LOVE IS BEST . 3*y Florence llodgkjn-son CHAPTER XII It was springtime at EasthiH-on Sea, and things were settling down again. Mrs. Dynevor. with her son and daughter, still lived at the Up lands, but with no fear now of the mortgage foreclosing. It was gener ally believed—and specially so by Har old—that the interest was paid to the young mistress of the Manor; really it went Into the local bank account of “Kitty Dynevor,” for Lillian I new that Alick Craven's wooing would soon end successfully, and wanted Kitty to have a nice little sum in hand for her trouseau. Woodlands was a school no longer. Mrs. Tanner lived at the Manor as chaperon to Miss Dynevor; and Lil lian, thoughtful in all things, had in sisted on purchasing an annuity of two hundred a year for her friend, so that, as she put it, if she did not live long Mrs. Tanner need not op«n a school again. Mrs. Dynevor and Kitty were often at the Manor, and loved Lillian even better than they had loved Miss Len don; but Harold never went there, and when he met his cousin at Up lands treated her with a cold reserve that almost broke her heart. “Your brother was kinder to me when I was a poor little governess,” she said to Kitty. And that damsel, then on the eve of her wedding, lec tured Harold pretty sharply on his manner to her favorite. “You don’t understand,” he said coldly. “Lillian is rich, we are poor, and that makes a gulf between us.” “But it need not,” Kitty persisted. Lillian and the twins were her bridesmaids when the June day came that made her Mrs. Alick Craven; and somehow, when the happy pair had driven ofT, Harold found himself alone In the garden with the chief bridesmaid. “It went off very well." he remarked, “I never saw Kitty look better.” “No. I think they will he very happy,” she said quietly. “I suppose yours will be the next wedding in the family, Lillian? It is high time you chose a prince consort for the Manor.” “Only that I am not going to do anything of the sort,” she answered. “I thought I heard Mrs. Tanner say something about changes at the Ma nor.” “Y'es; but they need not mean mat rimony.” She hesitated. “You were so kind to me in the old days, when first I came to Easthill, that I would like to tell you my plans. I am quite sure I am not fit to be a great lady, and I should like to feel that my life was of use to some one, so I am going , to London to be trained as a hospital nurse.” •Lillian!” ‘‘Anil as my life will be spent among sick folk, you see, I shall never want the Manor; and—you are the last of the Dynevors—you would make me very happy, Harold, if you would go back to the old home which was to have been yours, which would have been yours if I had never been born.” ‘‘Lillian, you know it is impossible!” ‘‘I know you have shunned the Ma nor lately; but if it was your own?” “I have only shunned it because something it contained was growing all too dear to me. Lillian, did you ever guess my secret—that 1 loved you with all my heart, and but for the gulf between our fortunes I should have asked you to be my wife?” ‘‘And I thought you hated me be cause I was my mother's daughter.” “I love you dearly; I have loved you ever since the old days, when I thought you were only a penniless lit tle teacher.” “I wish I had been,'' she answered wistfully. ‘‘I don't think money has brought me much happiness. But Harold, when I go to the hospital you must take the Manor; the dear old place can’t be left desolate.” And then Harold Dynevor’s love conquered his pride. He took Lillian in his arms, and whispered that he would only take the gift with the giver. And now Dynevor Manor is a happy home, and children who bear the old name make merry in the nursery Mrs. Craven had been afraid to use. The End. Lesson In Astronomy It was the third week of our trip across the plains. We were now just seventy-five miles from Fremont, and expected to make it very shortly; but on rising f was disgusted to find that one of the horses—we had only two— was dead lame. He had cast himself In the night. I was rubbing the strain ed tendons when the professor came \d stood beside me. “How long before he will be ready tor work again?” “I don't know.” I said shortly. “Hand me that oil.” "What is a near estimate?” he in quired, with a touch of mild irritation. “Surely in these days of scientific ex actitude so slight a matter as the length of a horse’s lameness may be computed with reasonable accuracy.” “I Just wish you'd try it, then,” I said, sulkily. “He may be ready to morrow—we may have to wait two weeks—unless you want to ride the mare in. I don't mind walking.” “An/ leave my specimens to the mercy of any Yahoo that happens along? My dear Curtis, I could not think of it! Since there’s only you and I we can make ourselves very comfortable. But I do hope the crea ture will be all right in a short time. I uni anxious to be in Fremont to study the collision of the comet with nij colleague there.” "Collision of the comet!” I repeated straightening up. There's nothing so tirssonie as rubbing a sprain.” “Certainly! That brilliant comet to which I have called your attention for several nights, will surely collide with the earth, in a few days at far thest. The phenomenon will prove a rare and wonderful one, though as tronomers have often expected such an occurrence. Unfortunately, something always seemed to interfere.” “May the interference continue," I said, laughing. "I don’t believe this old world will be smashed up yet awhile.” ‘‘I did not say it would be smash ed,” returned the professor with some dignity. ' The most advanced theorists agree in saying that the comet itself is now only in a gaseous form, and that now only in a gaseous form, and that-” "Ilallowell,” I interrupted, "go and make the coffee. We can discuss gase ous comets while we eat.” Three days passed, and the black was no better. As miseries never come single, his mate, a pretty mare, having the undue curiosity of her sex, experimented with a tempting weed, and wa3 in a very serious condition when I found her. I dosed her with several remedies, getting little he p from the professor. He was so busy watching a cloud that lay along the horizon that I was tempted to smash his telescope in order to bring him down to mundane affairs. Having done what I could for the poor mare, I came back to the wagon. “I don't believe she’ll pull through,” I said savagely. The professor squinted one eye up a little tighter. “Amazing!” he murmured. "It trav els with scarcely the sped of a locomo tive. 1 marvel the velocity is no greater-—doubtless the earth's gravity exercises a controlling influence at present.” Then, in a different tone, “Curtis, there's a buffalo calf coming toward us. I suppose you would not be interested if I told you of the ar rival of something really important.” I took the glass out of his hand. "It's not a calf, Hallowell. It’s a man-riding like the deuce. What do you reckon is the matter?” Hallowell was frprn the east and was not used to southern localisms. “It is impossible to reckon anything on so slight a basis,” he answered se riously—then made a wild dive at something that floated by. When he turned to me there was a shining bub ble in his hand. "The comet!” he shouted. “The col lision has occurred.” “Do you call that thing a comet?” I asked contemptuously. “I might say to you with Festus—‘Much learn ing hath made the mad.’ ” “It is a detached fragment from the main body of the gas,” he replied, dancing triumphantly around. “The comet as a whole is that faint cloud you see yonder.” “The deuce it is,” I said anxiously. : "We shall smother or be blown away. I remember you said something about its traveling like a train.” “Not blown away,” corrected the professor. “We can take refuge in the hole by that hemlock yonder. As to our chance of smothering, I wonder you can mention such a trifle in the face of material of such overwhelming scientific interest. I think—” We were interrupted by a cry from the advancing horseman. I saw that he was using whip and spur on his mount, and that the latter instead of responding was evidently played out. Indeed, as he reached us, the poor brute went down. His rider staggered up before I could lend my assistance. "For God’s sake let me have a horse!” he exclaimed entreatingly. “I am on my way from X—, to Fremont, with a pardon for my brother. If I do not reach the town before 12 to morrow, the best man that ever buck led will die for no worse fault than putting a 'wullet through that hound. Pistol Pete. It is nearly 5 now!” "You shall have the horse and wel come,” I replied, for the young fellow’s manly face wsro haggard with an awful grief, “but one is dead lame, and the other is too ilk to stand.” He made a rush for the horses to satisfy himself, and came back with a gesture of despair that went to my heart. “Look!” he cried wildly, drawing out an envelope. “There’s a life in that paper—and 1 have ridden—ridden —and met with one hindrance after another 1” The professor looked at him pity ingly. “How limited are the capabilities of the body compared with the desires of the spirit,” he murmured. "I cannot bear it!” cried the strang er, frantically. “They told me that was a good horse—the liars!” He flung himself on the ground and hard, dry sobs shook his chest, The professor picked up the glass. "In less than an hour it will be here,” he said thoughtfully. "Thank God I am not a scientist,” I said rudely. "You fellows have about as much feeliug as the dry bones you study.” The professor Ignored me, and shook the prostrate man. "Get up.” he said, commandingly, a new note in his voice. “Do as I tell you, and your brother may be saved yet.” The man rose. We both stared at Halloweil. 1 wondered if he had really gone crazy. “Take the tongue off the wagon,” he said curtly, "and spread the covey and all the cloth you can find on the ground near me.” For a moment I hesitated; then it dimly occurred to me that even a. bookworm might have original ideas, and I said sotto voce to the newcom er— "Do as he says; he's by no means as big a fool as he looks.” I rather think Halloweil overheard me, for ho shot a distinctly ungrateful glance in my direction, but he could say nothing, as wo were both now zeal ously obeying him. He made us cut the great cloth cov er in two large sails, and these wo fas tened on the wagon under his orders. "Surely—surely,” I gasped, "you don’t think that you can make that cloud of gas help us? Why, it’s fad ing away!” "It is not fading,” said the profes sor, brusquely. "It seems much faint er because you are so near it and be cause of the action of the sun on it. Do as I tell you—there’s no time to lose.” Wiien lie was satisfied he made us scramble into the wagon and we sat there, waiting for—what? Three ap parently sane men in a horseless wag on, waiting for a sky motor which mo mentarily grew fainter! When ten minutes passed by outraged dignity as sorted itself. "I won't be made a fool of.” I said, angrily, and started to leave the wag on. Halloweil pushed me back on my scat. Then I became awrare of a sick ening odor—a fresh breeze on my back— a pale mist around us shot with brilliant hues, and lo! we were run ning over the plain at a rate that threatened to wreck the wagon—our sails swelled out like two great wings. My hair was rapidly assuming a ver tical position, but the two faces near me showed utter unconsciousness of danger. That of the stranger wTas burning with joy and reverent thank fulness. To him it was a God-sent miracle for a good man’s rescue. The professor was radiant over this new factor in his knowledge and he mut tered his observations aloud. Neither seemed disturbed by the fact that from the speed and the smell,breathing was no easy matter. As to me—my one hope was that 1 might touch o'.d earth again safely. On, on we flow. Again and again I expected an immediate smashup, but our wagon was of fine and strong make, the plain was level, and we bade fair to reach the town shortly. In less than two hours we were not three miles from Fremont! Then a terrible idea flashed on me which I had been too hurried to think of before. We should pass the town! Like the brook, we might go on for ever— or at least far enough to wreck us on the broken lands beyond. As to the stranger, the trip would have been of no earthly use to him. “I shall jump," he said simply, as if in answer to an outspoken inquiry. The professor was looking anxious but he said nothing. llut we had forgotten the little river lying near the town. We struck it like a cyclone, and its four feet of water was whipped into wild spray around us, while the wagon spun like a frantic top, then stopped with a lurch that nearly sent us flying. Either the force of our motor was lessening or perhaps, even at its best, it would not have had time or strength to loosen the wagon from the heavy snag driven between the spokes, for the pale gas rushed on. leaving three dripping men and some ruined specimens in the river, with Fremont not 500 yards away. TEUTONS IN FRANCE, Parts of the Republic Are as Much Herman as the Fatherland. The northern third of France and half of Belgium are today more Teu tonic than the south of Germany. This should not occasion surprise when wo remember the incessant downpour of Teutonic tribes during the whole his toric period. It was a constant pro cession of Goths—from all points ol the compass—Franks, Burgundians, and others. France was entirely over run by the Franks, with the exception of Brittany, by the middle of the sixth century, says the London Express. All through the middle ages this part of France was German in language and customs as well. The very name of the country is Teutonic. It has the same origin as Franconia in Southern Germany. In 812 the council of Tours, away down south, ordained that every bishop should preach both in tho Ro mance and the Teutonic languages. The Franks preserved their German speech 400 years after the conquest. Charlemagne was a German. His cour tiers were all Germans. He lived and governed from outside the limits of modern France. The Abbe Sieyos ut tered an ethnological truism when, in the course of the French revolution, he cried out against the French aris tocracy: “Let us send them back to their German marshes whence they came.’’ Removal from County .IaII*. One of the measures before the legis lature of North Carolina provides that all criminals condemned to capital punishment shall be removed from the county jails immediately upon convic tion, to the state penitentiary tc await the execution of their sentence. TALM AGE'S SERMON. marks of THE LORD JESUS CHRIST. On ( liri.tlnn Heroism- The Groat ward That ConiM to the Faithful Soldier of the troM Heroes hikI .lUr* tjn of K»erydajr Life. (Copyright, 1901, by I.ouis Klopsch.) Washington, Feb. 24.—In this dis course Dr. Talmage praises Christian heroism and tells of great rewards. The text Is Galatians vi., 17, “1 bear in ray body the marks of the Lord Jesus.” We hear much about crowns,thrones, victories, but 1 now tell the more quiet story of scars, honorable and dishonor able. There are In all parts of the world people bearing dishonorable scars. They went into Die battle of sin and were worsted and to their dy ing day they will have a sacriflcation of body or mind or soul. It cannot bo hidden. There are tens of thousands of men and women now consecrated to God and living holy lives who were once corrupt; but they have been re generated, and they are no more what they once were than rubescenee i3 ema ciation, than balm is vitrol. than noon day is midnight. But in their de pleted physical health or mental twist or style of temptation they are ever and anon reminded of the obnoxious past. They have a memory that is de plorable. In some twinge of pain or some tendency to surrender to the wrong which they must perpetually re sist they have an unwholesome remin iscence. They carry scars, deep scars, ignoble scars. But Paul in my text shows us a scar ification which Is a badge of honorable and self-sacrificing service. He had in his weak eyes the result of too much study and in his body, bent and worn, the signature of scourgings and ship wrecks and maltreatment by mobs. In my text he shows those scars as he de clares, "I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus." Notice that It is not wounds, but scars, and a scar Is a heal ed wound. Before the scar is well de fined upon the flesh the inflammation must have depnrted and right circula tion must have been restored and new tissue must have been formed. It is a permanent indentation of the flesh—a efcatrix. Paul did well to show those scars. They were positive and indispu table proof that with all his body,mind and soul he believed what he said. They were his diploma, showing that he had graduated from the school of hardship for Christ. They were cre dentials proving bis right to lead in the world's evangelization. Not Ashnmoit of Scan. Men are not ashamed of scars got in battle for their country. No American is embarrassed when you ask him. “Where did you get that gash across your forehead?’’ and he can answer, “That was from a saber cut at San Juan." When you ask some German, “Where did you lose your right arm?" he is not ashamed to say, “I lost It at Sedan.” When you ask an Italian, “Where did you lose your eye?” he is not annoyed when he can answer, "1 suffered that in the last battle uuder our glorious General Garibaldi.” But I remind you of the fact that there are scars not got in war which are just as illustrious. We had in this country yeai'3 ago an eminent advocate who was called into the presidential cabi net at attorney general. In mid-life he was in a Philadelphia courtroom en gaged in an important trial. The at torney on the opposite side of the case got Irritated and angry and in a most brutal manner referred to the distin guished attorney’s disfigured face, a face more deeply scarred than any face 1 ever saw. The legal hero of whom I am speaking in his elosing argument said: “Gentlemen of the jury, when I was a little child I was playing with my sister in the nursery, and her clothes caught fire, and I ran to her to put out the fire. I succeeded, but 1 myself took fire, and before it was ex tinguished my lace was awfully burn ed and as black as the heart of the scoundrelly counsel who on the other side of the case has referred to my misfortune.” The eminent attorney of whom I speak carried all his life the honorable scar of his sister's rescue. Ktaiiug a Fnmlljr. But why do we go so far for illustra tion, when I could take right out of the memories of some whom I address in stances just as appropriate? To rear aright for God and heaven a large fam ily of children in that country home was a mighty undertaking. Far away from the village doctor,the garret must contain the herbs for the cure of all kinds of disorders. Through all infan tile complaints the children of that family went. They missed nothing In the way of childish disorders. Busy all day was the mother in every form of housework and twenty times a night called up by the children all down at the same time with the same conta gion. Her hair is white a long while before it is time for snow. Her shoul ders are bent long before the appropri ate time for stooping. Spectacles are adjusted, some for dose by and some for far off, years before you would have supiKised hc-T eyes would need re enforcement. Here and there Is a short grave In her pathway, this headstone bearing the name of this child and an other headstone bearing the name of another child. Hardly one bereavement lifts its shadow than another bereave ment. drops one. After thirty years of wifehood and motherhood the paths turns toward the setting sun. She cannot walk so far as she used to. Colds caught hang on longer than for merly. Some of the children are in the heavenly world, for which they were well prepared through maternal fidelity, and others are out in this world doing honor to a Christian an cestry. • • • Mnrtjr* All Around l'«. I People think they must look for mar I tyrs on battlefields or go through a his tory to find burnings at the stake and : tortures on racks when there are mar j tyrs all about us. At this time In this j capital city there are scores of men wearing themselves out in the public | service. In ten years they will not have a healthy nerve left in their body. In committee rooms, in consultations that involve the welfare of the nation, under the weight of great responsibili ties, their vitality is being subtracted. In almost every village of the country you find some broken down state or na tional official. After exhausting him self in the public service, rough Ameri can politics kicks him out of congress or cabinet or legislative hall, and he goes into comparative obscurity and comparative want, for he has been long enough away from home to lose his professional opportunities. No man that was ever put to death by sword or instrument of torture was more of a martyr than that man who has been wrung to death by the de mands of official position. The scars may not be visible, for theBe are scars on the brain and scars on the nerves and scars on the heart, but neverthe less are they scars, and God counts them, and their reward will be abund ant. The Unseen Scars, In all lands there are veterans of war who may not have had their face scraped with one bullet or their foot lamed by one bursting shell and who could not roll up their sleeve and show you one mark suggestive of battle, yet carry with them weaknesses got in ex posures to disease along malarial swamps or from many miles of march ing, and ever and anon they feel a twinge of pain, each recurrence of which is sharper or more lasting, until after awhile they will be captured for tile tomb by disorders which started 20 or 30 or 40 years before. And their scars are all unseen by human eyes. But those people are as certainly the victims of war as though they had been blown up in an undermined fortress or thrust through with a cavalryman’s lance. What I want to make out is that there are scars which are never counted except as God counts them, and I want to enlarge your sympathies. There is a woman who has suffered domestic injustice of which there is no cognizance. She savs nothing about it. An Inquisitor’s machine of torture could not wring from her the story of domestic woe. Ever since the day of orange blossoms and long white veil she has done her full duty and re ceived for it harshness and blame and neglect. The marriage ring, that was supposed to be a sign of unending af fection, has turned out to be one link of a chain of horrible servitude. A wreath of nettle and nightshade of brightest form would have been a more accurate prophecy. There are those who find it hard to believe that there is such a place as hell, but you could go right out in any community and find more than one hell of domestic tor ment. There is no escape for that woman but the grave, and that, com pared with the life she now lives, will be an arbor of Jasmine and of the hum ming bird’s song poured into the car of the honeysuckle. Scars! If there be none on the brow showing where he struck her arriving home from mid night carousal, nevertheless there are scars all up and down her injured and immortal soul which will be remem bered on the day when there shall leap forth for her avengement the live thunderbolts of an incensed God. When we see a veteran in any land who has lost a limb in battle, our sym pathies are stirred. But, oh, how many have in the domestic realm lost their life and yet are denied a pillow of dust on which to slumber? Better en large your roll of martyrs. Better adopt a new mode of counting human sacriflcations. A broken bone is not half as bad as a broken heart.. Marks of Christian Service. There are many who can, in the same sense that Paul uttered it, say, “I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus”—that is, for the sake of Christ and his cause they carry scars which keep their indenture through all time and all eternity. Do you think that Paul was accurate when he said that? If you have studied his career, you have no doubt of it. In his youth he learned how to fashion the hair of the Clcllian goat into canvas, a quiet trade, and then went to college, the president of which was Gamaliel, an institution which scholars say could not have been very thorough because of what they call Paul’s imperfect com mand of Greek syntax. But his history became exciting on the road to Damas cus, where he was unhorsed and blind ed. His conversion was a convulsion. Whether that fall from the horse may have left a mark upon him I know not, but the mob soon took after him and flogged and imprisoned and mal treated him until he had scars more than enough to assure the truthfulness of his utterance, ‘‘I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus.” All of Paul’s sufferings was for Christ's sake. He had intellectual pow ers which could have achieved for him all worldly successes. You see what he could do in a courtroom when with extemporaneous speech he made the Judicial bench tremble; when on Mars hill he confounded the Athenian crit ics; when he preached amid the ex citement of a tumbling penitentiary; when in a storm at sea he took com mand of the ship, the only one on board cool headed. With his inspired logic, and his courage of utterance, and his power of illustration, and his capa city to move audiences, and his spirit of defiance, there was no height of worldly power he might not have gained. * * * Army of Chrlitlttii Sold Ip ri. All ye who bear in your body the marks of the Lord Jesus, have you thought what use those marks will be in the heavenly world? What source of glorious reminiscence! In that world you will sit together and talk over earthly experiences. “Where did you get that scar?” saint will say to saint, and there will come back a story of hardship and struggle and persecution and wounds and victory through the grace of the gospel. Another spirit will say to listening spirit, “Where did you get that hurt so plainly marked?” And the answer will be: “Oh, that was one of the worst hurts I ever had. That wa3 a broken friendship. We were in sweetest accord for years, together in Joy and sorrow. What one thought the other thought. We were David and Jonathan. But our personal in terests parted, and our friendship broke, never to be renewed on earth. But we have made it all up here, and misunderstandings are gone, and wa are in the same heaven, on neighboring thrones, in neigh boring castles, on the banks of the same river.” Practical Application. Now what is the practical use of this subject? It is the cultivation of Chris tian heroics. The most of us want to say things and do things for God when there is no danger of getting hurt. We are all ready for easy work, for popu lar work, for compensating work, but we all greatly need more courage to brave the world and brave satanic as sault when there is something aggres sive and bold and dangerous to be un dertaken for God and righteousness. And if we happen to get bit what an ado we make about it! Wo all need more of the stuff that martyrs ore made out of. We want more sanctified grit, more Christian pluck, more holy recklessness as to what the world may say and do in any crisis of our life. Be right and do right, and all earth and hell combined cannot put you down. The same little missionary who wrote my text also uttered that piled up magnificence to be found in those words which ring like battle axes on splitting helmets: "In all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us, for I am persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to como, nor height, nor depth, nor any other crea ture, shall be able to separate us from the love of Ood. which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.” How do you like that, you cowards, who shrink back from aggressive work and if so much as a splinter pierce your flesh cry out louder than many a one torn in auto da fe? Many a sol dier has gone through a long war,been in twenty battles, led a regiment up a hill mounted by cannon and swept by musketry and yet came home without having been once hit and without a mark upon him. But It will not be so among those who pass in the grand re view of heaven. They have all in the holy wars been wounded, and all bear sears. And what would the newly ar rived in heaven do with nothing to show that he had ever been struck by human or diabolic weaponry? How embarrassed and eccentric such an one in such a place! Surely he would want, to be excused awhile from the heaven ly ranks and be permitted to descend to earth, crying "Give mo another chanee to do something worthy of an Immortal. Show me some post of dan ger to be manned, some fortress to bo stormed, some difficult charge to make. Like Leonidas at Thermopylae, like Miltriades at Marathon, like Marl borough at Blenheim, like Godfrey at Jerusalem, like Winkelrled at Sampach gathering the spears of the Austrian knights into his bosom, giving his life for others, show me some place where I can do a brave thing for God. I can not go back to heaven until somewhere I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus.” My hearer, my reader, quit complaining about your misfor tunes and disappointments and trou bles and through all time and all eter nity thank God for scars! A HISTORIC HOME. KoutHenu’R Famous "l.<» Cliaruiet (.«»'* Heady for a l’urrliasor. In all literature there Is hardly any house more famous than Les Char mettes, that modest dwelling In Cham bery where Jean Jacques Rousseau, the renowned French philosopher, spent the happiest years of his life,and there fore It is no wonder that the reading public of Europe was considerably sur prised and somewhat shocked when It heard the other day that It had been advertised for sale, says the St. Louis Star. The advertisement read as fol lows: “For Sale—Les Charmettes, the historic home of Jean Jacques Rous seau, together with furniture, fields, and orchard.” In 1600 the house was built, but it first became historic on July 6, 1738, that being the day on which Mme. de Warens, Rousseau’s friend, purchased it, together with “a barn, meadowland, orchard, plowland, vineyard, two oxen, two cows, ten sheep, seven hens, and a cock.” The new owner occupied it at once and Rousseau joined her there later in the same year. Of his life there one of his French biographers says: “To Mme. de Warens the world is infinitely indebted since it was she who provided this man, the son of a Geneva watchmaker, with a home in which he had ample opportunity to improve himself and to develop his many talents. Since 1782, the year in which Rousseau’s “Confes sions” were published, Les Charmettes has been a Mecca for thousands of his admirers from all parts of the world, not a year since that time passing in which hundreds have not visited it and reverently taken away from the little flower garden some buds or leaves in memory of him. Nature knows no pause in progress and development, and attaches her curse on all Inaction.—Goethe.