, would not give it, nor
-would I ask her hand without your consent.”
-
-The old man spoke out plainly now.
-
-“I am not much longer for this world, I think, for I am very feeble,
-and of all the living and dead world, this one soul--my child--is left
-to me. The tie between us is the only one that now remains unbroken,
-therefore you cannot be surprised that its breaking would crowd all
-my suffering into the one act. But I believe you to be a good man. I
-believe your object to be purely and truthfully what you have stated,
-and as a proof of my belief, I will give her to you--with my blessing,”
-and extending his hand, he allowed Elliott to grasp it warmly.
-
-“God bless you for this, Mr. Carr,” was all that he could say.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-
-Elliott had had a succession of busy months, when the case was called
-for the notorious moonshiner, Burr Chester, who had killed the sheriff
-while resisting arrest. The Grand Jury had found a true bill against
-him for murder in the first degree and Elliott Harding had been engaged
-to aid in the prosecution. It was no common case to deal with, and he
-was keenly conscious of this fact. After two long weeks of incessant
-work, a verdict of guilty was brought in, but as a last resort to save
-his client’s neck, an appeal was taken to the higher courts.
-
-After this Elliott had gone home weak, nervous and excited beyond
-natural tension. He spent a restless night, and the next morning was
-unexpectedly called to Boston to attend to business that required his
-immediate presence. He went over to let Dorothy know of his plans.
-Under a spell of sadness and impulse he said passionately:
-
-“If I left, not knowing that a near day was to bring me back to you I
-could not bear it. Our wedding day is just three weeks off, and from
-that time on you are to be inseparably mine--mine forever!”
-
-She clung to him quivering, tears, despite her efforts to be strong,
-escaping down her cheek. He held her to his heart and soothed her back
-to something of the calm she had lost.
-
-Just ten days he expected to be gone.
-
-The intervening time busily passed in preparations for the approaching
-wedding. Besides that, Dorothy’s heart had feasted upon the letters
-that had daily come on the noon train out of the North. Each afternoon
-since Elliott’s absence, she had been to town for the mail, having
-no patience to await its coming from the office by any neighboring
-messenger who chanced to pass that way.
-
-To-day’s expected letter was to be the last, for to-morrow Elliott
-would be with her again.
-
-Oh, Love! Love! life is sweet to all mortals, but it was particularly
-sweet to these two.
-
-After receiving her letter Dorothy started the short way home, singing
-lightly some old love tune. In the deep forest around her the faithful
-ring-dove poured forth his anthem of abiding peace.
-
- * * * * *
-
-John Holmes, the staunch friend of the family, had an engagement that
-evening with the Carr’s; so he started out to overtake Dorothy, hearing
-she had gone on just ahead of him.
-
-As he hurried along through the coming night, the moon’s white beams
-fell deep down in the beechen stems. Now and again wood-folk wakened
-from their dreams and carolled brokenly. The spirit of delicious peace
-that pervaded the lowering twilight enriched and beautified the reverie
-that rendered the dreamer oblivious to the present. His thoughts,
-his hopes were far afield--wandering along beckoning paths of the
-unexplored future. The office of prosecuting attorney was only the
-first step. He dreamed of Congress, too.
-
-“Why shouldn’t one do whatever one wants to do?”
-
-Thus he mused, when suddenly the sound of crashing underbrush startled
-him into consciousness of the present and a dark outline dashed into
-the road just ahead from out of the dense thicket that lay to his left.
-Before he could collect his scattered senses sufficiently to question
-or intercept the excited runner, the man dodged to one side, and sped
-along the road until he passed out of sight around an angle of the
-wood. Holmes called after him to stop, but his command was not obeyed.
-
-“What’s the matter?” he shouted after the flying figure; but receiving
-no answer, again he cried:
-
-“Stop, I say.” And this time a reply came in the shape of a faint groan
-from near by in the wood. He dashed into the darkness of the forest in
-the direction from whence the sound had come, his flesh quivering and
-his breath coming in gasps as an overwhelming sense of apprehension
-seized him.
-
-At first the gloom was such that he could see nothing distinctly and
-he groped his way forward with difficulty. The moon that for a moment
-had passed under a cloud now again shone brightly out, filling all
-the open spaces with a play of wavering light. He forced himself into
-the thicket from where he again heard a low sound--writhing, twisting
-his way through the thick, hindering stems, and there before him, in a
-little opening, he saw what appeared to be a prostrate human form.
-
-He sprang toward it and drew the clinging boughs aside to let the
-moonlight in. Then he saw it was the figure of a woman. Two ghastly
-gashes, edged with crimson, stained the white flesh of her throat.
-
-The awful meaning of the crime, as he thought of the headlong haste of
-the flying man, surged over Holmes. He quickly knelt to gaze into her
-face and as he gazed a terrible cry broke from his lips.
-
-“Dorothy! Oh, my God!”
-
-Raising the light form in his arms, he cried passionately on her name.
-
-The wind sobbed a dirge in the bare boughs above, but beside that, all
-the country-side was still.
-
-The girl hung heavy and limp in his arms as he bore her to the
-road. She made no answer to his cry--he felt blindly for a pulse--a
-heart--but found none.
-
-One short, sharp gasp convulsed her breast as he gently laid her
-down--a faint tremor passed over her frame, and she was dead!
-
-John Holmes looked into her face, distraught with agony. The blood
-drummed in his ears, his heart beat wildly; dazed and bewildered, a
-moment he stood--the power of action almost paralyzed. But he felt
-that something must be done, and done quickly.
-
-With a superhuman effort he lifted the dead girl and carried her toward
-her home. When he reached the door, after what seemed an eternity of
-travel, he waited, struggling for composure. How could he meet her
-father and break the news? Seeing no one around he slipped quietly in
-and laid the body upon a couch in the room which so long had been her
-own. When he entered the father’s room a deep calm filled the place.
-There sat the old man in his armchair, his head fallen to one side in
-the unstudied attitude of slumber. Upon his face there was more than a
-smile--a radiance--his countenance was lit up with a vague expression
-of content and happiness. His white hairs added sweet majesty to the
-cheerful light upon his face. He slept peacefully--perhaps dreaming
-that his child was well and would soon be home.
-
-An inexpressible pity was in his voice as John Holmes gently aroused
-the sleeper and told him the mournful truth. He would never forget that
-old face so full of startled grief--that awful appeal to him--that
-withered hand upraised to heaven. Then darkness came before the dim old
-eyes, when for a time all things were blotted out of his remembrance.
-
-The truth was so terrible that at first he could not grasp it. The
-moan he uttered was inarticulate and stifled. Gently John Holmes led
-him tremblingly to the couch where Dorothy lay--the blood still oozing
-from her throat; the dew of agony yet fresh on her brow, her dainty
-nostrils expanded by their last convulsive effort to retain the breath
-of life, appearing almost to quiver.
-
-A moment, motionless and staring, he stood above her--dead!
-
-Slowly awaking to the awful reality, he threw his hands up with the
-vehemence of despair and horror--then fell forward by her side, saying
-by the motion of his lips, “Dead!”
-
-Slowly his speech returned, and he reached out one hand.
-
-“My boy, she is not dead. I feel her heart in mine, I see her love for
-me in her face. No! she is not dead!--not dead!” his voice fell to a
-whispered groan.
-
-The other tried to stay his tears and to reply, but he could only
-touch her cold, bruised hand, hoping that he might grow to a perfect
-understanding of the tragedy.
-
-The father turned his head. His look was full of supplicating agony. In
-a plaintive and quivering voice he cried:
-
-“My God! My God! My God!”
-
-Presently John Holmes went away to give the alarm. Returning later, he
-went through the dreary house and darkened the windows--the windows
-of the room where the dead girl lay he darkened last. He lifted her
-cold hand and held it to his heart--and all the world seemed death and
-silence, broken only by the father’s moaning.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-
-The news flashed over the country as if by the lightning’s spark and by
-nine o’clock the district was aroused to a state of frenzied passion.
-From near and far they gathered to the stricken home, till in an hour
-a mob had assembled, vowing torture and death to the fiend. A brief
-questioning revealed the fact that the Carrs’ cook had seen a negro
-man pass the kitchen door about dusk, and he had asked for a drink of
-water. She would know him again, she said.
-
-A fierce yell rent the silence as Holmes told of the fleeing man and
-grim curses filled the air, followed by the thunder of hoofbeats as
-the horsemen dashed away in pursuit. On they rode through the darkness,
-galloping where the way was clear, and everywhere and at all times
-urging their horses to their utmost, every minute pressing forward
-with increasing rage and recklessness. Uphill, downhill the searchers
-went, scouring every nook and corner for miles around. Their panting
-horses needed not to be urged. They seemed to have caught the same
-fierce spirit that inspired their riders, their straining muscles and
-distended nostrils telling of their eagerness and exertion.
-
-The night was going, but the searchers had as yet found no trace. If
-the earth had opened and swallowed the one they sought, the mystery of
-his disappearance could have been greater.
-
-Shrewder than those of unthinking haste, the sheriff permitted the
-excited crowd to go ahead, that his plans would not be interfered with.
-Then, with his deputies and a bloodhound, he went to the scene of the
-murder. There he found a sprinkling of blood on the ground, and the
-imprints of the heavy shoes in the moist earth showed the direction
-which the murderer had taken. He quickly drew the hound’s nose to
-the trail and cheered him on. The dark, savage beast was wonderful
-at trailing, and had more than once overtaken fleeing criminals. He
-sniffed intelligently for a few minutes, then gave an eager yelp and
-plunged along the road, made an abrupt turn, then struck down through
-a narrow hollow, deep and dark. The men put spurs to their horses and
-dashed after him, heedless of the thorns that tore and reckless of
-sharp blows from matted undergrowth and low-lying boughs.
-
-The hound, with his deep guide-note, despite their efforts, was soon
-far ahead; his lithe, long body close to the earth, leaving no scent
-untouched.
-
-The trail led through what is known as “Robbers’ Hollow,” a ravine that
-runs in a trough through the winding hills, whose rugged sides looked
-jagged and terrible, surrounded by a savage darkness full of snares,
-where it was fearful to penetrate and appalling to stay. In spite of
-all, they hurried on faster and faster.
-
-Far ahead the pilot note of the hound called them on and they were
-well nigh exhausted when they came upon him, baying furiously at a
-cabin built on the naked side of a hill, around which there was not a
-tree or bush to shelter a man from bullets, should the occupants resist
-arrest. As the sheriff and his men arrived, the hound flung his note in
-the air and sent up a long howl, then dashed against the door, which
-shook and strained from the shock.
-
-The sheriff called him to heel and placed his men at corners of the
-cabin. He then rapped on the door and repeated it half a dozen times
-before there was a response. Finally a man came to the front.
-
-“Who wants me this time of night?” he grumbled, in a deep, gruff voice,
-as he stood in the doorway, his broad chest and arms showing strongly
-dark in the light of the lamp he held.
-
-“I do,” answered the sheriff. “Do you live here?”
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-“When did you come here, and from where?”
-
-“From the other side of Georgetown, and I got here ’bout an hour before
-dark.”
-
-“Why, Mr. Cooley,” whispered a voice at his elbow, “it was way arter
-dark.”
-
-“Sh!” he stuttered, shuffling his feet that the men might not hear
-anything else she said.
-
-“What is your name and occupation?” resumed the sheriff, calmly.
-
-“Ephriam Cooley, and I teach school ten miles north of Georgetown.”
-
-His speech was not that of a common negro, but of a lettered man, and
-seemed strangely at variance with his bearded, scowling face.
-
-“Have you a knife? I would like to borrow it, if you’ve got one?”
-
-“No, sir, I left my knife in my other pants’ pocket.”
-
-“But you’ve got a razor, haven’t you? Let me have it,” said the
-sheriff. “One of our men broke his girth and unfortunately we have no
-way of fixing it, as there is not a knife in the crowd.”
-
-There was a slight agitation in the negro’s manner as he turned to find
-the razor, or rather to pretend to search for it. The sheriff pushed in
-after him.
-
-“Maybe I can help you find it?” he said, as he picked up a coat from
-under one corner of the rumpled bed. A razor dropped to the floor. The
-negro made a move toward it, but the sheriff’s foot held it fast.
-
-“You need not trouble yourself; I will get it,” he said, as he stooped
-and raised it. “Bloodstained? Why, what does this mean?”
-
-“I killed a dog,” the negro muttered, his mouth parched with terror,
-his vicious eyes shooting forth venomous flashes. “I’d kill anybody’s
-dog before I’d let him bite me. Was it your dog?” and he shrank
-slightly away.
-
-“No,” said the sheriff, “it was not mine, but I am afraid you made a
-great mistake in killing that dog! Come, get yourself dressed and show
-it to me.”
-
-“I threw him in the creek,” he said, angrily.
-
-“You are under arrest. Come, we are going to take you to Georgetown.”
-The sheriff caught him by the arm.
-
-“What! for killing a dog, and a yellow dog at that?” He scowled blackly
-and fiercely. “I’m in hopes you won’t get me into court about this
-matter. I am willing to pay for it,” he said in a husky voice.
-
-“Very likely you will be called upon to pay--in full, but I will
-protect you to the extent of my authority. Hurry up! we’ve no time to
-lose. It is late and it’s going to rain.”
-
-The negro cast his eyes wildly about him, the last mechanical resource
-of despair, but saw nothing else to do.
-
-Mounting the prisoner handcuffed behind him, the sheriff was soon off
-for the Scott county jail, one of the party being sent ahead to have
-the Carr cook in waiting. The negro had nothing to say, but rode on in
-savage silence, his head dropped forward on his breast.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-
-A storm was gathering and the sheriff thought by hard riding he
-might reach the nearest railway station before it broke. He knew his
-prisoner’s life depended upon his getting him to a place of safety with
-all speed. The whole country was alive with armed men.
-
-Far off the ordnance of the sky boomed as the battle of the elements
-began. The lightning cut the clouds and soon the rain came, a dark
-falling wall. As far as the eye could bore into the darkness, only one
-light could be seen. They dared not take shelter under the roof of any
-man. So the sheriff and his men rode on through the storm, picking
-their way as best they could.
-
-Drenched and fagged, they reached the station only to find that the
-Elkhorn trestle had sustained some damage and in consequence delayed
-the Georgetown train. It would probably be three hours before the wreck
-could be repaired.
-
-The position of the sheriff was now serious; he could not think of such
-folly as remaining there at the mercy of the telegraph wires; he must
-try to make the trip by the river road and that, too, before daybreak.
-
-A pint of whiskey was brought from the little corner saloon and the
-party determined to start out again. The horses still bearing marks of
-hard riding stood in waiting. As they set off the rain ceased, the
-clouds broke and the moon came out brightly. Soon the sheriff thought
-he heard the sound of a gun, the signal that the searchers were on his
-track. They quickened their pace.
-
-“We are treed, I am afraid,” he said to his companions, and he could
-almost see the mob surrounding them, and their pitiless joy after the
-humiliation of having for awhile lost the trail.
-
-The prisoner began to show signs of anxiety. Every sound startled him
-and he kept looking expectantly about. The men urged their horses and
-rode on in a state of nervous tension to the ford where they must cross
-the river. It was away out of its banks. They halted and there was a
-moment’s silence.
-
-“She looks pretty high. What do you say?” asked the sheriff of one of
-his deputies.
-
-The man shook his head forbiddingly. To attempt to cross the river
-would be running a frightful risk.
-
-“There goes a gun again.”
-
-It required no longer an effort of the imagination to hear it. It was
-a fact and with all the terror that reality possesses, the prisoner
-shuddered, his restless eyeballs full of fear rolling wildly.
-
-The sheriff tried to collect his startled thoughts and resist the
-strange certainty which possessed him. His own frame felt the shudder
-that convulsed the form behind him.
-
-“Well!” he asked, once more addressing his deputy, “what say you?”
-
-“We’ll take the danger before us,” the other answered and, touching
-their horses, they plunged in. Half way across, the sheriff
-convulsively seized his horse’s neck for he could not swim. He was
-struggling desperately against the waves, clinging frantically around
-the neck of his swimming horse, when he heard a cry:
-
-“Great God, he’s gone!” and turning to look behind him, he saw that the
-negro had disappeared into the water. All eyes turned toward the spot
-where the manacled wretch had gone down.
-
-The drowning man arose to the surface a dizzy moment then sank again
-as quickly. Not a cry, not a word could be heard. The river went on
-booming heavily, its hoarse roar rising to a deafening intensity. The
-chief deputy, meanwhile, had managed to slip from his horse and float
-down stream, and with a violent swinging movement he succeeded in
-thrusting one arm between the negro’s handcuffed ones and sustaining
-him, just as he rose for the last time. Supporting him against his
-horse an instant he tightened his hold, that he might keep both heads
-above water. He was taking desperate chances against tremendous odds.
-
-With an indescribable feeling, the sheriff looked on but could render
-no assistance. The swimmer fought hard, but, after pulling some
-distance, it seemed clear that he had miscalculated his strength. Inch
-by inch, the two swept downward, notwithstanding the almost superhuman
-efforts of the desperate deputy. Gradually his stroke became more
-feeble and he saw the gap between them and the bank grow wider, the
-lost inches grew to feet, the feet to yards, and finally with utter
-despair, he thought the whole world had turned to water. He felt
-terrified. Exhaustion could be distinguished in all his limbs and his
-arms felt miserably dragged. He was going, not forward, but round and
-round, and with dizziness came unconsciousness.
-
-The next thing he remembered was an awful stiffness in every joint and
-muscle, a scent of whiskey, and the sheriff kneeling beside him upon
-the wet ground, forcing the warm liquid through his lips. As he gazed
-about him, he slowly asked:
-
-“Did that d----d nigger die after all?”
-
-The sheriff had not time to tell him that the negro was safe, for the
-next minute there came a volley of yells and sounds of oaths with the
-dull thunder of rapidly advancing hoofbeats, and before either man
-could speak again, a party of armed riders reined up in front of the
-ford.
-
-“Stop! men, stop!” The sheriff’s voice was heard eagerly hailing those
-on the opposite side. “You will risk your lives to try to cross here.”
-
-The quivering negro, terrified by the idea that the pursuers were upon
-them, made an effort to rise.
-
-“My God! don’t let them take me! Don’t give me up!”
-
-There was something savage and frenzied in the accent that went with
-those words. He clutched at the sheriff’s knees, his eyes became wild
-and fixed and filled with terror.
-
-“We must have your prisoner,” someone shouted. “Will you surrender him?”
-
-“Not yet,” was the sheriff’s answer. “I deliver him only to the law.”
-
-“You’ll give him up!” cried a score of determined voices.
-
-“Never! Never!”
-
-“Then we will fire on him!”
-
-Like a flash, the sheriff jumped in front of his prisoner. “Fire
-ahead,” he said.
-
-The next instant, there were a number of reports. All but one had fired
-in the air.
-
-“Cowards!” yelled the leader, “kill ’em all!”
-
-“Look here,” answered one, “that sheriff lives neighbor to me.”
-
-“We’re out for the nigger, not a white man!” said another. “Wait boys,
-we’ll get him yet!”
-
-The sheriff calmly mounted, forming a bar between the rifles and his
-prisoner and rode away, leaving the mob to await the fall of the
-stream. Half an hour later they reached the jail.
-
-“Chloe Carr,” the sheriff distinctly pronounced her name, as he
-summoned the negro cook, “did you ever see this man before?”
-
-“Yas, sah.”
-
-“Will you tell me when and where?”
-
-The prisoner made a desperate sign, his fiendish face blazing with
-mingled rage and terror. Wildly he shook his head. “She lies!” he
-growled, with a sudden threatening movement. “She never saw me before.”
-
-An animal-like snarl came from his throat. His face was shining with
-sweat, the veins of his neck were twisted and knotted. His body shook
-with savage fear, and the woman trembled.
-
-She said excitedly: “He’s de one I saw pass de do’ awhile befo’ Miss
-Dor’thy was found dead. I give him a drink ov water.”
-
-The prisoner was in a frenzy now. Fiercely he glared like a great
-black beast, caged. The woman saw the officers fairly carry him into
-the cell, but she felt less fear than sorrow now, as her heart was
-full of the memory of the girl she had loved and had watched from the
-cradle-side.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-
-Elliott Harding was coming home--home to Dorothy, and joy was so strong
-within him that it almost touched the edge of tears. The rising sun was
-trying hard to struggle out of a bluish haze, as he stepped from the
-train at Georgetown. Nodding to a negro driver, he walked to the hack,
-saying, “Drive me to my office, first, then you may take me out to Mr.
-Carr’s.”
-
-The negro cast a glance behind, and stammered excitedly, as he mounted
-to the seat:
-
-“Boss, dey’s erbout to mob yo’ man--de moonshiner dat you like ter got
-hung, I reck’n. Dey’s done at de jail by now.”
-
-A mob! A multitude in passion! Anticipation of the consequences flashed
-all too plainly upon Elliott Harding. A thrill shot through him! He
-leaped into the back, and commanded:
-
-“Drive to the jail with all your might.”
-
-The negro’s white eyeballs rolled with swift alarm. He seized the
-lines, laid on the whip and shouted:
-
-“Git up, git up.”
-
-The horses dashed forward and turned down the main street, the cumbrous
-wheels tearing up the mud and flinging it to right and left.
-
-Elliott’s breath fluttered in his throat. A fellow being--the man for
-whose conviction he had pleaded was in personal peril. In law he was
-against this poor wretch; in humanity he was for him--humanity has
-no distinctions. He saw but the slaughter!--the struggle!--the united
-forces on the one side; the lone desperation on the other.
-
-The good horses were doing their best now, and with a final lurch and
-swing were pulling up at the jail. Elliott bounded to his feet, rushed
-into the stirring crowd, and pushed through the circle that was moving
-toward the door.
-
-Low mutterings, fierce as the roar of a wounded lion, went forth as
-one man threw up his clinched hand, from which dangled a rope. As
-if impelled by a single spirit, they raged against the jail doors,
-clamoring at the oak.
-
-“Hang him! hang him! Give us the keys!”
-
-The terror stricken criminal heard and cowered in his cell, his giant
-muscles quivering in tense knots. He gathered himself for the last
-struggle with a dogged fierceness born of savage courage.
-
-“Break down the doors!”
-
-At this command there was a crash and commotion below--and then
-silence. Suddenly a man appeared facing them. He held up his hand, and
-all recognized that it was Elliott Harding.
-
-“Fellow citizens,” he cried, his voice ringing out over the gathering.
-“Don’t do this thing! This man will die by the hands of the law. Don’t
-stain yours!”
-
-Directly there was a universal hush. The crowd stood like stone before
-the calm courage of this remarkable arraignment. The men doubting
-their senses, gazed at each other curiously, then they looked at
-Elliott again. With indescribable speed a spirit flew from mind to
-mind, seizing them all alike. Then without a word, silently, and as
-though abashed, they turned away. Elliott was left alone, surprised at
-his sudden triumph, gazing with a curious stare at the frowning walls
-of the dingy jail.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-
-A half hour before, Elliott had been in a delicious reverie passing
-what were, perhaps the sweetest moments of his life. He had awakened
-early from a dream. He had dreamed that he felt the touch of soft
-fingers upon his cheek and the beating of a loving heart against his,
-and the memory of the ecstasy lingered like some charmed spell. Dorothy
-was his very own--Dorothy, crowned with the beauty which combined all
-of the woman and all of the angel. He saw nothing in the world save
-her radiant face. He praised God for giving him her love, and the hope
-of preserving that nearest likeness on earth to heaven--a home. This
-sweet foretokening of life’s full, ripe completeness had filled his
-heart.
-
-Joyous, enraptured, young, he had stepped upon the railway platform
-at Georgetown. From such thoughts to the vivid scene at the jail, was
-an abrupt and wild plunge into a whirling abysm. His mind was in a
-turmoil, and he felt the need of cooling air and brisk movement to
-regain his composure.
-
-As he set out on foot for the Carr’s, the sheriff, relieved from the
-anxiety of the jail attack, overtook him. Laying hand on his shoulder,
-he said earnestly:
-
-“Mr. Harding, you are a credit to your principles. I’m mightily obliged
-to you. When you need a friend, I’m your man. Nobody could have
-stopped that mob but you.”
-
-“I--why anyone else could have done so as well.”
-
-“No, because it was known that Miss Carr and you was goin’ to be
-married soon. They naturally thought you ought to be the man to fix the
-scoundrel’s sentence.”
-
-Elliott sprang round with such a start that the sheriff shrank back
-instinctively.
-
-“What!” he gasped, “you don’t mean--you don’t mean--”
-
-“My God!” said the sheriff. “Haven’t you heard?”
-
-“Heard, heard what, man? not Dorothy? You can’t mean that it was
-Dorothy Carr--what--what--”
-
-He stopped, a thrill of terror froze his blood.
-
-“It’s true--too true! Mr. Harding, she is dead!”
-
-“You lie! You lie!” Elliott shrieked.
-
-Then in a different tone, he huskily whispered:
-
-“Give me the keys, man, give me the keys! Quick! Quick!”
-
-It was all that the sheriff could do to make him understand that the
-jailer had the keys. A whirlwind of ungovernable fury swept over him.
-
-“Good God!” he panted, “The driver said the mob was for the
-moonshiner!” His senses reeled; staggering, he leaned against a wall
-near by.
-
-“What shall I do, my God! What shall I do!”
-
-“I advise you to go first to her poor old father. They say the shock
-has pretty near killed him,” said the sheriff.
-
-“You are right. I must go to him.” Elliott’s face knit convulsively
-as he spoke, crushing back the horror that almost paralyzed him. Then
-the sheriff proposed to get a buggy and drive him to Mr. Carr’s. As
-they rode along silently, all nature was still and peaceful--cruelly
-peaceful it seemed to Elliott, as he sat with his head inclined, his
-body shaken with deep grief, his breast laboring hard.
-
-They soon reached the hushed, dark home. A long trail of blood lay in
-ruddy streaks from the gateway to the door where the white crape swayed
-so gently--so gently.
-
-Elliott walked slowly and as if stunned. He went into the house, turned
-and looked about him.
-
-The parlor door was slightly open. He went in and began to walk the
-floor--the resource of those who suffer. There are instincts for all
-the crises of life--he felt that he was not alone.
-
-Nervously he unclasped and threw open the window blind, then, turning,
-cast his eyes sadly about him.
-
-There sat the old father in a posture of dejection, his eyes almost
-closed. Just beyond lay his child! Clasping his hands with an
-expression full of the most violent, most gentle entreaty, Elliott
-uttered a piercing cry!
-
-“Dorothy! Dorothy, my little girl, come back to me! Come back!” And
-with this appeal he sank upon his knees with both hands upon his eyes.
-
-“Elliott! Elliott!”
-
-He raised his head at length and looked steadily at Mr. Carr--this
-venerable, manly face, upon which God had imprinted goodness and
-heroism.
-
-“Yes, father,” and leaning forward he embraced his white head. Drawing
-it to his breast, his overcharged heart found relief in tears.
-
-The intense calm and silence of the father’s beautiful, mute
-resignation finally silenced him.
-
-Rigid before the fire, as if it were a charmed flame that was turning
-him old, he sat, with the dark lines deepening in his face; its stare
-becoming more and more haggard; its surface turning whiter and whiter,
-as if it were being overspread with ashes--the very texture and color
-of his hair appearing to change.
-
-A sunbeam shot in and faltered over the face of the girl asleep. This
-fair, white bride, robed in her wedding gown.
-
-Elliott got up and went to her side. He turned away again, and dropped
-upon the broad divan, utterly helpless, hopeless. Here he lay face
-downward, with his elbows on the cushions and his hands clutching his
-chin, his sad eyes staring steadily. He lay for hours gazing upon
-her face, moving not from the first position he had assumed. He took
-no heed of time--time and he were separate that day. He was neither
-hungry nor thirsty--only sick at the heart which lay like lead in him.
-
-By and by a long procession was seen moving from the house. Six bearers
-deposited their burden. Dorothy’s grave had been made beside her
-mother’s in the family burying ground, at the back of the garden.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-
-The preliminary inquiry into the case of Ephriam Cooley resulted in his
-being held over to the next meeting of the Grand Jury, which was yet
-some months away.
-
-Mr. Carr was not left alone in his grief. Elliott Harding gave up
-residence at his uncle’s home and went to live with and care for him.
-
-Among the neighboring people, there prevailed a respect for these two
-in their distress which was full of gentleness and delicacy. Men kept
-apart when they were seen walking with slow steps on the street, or
-stood in knots talking compassionately among themselves.
-
-At length the day came when the Grand Jury was in session. The absence
-of witnesses, upon which the defense had relied to argue the innocence
-of the accused, caused the prisoner’s counsel no little uneasiness as
-the hour for the opening of the court drew near. As he paced restlessly
-to and fro in the reserved space before the bench, there was a look of
-anxiety on his countenance and a frown upon his brow.
-
-When the hands of the big clock pointed to nine, the judge ascended
-the bench and took his seat. It was the signal for breathless silence,
-and as if to emphasize this silence, his honor rapped sharply with his
-gavel upon the desk in front of him.
-
-The clerk read the minutes of the preceding day and took the volume
-over for the judicial signature.
-
-“The case of the State against Ephriam Cooley,” called the clerk. “Are
-both sides ready?”
-
-The look of concern grew deeper on the face of the defendant’s
-attorney. He asked for a few minutes’ consultation with his witnesses
-and retired into an ante-room. Presently the door of this room opened
-and the attorney reappeared. The expression of anxiety and suspense had
-not left his face.
-
-“Your Honor,” he said, “the defense must ask for a continuance. We had
-hoped to be ready to proceed with the case without delay or cost to the
-state, but a witness whose testimony is essential and whom the defense
-has spared no diligence to secure, has failed to appear. Believing that
-the just interests of our client will suffer if we enter into trial
-without this witness, we have decided to ask Your Honor to continue the
-case until the next term.”
-
-The audience could scarcely restrain its impatience, and the judge
-found it necessary to call for order before stating that the
-postponement was granted.
-
-The courtroom was soon cleared. Groups of excited men gathered upon
-the street, their looks indicating sullen anger and desperate resolve.
-The bayonets of the militia had been set bristling around the jail and
-their gleam was all that kept the crowds back.
-
-Meanwhile, the strain upon Elliott Harding was telling. He walked
-erect with an effort and spent much of the time alone in his office,
-with his head bowed upon the desk, moaning in unutterable anguish. His
-suffering had drained his very soul--he could weep no more. Since the
-tragedy, every hour, every day had been a lifetime of misery. Fate had
-employed his bravest deeds for the breaking of his stout heart. Unheld,
-unhindered, he had long chosen his road but now he was grasped with
-sovereign indifference while there was brought upon him punishment for
-the insufferable egotism of his stubborn contentions. This was the
-bitterest cup he was ever called upon to drain, and he was never the
-same after draining it. He was experiencing perhaps what the earth
-experiences when it is furrowed with the share that the grain may be
-sown; it feels the wound alone, the thrill of the germ and the joy of
-the fruit are not yet come to comfort it.
-
-Mr. Carr was rapidly growing feeble. He was quite shut in. But with
-every fiber of the Carr endurance, he clung to life, with every desire
-intensified into the longing to live until the murderer’s trial was
-ended. On this night he sat in a large wooden rocker near the window,
-with a pillow at his shoulders. His pathetic figure, with its long
-attenuated frame, testified to his rapid decline. The soft south wind
-waved the white locks fringing his temples. One shaking hand lay
-helplessly on the arm of the chair, the other held loose grasp of a
-remotely-dated family monthly. His gray eyes, bright and clear in spite
-of their fine, crape-like setting of wrinkles, were absently turned to
-the sky. They kindled as Elliott laid a hand gently upon his shoulder.
-
-“How is my dear father by now?”
-
-“Pretty well,” he answered faintly--his old reply.
-
-“That’s good!” and Elliott tried to smile as he sank wearily into a
-chair.
-
-Mr. Carr, noticing how thinly his lips fitted about his white, even
-teeth, asked, “What have they done to my boy?”
-
-“Done enough, father,” said Elliot, starting up and revealing his
-haggard, agitated face. “They have postponed the trial.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-
-The coming of October brought the next term of court. What seemed
-an age had at last terminated and Ephriam Cooley was again brought
-to trial. His removal from the prison to the courthouse was without
-incident. The prisoner was guarded in the most thorough manner against
-possible molestation. The regular police guards were reinforced by
-deputies sworn in by the sheriff, and the vicinity of the court had, in
-consequence, the appearance of an armed camp.
-
-Police were stationed at every approach as well as in the hall and
-every preparation had been made to quell instantly any attempt at
-lawless interference with the ordinary course of law.
-
-When the doors opened, the waiting crowd was allowed to enter and in a
-few minutes all the available space within the courtroom was densely
-packed.
-
-The judge took his seat.
-
-Ephriam Cooley entered between two officers, handcuffed, his bold,
-insulting eyes wearing a look of sullen defiance, his unkempt beard
-lending more than ever an animal look to his face.
-
-The selection of the jury occupied the greater portion of the morning,
-but at length twelve citizens were impaneled and listened to the
-reading of the indictment.
-
-The temper of the people might be seen in the burst of rage that swept
-over the crowd when the atrocious deed was described.
-
-Elliott Harding, with his usual aspect of dignity, had schooled his
-face into a cold passiveness, but though outwardly calm, his pulse was
-throbbing with the fierceness of fever beats. A stranger entering the
-courtroom would never have selected him from the group of men as the
-one whose life had been crushed out by the object of this trial.
-
-When the reading was finished, the witnesses for the state were called.
-The first name which rang through the courtroom was that of John
-Holmes. The prisoner drew himself together and watched him keenly as
-the oath was administered; his face, despite its defiant mask, had a
-restless, haunted look which sat strangely on his hard, grim features.
-
-Skillfully aided by questions from the court, Holmes unfolded the whole
-awful story of the first discovery of the dead body of Dorothy Carr.
-Passing rapidly over the painful details, the sheriff told then of the
-man-hunt, of the finding of the bloody razor as it had dropped from the
-pocket of the prisoner’s coat.
-
-The negro cook of the Carrs swore that the prisoner was the man to whom
-she had given a drink of water about half an hour before her mistress
-had been brought home.
-
-Toward the close of the State’s evidence, the chain binding the
-prisoner to the gallows had become all but complete. In the face of
-such evidence and in the atmosphere of such bitter resentment, the
-counsel appointed for his defense struggled against overwhelming odds.
-
-He contented himself with belittling the value of circumstantial
-evidence adduced by the prosecution, and presenting the argument that
-the prisoner’s education and his social position as a school teacher
-attested to his inability to commit a crime so revolting in its
-conception and so brutal in its execution. He stated that the woman at
-whose house the prisoner had been arrested, had repeatedly said that he
-had been at her house, some fifteen miles away from the scene of the
-crime, at the very hour the deed was said to have been committed, that
-she would testify to that statement here if she had not moved away and
-could not now be located. Whatever effect the counsel thus produced was
-more than neutralized when the prisoner was called to the stand for a
-specious denial.
-
-The sinister fear with which the negro peered about the courtroom, the
-affected nonchalance and thinly veiled defiance of his mumbled answers
-told damningly against him. The passions of raging fear and terror
-had driven from his low-browed face every trace of intellectuality or
-culture, leaving only the cunning cruelty and ferocity of the animal.
-His cross-examination left him without a vestige of self control, and
-before it had well finished, in a violent passion he poured forth a
-volley of oaths, his huge frame quivering as he burst into a raving,
-shrieking arraignment of the white man, in which he had to be almost
-throttled into silence by the deputies.
-
-When the prosecuting attorney arose to review the case, there hung over
-the courtroom the ominous hush that is significant of but one thing.
-After a brief recital of the details of the evidence, the counsel
-appealed to the jury to do its sworn duty.
-
-The judge’s charge was a cool, impartial exposition of the law as it
-applied to the case. When finished, the jury arose amid a general
-movement of relief upon the part of the audience and as the twelve men
-filed out, there was considerable excited conversation, mingled with
-whispered speculations as to how long they would be out. Within the
-courtroom proper, as soon as the jury had retired, the Court instructed
-the sheriff to announce a recess.
-
-A half hour passed and there was a commotion in the outer hall. The
-sheriff wore an agitated air. Presently, one by one, a half-dozen men
-walked inside the railing and dropped carelessly into chairs.
-
-The prisoner looked at his new companions and evidently read aright
-their mission. They were deputy sheriffs. Four of them sat in chairs
-ranged behind the prisoner and one sat at either side of him.
-
-Directly across the aisle sat Elliott Harding, apparently cool and
-patient.
-
-Very soon it became generally known that a verdict had been reached.
-
-During the next five minutes, the rooms filled rapidly. The sheriff
-rapped for order and shouted:
-
-“Let everyone within the courtroom sit down.”
-
-From that moment the stillness of death prevailed. Every eye was turned
-toward the prisoner. His fingers worked convulsively and his whole body
-trembled. But few seconds elapsed before the twelve men slowly and
-gravely filed into their places.
-
-“Have you reached a verdict, gentlemen?” asked the Court, as they lined
-up.
-
-“We have, Your Honor,” answered the foreman.
-
-The Court then announced: “I want everyone to understand that the least
-attempt at an expression of approval or disapproval of this verdict, as
-it is read, will be punished by a fine for contempt. Mr. Clerk, read
-the verdict.”
-
-The clerk obeyed. His voice was clear and everyone heard: “We, the
-jury, agree and find the defendant, Ephriam Cooley, guilty of the
-murder of Dorothy Carr, and fix his punishment at death.”
-
-Elliott Harding quietly left the scene, feeling already a lightening of
-the intolerable load which had so long weighed upon him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-
-Mr. Carr, who had been slowly succumbing to his great grief, was ill
-the closing day of the trial. Dragging heavily through an existence
-that was not life, he was but a wraith of his former self. Waiting
-patiently, submitting with lifted head to the law’s justice. When he
-was told of the doom of Cooley, he seemed hardly to hear it, and he
-made no comment. It seemed now as if little else of life remained
-and yet occasional incoherent phrases showed the signs of some duty
-neglected and weighing heavily on the wandering mind.
-
-One morning, Elliott, seeing the longing visibly reflected on the old
-man’s countenance, asked:
-
-“What is it, father? Is there anything I can do?” And he laid his face
-to the withered palm of the outstretched hand. The sick man suddenly
-seemed to realize that his reason was abandoning him, and he made a
-supreme effort to collect his ideas and frame them into coherent speech.
-
-“Help me!” he said piteously. Then turning his head toward the window
-where he could see the grave so lately made for Dorothy, his worn face
-quivered and the big, slow tears ran down his furrowed cheeks.
-
-“Is it something of her you would say?” Elliott inquired.
-
-But the aged lips made no answer. For a time Elliott sat beside him,
-silent. Suddenly the old face lighted. Lifting up his sorrowful eyes,
-he said:
-
-“It has come, Elliott--my will! I have left everything to you, and,
-don’t forget Chloe.”
-
-Then once again, the look of blank abstraction spread over his features
-and he sank into a state of collapse as if the effort to think had
-exhausted his share of vitality.
-
-Elliott and his neighbors stood by and saw him grow feebler, his breath
-fainter. The old and eternal Mother Nature was silently slipping her
-pitying arms around her tired child. Presently the uncomplaining eyes
-were to be dimmed and the lips silenced forever. And as the end came,
-peacefully and quietly, Elliott forgot all--himself, his heartbreak,
-his wrath, forgot everything in the realization of the peace, the rest
-now possessing this long tired soul.
-
-The memory of the past swept over him. He recalled all that Dorothy had
-been to her father from the time when she had first stretched out her
-baby arms to him, all the little ways by which she had brought back his
-youth and made his house home, and his heart soft again.
-
-Two days later, all that was mortal of Napoleon Carr lay prone and cold
-in a new grave. He himself had chosen the spot between the two mounds,
-over which the grass lay in long windrows above his wife and child.
-
-Chloe was faithful to the end and was there when death darkened the
-eyes of her master.
-
-She was given the home she then lived in and ample provision for its
-maintenance.
-
-The Carr homestead was closed and Elliott went again to live with his
-uncle, Mr. Field.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-
-The day set by the court, upon which Ephriam Cooley was to pay the
-penalty for the crime of which he had been adjudged guilty, was the
-thirteenth of June.
-
-Long before that time, the colored population had been aroused to a
-lively interest in their convicted brother. There was a movement on
-foot to make a fight for his life. The negroes had gained the idea that
-the evidence of the woman at whose house Cooley had been arrested,
-and who could not be found to give evidence at the trial, would have
-cleared him. It was now rumored that she had been located away up in
-the East Kentucky mountains, where she had moved the year before. This
-story flew like thistle-down in the wind. Negro petitions were got up
-calling for mercy and commutation and were poured in upon the governor
-from all parts of the state.
-
-Sometimes it was rumored that the governor would commute the sentence
-to penal servitude for life. Then the rumor was contradicted, and so it
-went on. The governor had an eye to his own reelection and it was the
-current belief that he was not averse to doing that which might further
-the ends of his own ambition.
-
-It was well on in June and up to this time the governor had arrived at
-no decision, or if he had, had given no indication of it.
-
-Elliott was almost prostrate, the prey of a long drawn agony. This
-effort to soften the sentence weighed upon his weak nerves so that the
-phantom silence of his nights had been peopled by visions. His life
-became one oppression and a terror, and rest a thing never to be his.
-Again and again, amid the whirl of memory, he pressed the sad accusing
-words, “Are you my country’s foe and therefore mine?” upon the inward
-wound, tasting, cherishing the smart of them.
-
-He no longer had opinions: his opinions had become sympathies.
-
-There had come a day when, in his room alone, he took a pile of
-manuscript from his desk and looked at it long and hard, then held it
-to a blaze and watched it burn to a charred tissue on the hearthstone.
-It was his book.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-
-Tuesday, June the twenty-ninth, was an Eastwind day and it had nearly
-ended when Elliott Harding met the sheriff and inquired:
-
-“Any news from the governor?”
-
-He shook his head as he answered: “And none likely to come.” Taking
-out a silver watch he added: “The hanging is set for eleven o’clock
-to-morrow morning. Umph! This is tough work.”
-
-“I shall breathe more freely to-morrow,” was Elliott’s comment, as he
-passed on.
-
-A little further down he met John Holmes.
-
-“I was just going to your office,” said Holmes almost tenderly.
-
-Being near that place, they locked arms and went silently together.
-When they were seated, Holmes broke the silence.
-
-“Has any reprieve come yet?” he said abruptly as a man plunges into a
-critical subject.
-
-“No, I am glad to say!” and the lined face that lifted to the other was
-worn, the eyes strained and bloodshot.
-
-“Holmes, I have been thinking of my old views. God knows I have had
-time to think and cause to think! I am appreciating now the problem you
-of the South could not solve.” His voice grew unsteady.
-
-“Harding, I am sorry for you. You have suffered greatly. It is useless
-to attempt to convey in words what the South has long endured, but I
-believe she is on the point of struggling from beneath the crushing
-burden that weighs her down. A time will come when our southern
-governors will order a special term of Superior Court to try speedily
-a criminal and invariably fix the death penalty for the offense which
-is largely responsible for lynching. How much graver, deeper, more
-human now, must seem to you our tragedies and our defense. We would
-indeed welcome a worthier mode or the day when there will be no such
-tragedies.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-That night as the sheriff and his family sat in their lighted room,
-a man outside kept patient tryst, every fiber of his being directly
-concerned in the slightest movement or sound.
-
-As the night wore on and no one entered the door, his soul illumined
-with hope and seemed loosening itself from pain and desire.
-
-Presently there was a sound, a sight that startled him. A messenger was
-at the door holding a yellow slip. The sheriff came out rubbing his
-eyes.
-
-“What is it?” he asked sleepily.
-
-“A reprieve! A reprieve!”
-
-Holding it to the lamp in the hall, the sheriff read:
-
-“Sheriff of Scott County, Georgetown, Ky.--Ephriam Cooley’s sentence
-commuted to life imprisonment. Hurry prisoner to Frankfort. ----,
-Governor.”
-
-The sheriff hastily pencilled an answer and sent the boy speeding back.
-
-“Hitch the horse!” he called to his man.
-
-“Oh my God!” In that supreme cry, hope quivered in its death throb.
-Elliott Harding received the lance thrust of despair. He stood
-defenseless: alone with Destiny.
-
-All was done quietly and swiftly. The sleeping town knew nothing of the
-change.
-
-As the midnight train whistled in the distance, the sheriff with his
-handcuffed prisoner stepped from behind his sweating horse onto the
-empty platform. When the iron monster, like a great strong savior came
-rushing in, the criminal looked as if he could have embraced it. It was
-a thing of life to him.
-
-One or maybe two drowsy travelers shook themselves and scrambled
-to the platform. The sheriff and his man lost no time in seating
-themselves. The murderer was within a hair’s breadth of safety. The
-engine was ready to start. Snorting, trembling, as if in frightened
-pain, she moved off slowly, slowly.
-
-There was a sudden rush and speeding through the darkness; an unkempt
-figure, running staggeringly as though in exhaustion, leaped to the
-platform and pursued the moving train. A sudden flash, a sharp report,
-and Ephriam Cooley fell back dead, shot through the heart.
-
-By the time the train had drawn back to the station, the platform was
-deserted; only the shrouding mists of blue smoke remained.
-
- THE END.
-
-
-
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Smoking flax</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Hallie Erminie Rives</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 22, 2022 [eBook #68586]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: D A Alexander and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by University of California libraries)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SMOKING FLAX ***</div>
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-<h1>SMOKING FLAX</h1>
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-<p class="center no-indent">BY</p>
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-<p class="center no-indent p6"><i>SECOND EDITION</i></p>
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-<p class="ph3">F. TENNYSON NEELY</p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent" >PUBLISHER</p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">LONDON&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;NEW YORK</p>
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-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="adblock2">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak"><b>Neely’s Prismatic Library.</b></p>
-
-
-<p class="center no-indent"><b>GILT TOP, 50 CENTS.</b></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>“I know of nothing in the book line that equals
-Neely’s Prismatic Library for elegance and careful
-selection. It sets a pace that others will not easily
-equal and none surpass.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">E. A. Robinson.</span></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>SOUR SAINTS AND SWEET SINNERS. By Carlos Martyn.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>SEVEN SMILES AND A FEW FIBS. By Thomas J. Vivian. With full-page
-illustrations by well-known artists.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>A MODERN PROMETHEUS. By E. Phillips Oppenheim.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>THE SHACKLES OF FATE. By Max Nordau.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>A BACHELOR OF PARIS. By John W. Harding. With over 50 illustrations
-by William Hofacher.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>MONTRESOR. By Loota.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>REVERIES OF A SPINSTER. By Helen Davies.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>THE ART MELODIOUS. By Louis Lombard.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>THE HONOR OF A PRINCESS. By F. Kimball Scribner.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>OBSERVATIONS OF A BACHELOR. By Louis Lombard.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>KINGS IN ADVERSITY. By E. S. Van Zile.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>NOBLE BLOOD AND A WEST POINT
-PARALLEL. By Captain King.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>TRUMPETER FRED. By Captain King. Illustrated.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>FATHER STAFFORD. By Anthony Hope.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>THE KING IN YELLOW. By R. W. Chambers.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>IN THE QUARTER. By R. W. Chambers.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>A PROFESSIONAL LOVER. By Gyp.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>BIJOU’S COURTSHIPS. By Gyp. Illustrated.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>A CONSPIRACY OF THE CARBONARI. By Louise Muhlbach.</i></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><i>SOAP BUBBLES. By Dr. Max Nordau.</i></p></div>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">F. TENNYSON NEELY,<br />
-<span class="smaller">PUBLISHER,<br />
-NEW YORK, LONDON.</span></p>
-
-<div class="adblock3">
-<p class="center no-indent">
-<i>Copyrighted in the United States and<br />
-Great Britain in MDCCCXCVII by<br />
-F. Tennyson Neely.</i><br />
-<br />
-<i>All rights reserved.</i></p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center no-indent">TO MY MOTHER AND THE SOUTH</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INTRODUCTION">INTRODUCTION.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Smoking Flax” is a story of the South
-written by a young Kentucky woman. Undoubtedly
-in the South its advent will be
-saluted with enthusiastic bravos. What
-will be the nature of its reception in the
-North it is hazardous to predict. One
-thing, however, can be confidently prophesied
-for it everywhere&mdash;consideration.
-This the subject and manner of its treatment
-assures.</p>
-
-<p>The methods of Judge Lynch viewed
-from most standpoints are, without extenuation,
-evil; from a few aspects they may
-appear to be perhaps not wholly without
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>justification. Miss Rives, through the
-medium of romance, presents the question
-as seen from many sides, and then leaves
-to the reader the responsibility of determining
-“what is truth,” though where her
-own sympathies lie she does not leave
-much in doubt.</p>
-
-<p>The authoress comes of an old Virginia
-stock to whom the gift of narrative and
-literary expression seem to be a birthright.
-Since revolutionary days literature
-has been more or less enriched by contributions
-from successive members of the
-family&mdash;the well known contemporary
-novelist and the youthful author of this
-book sharing at the present time the responsibility
-of upholding the hereditary
-traditions. It seems, therefore, happily
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>appropriate that Miss Rives should have
-taken upon herself the task of placing
-before the world southern views of the
-problem of lynching, which, be it understood,
-are far from unanimous. The subject
-is handled with admirable tact, the
-author steering clear alike from prudish
-affectations of modesty and shocking details
-of inartistic realism: and throughout
-is maintained a judicial impartiality
-infrequent in the treatment of such burning
-questions.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Rives will achieve distinction in
-the South and at least notability elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class="right">H. F. G.</p>
-
-<p class="left"><span class="smcap">Rochester</span>, N. Y.</p>
-
-<p class="left2"><i>September 22nd, 97.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The house faced the college campus and
-was the only one in the block. This, in
-Georgetown, implies a lawn of no small
-dimensions; the place had neither gardener’s
-house nor porter’s lodge&mdash;nothing
-but that old home half hidden by ancient
-elms. For many a year it had stood with
-closed doors in the very heart of that
-prosperous Kentucky town, presenting a
-gloomy aspect and exercising for many a
-singular attraction. Near the deep veranda
-a great tree, whose boughs were no
-longer held in check by trimming, had
-thrust one of its branches through the
-frontmost window. Dampness had attacked
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>everything. The upper balcony was
-loosened, the roof warped, and lizards
-sunned themselves on the wall.</p>
-
-<p>As for the garden, long ago it had lapsed
-into a chaotic state. The thistle and the
-pale poppy grew in fragrant tangle with
-the wild ivy and Virginia creeper, and
-wilful weeds thrust their way across the
-gravel walks.</p>
-
-<p>Sadly old residents saw the place approaching
-the last stages of decay&mdash;saw this
-house, once the pride of the town, in its
-decrepitude and loneliness the plaything
-of the elements.</p>
-
-<p>“A noble wreck! It must have a history
-of some kind,” strangers would remark.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, that it has, and a sombre one it
-is!” any man or woman living near would
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>have answered, as they recalled the history
-of Richard Harding’s home. For the
-fate of Richard Harding was a sad memory
-to them. They remembered how he had
-been the representative of a fine old family
-and that much of his fortune had been
-spent in beautifying this place, to make it
-a fitting home for Catharine Field, his
-bride.</p>
-
-<p>She too had been of gentle birth and
-held an important place in their memory
-as one who brought with her to this rural
-community the wider experience usual to
-a young woman educated in Boston, who,
-after a few seasons of social success in an
-ultra fashionable set, has crowned her
-many achievements by a brilliant marriage.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span></p>
-
-<p>Her husband adored her and showed his
-devotion by humoring her extravagant
-tastes and prodigal fancies. He detested
-gayeties, yet complied with her slightest
-wish for social pleasures.</p>
-
-<p>Although it was generally agreed that
-this young couple got on well together,
-at the end of two years the husband had
-to admit to himself that his efforts to render
-his wife happy had not been entirely
-successful. He saw that she fretted for her
-northern life, was bored by everything
-about her. She cherished a bitter resentment
-for the slaveholders, vowing that it
-was barbarous and inhuman to own human
-beings as her husband and neighbors did.
-Though expressing pity for the poor,
-simple, dependent creatures, she did little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span>
-to make their tasks more healthful and
-reasonable ones, or to render them more
-capable and contented.</p>
-
-<p>Her baby’s nurse was the one servant of
-her household who met with gracious treatment
-at her hands. This old slave came
-to her endowed with the womanly virtues
-of honor, self-respect and humility. But
-in marveling at her on these accounts,
-Mrs. Harding forgot that it was the former
-mistress&mdash;her husband’s mother&mdash;that had
-made her what she was.</p>
-
-<p>At length the truth became clearly apparent
-that she was an obstinate, intensely
-prejudiced and very unreasonable woman,
-who, having lived for a time at a centre
-of fashionable intelligence in a city
-of culture, supposed herself to be quite
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>beyond the reach of and entirely superior
-to ordinary country folk. Eventually,
-her morbid dissatisfaction became so extreme
-that her husband yielded to her
-importunities, closed the house, and with
-her and their baby boy, went to live in
-Boston.</p>
-
-<p>This sacrifice he made quietly and uncomplainingly,
-his closest friends not then
-knowing how it wrenched his heart. A
-year passed, then another, and at the end
-of the third, the papers announced the
-death of Richard Harding.</p>
-
-<p>Though never again seeing his southern
-home, where he had planned to live his
-life in peace and useful happiness, it had
-held to the end a most sacred place in his
-memory&mdash;a memory which he truly hoped
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>would be transmittted to the heart and
-mind of his son. It was his last wish that
-the old homestead should remain as it
-was&mdash;closed to strangers&mdash;that no living
-being, unless of his own blood, should inhabit
-that abode of love and sorrow, that
-it be kept from the careless profanation
-of aliens.</p>
-
-<p>The world prophesied that his widow
-would soon forget the wishes of the dead,
-but as witness that she had thus far kept
-faith, there stood the closed, abandoned
-home, upon which Nature alone laid a
-destroying hand.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>In process of time, hardly a brick was
-to be seen in this old house that had not
-grown purple with age and become
-cloaked with moss and ivy. Antiquity
-looked out from covering to foundation
-stone. Only the flowers were young, and
-flowers spring from a remote ancestry.
-This house, inlaid in solitude, was as quiet
-as some cloister hidden away within some
-French forest.</p>
-
-<p>One summer afternoon, the quiet was
-broken by a group of college girls looking
-for some new flower for their botanical
-collection. But so full of youthful
-spirits were they that they hardly saw
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>the valley lilies with stems so short
-that they could scarcely bear up their
-innocent, sweet eyes, distressed, and stare
-like children in a crowd.</p>
-
-<p>Among these girls was one whom the
-most casual observer would have singled
-out from her companions for a beauty
-rare even in that land of beautiful women.
-She had wandered off alone and found a
-sleepy little primrose. As she freed the
-blossom from its stem and held it in her
-hand, a tide of thought surged up from
-her memory and deepened the color of her
-face. Quietly she dropped down upon the
-grass and began turning the leaves of her
-floral diary until she came to a similar
-flower pressed between its pages.</p>
-
-<p>In a corner was written: “Gathered in
-the mountains on the 18th of August.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How strange,” she thought, “to note
-how late it was found there, while it
-blooms so early here.”</p>
-
-<p>Commonplace as that discovery seemed
-to be, the face so radiant a moment before,
-became thoughtfully drawn.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at the name “E. Harding”
-written below the dry, dead blossom, and
-thought of the time when it had been written,
-thence back to her first meeting with
-its owner&mdash;one of those happy chances of
-travel, which have all the charm of the
-unexpected&mdash;as fresh in her memory as
-though it had been but yesterday. That
-summer had been one of those idyllic
-periods which are lived so unconsciously
-that their beauty is only realized in
-memories. To become conscious of such
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>charm at the time would be to break the
-spell which lies in the very ignorance of
-its existence.</p>
-
-<p>She, this ardent novice in learning,
-fresh from graduating honors, and full of
-unmanageable, new emotions did not comprehend
-that the same youthful impetuosity
-which had made the two fast friends
-in so brief a time, had also made it possible
-for a few heedless words even more
-quickly to separate them. An older or
-more experienced woman would have
-missed the sudden bloom and escaped the
-no less sudden storm.</p>
-
-<p>“Primroses are his favorite flowers,”
-she said half aloud, and a dainty little
-smile lifted ever so slightly the corners
-of her mouth as if there were pleasure in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>the thought. Then she took up her pencil
-and studiously began to jot down the
-botanical notes concerning the primrose.
-“Primrose, a biennial herb, from three
-to six inches tall. The flower is regular,
-symmetrical and four parted.”</p>
-
-<p>A twig snapped. The girl looked up
-quickly. “Welcome to my flowers,” said
-a voice beside her, and a young man
-smiled frankly, as he bowed and raised
-his white straw hat.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Harding!” she exclaimed, opening
-her eyes in wonder and staring at him
-with the prettiest face of astonishment.
-Alarm had brought color to her cheeks,
-while the level rays of the sun, which
-forced her to screen her eyes with one
-hand, clothed her figure in a broad belt
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>of gold. “How did you happen to be here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did not happen. Man comes not to
-his place by accident.”</p>
-
-<p>His answer, though given with a laugh,
-had a touch of truth.</p>
-
-<p>Through the bright excitement of her
-eyes, a sudden gleam of archness flashed.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you come to write us up, or
-rather down?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I have come to help those who won’t
-help themselves, but first let us make
-peace, if such a thing be necessary between
-us. Here is my offering,” and smilingly
-he laid two fresh white roses in her hand.</p>
-
-<p>She answered his smile with one of her
-own as she thrust the long generous stems
-through her waist belt; but she did not
-thank him with words, and he was glad
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>that she did not. Just as he would have
-spoken again, a number of girlish voices
-called in chorus:</p>
-
-<p>“Come, Dorothy, we are going now.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the same year that Elliott Harding
-was graduated from Princeton, he came
-into possession of his estate, which he at
-once began to share with his mother. Her
-love of good living and luxury, her craving
-for such elegancies as sumptuous
-furniture, expensive bric-à-brac, and
-stylish equipages had well nigh exhausted
-her means, and she was now almost entirely
-dependent upon a half-interest in
-the small estate in Kentucky. Considering
-that Elliott had a leaning towards the
-learned professions and political and social
-pursuits, added to a constitutional
-abhorrence of a business career, his financial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>
-condition was not altogether uncomfortable.
-He longed to own a superb
-library, a collection of books, great both
-in number and quality, and, furthermore,
-he wanted to complete his education by
-travel abroad, followed by a year or two
-of serious research in the South. He realized
-how ill these aspirations mated with
-the pleasure loving habits of his mother
-and how impossible it would be for him
-to realize his dreams, so long as his purse
-remained the joint source of supply.</p>
-
-<p>To many a young man the outlook would
-have been deeply discouraging. To him
-it was a means of developing the endurance
-and the strength of will which were
-among his distinguishing characteristics.</p>
-
-<p>Nature had fashioned Elliott Harding
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>when in one of her kindly moods. She
-had endowed him with many gifts; good
-birth, sound health of body and mind, industry,
-resolution and ambition. Besides
-possessing these goodly qualifications, he
-stood six feet in height, and in breadth of
-shoulder, depth of chest, sturdiness of
-legs and arms, he had few superiors. There
-was, too, a nobility of proportion in his
-forehead that indicated high breeding and
-broad intellectuality, and his face was full
-of force and refinement. His steel blue
-eyes gleamed with a superb self-confidence.</p>
-
-<p>By profession, Elliott Harding was a
-lawyer; by instinct, a writer. He practiced
-law for gain. He wrote because it
-was his ruling passion. He was a man who
-had been early taught to have faith in his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>own destiny and to consider himself an
-agent called by God to do a great work.
-When he came to his southern home he
-came with a purpose&mdash;a purpose which
-he determined to carry out quietly but
-with mighty earnestness. When he first
-arrived in the town he was content to rest
-unheralded, and his presence was not understood
-by the villagers. Nearly every
-morning now, he could be seen from the
-opposite window of the college to enter
-the old abandoned house and sit for hours
-near the door, his head bowed, his fingers
-busy with note-book and pencil.</p>
-
-<p>For some weeks this proceeding had continued
-with little variation. People noted
-it with diverse conjectures. Old men and
-women feared lest this man, whoever he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>might be,&mdash;a real estate agent perhaps&mdash;would
-bring about the restoration and sale
-of the old Harding home. These old-time
-friends, who had known and loved the
-father, Richard Harding, through youth
-and manhood, now rebelled against the
-possible disregard of his last request, which
-had become a heritage of the locality.
-With anxiety they watched the maneuvers
-of this mysterious individual and
-drearily wondered what would result from
-his stay.</p>
-
-<p>To young Harding the anxiety he had
-caused was unknown. Absorbed in his own
-affairs, he was too much occupied to think
-of the impression he was creating. His
-whole thought was given to gleaning the
-knowledge he required for the writing of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>the book by which he hoped to permanently
-mould southern opinion in conformity
-with his own against what he
-believed to be the shame of his native land.</p>
-
-<p>It was an evening in the third month of
-his residence in Georgetown. Elliott Harding
-paused in his walk along the street
-not quite decided which way to go.</p>
-
-<p>“She writes me she has drawn a ten-day
-draft for twenty-two hundred dollars,”
-he said to himself. “How on earth can I
-meet it? What shall I do about it? Let
-me think it out.” And checking his steps,
-which had begun to tend towards the
-college, where a reception to which he
-had been invited was being held, he took
-a turn or two in the already darkening
-street, and then started back to his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>rooms. In his mind, step by step, he
-traced out the possible consequences of
-action in the matter, but long consideration
-only confirmed his first impression
-that it was too late now to change the course
-of affairs so long existing.</p>
-
-<p>“But how am I to meet this last demand?”
-he questioned. “There is but one
-way open to me,” he finally thought. “The
-old home must go.”</p>
-
-<p>He nervously walked on, repeating to
-himself, “Mother! mother! I could never
-do this for anyone but you.”</p>
-
-<p>With the memory of his beloved father
-so strong within him, it was difficult to
-bring himself to face the inevitable with
-composure. The turbulent working of his
-heart contended against the resignation of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>his brain, and, when for a moment he
-felt resigned, then the memory of his dead
-father’s wish would rise up and protest,
-and the battle would have to be fought
-over again.</p>
-
-<p>But what he considered to be duty to the
-living triumphed over what he held as
-loyalty to the dead, so the next time he
-went to the old homestead, “For Sale”
-glared coldly and, he even imagined, reproachfully
-at him. It was then that
-Elliott realized the immensity of his sacrifice
-and bowed his head in silent sorrow.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>After that one time, Elliott Harding determined
-to face the inevitable and passed
-into the house without seeming to see the
-placard.</p>
-
-<p>One day while sitting in his accustomed
-writing place, which was the parlor, now
-furnished with a table and office chair, a
-man walked up the front steps. Elliott
-had just finished writing the words “The
-glimpses of light I have gained make the
-darkness more apparent,” when the man
-entered the doorway.</p>
-
-<p>The stranger was a tall, lean individual
-with iron gray beard curving out from under
-the chin. Eyes dark, keen and deep set;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>cheekbones as high as an Indian’s; hair
-iron gray and thick around the base of
-the skull, but thin and tangled over the
-top of the head, formed a combination
-striking and not unattractive. Though apparently
-far past his prime, he appeared
-to be as hearty and hale as if half the
-years of his life were yet to come. After
-gazing a moment at Elliott, he opened the
-conversation by saying:</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning! I suppose you are the
-agent for this property?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am, sir,” answered Elliott, courteously.
-“Come in and have a seat,” offering
-him his chair as he stood up and
-leaned against the writing table.</p>
-
-<p>“I have come to make a bid for this
-place. I would like to buy it, if it is to be
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>had at a reasonable figure. It is not for
-the land value alone that I want it,” he
-went on, “it is the old home of my only
-sister. Besides, for another and more
-sacred reason, I never want it to pass out
-of the family.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your sister’s old home,” said Elliott,
-without appearing to have heard the offer,
-“then you are Mr. Field&mdash;Philip Field?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is my name&mdash;and yours?”</p>
-
-<p>“Elliott Field Harding.”</p>
-
-<p>“My nephew?” questioned the elder.</p>
-
-<p>“Your nephew, I suppose,” assented
-Elliott.</p>
-
-<p>“And you did not know you had an
-uncle here?” the old man asked quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I knew you were living somewhere
-in the South, but was not certain
-of the exact locality.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span></p>
-
-<p>At this, the face of the visitor softened,
-a strange glow leaping to life in his quiet
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Your mother discarded me years ago
-for marrying a Southern girl not&mdash;not exactly
-up to her ideal, and I thought you
-might not have known she had a cast-off
-brother, whom she thought had shamed
-his blood and name,” was the low spoken
-comment.</p>
-
-<p>Then, half-unconsciously he stammered,
-“Catharine&mdash;your mother, is she well?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite well, I thank you,” said Elliott.</p>
-
-<p>“Will she come here to&mdash;to see you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not likely, no; I don’t think she will
-ever come South again,” was the contemplative
-reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Then she has not changed; she still
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>hates us here!” commented the other half
-sadly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well ‘hate’ is perhaps too strong a
-word; but I think that her inflexible disapproval
-of the social conditions here
-will never alter. You know her character.
-Her ideas are not easily changed and she
-thinks little outside of Boston and Boston
-ideals worthy of much consideration.”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor, dear sister! I had hoped that
-maternity and her early widowhood would
-awake in her a sense of the vast duties and
-responsibilities attached to her position as
-a southern woman. How I have longed to
-hear that she had learned the blessed lesson.”</p>
-
-<p>To these words Elliott listened intently,
-his breath coming quick with rebellious
-mortification.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span></p>
-
-<p>“If she had learned that lesson I might
-not now have to sacrifice the old home,”
-said Elliott, somewhat impetuously.</p>
-
-<p>“Sacrifice!” repeated the other, “and
-did you care to hold it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It was the dearest wish of my life to
-do so,” was the reply.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Field gazed at the young man with
-a look of admiration.</p>
-
-<p>“Elliott, my nephew,” he fervently
-said, holding out his hand as he spoke, “if
-it will please you to call me friend as well
-as uncle, I shall refuse neither the name
-nor the duties.”</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Philip, I thank you and accept
-your kindly offer,” and Elliott’s face
-brightened. The furrow which care had
-been ploughing between his brows the past
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>few days, smoothed itself out. Then in a
-burst of confidence, he continued:</p>
-
-<p>“It has long been my ambition to do
-something with this place, worthy of the
-memory of my father; but my mother is a
-little extravagant, I am afraid, and I have
-not as yet been able to carry out my wish.
-She lately drew upon me for twenty-two
-hundred dollars and it came at a time
-when my only recourse was either to sell
-the place or dishonor her paper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Elliott, it is very pleasing to me that
-you should speak thus frankly with me.
-Let me help you. I will gladly lend you
-the money so that you may not be forced
-to sell. I am well-to-do and can afford to
-help you.”</p>
-
-<p>Elliott listened in pleased surprise. He
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>felt touched beyond expression, but emotion
-irresistibly impelled him to seize
-his uncle’s hand, to bend low and press his
-lips upon it. This unexpected offer again
-buoyed up the hope of his intense desire
-to keep the homestead. For a time he
-stared steadily at this friend, his whole
-soul reflected upon his face.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Field eyed his nephew closely during
-this silence and noted the evidence of
-strength in the serious young face, and the
-unmistakable air of a thinker it bore, and
-rightly judged that here was one who had
-given over play for work.</p>
-
-<p>“The memory of your kind offer will
-live with me forever,” said Elliott, his
-voice full of deep feeling, breaking the
-silence. “But I cannot accept your generosity.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
-I have no assurance that my labors
-will be attended with success, and I
-have a horror of starting out in debt.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, my boy,” kindly spoke the
-other, “that spirit will win. I will buy
-the place, and it will still be in the family.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, uncle! You don’t know
-how grateful I am for that.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I am doubly pleased to be the
-owner since meeting you,” interrupted
-the elder. “This old heart of mine beats
-warmly for your father. He was a good
-man and I want to see the boy who bears
-his name winning a way up to the level of
-life which was once Richard’s. Yes, I
-want to see you foremost amongst just and
-honored men.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Philip,” heartily spoke Elliott,
-“for the sake of my father’s memory, I
-hope to fulfill that hope.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yes, yes, you will, my boy!” The
-old man arose to go and as he and Elliott
-clasped hands in a hearty good-bye, he
-added: “I shall be glad to see you at my
-home, which is two miles south of here, or
-at the Agricultural Bank of which I am
-president. I am a widower, have no children,
-and your presence in my home
-would fill a void,” and as though not wishing
-to trust himself further along the
-mournful trend of thought, he hastily
-withdrew.</p>
-
-<p>As Elliott watched his uncle walking
-down the gravelled path, his offer of friendship
-took a tempting form. A week before,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>
-he would have scornfully repelled
-any such advances.</p>
-
-<p>“Only to think of it!” Elliott soliloquized,
-“an offer of sympathy and help
-from this man for whom my mother, his
-sister, has not one gleam of sympathy, or
-even comprehension! It is strange that
-he should be the first to come in when all
-the world seems gone out.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus, without further heralding and no
-outward commercial negotiation, the old
-Harding homestead passed quietly into
-Mr. Field’s possession, and this matter
-once settled, Elliott began in earnest the
-practice of his profession. Accordingly,
-his law card at once appeared in the local
-papers and his “shingle” was hung out
-beside another, bearing the name “John
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>Holmes, Attorney at Law,” at the door of
-a building containing numerous small
-offices.</p>
-
-<p>Elliott knew his literary work was not
-enough to satisfy his insistent appetite for
-occupation, and for this reason, besides the
-necessity of earning something toward his
-modest expenses, he went into the practice
-of law.</p>
-
-<p>As Mr. Field felt he had been largely
-instrumental in his nephew’s settling here,
-he took an active interest in furthering
-his success.</p>
-
-<p>“That is Elliott Harding, my nephew,”
-he would say, with an affectionate familiarity,
-dashed with pride. “He is a most
-worthy young man, deserving of your confidence,”
-a commendation usually agreed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>to, with the unspoken thought sometimes,
-“and a very conceited one.”</p>
-
-<p>Why does the world look with such disapproval
-on self confidence? When a person
-is endowed with a vigorous brain,
-there is no better way for him to face the
-world than to start out with a full respect
-for his own talents, and unbounded faith
-in the possibilities that lie within him.</p>
-
-<p>Elliott Harding’s belief in himself was
-not small, and the consciousness of his
-ability led him to work diligently for
-both honor and profit. He expected labor
-and did not shrink from it. Very soon he
-riveted the attention of a few, then of the
-many, and it was not long before he rose
-to a position of considerable importance
-in the community and began to feel financial
-ground more solid beneath his feet.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was a glorious morning in August,
-when summer’s wide-set doors let in a torrent
-of later bloom.</p>
-
-<p>As early as ten o’clock the Riverside
-road was thronged with all manner of conveyances,
-moving toward the country,
-bound for an out-of-door fête of the character
-known in that region as a “bran-dance
-and barbecue.” This country road,
-prodigally overhung with the foliage of
-trees in the very heyday of their southern
-vigor is bounded on one side by goodly
-acres of farmland, and on the other by the
-Elkhorn, a historic river.</p>
-
-<p>The neighboring farms were still to-day.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>The light wind rustling the silken tassels
-of the corn was all the sound that would
-be heard until the morrow, unless, maybe,
-the neighing of the young horses left behind.</p>
-
-<p>From the topic of stock and farming,
-called forth by what they saw in passing,
-Elliott Harding and his uncle, as they rode
-along, fell to discussing the grim details of
-a murder and lynching that had but recently
-taken place just over the boundary,
-in Tennessee.</p>
-
-<p>“What a tremendous problem is this
-lynching evil,” said Elliott, looking keenly
-at his uncle, who shook his head seriously
-as he answered:</p>
-
-<p>“It is a very grave question that confronts
-us, and by far the less easier of settlement<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>
-because we are placed in the full
-light of public observation, all our doings
-heightened by its glare, and the passion of
-the people aroused. It is not that we will,
-but that we must lynch in these extreme
-cases. There seems no other way, and that
-is a poor enough one.”</p>
-
-<p>“How many persons do you suppose have
-lost their lives by lynch law in the south
-during the past ten years?” asked Elliott.</p>
-
-<p>“I should say at least a thousand,” replied
-Mr. Field.</p>
-
-<p>“Heavens! What a record!” exclaimed
-Elliott, who became silent, a look of brooding
-thoughtfulness taking the place of the
-happy expression that had lighted up his
-face. His uncle, noticing his preoccupation,
-endeavored to distract his thoughts
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>by calling attention to the distant sound
-of a big bass fiddle and a strong negro
-voice that called out many times, “balance
-all, swing yo par-d-ners.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose on this festive occasion I
-shall also hear some political aspirant
-promising poor humanity unconditional
-prosperity and deliverance from evil?”
-asked Elliott, by way of inquiry as to
-what other diversions might be expected.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, Holmes and Feland, the candidates
-for prosecuting attorney, are sure
-to be on hand,” replied Mr. Field.</p>
-
-<p>A little further on they came upon the
-crowd gathered in the woods. On the
-bough-roofed dancing ground the youths
-were tripping with lissome maids, who,
-with their filmy skirts a little lifted,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>showed shapely ankles at every turn. The
-lookers-on seemed witched with the rhythmic
-motion and the sensuous music.
-Old and young women, as well as men, the
-well-to-do and the poor, were there. Neat,
-nice-looking young people, with happy,
-intelligent faces, kept time to the waltz
-and the cotillion, which were the order of
-the day. As the graceful figures animated
-the arbor, far away in the depths of
-the wood could be heard echoes of light-hearted
-talk and happy laughter. The
-very genius of frolic seemed to preside
-over the gathering.</p>
-
-<p>Elliott stood near one end of the arbor
-and drew a long breath of pure delight at
-this, to him, truly strange and delightful
-pastoral. The mellow tints of nature’s
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>verdure, the soft languor of the warm
-atmosphere, gave a happy turn to his
-thoughts as he looked upon his first “bran-dance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come! finish this with me,” cried a
-sturdy farmer boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Do, dear mamma!” begged the gasping
-maiden at her side, “I am so tired.
-Do take a round with him.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus appealed to, the stout, handsome
-matron threw aside her palm-leaf fan and
-held out her hands to the boy. Although
-she had but reached that age when those of
-the opposite sex are considered just in
-their prime, she, being old enough to be
-the mother of the twenty-year-old daughter
-at her side, was considered too old to
-be one of the dancers. But at the hearty
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>invitation she too became one of the
-tripping throng and entered into the fun
-with all the sweetness and spontaneity in
-voice and gesture which made herself and
-others forget how far her Spring was past.
-The waltz now became a waltz indeed.
-The musicians played faster and faster
-and the girl clapped her hands as the
-couple whirled round and round, as though
-nothing on earth could stop them.</p>
-
-<p>“Please let’s stop. I beg you to stop,
-now!” cried the matron, panting for breath
-but the enraptured youth paid no heed to
-her pleadings, but swifter and swifter grew
-his pace, wilder and wilder his gyrations,
-till, fortunately for her, he encountered an
-unexpected post and was brought to a sudden
-halt. The waltz, too, had come to an end,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>and the onlookers clapped their hands in
-hearty applause. Even the veterans of
-the community seemed to enjoy the spirit
-of the sport. Elliott particularly noted
-the rapt enjoyment of a group of old men
-silver haired, ruddy skinned, keen eyed,
-who once seen, remained penciled upon
-the gazer’s memory&mdash;each head a worthy
-sketch.</p>
-
-<p>These patriarchs were bent with toil as
-well as age, their hands were roughened
-by labor, the Sunday broadcloth became
-them less than the week-day short coat, yet
-each figure had a dignity of its own. In one
-aged man, with snow-white hair, Roman
-nose and tawny, beardless face, the
-staunch Southerner of old lived again.
-Here was that calm and resolution betokening<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
-the indomitable spirit, the unswerving
-faith that led men to brave fire
-and sword, ruin and desolation, rather
-than surrender principle.</p>
-
-<p>In strong relief were these sombre figures
-of the group set forth by the light,
-airy frocks and the young faces and graceful
-forms of the pretty girls, with beflowered
-hats coquettishly perched above
-their heads, or swinging from their hands.
-One could step easily from the verge of
-the white holiday keeper to the confines of
-the pleasure loving black. But it was a
-great distance&mdash;like the crossing of a vast
-continent&mdash;between the habitats of alien
-races.</p>
-
-<p>On the outskirts of the crowd, here and
-there, under the friendly shade of some
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>wide spreading tree, could be seen a
-darkey busily engaged in vending watermelons
-and cool drinks. Coatless and hatless,
-with shirt wide open at neck and
-chest, and sleeves rolled elbow high, he
-transferred the luscious fruit from his
-wagon to the eager throng about him; while
-he passed compliments without stint upon
-the unbleached domestics who came to
-“trade” with him, not forgetting to occasionally
-lift his voice and proclaim the
-superior quality of his stock, verifying
-his assurances by taking capacious mouthfuls
-from the severed melon lying on the
-top of the load.</p>
-
-<p>Without ceremony, the darkeys, male
-and female, swarmed about the vender,
-some seating themselves in picturesque
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>ease upon the ground in pairs and groups.
-There were mulattos and octoroons of light
-and darker shades, to the type of glossy
-blackness, discussing last week’s church
-“festival,” to-morrow’s funeral, the Methodists’
-protracted meeting which begins
-one Christmas and lasts till the next.</p>
-
-<p>In astonishing quantities did the “culled
-folks” stow away “red meat” and “white
-meat,” and with juice trickling from the
-corners of their mouths down over their
-best raiment, gave ready ear to the vender’s
-broad jokes and joined in his loud
-laughter, showing, as only negroes can,
-their ready appreciation of the feast and
-holiday. Their hilarity kept up an undiminished
-flow until the participants were
-called to serve the midday meal for the
-“white folks.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span></p>
-
-<p>Hundreds partook of the delicious pig
-which had been roasted whole, that meat
-of which the poet wrote, “Send me, gods, a
-whole hog barbecued.”</p>
-
-<p>Animals spitted on pointed sticks sputtered
-and fizzled over a hole in the
-ground filled with live coals. Mindful attendants
-shifted the appetizing viands from
-side to side, seasoning them with salt, pepper,
-vinegar or lemon as the case might
-require, and when set forth, offered a
-feast as close to primitive nature as the
-trees under which it was served.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Very soon after the feast was ended,
-Elliott saw John Holmes and a party of
-men coming toward him.</p>
-
-<p>To a casual reader of the human countenance,
-it would be evident at a first
-glance that Holmes was a man of no small
-worldly knowledge, and as he now appeared
-with his companions one could discern
-that this superiority was recognized
-by them and that he held a certain position
-of authority, in fact that he was a
-man accustomed to rule rather than be
-ruled.</p>
-
-<p>As he approached Elliott, he addressed
-him with a pleased smile, saying: “I am
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>glad to see you here, Mr. Harding. Maybe
-you can help us out of a difficulty.”</p>
-
-<p>“In what way?” asked Elliott, surprised.</p>
-
-<p>“My political opponent was to have
-been here and we were to briefly address
-the people this afternoon, but, so far, he
-has failed to put in an appearance. The
-toiling folk have come here to-day, even
-laying aside important work in some instances,
-to hear a ‘speaking,’ and unless
-they hear some sort of an address (they
-are not particular about the subject) it
-will be hard to bring them together again
-when we need them more.</p>
-
-<p>“I, as a representative of the committee,
-request you to lend us a helping hand.
-It is generally desired that you be the
-orator upon this occasion.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What! address this gathering offhand
-and wholly unprepared? It would blight
-my prospects forever with them,” laughed
-Elliott.</p>
-
-<p>“On the other hand, it would give you
-an opportunity for a wider acquaintance
-and perhaps elect you to the first office to
-which you may yet aspire. Come! I will
-take no excuse,” persisted Holmes, while
-his companions seconded his insistence.</p>
-
-<p>After considerable pressing, Elliott was
-escorted to the platform, from which the
-musicians had moved. Without delay
-Holmes stepped to the front and in a loud,
-clear voice which hushed the crowd,
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“Ladies and gentlemen, I have the honor
-of introducing Mr. Elliott Harding, who
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>will speak in place of Mr. Feland, that
-gentleman, for some reason or other, having
-failed to put in an appearance.”</p>
-
-<p>Amid a storm of cheers, Elliott arose,
-straightening his eloquent shoulders as he
-came forward. His blonde face was full
-of eager life when he began.</p>
-
-<p>“Ladies and gentlemen: The unexpected
-compliment paid me by your committee
-has given me the pleasure of addressing
-you to-day. I accept the invitation the
-more gladly inasmuch as it gives me the
-opportunity of telling you that my heart,
-linked to the South by birth, has retained
-its old love in spite of absence and distance,
-and brings me back to my own
-place with a fonder and, if possible, a
-greater and nobler pride in this Southland<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>
-of yours and mine. And, it <i>is</i> a land
-to be proud of. More magnificent a country
-God has never made. It has seen the
-fierce harrowing of war. Gazing through
-the past years my fancy sees the ruin that
-has confronted the home-coming soldier&mdash;ashes
-instead of homes, burnt stubble instead
-of fences, the slaves on whose labor
-he had long depended for the cultivation
-of his fertile fields, with their bonds
-cast off, meeting him as freemen. Without
-money, provisions or even the ordinary
-implements of husbandry, he at once began
-the toilsome task of repairing his fallen
-fortunes. Having converted his sword into
-a plowshare, his spear into a pruning hook,
-he lost no time, but manfully set to work
-to restore his lost estate, and bring a measure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>
-of comfort to the dear ones deprived
-of their former luxuries.</p>
-
-<p>“So it is to the soldier of the ‘Lost
-Cause’ that all honor and praise must be
-given for the present prosperity of the
-land. And it becomes us as heirs of his
-sacrifice and of the fruits of his toil, to
-lend our every effort to the full garnering
-of the harvest.</p>
-
-<p>“As the giant West has sprung up from
-the sap of the East, so must the South rise
-up by strength drawn from the soil of the
-North. What the South needs to-day more
-than any other one thing is an influx of
-intelligent laborers from the North. It
-needs its sturdy folk of industrious habit,
-economy and indomitable energy; it needs
-a more profitable system of agriculture.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>Accustomed as that people is to economy,
-to frugality and to forcing existence out
-of an unwilling soil, if only they could be
-induced to come here in sufficient numbers,
-the country would soon blossom into
-mellow prosperity. And, my friends, I
-want to see them coming&mdash;coming with
-their capital to aid us in developing the
-inexhaustible mineral resources of our
-mines, the timber of our forests, to build
-our mills and rear our infant manufactures
-to the full stature of lusty manhood.
-Our future with all its limitless possibilities&mdash;this
-future which is to warm the great
-breast of the business world toward us,
-this future which shall shower upon us the
-fullness of earth&mdash;is all with you.</p>
-
-<p>“Therefore, with such a vista of promise
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>opening before our gaze, ill would it become
-us to fail in our duty toward ourselves,
-toward our country and toward
-Him who giveth all. Thus it befits us to
-lend every effort to the furtherance of this,
-our future salvation. To those upon whose
-coming so much depends, every inducement
-must be offered. And be it remembered
-that capital seeks its home in sections
-wherein life and prosperity enjoy
-the greatest security under the law. This
-is a conclusion founded on the great law of
-caution, upon which intelligent capital is
-planted and reared. It becomes necessary,
-then, to ask ourselves seriously, ‘Are we
-making every effort to solidify peace and
-order by the protection of life and the
-supreme establishment of law?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I need not answer this question. Circumstances
-have done so for me. The electric
-wire is still hot from flashing to the
-furtherest corner of our Nation, in all its
-revolting details, news of the recent
-awful crime in our sister state.</p>
-
-<p>“I am well aware that in touching upon
-this point I am wounding the sensibilities
-of a people who have been shadowed by
-personal injury and embittered by a
-natural race prejudice; but I feel that I
-can speak the more boldly because I
-touch the matter not as an alien whose
-sympathies are foreign and whose theories
-are theoretical chimeras, but as a southerner&mdash;one
-whose interest is the stronger
-because he is a southerner. My audience
-may refuse to grant the justice of my
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>argument, but it must admit the truth of
-the situation I outline. Whichever way
-we turn the tremendous problem of the
-lynching evil stares us in the face. It
-baits us, it defies us, it shames us.</p>
-
-<p>“Think of it! More than one thousand
-human lives forfeited to Judge Lynch
-form the South’s record for the past ten
-years. What a horrible record! It seems
-almost incredible that such lawlessness
-can exist in communities supposed to be
-civilized. Would to God it were but an
-evil dream and that I could to-day assure
-the world that this terrible condition is
-but the unfounded imagining of a nightmared
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Lynching is a peculiarly revolting
-form of murder, and to tolerate it is to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>pave the way for anarchy and barbarism.
-It cannot be truthfully denied that one
-of the most potent factors militating
-against the progress of this country is this
-frequent resort to illegal execution, and
-before we can realize the full benefits of
-your natural inheritance, your laws&mdash;our
-laws&mdash;must be impartially enforced, property
-must be protected, and life sacredly
-guarded by rigid legal enforcement,
-backed by an elevated public conception
-of duty.</p>
-
-<p>“It is no greater crime for one man to
-seize a brother man and take his life than
-it is for a lawless multitude to do the same
-act. The first, if there be any difference,
-is less criminal than the latter for it, at
-least often has the merit of individual
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span>courage and the plea for revenge on
-the ground of personal injury. But when
-a man is deprived of his liberty by incarceration
-in the jail and thus shorn of
-his power of self protection, it is the acme
-of dishonor and cowardice to wrest him
-from the grasp of the law and deprive him
-of his life upon evidence that possibly
-might not convict him before a jury.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not wish to be understood as saying
-that brave and good men do not sometimes,
-under strong excitement, participate
-in this outrage against human rights
-and organized society, for it is a fact that
-such rebellions are not infrequently led
-by the most prominent citizens, and, from
-this very fact, it is the more to be deplored.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span></p>
-
-<p>“My friends, have you never thought to
-what this practice may lead? Has the
-frequency of mob violence no alarming
-indications for you? Directed, as it more
-often is, against our negro population, instead
-of making better citizens of the depraved
-and deterring them from crime,
-it has a tendency to cultivate a race prejudice
-and stir up the worst of human
-passions. It is inculcating a disregard of
-law because it ignores that greatest principle
-of freedom&mdash;that every man is to be
-considered innocent until proven to be
-guilty by competent testimony.</p>
-
-<p>“Judge Lynch is the enemy of law and
-strikes at the very foundation of order and
-civil government. His rule is causing
-large classes to feel that the law of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>land affords them no protection. The
-courts furnish an adequate remedy for
-every wrong. One legal death on the
-scaffold has a more salutary effect than
-a score of mob executions. The former
-teaches a proper dread of offended law,
-leaves no unhealing wounds in the hearts
-of the living, stirs up no revengeful impulses,
-creates no feuds and causes no retaliatory
-murders. What a field of home
-mission stretches before us! We owe it to
-the South to remove this blot on our good
-name. Let us hasten the day when Judge
-Lynch shall be spoken of with a shudder,
-as a hideous memory.</p>
-
-<p>“This pitiful people, our former slaves,
-if instructed by intelligent ministers and
-teachers, might be delivered from the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>cramped mind, freed from the brutalized
-spirit which causes these crimes among us.
-They are naturally a religious people
-and this principle, which seems to be
-strong within them, under the guidance of
-an earnest enlightened ministry, might
-prove to be the key to the race problem
-find open up a social and political reformation,
-unequalled in modern times.</p>
-
-<p>“Already the negro race is doing much
-for its own advancement and good. To-day
-there are thirty-five thousand negro
-teachers in the elementary schools of the
-South. Six hundred ministers of the gospel
-have been educated in their own theological
-halls. They own and edit more than
-two hundred newspapers. They have
-equipped and maintain more than three
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>hundred lawyers and four hundred doctors
-and have accumulated property which is
-estimated at more than two hundred and
-fifty millions. I note this fact with pleasure.
-It makes them better citizens by
-holding a stake in their community. Let
-us show our appreciation of what they
-have already done by helping them to do
-more.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The strange faces, the new scene, the
-suddenness of the call had shaken Elliott’s
-self-possession, and he breathed a sigh of
-relief as he finished his speech.</p>
-
-<p>The mayor and municipal council
-crowded around him with outstretched
-hands, foremost amongst them, an old man
-with Roman features.</p>
-
-<p>“I was interested in your speech, young
-man,” said he, “but wait until this thing
-strikes home before you condemn our
-code.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right, Mr. Carr, you’re right!”
-cried several voices in chorus.</p>
-
-<p>The old gentleman talked on during the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>intervals of greetings and ended by inviting
-young Harding to his home, where a
-lawn party was to be held that night.</p>
-
-<p>As the volume of general applause lessened,
-the cry of “Holmes! Holmes!” was
-kept up with an insistence which might
-have induced a less capable man to respond.
-Nor would the enthused throng be
-quieted until John Holmes mounted the
-platform.</p>
-
-<p>“It had not been my purpose, ladies and
-gentlemen,” said he, “to address you to-day
-upon the subject touched upon by Mr.
-Harding, but, since he has modestly lectured
-us on our barbarity, I must say a
-word in defense of the South and southerners.
-He intimates that the curse of slavery
-still rests upon the southern states. I wonder<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
-if Mr. Harding knows whether or not
-the curse of slave-trade, which to be accurate
-is called ‘the sum of all villainies,’
-really rests upon Great Britain, who was
-the originator of the inhuman system and
-not upon us southerners?</p>
-
-<p>“The most careful statistics show that in
-the beginning over 19,000,000 Africans were
-imported into the British West Indies and
-so severely were they dealt with that
-when emancipation came, only a little over
-600,000 were left to benefit by it. The
-slave trade was fastened on the American
-colonies by the greed of English kings,
-who, over and over again, vetoed the restrictive
-legislation of the Colonial Assemblies
-on the ground that it interfered with
-the just profits of their sea-faring subjects.
-Is there no work for Nemesis here?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That the system of slavery, as it existed
-in the southern states, was accompanied
-by many cases of hardship and cruelty,
-we freely admit; that its abolition is a
-proper ground for sincere rejoicing, we
-do not hesitate to affirm. But, it is nevertheless
-true, that, looked at in a large way,
-slavery was a lifting force to the negro
-race during the whole period of its existence
-here. The proof lies just here&mdash;when
-the war of emancipation came, the
-4,000,000 negroes in the southern states
-stood on a higher level of civilization
-than did any other equal number of people
-of the same race anywhere on the
-globe.</p>
-
-<p>“As to the mental and moral advancement
-of the negro, we have not done enough to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>render us boastful or self-satisfied, but
-enough to dull the shafts of the mistaken
-or malicious who would convict us of
-heathenish indifference to his elevation.
-We have from childhood had a lively appreciation
-of the debt we owe to the race.
-Nobody owes them as much as we do;
-nobody knows them as well; nobody’s
-future is so involved in their destiny as
-our own. Is it not natural that we should
-help them in their pathetic struggle
-against poverty, ignorance and degradation?</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Harding, in speaking of their progress,
-intimates that these results have
-been reached by their own unaided efforts.
-The fact is that the elementary schools of
-which he speaks are sustained almost entirely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>
-by the southern white people, who,
-in the midst of their own grinding poverty,
-have taxed themselves to the extent
-of $50,000,000 to educate the children of
-their former slaves. The colored churches
-of to-day are the legitimate fruit of the
-faithful work done amongst the slaves
-before the war by white missionaries.</p>
-
-<p>“Two hundred and fifty millions is a
-vast sum. Could a race gather and hold so
-much in a commonwealth where its
-rights are being trampled upon with impunity?
-The question answers itself.
-There is, in truth, no place on earth where
-the common negro laborer has so good an
-opportunity as between the Potomac and
-Rio Grande. Here he is admitted to all
-the trades, toils side by side with white
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>workmen, and is protected in person and
-property so long as he justifies protection.</p>
-
-<p>“As to the statement that one thousand
-have been lynched in the past ten years,
-doubtless Mr. Harding accepts without
-further examination the crooked figures of
-partisan newspapers. But, granting this
-horrible record to be true, it must be acknowledged
-that the man does something
-to call forth such treatment. Along with
-the telling of our alleged bloodthirstiness,
-there should be related the frequency and
-atrocity of his outrages against our homes.
-The south willingly appeals to the judgment
-of civilized mankind as to the truth
-of her declaration that the objects of enlightened
-government are as well secured
-here as on any portion of the globe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That Mr. Harding and his sympathizers
-are actuated by excellent motives, I do
-not mean to question.</p>
-
-<p>“We are as mindful as others of the dangerous
-tendency of resorting to lawlessness,
-but strangers cannot understand the
-situation as well as those who are personally
-familiar with it and have suffered by
-it. It is much to be regretted, of course,
-that lynchings occur, but it is far more to
-be regretted that there are so many occasions
-for them. When the sanctity of
-woman is violated, man, if man he be, cannot
-but choose to avenge it. If the villain
-did not commit the crime for which this
-penalty is inflicted, then we would not be
-inflamed to summary vengeance. The perpetrator
-of this deed, the most heinous of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>all crimes and to which death is often
-added, need not complain when vengeance
-is visited upon him in a swift and merciless
-manner, according with the teaching
-of his own villainy.</p>
-
-<p>“Unquestionably it would be better if
-judicial formalities could be duly observed,
-but the law should make special provisions
-for summary execution when such grave
-offenses occur. Then, too, there is something
-to be said for the peculiar indignation
-which such cases incite. This anger is
-the just indignation of a community
-against a peculiarly vile class of criminal,
-not against a race, as Mr. Harding
-and others have grown to believe and to
-set forth. That it has seemed a race question
-with the south, has been because for
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>every negro in the north we have one
-hundred here.</p>
-
-<p>“Mid the stormy scenes a quarter of a
-century ago, when the bugle called the
-sons of the south to war, they went, leaving
-their wives, mothers, children and
-homes in the hands of the slaves who,
-though their personal interests were on the
-other side, were true to their trust, protected
-the helpless women and children
-and earned for them their support by the
-sweat of their own brow, and with a patience
-unparalleled left the question of
-freedom to the arbitrament of war. Their
-behavior under manifold temptations was
-always kindly and respectful, and never
-one raised an arm to molest the helpless. In
-the drama of all humanity, there is not a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>figure more pathetic or touching than the
-figure of the slave, who followed his master
-to the battle-field, marched, thirsted
-and hungered with him, nursed, served
-and cheered him&mdash;that master who was
-fighting to keep him in slavery. This subject
-comprises a whole vast field of its
-own and if the history of it is ever written,
-it will be written in the literature of
-the south, for here alone lies the knowledge
-and the love.</p>
-
-<p>“Who has taught him to regard liberty as
-a license? Who has sown this seed of animosity
-in his mind? Until they who have
-sown the seed of discord shall root up and
-clear away the tares, the peace and prosperity
-that might reign in this southern
-land can be but a hope, a dream. It is
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>this rooting of the tares, and this more
-surely than anything else, that will bring
-nearer the union and perfect good fellowship
-which is so greatly needed. Sound
-common sense and sterling Americanism
-can and will find a way to prosperity and
-peace.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The sun had set; off beyond the glistening
-green woodline, the sky was duskily
-red. The air was full of that freshness of
-twilight, which is so different from the
-dew of morning.</p>
-
-<p>Elliott left the bran-dance by a new road
-which was plain and characterless until he
-had passed through an unpretentious gate
-and was driving along the old elm avenue,
-a part of the Carr domain, which was undeniably
-picturesque. Shortly the elm
-branches came to an end and he entered a
-park, indifferently cared for, according
-to modern ideas, but well stocked with
-timber of magnificent growth and of almost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>
-every known native variety. Perhaps
-the oaks dominated in number and
-majesty, but they found worthy rivals in
-the towering elms.</p>
-
-<p>Neglect is very picturesque in its effect,
-whether the thing neglected be a ruined
-castle or an unkept tangle. The unpicturesque
-things are those in which man’s
-artificial selection reigns supreme.</p>
-
-<p>Had Elliott’s order-loving mother been
-with him, she would have observed that
-this park was ill-maintained, and that she
-would dearly love to have the thinning
-out and regulating of its trees. Whereas,
-to his less orderly fancy, it presented a
-most agreeable appearance. There was
-Nature’s charm wholly undisturbed by
-man, and what perhaps added the finishing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>
-touch to his satisfaction was the exceeding
-number of maples, in the perfect
-maturity of their growth. These straight
-and goodly trees so screened the house
-that he was very close before it could be
-seen. Even at the instant and before he
-had looked upon more than its gray stone
-frontage almost smothered in Virginia
-creepers, up to the very top of its rounded
-gables, Elliott was pleased.</p>
-
-<p>It was a secluded place. Its position
-was, according to his taste, perfect. It
-had the blended charm of simple, harmonious
-form and venerable age. It faced
-almost southeast, the proper aspect for a
-country house, as it ensures morning
-cheerfulness all the year round, and the
-full advantage of whatever sunshine there
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>is in winter from dawn practically to
-sundown and the exquisite effects of the
-rising of the moon.</p>
-
-<p>Low-growing lilies breathed seductive
-fragrance, and the softness of the air permitted
-the gay party assembled to indulge
-in what would have been indiscretion in
-a more northerly climate. Young girls
-discarded their straw hats and danced
-upon the smooth, green lawn, while elderly
-chaperons could retire to the halls and
-porches if they feared the chill night air.</p>
-
-<p>As Elliott approached the moonlit crowd
-of figures, Dorothy Carr came out to greet
-him. A young woman, tall and slight,
-with a figure lithe and graceful, made
-more perfect by ardent exercise. A skin
-which had never been permitted to lose
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>its infant softness, with lips as pure as
-perfect health and lofty thoughts could
-make them. Her blown gold hair was
-lustrous and soft, and she carried herself
-with the modesty of the gentlewoman.
-Her blue eyes were dark, their brows
-pencilled with delicate precision combining
-a breadth that was both commanding
-and sweet.</p>
-
-<p>“I am delighted to see you again, Mr.
-Harding,” Dorothy Carr said, graciously.</p>
-
-<p>“And I am delighted to be here,” replied
-Elliott, as he turned with his fair
-hostess to a rude seat fixed about the bole
-of an oak.</p>
-
-<p>“It was upon your grounds that we last
-met,” she added after a slight pause.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and I have waited with some impatience<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>
-for an invitation here, which
-came just to-day. You see how quickly I
-accepted.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a dainty reproof,” she said,
-laughing. “But I have been away all the
-summer or you should have been invited
-here long ago.”</p>
-
-<p>A few such commonplaces passed between
-them, then Dorothy referred to Elliott’s
-speech, which she had listened to with
-interest.</p>
-
-<p>“I was so suddenly called upon that I
-did little justice to the subject, and it is
-a subject of such grave responsibility.
-But perhaps it is just as well that I did
-not have time to present it more strongly
-for it appears to have been already misunderstood,
-and I hear that not a few
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>have branded me with all sorts of bad
-names. I trust I have not fallen under
-your condemnation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, to be frank, I think you exhibited
-a somewhat fanatical anxiety to lecture
-people differently circumstanced,”
-she answered gravely. “Yet I did not
-condemn you. I hope you give me credit
-for more liberality than that. You are
-new to our land, and have much to grow
-accustomed to. We should not expect you
-at once to see this matter as we do,” was
-the evasive reply.</p>
-
-<p>“She certainly does not lack the courage
-of her convictions,” he thought. Then
-aloud:</p>
-
-<p>“You evidently think I shall alter my
-views?” this in his airily candid manner;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>“I stated the true conditions of affairs,
-just as I understand them.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is the trouble. The true condition
-is not as you and many others
-understand it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then let us hope that I may fully comprehend
-before a great while. I at least
-intend to make the best of this opportunity,
-for, as you may know, I have settled
-permanently in Georgetown.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked up with a beautiful aloofness
-in her eyes. The brave mouth, with its full,
-sensitive lips, was strong, yet delicate.</p>
-
-<p>“I am glad to hear that, for then you
-can hardly fail, sooner or later, to feel
-as we do about the subject of your to-day’s
-discussion. I hope to help you to think
-kindly of your new home.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Nothing could be more comforting than
-this from you,” he assured her, with that
-frank manner which suited well the fearless
-expression of his face. “I am now delightfully
-quartered with my kinsman,
-Mr. Field, whose acres join yours, I believe;
-so we shall be neighbors.”</p>
-
-<p>Then they laughed. “We are really to
-be neighbors after all our quarrel in the
-mountains? Well!” she added, hospitably,
-“a cover will always be laid for you at
-our table, and you shall have due warning
-of any entertainment that may take
-place. It shall be my duty to see that you
-are thoroughly won over to the South; to
-her traditions as well as her pleasures.”</p>
-
-<p>“But changing this flippant subject to
-one of graver importance, just now; there
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>is one thing absolutely necessary for you
-Kentuckians to learn before you win me.”
-His face lighted with a charming smile.</p>
-
-<p>“What is that?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“You must first know how to make Manhattan
-cocktails.”</p>
-
-<p>She answered with a pretty pout, “I&mdash;we
-can make them now; why shouldn’t we?
-Doesn’t all the good whiskey you get up
-North come from the bluegrass state?”</p>
-
-<p>Amused at her loyalty, Elliott assented
-willingly: “That is a fact. And I like
-your whiskey,&mdash;a little of it&mdash;I like your
-state&mdash;all of it&mdash;its bluegrass, its thoroughbreds,
-and its women. But, you will pardon
-me, there is something wanting in its
-cocktails, perhaps&mdash;it’s the cherry!”</p>
-
-<p>“A fault that can be easily remedied,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>and&mdash;suppose we did succeed, would you
-belong to us?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid I would,” he agreed smilingly.</p>
-
-<p>Here the music of the two-step stopped,
-and Uncle Josh, the old negro fiddler,
-famous the country over for calling the
-figures of the dance, straightened himself
-with dignity, and called loudly:</p>
-
-<p>“Pardners for de las’ waltz ’fore supper!”</p>
-
-<p>Dorothy could not keep the mirth from
-her lips. Uncle Josh was not measuring
-time by heartbeats but the cravings of
-his stomach; his immortal soul was his immortal
-appetite. However, whatever
-motive inspired him to fix the supper
-time, it proved efficacious, and partners
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>were soon chosen and the dancing began
-again as vigorously as ever.</p>
-
-<p>Dorothy and Elliott were not slow in
-joining the other dancers and glided
-through the dreamy measures which
-Uncle Josh, despite his longing to eat,
-drew forth sweetly from his old, worn
-fiddle. He was the soul of melody and
-had an eye to widening his range of selections
-and his inimitable technique appreciating
-the demands upon his art. When,
-with an extra flourish, Uncle Josh eventually
-brought the music to an end, Mr.
-Carr, with his easy Southern manner,
-courteously invited every one in to supper.
-He led the way, accompanied by
-Elliott Harding and Dorothy.</p>
-
-<p>How pretty the dining-room looked! Its
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>half-light coming through soft low tones of
-pink. Big rosy balls of sweet clover,
-fresh from the home fields, were massed
-in cream tinted vases, bunched over pictures
-and trailed down in lovely confusion
-about the window and straggling
-over door frames. Upon the long table
-stood tall candlesticks and candelabras
-many prismed, with branching vines
-twisted in and out in quaint fashion,
-bearing tall candles tipped with pink
-shades. From the centre of the ceiling to
-each corner of the room first, then to
-regular distances, were loosely stretched
-chains of pink and white clovers. Large
-bows of ribbon held these lengths in place
-where they met the chair board. In each
-corner close to the wall were jars which,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span>in their pretty pink dresses of crinkled
-paper held in place by broad ribbon
-sashes, would scarcely be recognized as
-the old butter pots of our grandmothers’
-days. From these jars grew tufts of rooted
-clover. Even the old fireplace and broad
-mantel were decked with these blossoms.</p>
-
-<p>At each side of the table stood two glass
-bowls filled with branches of clover leaves
-only; one lot tied with pink ribbon, the
-other with white. When supper was served
-these bowls were passed around while
-Dorothy repeated the pretty tradition of
-the four-leaf clover. Then commenced the
-merry hunt for the prize that only two
-could win. Bright eyes and deft fingers
-searched their leaves through.</p>
-
-<p>While this went on, in the dining-room
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>just outside, under the moon and the
-maples, near the kitchen door, was another
-scene as joyous, if not so fair. At the head
-of the musician’s banquetting board sat
-Uncle Josh, hospitably helping each to
-the good things Aunt Chloe had heaped
-before them in accordance with the orders
-of “her white folks.” She was considered
-one of the most important members of the
-Carr household, having been in the service
-of the family for thirty years, being
-a blend of nurse, cook and lady’s maid.</p>
-
-<p>As Uncle Josh’s brown, eager hands
-greedily grasped the mint julep, and held
-it sparkling between him and the light,
-with a broad smile on his beaming face,
-he exultantly exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>“De Lawd love her soul, Miss Dor’thy,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>nebber is ter fergit we all. Talk erbout
-de stars! She’s ’way ’bove dem.”</p>
-
-<p>While he and his companions drank mint
-julep in token that his grateful sentiment
-was recognized as a toast to the fine hostess,
-the dining-room was ringing with laughter
-and congratulations over Elliott Harding’s
-victory, he having found one of the
-four-leaved trophies.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is its mate?” was the eager
-question as nimble fingers and sharp eyes
-searched over the little bunches right and
-left again, anxious to find this potent
-charm against evil. The search, however,
-was vain. Some one asked if its loss meant
-that Mr. Harding should live unwedded
-for the rest of his days.</p>
-
-<p>The evening closed with jokes of his
-bachelorhood.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span></p>
-
-<p>By midnight the dining-room was still,
-the table cleared, the only sign of what
-had been was the floor with its scattered
-leaves.</p>
-
-<p>All tired out with the long hours of
-gayety, Dorothy had hurried off to bed.
-There was a little crushed four-leaved
-clover fastened upon her nightgown as she
-lay down to her sweet, mysterious, girlish
-dreams.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dorothy’s father, Napoleon Carr, was a
-man well known and greatly respected
-throughout the south country where he
-had always lived. His existence had been
-a laborious one, for he had entered the
-lists heavily handicapped in the matter of
-education. Intellectual enjoyment, dimly
-realized, had never been his; but he struggled
-that his family might have a fairer
-chance. Much of his comfortable income
-of late years had been generously devoted
-to the education of his daughter.</p>
-
-<p>He had been happily wedded, though
-long childless. At length, when Dorothy
-was born it was at the price of her mother’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>
-life. This was a terrific blow to the
-husband and father. He was inconsolable
-with grief. The child was sent to a
-kinsman for a few months, after which time
-Mr. Carr felt that he must have her ever
-with him. To him there was nothing so
-absorbing as the tender care of Dorothy.
-He was very prideful of her. He watched
-her daily growth and then, all at once,
-while he scarcely realized that the
-twilight of childhood was passing, the
-dawn came, and, like the rose vine by his
-doorway, she burst into bloom.</p>
-
-<p>With what a reverential pride he saw
-her filling the vacant place, diffusing a
-fragrance upon all around like the sweet,
-wet smell of a rose.</p>
-
-<p>He was a splendid horseman and crack
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>shot, and it had been one of his pleasures
-to teach her to handle horse and gun.
-Together they would ride and hunt, and
-no day’s outing was perfect to him unless
-Dorothy was by his side.</p>
-
-<p>It was not surprising, therefore, to find
-her a little boyish in her fondness for
-sport. However, as she grew to womanhood,
-she sometimes, from a fancy that it
-was undignified, would decline to take
-part in these sports. But when he had
-started off alone with dogs and gun, the
-sound of running feet behind him would
-cause him to turn to find Dorothy with
-penitent face before him. Then lovingly
-encircling his neck with arms like stripped
-willow boughs, the repentant words:
-“I do want to go. I was only in fun,”
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>would be a preface to a long day of delight.</p>
-
-<p>In time these little moods set him thinking,
-and he began to realize that their
-beautiful days of sporting comradeship
-were in a measure over. How he wished
-she might never outgrow this charm of
-childhood.</p>
-
-<p>Ah! those baby days, not far past! How
-often of nights the father went to her bedroom,
-just touching his child to find out if
-the covering was right and that she slept
-well. How many, many times had he
-leaned over her sleeping form in the dim
-night light, seeming to see a halo around
-her head as he watched the dimpling smile
-about her infant mouth, and, recalling the
-old nurse saying, that when a baby smiles,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span>angels are whispering to it, took comfort
-in the thought that maybe it was all
-true, that the mother was soothing her
-child to deeper slumber, and so, perhaps,
-was also beside him. All unconsciously
-she had slept, never hearing the prayer to
-God that when the day should come when
-she would leave him for the man of her
-heart, death might claim his lone companionship.</p>
-
-<p>How it hurt when the neighbors would
-says “You have a grown daughter now,”
-or “Dorothy is a full fledged woman.” It
-was not until then that Mr. Carr had let
-his daughter know that it would almost
-break his heart if she should ever leave
-him for another. But he made absolutely no
-restrictions against her meeting young men.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span></p>
-
-<p>Of course this rare creature had sweethearts
-not a few, for the neighboring boys
-began to nourish a tender sentiment for
-her before she was out of short dresses.
-Her playmates were free of the house;
-their coming was always welcome to her
-and encouraged by her father though
-this past year, when a new visitor had
-found his way there, the father took particular
-note of her manner toward this
-possible suitor. The kind old eyes would
-follow her with pathetic eagerness, not
-reproaching or reproving, only always
-questioning: “Is this to be the man who
-shall open the new world’s doors for her;
-who shall give her the first glimpse of that
-wonderful joy called love?”</p>
-
-<p>Yet so truly unselfish was her nature,&mdash;despite<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
-the unlimited indulgences when,
-visiting in congenial homes where she
-was petted and admired, full of the intoxication
-of the social triumphs, she had
-out of the abundance of her heart exclaimed:
-“Oh, I am so happy! happy! happy!”&mdash;there
-was sure to follow a time of anxious
-solicitude, when she asked herself, “But
-how has it been with him&mdash;with dear old
-father?”</p>
-
-<p>It was so generous of him to spare so
-much of her society; so good of him to
-make her orphan way so smooth and fair.
-She could read in his pictured face something
-of the loneliness and the disappointments
-he had borne; something of the
-heartaches he must have suffered. All
-this she recalled, the pleasure of it and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>the pain of it, the pride and joy of it.
-What a delight it was to make her visit
-short, and surprise him by returning home
-before he expected her.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Time went swiftly. The seasons followed
-each other without that fierceness
-in them to which one is accustomed in the
-North. The very frosts were gentle;
-slowly and kindly they stripped the
-green robes from tree and thicket, gave
-ample warning to the robin, linnet and
-ruby-throat before taking down the leafy
-hangings and leaving their shelter open
-to the chill rains of December. The wet
-kine and horses turned away from the
-North and stood in slanting rains with
-bowed heads.</p>
-
-<p>Christmas passed, and New Year. Pretty
-soon spring was in the valleys, creeping
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span>first for shelter shyly, in the pause of the
-blustering wind that was blowing the last
-remnants of old winter from the land.</p>
-
-<p>There was a general spreading of dry
-brush over the spaded farm country; then
-the sweet, clean smell of its burning and
-a misty veil of thin blue smoke hanging
-everywhere throughout the clearing. As
-soon as the fear of frost was gone, all the
-air was a fount of freshness. The earth
-smiled its gladness, and the laughing
-waters prattled of the kindness of the
-sun. When the dappled softness of the sky
-gave some earnest of its mood, a brisk
-south wind arose and the blessed rain
-came driving cold, yet most refreshing.
-At its ceasing, coy leaves peeped out, and
-the bravest blossoms; the dogwoods, full-flowered,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>
-quivered like white butterflies
-poised to dream. In every wet place the
-little frogs began to pipe to each other
-their joy that spring was holding her
-revel. The heart of the people was not
-sluggish in its thankfulness to God, for if
-there were no spring, no seed time, there
-would be no harvest. Now summer was
-all back again. Song birds awakening at
-dawn made the woods merry carolling to
-mates and younglings in the nests. All
-nature was in glad, gay earnest. Busy
-times, corn in blossom rustling in the
-breeze, blackberries were ripe, morning-glories
-under foot, the trumpet flower
-flaring above some naked girdled tree.
-Open meadows full of sun where the hot
-bee sucks the clover, the grass tops gather
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span>purple, and ox-eyed daisies thrive in wide
-unshadowed acres.</p>
-
-<p>“Just a year ago since I came to the
-South,” mused Elliott Harding, as he
-walked back and forth in his room, the
-deep bay window of which overlooked a
-lawn noticeably neat and having a representative
-character of its own.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule, South country places in
-thickly settled regions are pronounced
-unlovely at a glance, either by reason of
-the plainness of their architecture or by
-the too close proximity of other buildings.
-Here was an exception for the outhouses
-were numerous but in excellent repair
-and red-tiled like the house itself. The
-tiles were silvered here and there with
-the growth and stains of unremoved lichens.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>
-There was not an eye-sore anywhere
-about this quiet home of Mr. Field.</p>
-
-<p>Elliott’s intimates had expressed a pity
-for him. Surely this quiet must dull his
-nerves so used to spurring, and he find the
-jog-trot of the days’ monotony an insupportable
-experience. That Elliott belonged
-to the world, loved it, none knew
-better than himself. He had revelled in
-its delights with the indifferent thought,
-“Time enough for fireside happiness by-and-by.”
-His interest in life had been
-little more than that which a desire for
-achievement occasions in an energetic
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of his past association, his
-past carelessness, this moment found him
-going over the most trivial event that had
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>the slightest connection with Dorothy
-Carr. He tried to recall every word,
-every look of hers. Often when he had
-had a particularly hard day’s work, it
-rested him to stop and take supper with
-the Carrs. The sight of their home life
-fascinated him. He had never known
-happy family life; he had little conception
-of what a pure, genial home might be.
-The simple country customs, the common
-interests so keenly shared, the home loyalty&mdash;all
-these were new to him, and impressed
-him forcibly. And how like one
-of them he had got to feel walking in the
-front hall often, hanging up his hat, and
-reading the evening papers if the folks
-were out, and sometimes when Aunt Chloe
-told him where Dorothy had gone, he felt
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span>the natural inclination to go in pursuit of
-her. He remembered once finding her
-ankle deep in the warm lush garden
-grasses, pulling weeds out from her flowers,
-and he had actually got down and
-helped her. That was a very happy hour;
-the freshness of the sweet air gave her unconventional
-garb a genuine loveliness&mdash;gave
-him a sense of manliness and mastery
-which he had not felt in the old life.
-How infinitely sweet she looked! Something
-about her neatness, grace and order
-typified to him that palladium of man’s
-honor and woman’s affection&mdash;the home.
-She appealed to the heart and that appeal
-has no year, no period, no fashion.</p>
-
-<p>Daylight was dying now; he looked
-longingly towards the gray gables, the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>only indication of the Carr homestead.
-Afar beyond the range of woodland the
-day’s great stirrup cup was growing
-fuller. Up from the slow moving river
-came a breath of cool air, and beyond the
-landline quivered the green of its willows.
-Dusk had fallen&mdash;the odorous dusk of the
-Southland. In the distance somewhere
-sounds of sweet voices of the negroes singing
-in the summer dark, their music
-mingling with the warm wind under the
-stars. The night with its soft shadings
-held him&mdash;he leaned long against the window
-and listened.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Whar’s dat bucket? Whar’s dat bucket?
-Here it is done sun up an’ my cows aint
-milked yit!”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Chloe floundered round in a hurry,
-peering among the butter bowls and pans
-on the bench, in search of her milk bucket.</p>
-
-<p>“I’se ransacked dis place an’ it kyant
-be paraded,” she said, placing her hands
-on her ample hips to pant and wonder.
-Meanwhile she could hear the impatient
-lowing of the cows and the hungry bleating
-of the calves from their separate pens.
-Presently her thick lips broadened into a
-knowing smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Laws ter gracious! If Miss Dorothy
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>aint kyard my las’ ling’rin basket an’
-bucket to dem cherry trees. She ’lowed
-to beat de birds dar. Do she spec me to
-milk in my han’? I’m gwine down dar
-an’ git dat.”</p>
-
-<p>Here she broke off with a second laugh,
-and with a natural affection in the midst
-of her hilarity, which had its tender touch
-with it.</p>
-
-<p>“I’se lyin’! I’d do nuthin’ ob de sort.
-If she’d wanted me ter climb dem trees
-myself I’d done it even if I’d knowed I’d
-fall out and bust my ole haid.”</p>
-
-<p>Again Aunt Chloe looked about her for
-something which would do service for a
-milkpail. Out in the sun stood the big
-cedar churn, just where she had placed it
-the night before that it might catch the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>fresh morning air and sunshine. At sight
-of it she looked relieved.</p>
-
-<p>“Well! dis here doan leak, and aint
-milk got to go in it arter all?” So shouldering
-the awkward substitute, she hurried
-to the “cup pen” with the thought:
-“Lemme make ’aste an’ git thro’, I’se
-gwine ter he’p Miss Dorothy put up dem
-brandy cherries.”</p>
-
-<p>Down in the orchard Dorothy was picking
-cherries to fill the last bucket whose
-loss had caused Aunt Chloe’s mind such
-vexation, and whose substitute&mdash;the churn&mdash;was
-now causing her a vast deal more, as
-the cow refused to recognize any new airs,
-and so moved away from its vicinity as
-fast as she set it beside her.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Dorothy heard the sound of a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>horse’s tread, at the same time a voice
-called out:</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, little boy, is this the road to
-Georgetown?”</p>
-
-<p>Elliott Harding had drawn in rein, and
-was looking up through the leaves.</p>
-
-<p>“How mean of you!” she stammered, her
-face flushing. “What made you come this
-way?”</p>
-
-<p>He only laughed, and did not dare admit
-that Aunt Chloe had been the traitor, but
-got down, hitched his horse, and went
-nearer. Dorothy was very lovely as she
-stood there in the gently swaying tree,
-one arm holding to a big limb, while the
-other one was reaching out for a bunch of
-cherries. Her white sunbonnet with its
-long streamers swayed over her shoulders.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>Her plenteous hair, inclined to float, had
-come unplaited at the ends and fell in
-shimmering gold waves about her blue
-gingham dress. Nothing more fragrant with
-innocent beauty had Elliott ever seen, as
-her lithe, slim arms let loose their hold to
-climb down. She was excited and trembling
-as she put out her hands and took
-both his strong ones that he might help her
-to the ground.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose it is tomboyish to climb
-trees,” she commenced, in a confused sort
-of way. “But, the birds eat the cherries
-almost as fast as they ripen, and I wanted
-to save some nice ones for your cocktails.”</p>
-
-<p>A look of embarrassment had been deepening
-in Dorothy’s face. Her voice
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>sounded tearful, and looking at her he
-saw that her lips quivered and her nostrils
-dilated, and at once comprehended
-that the frank confession was prompted
-by embarrassment rather than gayety.
-Remembering her diffidence at times with
-him, he quickly reassured her, feeling
-brutal for having chaffed her.</p>
-
-<p>“It is all right to climb if you wish,”
-he said. “I admire your spirit of independence
-as well as your fearlessness. You
-are a wholesome-minded girl; you will
-never be tempted to do anything unbecoming.”</p>
-
-<p>As he stood idly tapping the leaves with
-his whip, a strange softening came over
-him against which he strove. He wanted
-to find some excuse to get on his horse and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span>ride away without another word. He
-looked off toward the path along which he
-had come. At the turn of it was Aunt
-Chloe’s cabin, half hidden by a jungle of
-vines and stalks of great sunflowers. Festoons
-of white and purple morning-glories
-ran over the windows to the sapling porch
-around which a trellis of gourd vines
-swung their long-necked, grotesque fruit.
-Flaming hollyhocks and other bits of
-brilliant bloom gave evidence of the warm
-native taste that distinguished the negro of
-the old regime. The sun flaring with
-blinding brilliancy against the white-washed
-fence made him turn back to the
-shade where he could see only Dorothy’s
-blue eyes, with just that mingling of love
-and pain in them; the sweet mouth a little
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>tremulous, the color coming and going in
-the soft cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“And a cocktail with the cherry will be
-perfect.” He had almost forgotten to take
-up the conversation where she had left off.
-“But your dear labor has brought a questionable
-reward. You will remember the
-cherry was the one thing lacking to make
-me yours?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes!” her face lightening with a
-sudden recollection. “Now you do belong
-to us.”</p>
-
-<p>“If ‘us’ means you, I grant you that I
-have been fairly and squarely won.”</p>
-
-<p>Dropping his whip, Elliott leaned over
-and took Dorothy’s face between his hands
-bringing it close to his own, their hearts
-and lips together for one delicious moment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Dorothy, we belong to each other,” he
-said, gazing straight into her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>She had been beautiful to him always,
-but loveliest now with the look of love
-thrilling her as he felt her tapering
-wrists close around his neck.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems as though I have loved you
-all my life, Elliott.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if in loving me, the sweetness of
-you, the youth, the happiness should be
-wasted! Shall I always make you happy, I
-often ask myself. I want to know this,
-Dorothy, for I hope to make you my
-wife.”</p>
-
-<p>At the word “wife,” delicate vibrations
-glided through her, deepening into pulsations
-that were all a wonder and a wild
-delight, throbbing with the vigor of love
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>and youth that drenched her soul with a
-rapturous sense.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Elliott! Elliott! You are mine.
-All mine.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Happy weeks! Happy moons! uncounted
-days of uncounted joys! For Elliott and
-Dorothy the summer passed away in
-blissful Arcadian fashion. She was to him
-that most precious and sustaining of all
-good influences&mdash;a woman gently wise and
-kindly sympathetic, an influence such as
-weans men by the beauty of purity from
-committing grosser sins and elevates them
-above low tastes and its objects by the
-exquisite ineffable loftiness of soul, which
-is the noblest attribute of pure womanhood.</p>
-
-<p>There was a bond between these two, real
-eternal, independent of themselves, made
-not by man, but God.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span></p>
-
-<p>With the hope of sparing her father
-sorrow over the fact that another shared
-her affection, Dorothy did not at first tell
-him of her engagement, and Elliott was
-not unnaturally reticent about it, having
-so often heard that Mr. Carr would feel
-it a heavy blow to have his daughter leave
-him alone.</p>
-
-<p>September was now well advanced and
-the equinoctial storms were bold and bitter
-on the hills. Many trees succumbed to
-their violence, broken branches filled the
-roads and tall tree trunks showed their
-wounds. The long blue grass looked like
-the dishevelled fur of an animal that had
-been rubbed the wrong way. There were
-many runnels and washouts trending
-riverward in the loose soil. By the time
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span>the storm showed signs of abating, considerable
-damage had been done. Many
-barns, cabins and even houses were unroofed
-or blown down. Among other victims
-of the wind was Mr. Field, inasmuch
-as the old homestead which he had
-purchased of Elliott was one of the buildings
-wrecked.</p>
-
-<p>It happened that the morning after the
-storm, Elliott was to drive into town with
-Dorothy. As they passed along, they
-noted here and there the havoc wrought.
-Finally, as they approached the old Harding
-place, they saw that the fury of the
-storm had counted it among its playthings.
-Elliott gazed lingeringly and sadly at the
-wreck. Then he stopped the horses and
-helping Dorothy out of the vehicle he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>tied the team and together they went up
-the pathway, looking often at each other
-in mute sorrow. She felt that any words
-of consolation would be out of place while
-the first shock lasted, so kept silent, letting
-her eyes tell of her sympathy. For
-a time they stood and looked at the scene
-of devastation, the ruins covered with abundant
-ivy that gleamed and trembled in
-the light of the sun. Then Elliott said
-slowly:</p>
-
-<p>“My father’s wish is now beyond the
-reach of possible denial. Nature has
-destroyed it, just as he wished it should
-be done.”</p>
-
-<p>Walking about, looking now at this, now
-at that remnant of the wreck, he kept biting
-his lips to keep back the tears, but
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span>the sight was so like looking upon a loved
-one dead, that he could not long keep
-them back&mdash;hot tears came in a passionate
-gush, and he must allow himself relief of
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Business successes eventually rendered
-it possible for Elliott to gratify his
-old ambition about the homestead and
-thinking that the time for action had come
-the next day, when his uncle dropped into
-his office to talk over the storm and its
-destroying of the old homestead, Elliott
-suggested:</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Philip, I have a mind to buy
-that lot from you. Would you sell it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you ask? Are you going to
-get married?”</p>
-
-<p>“If I can ever get the father’s blessing
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span>of the woman I love, I am,” was Elliott’s
-straightforward reply.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Field looked solemn. “I am afraid
-no man will ever get his willing consent,
-if you refer to Mr. Carr,” he remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, never mind, that has no connection
-with this proposition. I have long
-had a desire to do something to perpetuate
-my father’s memory. Since fate has removed
-the house, I have an idea of erecting
-a building and presenting it as an institution
-for the manual education of
-colored children.”</p>
-
-<p>The astonished look on Mr. Field’s face
-gave place to one of admiration as Elliott
-proceeded and he quickly interrupted:</p>
-
-<p>“My dear boy, I am glad to say I have
-anticipated you. The bank has in its
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>safe keeping a deed already made out in
-your name. The property has always been
-and now is yours to do with as you
-please.”</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Philip, you overwhelm me with
-surprise and gratitude,” exclaimed Elliott
-grasping the old man’s hand firmly in his.
-“You are too good to me.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Field rested his face in his hand
-and regarded his nephew with all the
-fondness of a parent. After a pause,
-Elliott continued:</p>
-
-<p>“Since you have so greatly aided me by
-giving me such a generous start, I will
-myself erect the building, but together
-we will make the gift of it in my father’s
-name, and call it the ‘Richard Harding
-Institute.’”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Field showed the warmth of his appreciation
-by grasping his nephew’s hand,
-and together they discussed at length the
-plan of the buildings.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>As Elliott drove briskly home that
-evening, hope pointed enthusiastically
-forward. The two ambitions he was about
-to realize had long been interwoven with
-the whole tenor of his existence. The possibility
-of making a fitting memorial to
-his father’s name had been unexpectedly
-brought about, and following close upon
-this good luck came the gratifying news
-that the book he had been so long at work
-upon had been favorably received by the
-publishers, who were assured not only of
-its literary merit, but of its commercial
-value as well, since it dealt with the popular
-side of the lynching evil, as viewed by
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>the outer world. His subject was at the
-time attracting so much attention and causing
-so many heated discussions, that he had
-hardly dared to hope that his first attempt
-in serious literature would meet with the
-success of acceptance.</p>
-
-<p>When he got home he found his uncle
-looking over the manuscript which had
-been returned to him for final review and
-quietly took a seat beside him to listen to
-his comments while awaiting the supper
-hour.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Field laid the papers on his knee.</p>
-
-<p>“This is very good, as a story. I can
-truthfully say that I am more than pleased
-with it from a literary standpoint. But
-that alone is no reason for publishing.
-This haste to rush into print is one of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span>bad signs of the times. Your views as
-herein expressed are more pardonable
-than reasonable, for they are your inheritance
-rather than your fault.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have been conscientious, am I to blame
-for that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is to blame?” asked his uncle.
-“First, your mother had something to do
-with the forming of your opinions. She
-had the training of your mind at that critical
-age when the bend of the twig forms
-the shape of the tree, and no doubt the
-society in which you have been thrown
-has helped to make you an agitator.”</p>
-
-<p>“Society must then take the consequences
-of its own handiwork. As for my
-mother, I will say in her defense, that if
-her teachings were not always the best, she
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>aimed toward what she considered a high
-ideal.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Field knew there was a deep sincerity,
-an almost fanatical earnestness in
-his nephew, and he respected him none
-the less for it. He was at that critical
-season of life in which the mind of man
-is made up in nearly equal proportions of
-depth and simplicity.</p>
-
-<p>“I see your convictions are real, yet I
-strongly advise you to give more time to
-the matter and make further investigation
-before you give your views to the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“The more I search, the more I find that
-condemns lynching.” Elliott spoke in a
-deferential tone, for despite his own strong
-convictions, the soundness of his uncle’s
-views on other matters made him respect
-his opinion of this.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I wish you would give over reading
-those unprincipled authors, my boy, whose
-aim is to excite the evil passions of the
-multitude; and shut your ears to the extravagant
-statements of people who make
-tools of enthusiastic and imaginative
-minds to further their own selfish ends.
-An intelligent conservatism is one of the
-needs of the day.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am profoundly sorry that my work
-is so objectionable to you. My publishers
-tell me it is worth printing, and as
-evidence of their assurance, they offer me
-a good round sum, besides a royalty.”</p>
-
-<p>“I grant the probabilities of the book
-being a pecuniary success, but there are
-other considerations. You must recollect
-that all your prospects are centered in the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>South, and now the affections of your
-heart bind you here; therefore you should
-give up all this bitter feeling against us.
-As you know more of this race, you will
-find that it is by no means as ill used as
-you are taught to believe. I advise you
-most earnestly, as you value your future
-here, to suppress this book, which would
-do the South a great injury and yourself
-little credit.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Field leaned wearily back on the
-high armchair. He had swayed Elliott in
-some things, but it was clear that in one
-direction one would always be opposed to
-that which the other advocated. They
-could never agree, nor even affect a compromise.
-The nephew was grieved, yet his
-purpose was fixed, and he fed on the hope
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>of one day winning reconciliation through
-fame if not conviction, and in reuniting
-the sister and brother in the mutual pride
-of his success.</p>
-
-<p>With half a sigh Elliott began rearranging
-the pages, when a finely written line
-in an obscure corner of one page caught
-his eye. Holding it toward the light he
-read:</p>
-
-<p>“Are you my country’s foe, and therefore
-mine?”</p>
-
-<p>At her urgent request, he had allowed
-Dorothy to read the manuscript, and had
-been happy in the thought that she had
-returned it into his own hands without a
-word of criticism. As he read this question,
-he felt and appreciated both her love
-for him and her loyalty to her people.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>And, while she had not openly condemned
-his work, he knew he had not her approval
-of its sentiment. He felt a growing
-knowledge that any success, no matter its
-magnitude, would be hollow unless she
-shared his rejoicings.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the quiet meal was done, he
-set out for the Carr’s. Twilight was well
-advanced. A white frost was on the stubble
-fields and the stacked corn and the
-crimson and russet foliage of the woodside
-had the moist look of colors on a painter’s
-palette.</p>
-
-<p>At the window, Dorothy stood and
-watched her sweetheart come. The same
-constancy shone in her gentle face for him
-as ever and her greeting was as warm as his
-fondest anticipations could have pictured.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Have I displeased you? You do not
-share a pride in my work, Dorothy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Since you guess it,” she answered, “I
-may be spared the pain of confessing.”</p>
-
-<p>Elliott was silent for a time, but his expression
-showed the deep disappointment
-he felt.</p>
-
-<p>At length in an undertone, he said:</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t reproach me. Of course you have
-not felt this as I feel it, being so differently
-situated and looking at it from another
-point of view.”</p>
-
-<p>Seeing that he paused for her answer,
-Dorothy replied: “I have considered all
-this. But do you not see what a reflection
-your clever plot is upon us, or what a
-gross injustice it will do the South?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cold facts may sound harsh, but you
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span>will be all the better for your chastening.
-The South will advance under it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I could believe it; the chances
-are all against us. Why did you ever
-want to take such a risk?” and the air of
-the little, slender, determined maiden
-marked the uncompromising rebel.</p>
-
-<p>Elliott deliberately arose. His face was
-earnest and full of a strange power.</p>
-
-<p>“It hurts me to displease you, Dorothy,
-but I must direct my own will and conscience.
-To hold your respect and my
-own, I must be a man,&mdash;not a compromise.”</p>
-
-<p>There was such lofty sentiment in that
-calm utterance from his heart that Dorothy,
-acknowledging the strength of it,
-could not resist the impulse of admiring
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span>compassion and stifling any lingering
-feeling of resentment, she quietly laid her
-hand on his and looked into his face with
-eyes that Fate must have purposed to be
-wells of comfort to a grieving mind. At
-her touch Elliott started, looked down
-and met her soothing gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“If it were not for our mistakes, failures
-and disappointments, the love we
-bear our treasures would soon perish for
-lack of sustenance. It is the failures in
-life that make one gentle and forgiving
-with the weak and I almost believe it is
-the failures of others that mostly endear
-them to us. Do what you may, let it bring
-what it will, all my love and sanction
-goes with it,” she said softly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>October days! The sumacs drabbled in
-the summer’s blood flaunt boldly, and
-green, gold and purple shades entrance the
-eye. The mullein stands upon the brown
-land a lonely sentinel. The thistle-down
-floats ghost-like through the haze, and
-silvery disks of a spider’s web swing twixt
-the cornrows.</p>
-
-<p>Sunday. Elliott remained at home
-until late in the afternoon. While
-he feared the result, he still held to his
-fixed resolve to go that day and definitely
-ascertain what was to come of his love for
-Dorothy. He said to Mr. Field, as he
-started off, “I shall not be back to supper&mdash;I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>
-am going to see Mr. Carr.” His voice
-was hopeful and his face wore a smile.</p>
-
-<p>His nephew’s assumed hopefulness had
-long been more painful to Mr. Field than
-this despondency he sought to cover by it.
-It was so unlike hopefulness, had in it
-something so fierce in its determination&mdash;was
-so hungry and eager, and yet carried
-such a consciousness of being forced, that
-it had long touched his heart.</p>
-
-<p>Dorothy knew the object of this call,
-and when her father came into the parlor
-she withdrew, full of sweet alarm, and
-left the two together. A tender glance, a
-soft rustling of pretty garments, and
-Elliott knew that he and her father were
-alone. He had scarcely taken his chair,
-when he began:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Carr, I have come upon the most
-sacred and important duty of my life.”</p>
-
-<p>“Draw your chair closer, I cannot see
-you well,” said Mr. Carr. “I am growing
-old and my sight is failing me.” And the
-way his voice faded into silence was typical
-of what he had said.</p>
-
-<p>Elliott obeying his request, continued:</p>
-
-<p>“I have had the honor of being received
-in this house for some time&mdash;nearly two
-years now, and I hope the topic on which
-I am about to speak will not surprise you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it about Dorothy?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is. You evidently anticipate what
-I would say, though you cannot realize
-my hopes and fears. I love her truly,
-Mr. Carr, and I want to make her my
-wife.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I knew it would come. But why not a
-little later?” he said, pathetically.</p>
-
-<p>It was so like a cry of pain, this appeal,
-that it made Elliott’s heart ache and
-hushed him into silence. After a little,
-Mr. Carr said, solemnly:</p>
-
-<p>“Go on!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know, after seeing you together from
-day to day, that between you and her there
-is an affection so strong, so closely allied
-to the circumstances in which it has been
-nurtured, that it has few parallels. I
-know that mingled with the love and duty
-of a daughter who has become a woman,
-there is yet in her heart all the love and
-reliance of childhood itself. When she is
-clinging to you the reliance of baby, girl
-and woman in one is upon you. All this I
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>have known since first I met you in your
-home life.”</p>
-
-<p>With an air of perfect patience the old
-man remained mute, keeping his eyes cast
-down as though, in his habit of passive endurance,
-it was all one to him if it never
-came his turn to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Feeling that,” Elliott went on, “I have
-waited as long as it is in the nature of man
-to do. I have felt, and even now feel, that
-perhaps to interpose my love between you
-and her is to touch this hallowed association
-with something not so good as itself,
-but my life is empty without her, and I
-must know now if you will entrust her to
-my care.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man’s breathing was a little
-quickened as he asked, mournfully: “How
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>could I do without her? What would become
-of me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do without her?” Elliott repeated.
-“I do not mean to stand between you two&mdash;to
-separate you. I only seek to share with
-her her love for you, and to be as faithful
-always as she has been; to add to hers a
-son’s affection and care. I have no other
-thought in my heart but to double with
-Dorothy her privileges as your child, companion,
-friend. If I harbored any thought
-of separating her from you, I could not
-now touch this honored hand.” He laid
-his own upon the wrinkled one as he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>Answering the touch for an instant only,
-but not coldly, Mr. Carr lifted his eyes
-with one grave look at Elliott, then gazed
-anxiously toward the door. These last
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span>words seemed to awaken his subdued lips.</p>
-
-<p>“You speak so manfully, Mr. Harding,
-that I feel I must treat your confidence
-and sincerity in the same spirit.”</p>
-
-<p>“With all my heart I thank you, Mr.
-Carr, for I well understand that without
-you I have no hope. She, I feel sure,
-would not give it, nor would I ask her
-hand without your consent.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man spoke out plainly now.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not much longer for this world, I
-think, for I am very feeble, and of all the
-living and dead world, this one soul&mdash;my
-child&mdash;is left to me. The tie between us is
-the only one that now remains unbroken,
-therefore you cannot be surprised that its
-breaking would crowd all my suffering
-into the one act. But I believe you to be
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>a good man. I believe your object to be
-purely and truthfully what you have
-stated, and as a proof of my belief, I will
-give her to you&mdash;with my blessing,” and
-extending his hand, he allowed Elliott to
-grasp it warmly.</p>
-
-<p>“God bless you for this, Mr. Carr,” was
-all that he could say.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Elliott had had a succession of busy
-months, when the case was called for the
-notorious moonshiner, Burr Chester, who
-had killed the sheriff while resisting arrest.
-The Grand Jury had found a true
-bill against him for murder in the first
-degree and Elliott Harding had been engaged
-to aid in the prosecution. It was no
-common case to deal with, and he was
-keenly conscious of this fact. After two
-long weeks of incessant work, a verdict of
-guilty was brought in, but as a last resort
-to save his client’s neck, an appeal was
-taken to the higher courts.</p>
-
-<p>After this Elliott had gone home weak,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>nervous and excited beyond natural tension.
-He spent a restless night, and the
-next morning was unexpectedly called to
-Boston to attend to business that required
-his immediate presence. He went over to
-let Dorothy know of his plans. Under a
-spell of sadness and impulse he said passionately:</p>
-
-<p>“If I left, not knowing that a near day
-was to bring me back to you I could not
-bear it. Our wedding day is just three weeks
-off, and from that time on you are to be
-inseparably mine&mdash;mine forever!”</p>
-
-<p>She clung to him quivering, tears, despite
-her efforts to be strong, escaping
-down her cheek. He held her to his heart
-and soothed her back to something of the
-calm she had lost.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span></p>
-
-<p>Just ten days he expected to be gone.</p>
-
-<p>The intervening time busily passed in
-preparations for the approaching wedding.
-Besides that, Dorothy’s heart had feasted
-upon the letters that had daily come on the
-noon train out of the North. Each afternoon
-since Elliott’s absence, she had been
-to town for the mail, having no patience to
-await its coming from the office by any
-neighboring messenger who chanced to
-pass that way.</p>
-
-<p>To-day’s expected letter was to be the
-last, for to-morrow Elliott would be with
-her again.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, Love! Love! life is sweet to all
-mortals, but it was particularly sweet to
-these two.</p>
-
-<p>After receiving her letter Dorothy
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>started the short way home, singing lightly
-some old love tune. In the deep forest
-around her the faithful ring-dove poured
-forth his anthem of abiding peace.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>John Holmes, the staunch friend of the
-family, had an engagement that evening
-with the Carr’s; so he started out to overtake
-Dorothy, hearing she had gone on
-just ahead of him.</p>
-
-<p>As he hurried along through the coming
-night, the moon’s white beams fell deep
-down in the beechen stems. Now and again
-wood-folk wakened from their dreams
-and carolled brokenly. The spirit of delicious
-peace that pervaded the lowering
-twilight enriched and beautified the
-reverie that rendered the dreamer oblivious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>
-to the present. His thoughts, his
-hopes were far afield&mdash;wandering along
-beckoning paths of the unexplored future.
-The office of prosecuting attorney was only
-the first step. He dreamed of Congress,
-too.</p>
-
-<p>“Why shouldn’t one do whatever one
-wants to do?”</p>
-
-<p>Thus he mused, when suddenly the sound
-of crashing underbrush startled him into
-consciousness of the present and a dark
-outline dashed into the road just ahead
-from out of the dense thicket that lay to
-his left. Before he could collect his scattered
-senses sufficiently to question or intercept
-the excited runner, the man dodged
-to one side, and sped along the road until
-he passed out of sight around an angle of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span>the wood. Holmes called after him to
-stop, but his command was not obeyed.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” he shouted after
-the flying figure; but receiving no answer,
-again he cried:</p>
-
-<p>“Stop, I say.” And this time a reply
-came in the shape of a faint groan from
-near by in the wood. He dashed into the
-darkness of the forest in the direction
-from whence the sound had come, his
-flesh quivering and his breath coming in
-gasps as an overwhelming sense of apprehension
-seized him.</p>
-
-<p>At first the gloom was such that he could
-see nothing distinctly and he groped his
-way forward with difficulty. The moon
-that for a moment had passed under a cloud
-now again shone brightly out, filling all
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span>the open spaces with a play of wavering
-light. He forced himself into the thicket
-from where he again heard a low sound&mdash;writhing,
-twisting his way through the
-thick, hindering stems, and there before
-him, in a little opening, he saw what appeared
-to be a prostrate human form.</p>
-
-<p>He sprang toward it and drew the clinging
-boughs aside to let the moonlight in.
-Then he saw it was the figure of a woman.
-Two ghastly gashes, edged with crimson,
-stained the white flesh of her throat.</p>
-
-<p>The awful meaning of the crime, as he
-thought of the headlong haste of the flying
-man, surged over Holmes. He quickly
-knelt to gaze into her face and as he gazed
-a terrible cry broke from his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Dorothy! Oh, my God!”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span></p>
-<p>Raising the light form in his arms, he
-cried passionately on her name.</p>
-
-<p>The wind sobbed a dirge in the bare
-boughs above, but beside that, all the country-side
-was still.</p>
-
-<p>The girl hung heavy and limp in his arms
-as he bore her to the road. She made no
-answer to his cry&mdash;he felt blindly for a
-pulse&mdash;a heart&mdash;but found none.</p>
-
-<p>One short, sharp gasp convulsed her
-breast as he gently laid her down&mdash;a faint
-tremor passed over her frame, and she was
-dead!</p>
-
-<p>John Holmes looked into her face, distraught
-with agony. The blood drummed
-in his ears, his heart beat wildly; dazed
-and bewildered, a moment he stood&mdash;the
-power of action almost paralyzed. But he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>felt that something must be done, and done
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p>With a superhuman effort he lifted the
-dead girl and carried her toward her home.
-When he reached the door, after what
-seemed an eternity of travel, he waited,
-struggling for composure. How could he
-meet her father and break the news? Seeing
-no one around he slipped quietly in
-and laid the body upon a couch in the
-room which so long had been her own.
-When he entered the father’s room a deep
-calm filled the place. There sat the old
-man in his armchair, his head fallen to one
-side in the unstudied attitude of slumber.
-Upon his face there was more than a smile&mdash;a
-radiance&mdash;his countenance was lit up
-with a vague expression of content and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span>happiness. His white hairs added sweet
-majesty to the cheerful light upon his face.
-He slept peacefully&mdash;perhaps dreaming that
-his child was well and would soon be home.</p>
-
-<p>An inexpressible pity was in his voice
-as John Holmes gently aroused the sleeper
-and told him the mournful truth. He
-would never forget that old face so full of
-startled grief&mdash;that awful appeal to him&mdash;that
-withered hand upraised to heaven.
-Then darkness came before the dim old
-eyes, when for a time all things were blotted
-out of his remembrance.</p>
-
-<p>The truth was so terrible that at first he
-could not grasp it. The moan he uttered
-was inarticulate and stifled. Gently John
-Holmes led him tremblingly to the couch
-where Dorothy lay&mdash;the blood still oozing
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span>from her throat; the dew of agony yet
-fresh on her brow, her dainty nostrils expanded
-by their last convulsive effort to
-retain the breath of life, appearing almost
-to quiver.</p>
-
-<p>A moment, motionless and staring, he
-stood above her&mdash;dead!</p>
-
-<p>Slowly awaking to the awful reality, he
-threw his hands up with the vehemence of
-despair and horror&mdash;then fell forward by
-her side, saying by the motion of his lips,
-“Dead!”</p>
-
-<p>Slowly his speech returned, and he
-reached out one hand.</p>
-
-<p>“My boy, she is not dead. I feel her
-heart in mine, I see her love for me in
-her face. No! she is not dead!&mdash;not dead!”
-his voice fell to a whispered groan.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span></p>
-
-<p>The other tried to stay his tears and to
-reply, but he could only touch her cold,
-bruised hand, hoping that he might grow
-to a perfect understanding of the tragedy.</p>
-
-<p>The father turned his head. His look
-was full of supplicating agony. In a plaintive
-and quivering voice he cried:</p>
-
-<p>“My God! My God! My God!”</p>
-
-<p>Presently John Holmes went away to
-give the alarm. Returning later, he went
-through the dreary house and darkened
-the windows&mdash;the windows of the room
-where the dead girl lay he darkened last.
-He lifted her cold hand and held it to his
-heart&mdash;and all the world seemed death and
-silence, broken only by the father’s moaning.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The news flashed over the country as if
-by the lightning’s spark and by nine
-o’clock the district was aroused to a state
-of frenzied passion. From near and far
-they gathered to the stricken home, till
-in an hour a mob had assembled, vowing
-torture and death to the fiend. A brief
-questioning revealed the fact that the
-Carrs’ cook had seen a negro man pass the
-kitchen door about dusk, and he had asked
-for a drink of water. She would know
-him again, she said.</p>
-
-<p>A fierce yell rent the silence as Holmes
-told of the fleeing man and grim curses
-filled the air, followed by the thunder of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span>hoofbeats as the horsemen dashed away in
-pursuit. On they rode through the darkness,
-galloping where the way was clear,
-and everywhere and at all times urging
-their horses to their utmost, every minute
-pressing forward with increasing rage
-and recklessness. Uphill, downhill the
-searchers went, scouring every nook and
-corner for miles around. Their panting
-horses needed not to be urged. They
-seemed to have caught the same fierce
-spirit that inspired their riders, their
-straining muscles and distended nostrils
-telling of their eagerness and exertion.</p>
-
-<p>The night was going, but the searchers
-had as yet found no trace. If the earth
-had opened and swallowed the one they
-sought, the mystery of his disappearance
-could have been greater.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span></p>
-
-<p>Shrewder than those of unthinking
-haste, the sheriff permitted the excited
-crowd to go ahead, that his plans would
-not be interfered with. Then, with his
-deputies and a bloodhound, he went to the
-scene of the murder. There he found a
-sprinkling of blood on the ground, and
-the imprints of the heavy shoes in the
-moist earth showed the direction which
-the murderer had taken. He quickly
-drew the hound’s nose to the trail and
-cheered him on. The dark, savage beast
-was wonderful at trailing, and had more
-than once overtaken fleeing criminals.
-He sniffed intelligently for a few minutes,
-then gave an eager yelp and plunged
-along the road, made an abrupt turn, then
-struck down through a narrow hollow,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span>deep and dark. The men put spurs to
-their horses and dashed after him, heedless
-of the thorns that tore and reckless of
-sharp blows from matted undergrowth
-and low-lying boughs.</p>
-
-<p>The hound, with his deep guide-note,
-despite their efforts, was soon far ahead;
-his lithe, long body close to the earth,
-leaving no scent untouched.</p>
-
-<p>The trail led through what is known as
-“Robbers’ Hollow,” a ravine that runs in
-a trough through the winding hills, whose
-rugged sides looked jagged and terrible,
-surrounded by a savage darkness full of
-snares, where it was fearful to penetrate
-and appalling to stay. In spite of all, they
-hurried on faster and faster.</p>
-
-<p>Far ahead the pilot note of the hound
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>called them on and they were well nigh
-exhausted when they came upon him,
-baying furiously at a cabin built on the
-naked side of a hill, around which there
-was not a tree or bush to shelter a man
-from bullets, should the occupants resist
-arrest. As the sheriff and his men arrived,
-the hound flung his note in the air
-and sent up a long howl, then dashed
-against the door, which shook and strained
-from the shock.</p>
-
-<p>The sheriff called him to heel and placed
-his men at corners of the cabin. He then
-rapped on the door and repeated it half
-a dozen times before there was a response.
-Finally a man came to the front.</p>
-
-<p>“Who wants me this time of night?” he
-grumbled, in a deep, gruff voice, as he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span>stood in the doorway, his broad chest and
-arms showing strongly dark in the light of
-the lamp he held.</p>
-
-<p>“I do,” answered the sheriff. “Do you
-live here?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“When did you come here, and from
-where?”</p>
-
-<p>“From the other side of Georgetown,
-and I got here ’bout an hour before
-dark.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Mr. Cooley,” whispered a voice
-at his elbow, “it was way arter dark.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sh!” he stuttered, shuffling his feet
-that the men might not hear anything else
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>“What is your name and occupation?”
-resumed the sheriff, calmly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Ephriam Cooley, and I teach school
-ten miles north of Georgetown.”</p>
-
-<p>His speech was not that of a common
-negro, but of a lettered man, and seemed
-strangely at variance with his bearded,
-scowling face.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you a knife? I would like to
-borrow it, if you’ve got one?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, I left my knife in my other
-pants’ pocket.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you’ve got a razor, haven’t you?
-Let me have it,” said the sheriff. “One
-of our men broke his girth and unfortunately
-we have no way of fixing it, as
-there is not a knife in the crowd.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a slight agitation in the
-negro’s manner as he turned to find the
-razor, or rather to pretend to search for
-it. The sheriff pushed in after him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Maybe I can help you find it?” he said,
-as he picked up a coat from under one
-corner of the rumpled bed. A razor
-dropped to the floor. The negro made a
-move toward it, but the sheriff’s foot held
-it fast.</p>
-
-<p>“You need not trouble yourself; I will
-get it,” he said, as he stooped and raised
-it. “Bloodstained? Why, what does this
-mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“I killed a dog,” the negro muttered,
-his mouth parched with terror, his vicious
-eyes shooting forth venomous flashes. “I’d
-kill anybody’s dog before I’d let him bite
-me. Was it your dog?” and he shrank
-slightly away.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the sheriff, “it was not mine,
-but I am afraid you made a great mistake
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>in killing that dog! Come, get yourself
-dressed and show it to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I threw him in the creek,” he said,
-angrily.</p>
-
-<p>“You are under arrest. Come, we are
-going to take you to Georgetown.” The
-sheriff caught him by the arm.</p>
-
-<p>“What! for killing a dog, and a yellow
-dog at that?” He scowled blackly and
-fiercely. “I’m in hopes you won’t get me
-into court about this matter. I am willing
-to pay for it,” he said in a husky voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Very likely you will be called upon to
-pay&mdash;in full, but I will protect you to the
-extent of my authority. Hurry up! we’ve
-no time to lose. It is late and it’s going to
-rain.”</p>
-
-<p>The negro cast his eyes wildly about
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span>him, the last mechanical resource of despair,
-but saw nothing else to do.</p>
-
-<p>Mounting the prisoner handcuffed behind
-him, the sheriff was soon off for the
-Scott county jail, one of the party being
-sent ahead to have the Carr cook in waiting.
-The negro had nothing to say, but
-rode on in savage silence, his head dropped
-forward on his breast.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>A storm was gathering and the sheriff
-thought by hard riding he might reach the
-nearest railway station before it broke.
-He knew his prisoner’s life depended
-upon his getting him to a place of safety
-with all speed. The whole country was
-alive with armed men.</p>
-
-<p>Far off the ordnance of the sky boomed
-as the battle of the elements began. The
-lightning cut the clouds and soon the rain
-came, a dark falling wall. As far as the
-eye could bore into the darkness, only
-one light could be seen. They dared not
-take shelter under the roof of any man.
-So the sheriff and his men rode on through
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>the storm, picking their way as best they
-could.</p>
-
-<p>Drenched and fagged, they reached the
-station only to find that the Elkhorn trestle
-had sustained some damage and in consequence
-delayed the Georgetown train.
-It would probably be three hours before
-the wreck could be repaired.</p>
-
-<p>The position of the sheriff was now
-serious; he could not think of such folly
-as remaining there at the mercy of the
-telegraph wires; he must try to make the
-trip by the river road and that, too, before
-daybreak.</p>
-
-<p>A pint of whiskey was brought from the
-little corner saloon and the party determined
-to start out again. The horses still
-bearing marks of hard riding stood in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span>waiting. As they set off the rain ceased,
-the clouds broke and the moon came out
-brightly. Soon the sheriff thought he
-heard the sound of a gun, the signal that
-the searchers were on his track. They
-quickened their pace.</p>
-
-<p>“We are treed, I am afraid,” he said to
-his companions, and he could almost see
-the mob surrounding them, and their pitiless
-joy after the humiliation of having
-for awhile lost the trail.</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner began to show signs of anxiety.
-Every sound startled him and he
-kept looking expectantly about. The
-men urged their horses and rode on in a
-state of nervous tension to the ford where
-they must cross the river. It was away
-out of its banks. They halted and there
-was a moment’s silence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span></p>
-
-<p>“She looks pretty high. What do you
-say?” asked the sheriff of one of his
-deputies.</p>
-
-<p>The man shook his head forbiddingly.
-To attempt to cross the river would be
-running a frightful risk.</p>
-
-<p>“There goes a gun again.”</p>
-
-<p>It required no longer an effort of the
-imagination to hear it. It was a fact and
-with all the terror that reality possesses,
-the prisoner shuddered, his restless eyeballs
-full of fear rolling wildly.</p>
-
-<p>The sheriff tried to collect his startled
-thoughts and resist the strange certainty
-which possessed him. His own frame felt
-the shudder that convulsed the form behind
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” he asked, once more addressing
-his deputy, “what say you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span></p>
-
-<p>“We’ll take the danger before us,” the
-other answered and, touching their horses,
-they plunged in. Half way across, the
-sheriff convulsively seized his horse’s
-neck for he could not swim. He was
-struggling desperately against the waves,
-clinging frantically around the neck of
-his swimming horse, when he heard a cry:</p>
-
-<p>“Great God, he’s gone!” and turning to
-look behind him, he saw that the negro
-had disappeared into the water. All eyes
-turned toward the spot where the manacled
-wretch had gone down.</p>
-
-<p>The drowning man arose to the surface a
-dizzy moment then sank again as quickly.
-Not a cry, not a word could be heard.
-The river went on booming heavily, its
-hoarse roar rising to a deafening intensity.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>The chief deputy, meanwhile, had managed
-to slip from his horse and float down
-stream, and with a violent swinging movement
-he succeeded in thrusting one arm
-between the negro’s handcuffed ones and
-sustaining him, just as he rose for the last
-time. Supporting him against his horse
-an instant he tightened his hold, that he
-might keep both heads above water. He
-was taking desperate chances against
-tremendous odds.</p>
-
-<p>With an indescribable feeling, the sheriff
-looked on but could render no assistance.
-The swimmer fought hard, but,
-after pulling some distance, it seemed
-clear that he had miscalculated his
-strength. Inch by inch, the two swept
-downward, notwithstanding the almost
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>superhuman efforts of the desperate
-deputy. Gradually his stroke became
-more feeble and he saw the gap between
-them and the bank grow wider, the lost
-inches grew to feet, the feet to yards,
-and finally with utter despair, he thought
-the whole world had turned to water. He
-felt terrified. Exhaustion could be distinguished
-in all his limbs and his arms
-felt miserably dragged. He was going,
-not forward, but round and round, and
-with dizziness came unconsciousness.</p>
-
-<p>The next thing he remembered was an
-awful stiffness in every joint and muscle,
-a scent of whiskey, and the sheriff kneeling
-beside him upon the wet ground, forcing
-the warm liquid through his lips.
-As he gazed about him, he slowly asked:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Did that d&mdash;&mdash;d nigger die after all?”</p>
-
-<p>The sheriff had not time to tell him that
-the negro was safe, for the next minute
-there came a volley of yells and sounds of
-oaths with the dull thunder of rapidly advancing
-hoofbeats, and before either
-man could speak again, a party of armed
-riders reined up in front of the ford.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop! men, stop!” The sheriff’s voice
-was heard eagerly hailing those on the
-opposite side. “You will risk your lives
-to try to cross here.”</p>
-
-<p>The quivering negro, terrified by the
-idea that the pursuers were upon them,
-made an effort to rise.</p>
-
-<p>“My God! don’t let them take me! Don’t
-give me up!”</p>
-
-<p>There was something savage and frenzied
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>in the accent that went with those words.
-He clutched at the sheriff’s knees, his
-eyes became wild and fixed and filled
-with terror.</p>
-
-<p>“We must have your prisoner,” someone
-shouted. “Will you surrender him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet,” was the sheriff’s answer.
-“I deliver him only to the law.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll give him up!” cried a score of
-determined voices.</p>
-
-<p>“Never! Never!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then we will fire on him!”</p>
-
-<p>Like a flash, the sheriff jumped in front
-of his prisoner. “Fire ahead,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>The next instant, there were a number
-of reports. All but one had fired in
-the air.</p>
-
-<p>“Cowards!” yelled the leader, “kill
-’em all!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Look here,” answered one, “that sheriff
-lives neighbor to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re out for the nigger, not a white
-man!” said another. “Wait boys, we’ll
-get him yet!”</p>
-
-<p>The sheriff calmly mounted, forming a
-bar between the rifles and his prisoner
-and rode away, leaving the mob to await
-the fall of the stream. Half an hour later
-they reached the jail.</p>
-
-<p>“Chloe Carr,” the sheriff distinctly
-pronounced her name, as he summoned the
-negro cook, “did you ever see this man
-before?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yas, sah.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you tell me when and where?”</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner made a desperate sign, his
-fiendish face blazing with mingled rage
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>and terror. Wildly he shook his head.
-“She lies!” he growled, with a sudden
-threatening movement. “She never saw
-me before.”</p>
-
-<p>An animal-like snarl came from his
-throat. His face was shining with sweat,
-the veins of his neck were twisted and
-knotted. His body shook with savage
-fear, and the woman trembled.</p>
-
-<p>She said excitedly: “He’s de one I saw
-pass de do’ awhile befo’ Miss Dor’thy was
-found dead. I give him a drink ov
-water.”</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner was in a frenzy now.
-Fiercely he glared like a great black
-beast, caged. The woman saw the officers
-fairly carry him into the cell, but she felt
-less fear than sorrow now, as her heart
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>was full of the memory of the girl she had
-loved and had watched from the cradle-side.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Elliott Harding was coming home&mdash;home
-to Dorothy, and joy was so strong within
-him that it almost touched the edge of
-tears. The rising sun was trying hard to
-struggle out of a bluish haze, as he stepped
-from the train at Georgetown. Nodding
-to a negro driver, he walked to the hack,
-saying, “Drive me to my office, first, then
-you may take me out to Mr. Carr’s.”</p>
-
-<p>The negro cast a glance behind, and
-stammered excitedly, as he mounted to the
-seat:</p>
-
-<p>“Boss, dey’s erbout to mob yo’ man&mdash;de
-moonshiner dat you like ter got hung, I
-reck’n. Dey’s done at de jail by now.”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span></p>
-<p>A mob! A multitude in passion! Anticipation
-of the consequences flashed all
-too plainly upon Elliott Harding. A
-thrill shot through him! He leaped into
-the back, and commanded:</p>
-
-<p>“Drive to the jail with all your might.”</p>
-
-<p>The negro’s white eyeballs rolled with
-swift alarm. He seized the lines, laid on
-the whip and shouted:</p>
-
-<p>“Git up, git up.”</p>
-
-<p>The horses dashed forward and turned
-down the main street, the cumbrous wheels
-tearing up the mud and flinging it to right
-and left.</p>
-
-<p>Elliott’s breath fluttered in his throat.
-A fellow being&mdash;the man for whose conviction
-he had pleaded was in personal peril.
-In law he was against this poor wretch; in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span>humanity he was for him&mdash;humanity has no
-distinctions. He saw but the slaughter!&mdash;the
-struggle!&mdash;the united forces on the one
-side; the lone desperation on the other.</p>
-
-<p>The good horses were doing their best
-now, and with a final lurch and swing
-were pulling up at the jail. Elliott
-bounded to his feet, rushed into the stirring
-crowd, and pushed through the circle
-that was moving toward the door.</p>
-
-<p>Low mutterings, fierce as the roar of a
-wounded lion, went forth as one man threw
-up his clinched hand, from which dangled
-a rope. As if impelled by a single spirit,
-they raged against the jail doors, clamoring
-at the oak.</p>
-
-<p>“Hang him! hang him! Give us the
-keys!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span></p>
-
-<p>The terror stricken criminal heard and
-cowered in his cell, his giant muscles quivering
-in tense knots. He gathered himself
-for the last struggle with a dogged fierceness
-born of savage courage.</p>
-
-<p>“Break down the doors!”</p>
-
-<p>At this command there was a crash and
-commotion below&mdash;and then silence. Suddenly
-a man appeared facing them. He
-held up his hand, and all recognized that
-it was Elliott Harding.</p>
-
-<p>“Fellow citizens,” he cried, his voice
-ringing out over the gathering. “Don’t
-do this thing! This man will die by the
-hands of the law. Don’t stain yours!”</p>
-
-<p>Directly there was a universal hush.
-The crowd stood like stone before the calm
-courage of this remarkable arraignment.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>The men doubting their senses, gazed at
-each other curiously, then they looked at
-Elliott again. With indescribable speed
-a spirit flew from mind to mind, seizing
-them all alike. Then without a word,
-silently, and as though abashed, they turned
-away. Elliott was left alone, surprised at
-his sudden triumph, gazing with a curious
-stare at the frowning walls of the dingy
-jail.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>A half hour before, Elliott had been in a
-delicious reverie passing what were, perhaps
-the sweetest moments of his life. He
-had awakened early from a dream. He
-had dreamed that he felt the touch of soft
-fingers upon his cheek and the beating of
-a loving heart against his, and the memory
-of the ecstasy lingered like some charmed
-spell. Dorothy was his very own&mdash;Dorothy,
-crowned with the beauty which combined
-all of the woman and all of the
-angel. He saw nothing in the world save
-her radiant face. He praised God for giving
-him her love, and the hope of preserving
-that nearest likeness on earth to heaven&mdash;a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>
-home. This sweet foretokening of
-life’s full, ripe completeness had filled his
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>Joyous, enraptured, young, he had
-stepped upon the railway platform at
-Georgetown. From such thoughts to the
-vivid scene at the jail, was an abrupt and
-wild plunge into a whirling abysm. His
-mind was in a turmoil, and he felt the
-need of cooling air and brisk movement to
-regain his composure.</p>
-
-<p>As he set out on foot for the Carr’s, the
-sheriff, relieved from the anxiety of the
-jail attack, overtook him. Laying hand
-on his shoulder, he said earnestly:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Harding, you are a credit to your
-principles. I’m mightily obliged to you.
-When you need a friend, I’m your man.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span>Nobody could have stopped that mob but
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;why anyone else could have done so
-as well.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, because it was known that Miss
-Carr and you was goin’ to be married
-soon. They naturally thought you ought
-to be the man to fix the scoundrel’s sentence.”</p>
-
-<p>Elliott sprang round with such a start
-that the sheriff shrank back instinctively.</p>
-
-<p>“What!” he gasped, “you don’t mean&mdash;you
-don’t mean&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“My God!” said the sheriff. “Haven’t
-you heard?”</p>
-
-<p>“Heard, heard what, man? not Dorothy?
-You can’t mean that it was Dorothy Carr&mdash;what&mdash;what&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span></p>
-
-<p>He stopped, a thrill of terror froze his
-blood.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s true&mdash;too true! Mr. Harding, she
-is dead!”</p>
-
-<p>“You lie! You lie!” Elliott shrieked.</p>
-
-<p>Then in a different tone, he huskily
-whispered:</p>
-
-<p>“Give me the keys, man, give me the
-keys! Quick! Quick!”</p>
-
-<p>It was all that the sheriff could do to
-make him understand that the jailer had
-the keys. A whirlwind of ungovernable
-fury swept over him.</p>
-
-<p>“Good God!” he panted, “The driver
-said the mob was for the moonshiner!”
-His senses reeled; staggering, he leaned
-against a wall near by.</p>
-
-<p>“What shall I do, my God! What shall
-I do!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I advise you to go first to her poor old
-father. They say the shock has pretty
-near killed him,” said the sheriff.</p>
-
-<p>“You are right. I must go to him.”
-Elliott’s face knit convulsively as he
-spoke, crushing back the horror that almost
-paralyzed him. Then the sheriff
-proposed to get a buggy and drive him to
-Mr. Carr’s. As they rode along silently,
-all nature was still and peaceful&mdash;cruelly
-peaceful it seemed to Elliott, as he sat with
-his head inclined, his body shaken with
-deep grief, his breast laboring hard.</p>
-
-<p>They soon reached the hushed, dark
-home. A long trail of blood lay in ruddy
-streaks from the gateway to the door
-where the white crape swayed so gently&mdash;so
-gently.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span></p>
-
-<p>Elliott walked slowly and as if stunned.
-He went into the house, turned and looked
-about him.</p>
-
-<p>The parlor door was slightly open. He
-went in and began to walk the floor&mdash;the
-resource of those who suffer. There are
-instincts for all the crises of life&mdash;he felt
-that he was not alone.</p>
-
-<p>Nervously he unclasped and threw open
-the window blind, then, turning, cast his
-eyes sadly about him.</p>
-
-<p>There sat the old father in a posture of
-dejection, his eyes almost closed. Just
-beyond lay his child! Clasping his hands
-with an expression full of the most violent,
-most gentle entreaty, Elliott uttered a
-piercing cry!</p>
-
-<p>“Dorothy! Dorothy, my little girl, come
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span>back to me! Come back!” And with this
-appeal he sank upon his knees with both
-hands upon his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Elliott! Elliott!”</p>
-
-<p>He raised his head at length and looked
-steadily at Mr. Carr&mdash;this venerable, manly
-face, upon which God had imprinted goodness
-and heroism.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, father,” and leaning forward he
-embraced his white head. Drawing it to
-his breast, his overcharged heart found
-relief in tears.</p>
-
-<p>The intense calm and silence of the
-father’s beautiful, mute resignation finally
-silenced him.</p>
-
-<p>Rigid before the fire, as if it were a
-charmed flame that was turning him old,
-he sat, with the dark lines deepening in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span>his face; its stare becoming more and more
-haggard; its surface turning whiter and
-whiter, as if it were being overspread
-with ashes&mdash;the very texture and color of
-his hair appearing to change.</p>
-
-<p>A sunbeam shot in and faltered over the
-face of the girl asleep. This fair, white
-bride, robed in her wedding gown.</p>
-
-<p>Elliott got up and went to her side.
-He turned away again, and dropped upon
-the broad divan, utterly helpless, hopeless.
-Here he lay face downward, with
-his elbows on the cushions and his hands
-clutching his chin, his sad eyes staring
-steadily. He lay for hours gazing upon
-her face, moving not from the first position
-he had assumed. He took no heed of
-time&mdash;time and he were separate that day.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span>He was neither hungry nor thirsty&mdash;only
-sick at the heart which lay like lead in him.</p>
-
-<p>By and by a long procession was seen
-moving from the house. Six bearers deposited
-their burden. Dorothy’s grave
-had been made beside her mother’s in the
-family burying ground, at the back of the
-garden.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The preliminary inquiry into the case
-of Ephriam Cooley resulted in his being
-held over to the next meeting of the Grand
-Jury, which was yet some months away.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Carr was not left alone in his grief.
-Elliott Harding gave up residence at his
-uncle’s home and went to live with and
-care for him.</p>
-
-<p>Among the neighboring people, there prevailed
-a respect for these two in their distress
-which was full of gentleness and
-delicacy. Men kept apart when they were
-seen walking with slow steps on the street,
-or stood in knots talking compassionately
-among themselves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span></p>
-
-<p>At length the day came when the Grand
-Jury was in session. The absence of witnesses,
-upon which the defense had relied
-to argue the innocence of the accused,
-caused the prisoner’s counsel no little uneasiness
-as the hour for the opening of the
-court drew near. As he paced restlessly
-to and fro in the reserved space before
-the bench, there was a look of anxiety on
-his countenance and a frown upon his
-brow.</p>
-
-<p>When the hands of the big clock pointed
-to nine, the judge ascended the bench and
-took his seat. It was the signal for breathless
-silence, and as if to emphasize this
-silence, his honor rapped sharply with his
-gavel upon the desk in front of him.</p>
-
-<p>The clerk read the minutes of the preceding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span>
-day and took the volume over for
-the judicial signature.</p>
-
-<p>“The case of the State against Ephriam
-Cooley,” called the clerk. “Are both
-sides ready?”</p>
-
-<p>The look of concern grew deeper on the
-face of the defendant’s attorney. He asked
-for a few minutes’ consultation with his
-witnesses and retired into an ante-room.
-Presently the door of this room opened
-and the attorney reappeared. The expression
-of anxiety and suspense had not left
-his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Your Honor,” he said, “the defense
-must ask for a continuance. We had hoped
-to be ready to proceed with the case without
-delay or cost to the state, but a witness
-whose testimony is essential and whom
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>the defense has spared no diligence to
-secure, has failed to appear. Believing
-that the just interests of our client will
-suffer if we enter into trial without this
-witness, we have decided to ask Your Honor
-to continue the case until the next term.”</p>
-
-<p>The audience could scarcely restrain its
-impatience, and the judge found it necessary
-to call for order before stating that
-the postponement was granted.</p>
-
-<p>The courtroom was soon cleared. Groups
-of excited men gathered upon the street,
-their looks indicating sullen anger and
-desperate resolve. The bayonets of the
-militia had been set bristling around the
-jail and their gleam was all that kept the
-crowds back.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the strain upon Elliott Harding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span>
-was telling. He walked erect with
-an effort and spent much of the time alone
-in his office, with his head bowed upon the
-desk, moaning in unutterable anguish.
-His suffering had drained his very soul&mdash;he
-could weep no more. Since the tragedy,
-every hour, every day had been a lifetime
-of misery. Fate had employed his bravest
-deeds for the breaking of his stout
-heart. Unheld, unhindered, he had long
-chosen his road but now he was grasped with
-sovereign indifference while there was
-brought upon him punishment for the insufferable
-egotism of his stubborn contentions.
-This was the bitterest cup he was ever
-called upon to drain, and he was never
-the same after draining it. He was experiencing
-perhaps what the earth experiences<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>
-when it is furrowed with the share
-that the grain may be sown; it feels the
-wound alone, the thrill of the germ and
-the joy of the fruit are not yet come to
-comfort it.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Carr was rapidly growing feeble.
-He was quite shut in. But with every
-fiber of the Carr endurance, he clung to
-life, with every desire intensified into the
-longing to live until the murderer’s trial
-was ended. On this night he sat in a large
-wooden rocker near the window, with a
-pillow at his shoulders. His pathetic figure,
-with its long attenuated frame, testified
-to his rapid decline. The soft south
-wind waved the white locks fringing his
-temples. One shaking hand lay helplessly
-on the arm of the chair, the other
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span>held loose grasp of a remotely-dated
-family monthly. His gray eyes, bright and
-clear in spite of their fine, crape-like
-setting of wrinkles, were absently turned
-to the sky. They kindled as Elliott laid a
-hand gently upon his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“How is my dear father by now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty well,” he answered faintly&mdash;his
-old reply.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s good!” and Elliott tried to smile
-as he sank wearily into a chair.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Carr, noticing how thinly his lips
-fitted about his white, even teeth, asked,
-“What have they done to my boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Done enough, father,” said Elliot,
-starting up and revealing his haggard,
-agitated face. “They have postponed the
-trial.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The coming of October brought the next
-term of court. What seemed an age had
-at last terminated and Ephriam Cooley
-was again brought to trial. His removal
-from the prison to the courthouse was
-without incident. The prisoner was
-guarded in the most thorough manner
-against possible molestation. The regular
-police guards were reinforced by deputies
-sworn in by the sheriff, and the vicinity
-of the court had, in consequence, the appearance
-of an armed camp.</p>
-
-<p>Police were stationed at every approach
-as well as in the hall and every preparation
-had been made to quell instantly any
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span>attempt at lawless interference with the
-ordinary course of law.</p>
-
-<p>When the doors opened, the waiting
-crowd was allowed to enter and in a few
-minutes all the available space within
-the courtroom was densely packed.</p>
-
-<p>The judge took his seat.</p>
-
-<p>Ephriam Cooley entered between two
-officers, handcuffed, his bold, insulting
-eyes wearing a look of sullen defiance,
-his unkempt beard lending more than ever
-an animal look to his face.</p>
-
-<p>The selection of the jury occupied the
-greater portion of the morning, but at
-length twelve citizens were impaneled and
-listened to the reading of the indictment.</p>
-
-<p>The temper of the people might be seen
-in the burst of rage that swept over the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>crowd when the atrocious deed was described.</p>
-
-<p>Elliott Harding, with his usual aspect of
-dignity, had schooled his face into a cold
-passiveness, but though outwardly calm,
-his pulse was throbbing with the fierceness
-of fever beats. A stranger entering
-the courtroom would never have selected
-him from the group of men as the one
-whose life had been crushed out by the
-object of this trial.</p>
-
-<p>When the reading was finished, the witnesses
-for the state were called. The first
-name which rang through the courtroom
-was that of John Holmes. The prisoner
-drew himself together and watched him
-keenly as the oath was administered; his
-face, despite its defiant mask, had a restless,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span>
-haunted look which sat strangely on
-his hard, grim features.</p>
-
-<p>Skillfully aided by questions from the
-court, Holmes unfolded the whole awful
-story of the first discovery of the dead
-body of Dorothy Carr. Passing rapidly
-over the painful details, the sheriff told
-then of the man-hunt, of the finding of the
-bloody razor as it had dropped from the
-pocket of the prisoner’s coat.</p>
-
-<p>The negro cook of the Carrs swore that
-the prisoner was the man to whom she had
-given a drink of water about half an hour
-before her mistress had been brought
-home.</p>
-
-<p>Toward the close of the State’s evidence,
-the chain binding the prisoner to the gallows
-had become all but complete. In
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>the face of such evidence and in the atmosphere
-of such bitter resentment, the
-counsel appointed for his defense struggled
-against overwhelming odds.</p>
-
-<p>He contented himself with belittling the
-value of circumstantial evidence adduced
-by the prosecution, and presenting the
-argument that the prisoner’s education
-and his social position as a school teacher
-attested to his inability to commit a crime
-so revolting in its conception and so brutal
-in its execution. He stated that the woman
-at whose house the prisoner had been
-arrested, had repeatedly said that he had
-been at her house, some fifteen miles away
-from the scene of the crime, at the very
-hour the deed was said to have been committed,
-that she would testify to that statement<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>
-here if she had not moved away and
-could not now be located. Whatever effect
-the counsel thus produced was more
-than neutralized when the prisoner was
-called to the stand for a specious denial.</p>
-
-<p>The sinister fear with which the negro
-peered about the courtroom, the affected
-nonchalance and thinly veiled defiance of
-his mumbled answers told damningly
-against him. The passions of raging fear
-and terror had driven from his low-browed
-face every trace of intellectuality
-or culture, leaving only the cunning
-cruelty and ferocity of the animal. His
-cross-examination left him without a vestige
-of self control, and before it had well
-finished, in a violent passion he poured
-forth a volley of oaths, his huge frame
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span>quivering as he burst into a raving,
-shrieking arraignment of the white man,
-in which he had to be almost throttled
-into silence by the deputies.</p>
-
-<p>When the prosecuting attorney arose to
-review the case, there hung over the
-courtroom the ominous hush that is significant
-of but one thing. After a brief recital
-of the details of the evidence, the
-counsel appealed to the jury to do its
-sworn duty.</p>
-
-<p>The judge’s charge was a cool, impartial
-exposition of the law as it applied to the
-case. When finished, the jury arose amid
-a general movement of relief upon the
-part of the audience and as the twelve
-men filed out, there was considerable excited
-conversation, mingled with whispered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span>
-speculations as to how long they
-would be out. Within the courtroom
-proper, as soon as the jury had retired,
-the Court instructed the sheriff to announce
-a recess.</p>
-
-<p>A half hour passed and there was a commotion
-in the outer hall. The sheriff wore
-an agitated air. Presently, one by one,
-a half-dozen men walked inside the railing
-and dropped carelessly into chairs.</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner looked at his new companions
-and evidently read aright their
-mission. They were deputy sheriffs. Four
-of them sat in chairs ranged behind the
-prisoner and one sat at either side of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Directly across the aisle sat Elliott
-Harding, apparently cool and patient.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span></p>
-
-<p>Very soon it became generally known
-that a verdict had been reached.</p>
-
-<p>During the next five minutes, the rooms
-filled rapidly. The sheriff rapped for
-order and shouted:</p>
-
-<p>“Let everyone within the courtroom
-sit down.”</p>
-
-<p>From that moment the stillness of death
-prevailed. Every eye was turned toward
-the prisoner. His fingers worked convulsively
-and his whole body trembled.
-But few seconds elapsed before the twelve
-men slowly and gravely filed into their
-places.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you reached a verdict, gentlemen?”
-asked the Court, as they lined up.</p>
-
-<p>“We have, Your Honor,” answered the
-foreman.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Court then announced: “I want
-everyone to understand that the least attempt
-at an expression of approval or disapproval
-of this verdict, as it is read,
-will be punished by a fine for contempt.
-Mr. Clerk, read the verdict.”</p>
-
-<p>The clerk obeyed. His voice was clear
-and everyone heard: “We, the jury, agree
-and find the defendant, Ephriam Cooley,
-guilty of the murder of Dorothy Carr, and
-fix his punishment at death.”</p>
-
-<p>Elliott Harding quietly left the scene,
-feeling already a lightening of the intolerable
-load which had so long weighed
-upon him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Carr, who had been slowly succumbing
-to his great grief, was ill the closing
-day of the trial. Dragging heavily through
-an existence that was not life, he was but
-a wraith of his former self. Waiting patiently,
-submitting with lifted head to the
-law’s justice. When he was told of the
-doom of Cooley, he seemed hardly to hear
-it, and he made no comment. It seemed
-now as if little else of life remained
-and yet occasional incoherent phrases
-showed the signs of some duty neglected
-and weighing heavily on the wandering
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>One morning, Elliott, seeing the longing
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span>visibly reflected on the old man’s countenance,
-asked:</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, father? Is there anything I
-can do?” And he laid his face to the
-withered palm of the outstretched hand.
-The sick man suddenly seemed to realize
-that his reason was abandoning him, and
-he made a supreme effort to collect his
-ideas and frame them into coherent speech.</p>
-
-<p>“Help me!” he said piteously. Then
-turning his head toward the window
-where he could see the grave so lately
-made for Dorothy, his worn face quivered
-and the big, slow tears ran down his furrowed
-cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it something of her you would
-say?” Elliott inquired.</p>
-
-<p>But the aged lips made no answer. For
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>a time Elliott sat beside him, silent. Suddenly
-the old face lighted. Lifting up his
-sorrowful eyes, he said:</p>
-
-<p>“It has come, Elliott&mdash;my will! I have
-left everything to you, and, don’t forget
-Chloe.”</p>
-
-<p>Then once again, the look of blank abstraction
-spread over his features and he
-sank into a state of collapse as if the effort
-to think had exhausted his share of
-vitality.</p>
-
-<p>Elliott and his neighbors stood by and
-saw him grow feebler, his breath fainter.
-The old and eternal Mother Nature was
-silently slipping her pitying arms around
-her tired child. Presently the uncomplaining
-eyes were to be dimmed and the
-lips silenced forever. And as the end
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span>came, peacefully and quietly, Elliott forgot
-all&mdash;himself, his heartbreak, his
-wrath, forgot everything in the realization
-of the peace, the rest now possessing
-this long tired soul.</p>
-
-<p>The memory of the past swept over
-him. He recalled all that Dorothy had
-been to her father from the time when she
-had first stretched out her baby arms to
-him, all the little ways by which she had
-brought back his youth and made his
-house home, and his heart soft again.</p>
-
-<p>Two days later, all that was mortal of
-Napoleon Carr lay prone and cold in a
-new grave. He himself had chosen the
-spot between the two mounds, over which
-the grass lay in long windrows above his
-wife and child.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span></p>
-
-<p>Chloe was faithful to the end and was
-there when death darkened the eyes of her
-master.</p>
-
-<p>She was given the home she then lived
-in and ample provision for its maintenance.</p>
-
-<p>The Carr homestead was closed and
-Elliott went again to live with his uncle,
-Mr. Field.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The day set by the court, upon which
-Ephriam Cooley was to pay the penalty
-for the crime of which he had been adjudged
-guilty, was the thirteenth of June.</p>
-
-<p>Long before that time, the colored population
-had been aroused to a lively interest
-in their convicted brother. There was
-a movement on foot to make a fight for his
-life. The negroes had gained the idea that
-the evidence of the woman at whose house
-Cooley had been arrested, and who could
-not be found to give evidence at the trial,
-would have cleared him. It was now
-rumored that she had been located away
-up in the East Kentucky mountains, where
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span>she had moved the year before. This story
-flew like thistle-down in the wind. Negro
-petitions were got up calling for mercy
-and commutation and were poured in upon
-the governor from all parts of the state.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes it was rumored that the governor
-would commute the sentence to
-penal servitude for life. Then the rumor
-was contradicted, and so it went on. The
-governor had an eye to his own reelection
-and it was the current belief that he was
-not averse to doing that which might
-further the ends of his own ambition.</p>
-
-<p>It was well on in June and up to this
-time the governor had arrived at no decision,
-or if he had, had given no indication
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>Elliott was almost prostrate, the prey
-of a long drawn agony. This effort to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span>soften the sentence weighed upon his weak
-nerves so that the phantom silence of his
-nights had been peopled by visions. His
-life became one oppression and a terror,
-and rest a thing never to be his. Again
-and again, amid the whirl of memory, he
-pressed the sad accusing words, “Are you
-my country’s foe and therefore mine?”
-upon the inward wound, tasting, cherishing
-the smart of them.</p>
-
-<p>He no longer had opinions: his opinions
-had become sympathies.</p>
-
-<p>There had come a day when, in his room
-alone, he took a pile of manuscript from
-his desk and looked at it long and hard,
-then held it to a blaze and watched it burn
-to a charred tissue on the hearthstone.
-It was his book.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Tuesday, June the twenty-ninth, was an
-Eastwind day and it had nearly ended
-when Elliott Harding met the sheriff and
-inquired:</p>
-
-<p>“Any news from the governor?”</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head as he answered: “And
-none likely to come.” Taking out a silver
-watch he added: “The hanging is set for
-eleven o’clock to-morrow morning.
-Umph! This is tough work.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall breathe more freely to-morrow,”
-was Elliott’s comment, as he passed
-on.</p>
-
-<p>A little further down he met John
-Holmes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I was just going to your office,” said
-Holmes almost tenderly.</p>
-
-<p>Being near that place, they locked arms
-and went silently together. When they
-were seated, Holmes broke the silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Has any reprieve come yet?” he said
-abruptly as a man plunges into a critical
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I am glad to say!” and the lined
-face that lifted to the other was worn,
-the eyes strained and bloodshot.</p>
-
-<p>“Holmes, I have been thinking of my
-old views. God knows I have had time to
-think and cause to think! I am appreciating
-now the problem you of the South
-could not solve.” His voice grew unsteady.</p>
-
-<p>“Harding, I am sorry for you. You
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span>have suffered greatly. It is useless to attempt
-to convey in words what the South
-has long endured, but I believe she is on
-the point of struggling from beneath the
-crushing burden that weighs her down.
-A time will come when our southern governors
-will order a special term of Superior
-Court to try speedily a criminal
-and invariably fix the death penalty for
-the offense which is largely responsible
-for lynching. How much graver, deeper,
-more human now, must seem to you our
-tragedies and our defense. We would indeed
-welcome a worthier mode or the
-day when there will be no such tragedies.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>That night as the sheriff and his family
-sat in their lighted room, a man outside
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span>kept patient tryst, every fiber of his being
-directly concerned in the slightest
-movement or sound.</p>
-
-<p>As the night wore on and no one entered
-the door, his soul illumined with hope and
-seemed loosening itself from pain and
-desire.</p>
-
-<p>Presently there was a sound, a sight that
-startled him. A messenger was at the door
-holding a yellow slip. The sheriff came
-out rubbing his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” he asked sleepily.</p>
-
-<p>“A reprieve! A reprieve!”</p>
-
-<p>Holding it to the lamp in the hall, the
-sheriff read:</p>
-
-<p>“Sheriff of Scott County, Georgetown,
-Ky.&mdash;Ephriam Cooley’s sentence commuted
-to life imprisonment. Hurry prisoner
-to Frankfort. &mdash;&mdash;, Governor.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span></p>
-
-<p>The sheriff hastily pencilled an answer
-and sent the boy speeding back.</p>
-
-<p>“Hitch the horse!” he called to his man.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh my God!” In that supreme cry,
-hope quivered in its death throb. Elliott
-Harding received the lance thrust of despair.
-He stood defenseless: alone with
-Destiny.</p>
-
-<p>All was done quietly and swiftly. The
-sleeping town knew nothing of the change.</p>
-
-<p>As the midnight train whistled in the
-distance, the sheriff with his handcuffed
-prisoner stepped from behind his sweating
-horse onto the empty platform. When
-the iron monster, like a great strong
-savior came rushing in, the criminal
-looked as if he could have embraced it.
-It was a thing of life to him.</p>
-
-<p>One or maybe two drowsy travelers
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span>shook themselves and scrambled to the
-platform. The sheriff and his man lost no
-time in seating themselves. The murderer
-was within a hair’s breadth of safety.
-The engine was ready to start. Snorting,
-trembling, as if in frightened pain, she
-moved off slowly, slowly.</p>
-
-<p>There was a sudden rush and speeding
-through the darkness; an unkempt figure,
-running staggeringly as though in exhaustion,
-leaped to the platform and pursued
-the moving train. A sudden flash, a
-sharp report, and Ephriam Cooley fell
-back dead, shot through the heart.</p>
-
-<p>By the time the train had drawn back
-to the station, the platform was deserted;
-only the shrouding mists of blue smoke
-remained.</p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">THE END.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="adblock"><div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak"><b>Neely’s Tourist Library.</b></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center no-indent"><b>PRICE, &mdash; TEN CENTS.</b><br />
-<i>Entered as second-class matter.</i></p>
-
-<p>Mr. F. Tennyson Neely presents a new library
-of unusual merit, containing standard works
-published in a form that has never been equaled.
-<span class="smcap">Neely’s Tourist Library</span> has jumped into popularity
-from the start among travelers and all readers of fiction,
-so that no shrewd dealer need hesitate about making a
-heavy order and filling out a standing order for each
-weekly issue, a list of which follows:</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE WHITE COMPANY. By A. Conan Doyle.</b><br />
-<b>THE DEEMSTER. By Hall Caine.</b><br />
-<b>A ROMANCE OF TWO WORLDS. By Marie Corelli.</b><br />
-<b>TREASURE ISLAND. By Robert L. Stevenson.</b><br />
-<b>THE SIGN OF THE FOUR. By A. Conan Doyle.</b><br />
-<b>KIDNAPPED. By Robert L. Stevenson.</b><br />
-<b>THE BONDMAN. By Hall Caine.</b><br />
-<b>MICAH CLARK. By A. Conan Doyle.</b><br />
-<b>SPORT ROYAL. By Anthony Hope.</b><br />
-<b>THE MAN IN BLACK. By Stanley J. Weyman.</b><br />
-<b>UNCLE TOM’S CABIN. By Mrs. Stowe.</b><br />
-<b>BEYOND THE CITY. By A. Conan Doyle.</b></p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">A NEW ISSUE EVERY WEEK.</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="adblock"><div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak"><b>Neely’s Library of
-Choice Literature.</b></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center no-indent"><b>Paper,&mdash;Fifty Cents.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE EMBASSY BALL.</b> By Virginia Rosalie Coxe.<br />
-<b>TRUE TO THEMSELVES.</b> By Alex. J. C. Skene, M.D., LL.D.<br />
-<b>THE RASCAL CLUB.</b> By Julius Chambers.
-Fully Illustrated by J. P. Burns.<br />
-<b>ISIDRA, THE PATRIOT DAUGHTER OF
-MEXICO.</b> By Willis Steell.<br />
-<b>THE MILLS OF GOD.</b> By Helen Davies.
-Author of “Reveries of a Spinster.”<br />
-<b>PETRONILLA, THE SISTER.</b>
-By Emma Homan Thayer. Fully Illustrated.<br />
-<b>URANIA.</b> By Camille Flammarion.
-Profusely Illustrated with half-tone engravings.<br />
-<b>A GARRISON TANGLE.</b> Capt. Chas. King.<br />
-<b>FORT FRAYNE.</b> By Capt. Chas. King.<br />
-
-<span class="styleb">
-<b>A SON OF MARS.</b><br />
-<b>A BAR SINISTER.</b><br />
-<b>A GODDESS OF AFRICA.</b><br />
-<b>MASKED IN MYSTERY.</b><br />
-<b>HER RESCUE FROM THE TURKS.</b></span>
- <span class="stylea">
- <img style="height: 5.4em;
- width: .75em;
- text-align: left;
- vertical-align: middle;
- display: inline;"
- alt="}"
- src="images/bracket.jpg" /></span>
- <!-- adjust height in ems to fit; create image of a left bracket to use and place in the images folder,
- and height and width will stretch as needed -->
- <span class="stylec">
- By St. George<br />
- Rathborne,<br />
- <span class="smaller">Author of<br />
- Dr. Jack.</span></span><br />
-<b>MARJORY MOORE’S LOVERS.</b> By Adeline Sergeant.<br />
-<b>A BACHELOR OF PARIS.</b> J. W. Harding.
-Fully Illustrated by William Hofaker.<br />
-<b>BILL NYE’S REMARKS.</b> 150 Illustrations.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="adblock"><div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak"><b>Neely’s Library of
-Choice Literature.</b></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The following Copyrighted Novels, published at <b>50c.</b>
-per copy, are now sold at <b>25c</b> each.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>MISS DEVEREUX OF THE MARIQUITA.</b> By R. H. Savage.<br />
-<b>FACING THE FLAG.</b> By Jules Verne.<br />
-<b>HOW WOMEN LOVE.</b> By Max Nordau.<br />
-<b>IN THE OLD CHATEAU.</b> By Richard Henry Savage.<br />
-<b>SOME WOMEN AND A MAN.</b> By William J. Locke.<br />
-<b>A DAUGHTER OF JUDAS.</b> By Richard Henry Savage.<br />
-<b>THE LAND OF PROMISE.</b> By Paul Bourget.<br />
-<b>THE FLYING HALCYON.</b> By Richard Henry Savage.<br />
-<b>THE CHARLATAN.</b> By R. Buchanan and Henry Murray.<br />
-<b>THE PRINCESS OF ALASKA.</b> By Richard Henry Savage.<br />
-<b>THE ANARCHIST.</b> By Richard Henry Savage.<br />
-<b>A DAUGHTER OF THE KING.</b> By Alien.<br />
-<b>FOR LIFE AND LOVE.</b> By Richard Henry Savage.<br />
-<b>A MONK OF CRUTA.</b> By E. Phillips Oppenheim.<br />
-<b>LIFE AND SERMONS OF DAVID SWING.</b><br />
-<b>THE MASKED VENUS.</b> By Richard Henry Savage.<br />
-<b>THE FALLEN RACE.</b> By Austyn Granville.<br />
-<b>A YOUNG LADY TO MARRY, and other French Stories.</b><br />
-<b>SWEET DANGER.</b> By Ella Wheeler Wilcox.<br />
-<b>THE SPIDER OF TRUXILLO.</b> By Richard Henry Savage.<br />
-<b>HAWAIIAN LIFE.</b> By Charles Warren Stoddard.<br />
-<b>AFTER MANY YEARS&mdash;Poems.</b> By R. H. Savage.<br />
-<b>IN THE DAY OF BATTLE.</b> By J. A. Steuart.<br />
-<b>CAMPAIGNS OF CURIOSITY.</b> By E. L. Banks.</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="adblock"><div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak"><b>Neely’s Popular Library.</b></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center no-indent"><b>Paper &mdash; Twenty-five Cents.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>IN STRANGE COMPANY. By Guy Boothby.</b>
-(With full-page half-tone Illustrations.)<br />
-<b>RENTED&mdash;A HUSBAND.</b> By Voisin.<br />
-<b>THE NEW MAN AT ROSSMERE</b>
-By Mrs. J. H. Walworth.<br />
-<b>A WOMAN’S MISTAKE, or, ON A MARGIN.</b>
-By Julius Chambers.<br />
-<b>THE ONE TOO MANY.</b> By Mrs. Lynn Linton.<br />
-<b>THE FAT AND THE THIN.</b> By Emile Zola.<br />
-<b>AT MARKET VALUE.</b> By Grant Allen.<br />
-<b>RACHEL DENE.</b> By Robert Buchanan.<br />
-<b>THE MINOR CHORD.</b> By J. M. Chapple.<br />
-<b>BOSS BART.</b> By J. M. Chapple.<br />
-<b>THE GATES OF DAWN.</b> Fergus Hume.<br />
-<b>NANCE, A KENTUCKY BELLE.</b> By Greene.<br />
-<b>BITTER FRUITS.</b> By M. Caro. (Fully Illustrated.)<br />
-<b>ARE MEN GAY DECEIVERS?</b>
-By Mrs. Frank Leslie.<br />
-<b>NYE AND RILEY’S WIT AND HUMOR.</b><br />
-<b>BILL NYE’S SPARKS.</b><br />
-<b>LOVE AFFAIRS OF A WORLDLY MAN.</b>
-By Maibelle Justice.<br />
-<b>LOVE LETTERS OF A WORLDLY WOMAN.</b>
-By Mrs. W. K. Clifford.<br />
-<b>WAS IT SUICIDE?</b> By Ella Wheeler Wilcox.<br />
-<b>CLAUDEA’S ISLAND.</b> By Esme Stuart.<br />
-<b>WEBSTER’S PRONOUNCING DICTIONARY.</b>
-(Illustrated.) 350 Pages.<br />
-<b>THE DISAPPEARANCE OF MR. DERWENT.</b>
-By Thomas Cobb.<br />
-<b>SACRIFICED LOVE.</b> By Alphonse Daudet.<br />
-<b>THE MAHARAJAH’S GUEST.</b> By Indian Exile.<br />
-<b>THE LAST OF THE VAN SLACKS.</b>
-By Edward S. Van Zile.<br />
-<b>MARK TWAIN, HIS LIFE AND WORK.</b><br />
-<b>THE MAJOR IN WASHINGTON.</b><br />
-<b>SOCIAL ETIQUETTE.</b> By Emily S. Bouton.</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="adblock"><div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak"><b>Neely’s Popular Library.</b></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center no-indent"><b>Paper &mdash; Twenty-five Cents.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>ODD FOLKS.</b> By Opie Read.<br />
-<b>A MOUNTAIN OF GOLD.</b> By Willis Steell.<br />
-<b>ONE OF EARTH’S DAUGHTERS.</b> Ellen Roberts.<br />
-<b>THE PASSING OF ALIX.</b> By Mrs. Marjorie Paul.<br />
-<b>LUNAR CAUSTIC.</b> By Charles H. Robinson.<br />
-<b>THE PALMETTO.</b> By F. S. Heffernan.<br />
-<b>IMOLA.</b> By F. S. Heffernan.<br />
-<b>UTOPIA.</b> By Frank Rosewater.<br />
-<b>BLACK FRIDAY.</b> By Thomas B. Connery.<br />
-<b>ALL THE DOG’S FAULT.</b> By Thos. B. Connery.<br />
-<b>THE MALACHITE CROSS.</b> By Frank Norton.<br />
-<b>A FASCINATING SINNER.</b> By Delta.<br />
-<b>HYPNOTISM.</b> By Jules Claretie.<br />
-<b>KERCHIEFS TO HUNT SOULS.</b> Amelia Fytche.<br />
-<b>THE FORTUNES OF MARGARET WELD.</b>
-By S. M. H. G.<br />
-<b>A JOURNEY TO VENUS.</b> By G. W. Pope.<br />
-<b>PAOLA CORLETTI.</b> By Alice Howard Hilton.<br />
-<b>TWO STRANGE ADVENTURERS.</b> By Cornwallis.<br />
-<b>MY SPANISH SWEETHEART.</b> By F. A. Ober.<br />
-<b>THE CAPTAIN’S ROMANCE.</b> By Opie Read.<br />
-<b>THE ADOPTED DAUGHTER.</b> By Fawcett.<br />
-<b>TOM BROWN’S SCHOOL DAYS.</b> By Hughes.<br />
-<b>KIDNAPPED.</b> By R. L. Stevenson.<br />
-<b>MICAH CLARKE.</b> By A. Conan Doyle.<br />
-<b>THE SIGN OF THE FOUR.</b> By Doyle.<br />
-<b>SPORT ROYAL.</b> By Anthony Hope.<br />
-<b>FATHER STAFFORD.</b> By Anthony Hope.<br />
-<b>THE BONDMAN.</b> By Hall Caine.<br />
-<b>THE MINISTER’S WEAK POINT.</b> By Maclure.<br />
-<b>AT LOVE’S EXTREMES.</b> By Thompson.<br />
-<b>BY RIGHT, NOT LAW.</b> By R. H. Sherard.<br />
-<b>IN DARKEST ENGLAND.</b> By General Booth.<br />
-<b>PEOPLE’S REFERENCE BOOK.</b><br />
-<b>MARTHA WASHINGTON COOK BOOK.</b><br />
-<b>HEALTH AND BEAUTY.</b> By Emily S. Bouton.</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="adblock"><div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak">Neely’s Miscellaneous Books.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center no-indent"><b>AMELIA E. BARR’S WORKS.</b></p>
-<br />
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THUS RUNS THE WORLD AWAY.</b> Cloth, $1.25.<br />
-<b>WAS IT RIGHT TO FORGIVE?</b> Cloth, $1.25.</p>
-<br />
-<p class="center no-indent"><b>OPIE READ’S WORKS.</b></p>
-<br />
-<p class="no-indent"><b>ODD FOLKS.</b> Cloth, $1.00; paper, 25c.<br />
-<b>THE CAPTAIN’S ROMANCE.</b> Cloth, $1.00; paper, 25c.</p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent"><b>CAPT. CHARLES KING’S WORKS.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>FORT FRAYNE.</b> Cloth, $1.25; paper, 50c.<br />
-<b>AN ARMY WIFE.</b> Cloth, $1.25. 32 full-page Illustrations.<br />
-<b>A GARRISON TANGLE.</b> Cloth, $1.25; paper, 50c.<br />
-<b>NOBLE BLOOD AND A WEST POINT PARALLEL.</b> 50c.<br />
-<b>TRUMPETER FRED.</b> 50c. With full-page Illustrations.</p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent"><b>MAX NORDAU’S WORKS.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE AILMENT OF THE CENTURY.</b> Cloth, $2.00.<br />
-<b>THE SHACKLES OF FATE.</b> Gilt Top, 50c.<br />
-<b>HOW WOMEN LOVE.</b> Cloth, $1.25.<br />
-<b>THE RIGHT TO LOVE.</b> Cloth, $1.50.<br />
-<b>THE COMEDY OF SENTIMENT.</b> Cloth, $1.50.<br />
-<b>SOAP BUBBLES.</b> Gilt top, 50c.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>AN ALTRUIST.</b> By Ouida. Gilt top, $1.00.<br />
-<b>CHEIRO’S LANGUAGE OF THE HAND.</b> Sixth Edition,
-$2.50.<br />
-<b>IF WE ONLY KNEW AND OTHER POEMS.</b> By Chairo.
-Cloth, 50c.<br />
-<b>THE BACHELOR AND THE CHAFING DISH.</b> By Deshler
-Welsh. Illustrated. Cloth, $1.00.<br />
-<b>THE LAND OF PROMISE.</b> By Paul Bourget. Fully illustrated.
-Cloth, $1.00; paper, 25c.<br />
-<b>NEELY’S HISTORY OF THE PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS.</b>
-Over 1,000 pages, fully illustrated, $2.50.<br />
-<b>DR. CARLIN’S RECEIPT BOOK AND HOUSEHOLD
-PHYSICIAN.</b> Cloth, $1.00; paper, 50c.<br />
-<b>LIFE AND SERMONS OF DAVID SWING.</b> Cloth, $1.50;
-paper, 50c.<br />
-<b>GIVING AND GETTING CREDIT.</b> By F. B. Goddard.
-Cloth, $1.00.<br />
-<b>THE ART OF SELLING.</b> By F. B. Goddard. 50c.<br />
-<b>A JOURNEY TO VENUS.</b> By G. W. Pope. Cloth, $1.00;
-paper, 25c.<br />
-<b>KERCHIEFS TO HUNT SOULS.</b> By M. Amelia Fytche.
-Cloth, $1.00; paper, 25c.<br />
-<b>FACING THE FLAG.</b> By Jules Verne. Cloth, $1.00.<br />
-<b>THAT EURASIAN.</b> By Aleph Bey. Cloth, $1.25.<br />
-<b>CORNERSTONES OF CIVILIZATION.</b> Union College
-Practical Lectures (Butterfield Course). $3.00.<br />
-<b>WASHINGTON, OR THE REVOLUTION.</b> A drama, by
-Ethan Allen. 2 vols. Cloth, $3.00; paper, $1.00.</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="adblock"><div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak">Neely’s Latest Books.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>AN ALTRUIST.</b> By <span class="smcap">Ouida</span>. Gilt top, $1.00.<br />
-<b>THUS RUNS THE WORLD AWAY.</b> <span class="smcap">Amelia E. Barr.</span>
-Cloth, $1.25.<br />
-<b>WAS IT RIGHT TO FORGIVE?</b> <span class="smcap">Amelia E. Barr.</span> Cloth,
-$1.25.<br />
-<b>A NEW STORY</b> by <span class="smcap">Capt. Chas. King.</span> Cloth, $1.25.<br />
-<b>THE EMBASSY BALL.</b> By <span class="smcap">Virginia Rosalie Coxe</span>. Cloth,
-$1.25; paper, 50c.<br />
-<b>A MODERN PROMETHEUS.</b> By <span class="smcap">E. Phillips Oppenheim</span>.<br />
-Illustrated by <span class="smcap">H. B. Mathews</span>. Cloth, gilt top, 50c.<br />
-<b>SOUR SAINTS AND SWEET SINNERS.</b> By <span class="smcap">Carlos Martyn</span>.
-Cloth, gilt top, $1.00.<br />
-<b>SEVEN SMILES, AND A FEW FIBS.</b> By <span class="smcap">Thomas J. Vivian</span>,
-with full-page illustrations by well-known artists.
-Cloth, gilt top, 50c.<br />
-<b>DAVENPORT’S CARTOONS.</b> By <span class="smcap">Homer Davenport</span>.<br />
-<b>THE RASCAL CLUB.</b> By <span class="smcap">Julius Chambers</span>. Fully illustrated
-by J. P. Burns. Cloth, $1.25; paper, 50c.<br />
-<b>THE MILLS OF GOD.</b> By <span class="smcap">Helen Davies</span>, author of
-“Reveries of a Spinster.” Cloth, $1.25; paper, 50c.<br />
-<b>AMONG THE DUNES.</b> By <span class="smcap">Mrs. D. L. Rhone</span>. Cloth, $1.25.<br />
-<b>THE AILMENT OF THE CENTURY.</b> <span class="smcap">Max Nordau</span>. Cloth, $2.<br />
-<b>A SON OF MARS.</b> By <span class="smcap">St. George Rathborne</span>, author
-of “Dr. Jack.” Cloth, $1.00; paper, 50c.<br />
-<b>PETRONILLA, THE SISTER.</b> By <span class="smcap">Emma Homan Thayer</span>.
-Fully Illustrated. Cloth, $1.25; paper, 50c.<br />
-<b>SONGS OF THE WINGS.</b> <span class="smcap">Minnie Gilmore.</span> Cloth, $1.25.<br />
-<b>URANIA.</b> By <span class="smcap">Camille Flammarion</span>. Profusely Illustrated.
-Cloth, $1.25; paper, 50c.<br />
-<b>A GUIDE TO PALMISTRY.</b> By <span class="smcap">Mrs. Eliza Easter-Henderson</span>.
-Cloth. $1.00.<br />
-<b>TRUE TO THEMSELVES.</b> A Psychological Study. By
-<span class="smcap">Alex. J. C. Skene</span>, M.D., LL.D. Cloth, $1.25.<br />
-<b>ODD FOLKS.</b> By <span class="smcap">Opie Read</span>. Cloth, $1.00.<br />
-<b>LUNAR CAUSTIC.</b> By <span class="smcap">Charles H. Robinson</span>. Paper, 25c.<br />
-<b>UTOPIA.</b> By <span class="smcap">Frank Rosewater</span>. Paper, 25c.<br />
-<b>BLACK FRIDAY.</b> By <span class="smcap">Thomas B. Connery</span>. Paper, 25c.<br />
-<b>ALL THE DOG’S FAULT.</b> BY <span class="smcap">Thos. B. Connery</span>. Paper, 25c.<br />
-<b>THE MALACHITE CROSS.</b> By <span class="smcap">Frank Norton</span>. Paper, 25c.<br />
-<b>ONE OF EARTH’S DAUGHTERS.</b> <span class="smcap">Ellen Roberts.</span> Paper, 25c.<br />
-<b>THE PASSING OF ALIX.</b> <span class="smcap">Mrs. Marjorie Paul.</span> Paper, 25c.<br />
-<b>A MOUNTAIN OF GOLD.</b> By <span class="smcap">Willis Steell</span>. Paper, 25c.<br />
-<b>ISIDRA.</b> By <span class="smcap">Willis Steell</span>. Paper, 50c.</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="adblock"><div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak">Neely’s Prismatic Library</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">Gilt Top,&mdash;Fifty Cents.</p>
-
-<p>“I KNOW OF NOTHING IN THE BOOK LINE THAT
-EQUALS NEELY’S PRISMATIC LIBRARY FOR ELEGANCE
-AND CAREFUL SELECTION. IT SETS A PACE THAT
-OTHERS WILL NOT EASILY EQUAL, AND NONE SURPASS.”&mdash;<b>E.
-A. ROBINSON.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>SEVEN SMILES, AND A FEW FIBS. By Thomas J.
-Vivian</b>, with full-page illus. by well-known artists.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>A MODERN PROMETHEUS. By E. Phillips Oppenheim.
-Illustrated by H. B. Mathews.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE SHACKLES OF FATE. By Max Nordau.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>SOAP BUBBLES. By Max Nordau.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>A BACHELOR OF PARIS. By John W. Harding.</b>
-With over 50 illustrations by William Hofaker.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>MONTRESOR. By Loota.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>REVERIES OF A SPINSTER. By Helen Davies.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE ART MELODIOUS. By Louis Lombard.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE HONOR OF A PRINCESS. F. Kimball Scribner.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>OBSERVATIONS OF A BACHELOR. Louis Lombard.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>KINGS IN ADVERSITY. By E. S. Van Zile.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>NOBLE BLOOD AND A WEST POINT PARALLEL.
-By Captain King and Ernest Von Wildenbruch.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>TRUMPETER FRED. By Captain King. Illustrated.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>FATHER STAFFORD. By Anthony Hope.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>THE KING IN YELLOW. By R. W. Chambers.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>IN THE QUARTER. By R. W. Chambers.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>A PROFESSIONAL LOVER. By Gyp.</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>BIJOU’S COURTSHIPS. By Gyp.</b> Translated by
-Katherine Berry di Zériga. Illustrated by H. B.
-Axtell.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b>A CONSPIRACY OF THE CARBONARI. By Louise Muhlbach.</b></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak"><span class="smcap">Transcriber’s Notes:</span></p>
-
-<p>On page 34, Catherine has been changed to Catharine.</p>
-
-<p>On page 37, aple has been changed to able.</p>
-
-<p>On page 38, sierous has been changed to serious.</p>
-
-<p>On page 59, unexpceted has been changed to unexpected.</p>
-
-<p>On page 63, futherance has been changed to furtherance.</p>
-
-<p>On page 83, fellow ship has been changed to fellowship.</p>
-
-<p>On page 88, comanding has been changed to commanding.</p>
-
-<p>On page 124, dolicious has been changed to delicious.</p>
-
-<p>On page 184, a repetitive “the the” has been removed.</p>
-
-<p>On page 202, a repetitive “and and” has been removed.</p>
-
-<p>On page 205, dilligence has been changed to diligence.</p>
-
-<p>On page 225, thistledown has been changed to thistle-down.</p>
-
-<p>Minor silent changes have been made to regularize usage of
-punctuation.</p>
-
-<p>All other spelling, hyphenation and dialect have been
-retained as typeset.</p></div></div>
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