St ef n i t ri Q J i lM IH t ii A f i Sv H ii Mft lMa a- a- - n m -- 1 HMHHBHtfMHMHMiai V atjmriiiiilnH im TTrrrPTTTrrT CHAPTER XVIIL The day and the hour arrived Sir Basil was to go with them as far as Dover and sea them safely on board They -were all four to start by the mid day train from Arley to London Leah had measured her strength that morning and found it rapidly failing I could not live through two more days of it she said Thank heaven it is -almost over She was passive -while her maid took all the pains she could to hide the shrink ing of the graceful figure the pallor of the beautiful face She must keep up appearances -while she was in England among those who knew her but when she was across the sea she could give way she could droop and die as she would but not here She bade farewell to the grand old home where she had been so utterly but falsely happy She stood for some time on the terrace where the passion flowers grew the spot where she lad seen her lover first and where her heart had gone out to him She kissed the bare brown branches They would live again they would be covered with green leaves and 6tarry flowers when leaves and flowers should gladden her eyes no more She stretched out her hands with a great cry when she took her last look round the room where she had spent such happy hours All earth and air seemed burn s Ing fire Oh for rest for change for the coldness even of the grave Those who saw Miss Hattons face when she left Brentwood never forgot it It was a strange journey to Dover Sir Arthur was the only one who talked Hettie avoided either looking at or speak ing to Sir Basil and Leah could have laughed in bitter amusement at the scene Sir Arthur spoke of his nieces return of the marriage of Glen of Basil in Parliament and saw nothing wrong They stood together on deck at last a blue sky above them the sun shining on the white cliffs of Dover and on the sea which was almost as smooth as a mirror Sir Arthur took Hettie to the other side of the vessel They will have so much to say to each ther lovers always have We will leave them alone Hettie So they stood side by side the deathly pallor of Leahs face hidden by hex veil A terrible calm had fallen over her She loved Sir Basil still with her wliole heart she could have knelt down there and have covered his hands with burning kisses and burning tears She held them - for a moment in a close grasp while she looked into his face for the last time The solemn shadow of eternity lay over her Then there came a shout from the sail ors All was in readiness those who were forshore must leave The moments were numbered her eyes never left him her hand still held his I must go he said Good by Leah He bent down and kissed her lips He started to find them so cold Good by he repeated A pleasant prosperous journey Leah and a happy return Good by Basil good by my love she 6aid and the next moment she was look ing over the waters alone He was gone She felt that she would never see him again in this world The eky the sea the white cliffs were whirl ing round her She was glad to raise her veil and let the sea breeze play upon her face She was free now she need no longer keep up appearances She had looked her last upon him The long strain the long tension was ended The calm plash of the waves seemed to cool the fever that had laid waste her life all earth and air were no longer burning lire The rest of the journey was like a dream to her and she never woke from it until she stood in the salon of the villa at Mentone and saw the duchess regarding her with tearful eyes Great heaven she cried this is not Leah this is a shadow I thought it was Hettie who had been ill So it was I have not been ill said a voice which the duchess scarcely recog nized as Leahs I am well but my journey has tired me What can be the matter What has gone wrong in the girls life thought the kindly woman The only thing that tshe reminds me of is a flower broken by a tempest There was in Mentone a celebrated English physician Dr Evan Griffiths a skillful prosperous man very popular among the invalids and the English at Mentone He lived with his mother in a pretty little villa Popular as he was he had never married It was said that he bad no time for wooing One evening as Dr Griffith sat alone In his study the servant announced a young lady She had sent no card and had given no name but looked very ill At first the doctor felt annoyed He had no liking for mysterious patients and felt it hard that he could not have one cigar in peace Show the lady in here he said impa tiently But his impatience died away when a tall closely veiled woman came in and stood silently before him She did not speak until the servant had closed the door then she raised her veil so that he could see her face and he was startled by its delicacy and wonderful beauty I know that I am calling at an un- usual time she said t thank you much for seeing me I have a question to ask you a question of life or death Will you answer it If I can said the doctor Docs it concern yourself Yes she replied And then he felt that death and not -life would be the answer if he could judge from her face CHAPTER XIX Dr Griffiths placed a chair for his -beautiful young patient and standing by the table waited until she spoke Do people she said abruptly ever die of a broken heart I have never known a case answer ed the doctor though I have heard and teA of uch a thing -1 L 1 if--- XJ tAJUtAfcJli4AAJ44JA Some months since ohe said look ing at him with calm grave eyes I was as strong as anyone could wish to be I had splendid health and a perfect constitution Now I have hardly strength to live and everyone thinks I am in dan ger There must be a reason for it re marked the doctor quietly There is a reason which I will tell you and I want you to judge if it will kill me I have had within the last two months a trouble a terrible trouble one that I have had to bury in the depths of my heart I could not speak of it or hint it or place confidence in any living creature concerning it I have shut my secret in my heart and it has been prey ing upon it It has eaten my heart away The constant repression the desperate ef forts I have made to seem as usual have been too much for me and now I feel sure that I have some affection of the heart which will soon put an end to my life He began to understand something of the case Do you want to live he asked brief ly No I want to die she answered Then came a string of questions all of which she answered candidly enough The doctor knit his brows and was si lent for some time then he listened to the action of the heart and grew graver still I think he said that you have al ways had a great tendency to heart dis ease and now I am sorry to say it is a confirmed case Her face brightened and she murmur ed a few words to herself which he did not hear Tell me doctor she asked how long do you think I have to live Not long was the grave reply In a great measure it lies in your own hands If you could get rid of this care if you could prevent yourself from brooding over it if you could rouse yourself you might live a little longer j tuuiu ixut sue am cue restraint has been too great and too persistent Will you tell me what the end will be like I wish you would not ask me he answered looking pitifully at the fair face It will be the greatest service you can render me she said It matters so lit tle to me If I have some months to live I shall carry out an intention which I have formed if not I shall forego it Tell me doctor v You will not live for months he said the greater the pity The greater the joy she cried Will it be weeks Weeks in all probability he replied And the end she asked again The end will be sudden and peaceful he answered It may be at any time Any sudden sottoav or joy might prove 11 Z vjiuuiuess peuee resignation ure your greatest helps Poor child he said in an outburst of sudden tender pity poor child Life has been har for you Very hard she declared I wish he said that you would fol low my advice I could not save your life but I might prolong it No she replied I am staying here at Mentone I shall die here and when I die they will be sure to send for vou You will not say that you have seen me I will not he promised There followed two quiet poacefnl and happy weeks of which Hettie liked to think afterward It struck her at times that Leah looked weak and ill but she made so complaint Letters and news papers came every day from England giving them all the news of Glen and of Brentwood above all of the election Hettie enjoyed talking about it with the duchess but Leah never uttered a word She had made up her mind to the great est sacrifice any woman could n ake she would die and give no sign News came from England that Sir Basil had been returned member for the ouumy Liie uuKe ana ijucness were delighted Hettie was pleased and talk ed more about it than she talked about anything else Leah said little but she looked happier The next day came a letter to say that the election being over Sir Basil and the general hoped to run over to Mentone even if they were able to remain only a week When Leah read that letter her face grew white Leah went to her room the sun shone bright and warm and the air was full of the perfume of flowers She was tired with a peculiar feeling of longing for rest which was new to her and her senses had been suddenly sharpened She could see further she could hear with almost painful distinctness She had a letter to write but the feeling of fatigue was so strong upon her that she was hardly mciinea to commence ner task I will do it at once and then it will not trou ble me she said to herself She sat for some time with the pen in her hand It was the one great tempta tion of her life Should she tell him or not When sh came to die should she feel any the happier that she had left him with this sting in ljis breast this memory which would always be to him one of ibittex pain It would be ample vengeance If he knew that her unhap piness had killed her hecould never be nappy agam Me wa honorable and sensitive the chances were that if he knew the truth he would never marry Hettie It was a great temptation Her heart throbhed with it her whole frame trembled and then with a supreme ef fort she conquered it Swiftly suddenly as had been foretold death came to her without pain without bitterness without agony The pen drop ped from the white fingers her head fell upon the paper She died with a smile on her lips There was not even a spasm of pain no faint murmur or cry The throbbing laboring broken heart had Stopped at lash With tho fhnf ai BY CHARLOTTE M BRAEME f - tTTTTTrrrrTTTTtrrrTTrrrrrrirrrv rlt behind grew cold embrace of death and beautiful in the CHAPTER XX So they found her dead The duchess was almost frantic She refused to be lieve that Leah was dead It was ut terly impossible she declared She call ed for brandy wine hot water ever possible restorative She would not sit the mark of death on the beautiful face She sent for doctors and one of the first who came was Dr Evan Griffiths He recognized her at once This was the despairing girl who had come to him longing with her whole heart to die and the longing had been granted He was accustomed to many a sad sight gnd scene to every kind of sickness and jis tress but he had seen nothing which touched him more than the dead face o this hapless girl Tears came into hi eyes The duchess would not allow anything to be touched in the room until the gen eral and Sir Basil came They had tel egraphed at once for them East as steam could take them they went to Mentone and found the terrible news true that Leah was dead All the calm imperial beauty of her youth came back to her as she lay sleep ing after her long fever and pain There was no pain on the beautiful face the thick dark eyelashes lay like fringe on the white cheeks there was a strange beauty on the marble brow and the proud curves of the perfect lips were set in a smile The duchess had covered the couch on which she lay with lovely white blossoms and so Sir Basil who had part ed from her on board the steamer saw her again He kissed the pale lips that had murmured so many loving words to him weeping like a child and regretting that he had not loved her more Early the next morning he went out and procured some scarlet passion flow ers Sir Arthur liked him all the better because he cried like a child when he placed them in the dead white hands One could have fancied that a smile pass ed over the dead face Her secret was safe forever now and no one knew why she had died No suspicion of the truth came to any one of them So they mourned her and no sting of bitter memories increased their pain Hettie and the general learned to love each other in the midst of their trouble more than they would ever have done in prosperity They mourned long and sin cerely for Leah The general for a long time was quite unlike himself he seem ed unable to recover from the blow and there were limes when everyone thought that Hettie must follow her sister There was a great outburst of sorrow in England when the papers told that Leah the beloved niece of Gen Sir Ar thur Hatton had died suddenly at Men tone of heart disease English visitprs go now to see her grave none leave it without tears They tell each other how soon she was to have been married to someone whom she loved dearly and how she was writing to her lover when the summons came Leahs grave is the most beautiful in the ceme tery A tall white marble cross bears her name and masses of superb scarlet passion flowei s creep up it and overhang the grave Five years have passed since Leahe death but her memory lives bright and beautiful among those who loved hef best Sir Basil and Hettie have been three years married and they live en tirely at Brentwood Sir Arthur implor ed them to let it be sol He could not bear to live alone again So they had consented to make Brentwood their home leaving it at times to go to Glen when the general always accompanied them He loved Hettie and as the years rolled on he looked to her for all the comfort and brightness of his life But those who knew him best said that she had never occupied the same place in his heart which Leah had There is no fear that Leah will be for gotten at Brentwood The beautif uL pic ture of her shown at the Royal Academy and called Tiia rassion Elovvbr hangs in the drawing room there Every one who sees it stops and looks with wonder it the lovely face and dark eyes that jeem to follow one Lady Carlton has a fine handsome boy whom she has named Arthur who inher its her blue eyes and golden hair She thinks that there is no boy in England like him and Sir Basil is of the same opinion though perhaps in his heart he loves best the baby girl called Leah whose dark eyes and lovely face bring so vividly back to him the one buried for ever from the sight of men One morning Lady Carlton at play with her baby girl caught her in her arms and held her up in front of the pic ture of The Passiou Flower See Basih she cried little Leah will be the very image of her aunt Sir Basil crossed over to his wife She will resemble her he said quiet ly but I hope babys face will not have the shadow of melancholy that lies on this one I hope not returned Hettie Leah always had that look even when her face was most radiant it was there Oh Ba sil how young and beautiful she was to die I often wonder said Sir Basil what would have happened had she lived Het tie Fmever like to think that our hap piness and we are happy sweet wife1 comes from Leahs death Hettie looked at him thoughtfully It is not so Basil she said If Leah had lived you would have married her but she never would have been hap py I think she wanted something more than one finds in this world Her nature was noble and lofty I do not think any human love would- have satisfied her Do you remember the restless longing on her beauteous face See it is there even in this picture She would never have been happy Perhaps not allowed Sir Basil per haps not Hettie I think you are right ho said as they moved slowly away from the beautiful face That was how they judged her The heavy clouds may be raining But with evening comes the light Through the dark are low winds com plaining Yet the sunrise gilds the height And love has hidden treasure For the patient and the pure And Time gives his fullest measure To the workers who endure And the Word that no love has shaken - Has the future pledge supplied For we know that when we awaken We shall be satisfied The end chanted a requiem among the great trees Great Britain buys uaafc than 20000 her soul rose to heaven and the body left horses In the United States every ye IM WPSWpflBffWfM jrx G SerassisSWSiWMKKSi 4rfJIl i - OfrrnrYYrriYt3n iiiii WASHINQTO 4y f ammunition and prepare for the struggle VVH fim The treats which he managed in the M 53 flSSrf mmvS following years were almost as inspiring m Sli SWk asthe victories he planned His must be WSm M mh kv how wcl1 he PIayed Jt istory He nj -- JMBtefl f3Bk compelled England to recognize the PBb yf ke as more than a mere insurrection IBSKk isi and secured thus the rights of civilized flMraa JlEJFw Amir JlziSZixi vjzi0z2m How great the odds were against Gen WBssljslSSjfcw 0gZmS Washington can never be rightly agjsaagssssa mated Time 1 ps3m riivoi in iuciv 3 If AN HhAUTVk 5 WX1 ViVi fWi 2rarasWirferysrfeJr I T is impossible at this day to add any thing of a new character to the ac count of men and events of a hundred years and more ago for the field of his tory in so far as it relates to the Ameri can revolution and the men who were representative in its accomplishment has been well explored and voluminously ex pounded by hundreds of men equal to the task Nor is there a school child of 10 years in all this country who has not Avritten his essay on these same men and events so that their history is in burned in the minds of all Americans Yet this is one of the hopeful signs of the dispo sition of a great people towards those who called its nation into existence And of the leader of all those courageous men the one who before all 6thers car ried tr an astonishing and successful achievement the herculean labors of bringing victorious a handful of ragged and untrained soldiers through the dark ness of a struggle with one of the most powerful countries on earth certainly nothing now needs be said As a young man Washington was prob ably no less flippant and worldly thai hundreds of others in the colonies His manners which have been thought extra ordinary in their courtliness were prob ably not the slightest bit more so than those of the majority of his acquaint- j ances ie was not uee irom tne tauits i of men of his time He was accustomed to methodical exactness from his i ence on his mothers plantation and to her he no doubt owed many of the traits which afterwards stood him in such good stead From his school teachers Wil liam Hobby who was also the church sexton and Thomas Williams he learn ed to read and to write as well as to un derstand the art of computation The latter of the two also gave him the rudi ments of surveying which served as much as any other one thing to develop- him in to the general of the American forces For it was on account of his knowledge of this science that he spent three of his years of early manhood in the wilds of the forests running lines determin ing levels fixing boundaries His wages at this time were sufficient to enable him to purchase large pieces of that trackless wilderness bordering on streams which were afterwards of great value thus de veloping his insight and shrewdness as a business man But the lesons that lie learned from that rugged nature in the Solitary hours were yriceless and the constitution that was hardened by his life in the woods enabled him in after years to endure untold strains of expos ure and suffering to rescue Braddock af ter that generals defeat by the French to conceive the crossing of the Delaware on that bleak and cheerless December night to undergo Valley Forge and to emerge from them all the modest self contained reserved gentleman It was because of his knowledge of the ways of the forest that he was sent on that seemingly needless errand to warn the French off English territory in the win ter of 1753 54 on which he quitted him self well and learned his first lessons in practical warfare The next year he was chosen to go with Braddock on his ill fated expedition against the French Here if was that Washington learned for the first time that Americans were of just as good stuff as Englishmen that they could fight just as bravely as the seasoned veterans of the mother country For it was through the efforts of the bush whacking Virginians that Brad docks force escaped entire destruction The colonists knew better than did Brad dock that the evolutions of the parade ground were of no avail in the sort of warfare in which they were at that time engaged The physical strain undergone by Washington at this time was extra ordinary From the ninth to the six teenth of that July he had little sleep walking and riding sometimes all night long through the forest and succeeding in bringing up some support for Brad docks retreating army He was then 25 years old In the course of that one expedition he had seen enough to give him an unconquerable faith in the valor and abilities of his fellow colonists This faith it may have been that so upheld him through the dark hours of defeat and intrigue when his army well high per ished from lack of food and clothing Washington had no idea even when the colonies were being greatly roused over the injustice of their treatment by Eng land that the end would be war He dfd not desire war And it was only when there was no other way to decide the momentous question of principle that he set his heart on hostilities The cour age of the man in accepting the position of commander-in-chief which was offered to him by the assembly was sublime The mother country could send hundreds of thousands of trained soldiers against the colonists her ships ruled the seas On the other hand the colonists were a few thousands undisciplined in any war fare except that against the Indians their resources were comparatively insig nificant It seems as if there could have been but one outcome But Washington modestly undertook the task refusing first any money remuuneration for the services he might render And then his sagacity as a commander began to display itself Quietly did he collect stores and - and again army on the point of dissolving away There were many true hearts in the Congress but there were many also who still lean ed a little towards England fearing that the new order of things would never be successful There was only a half-hearted support for the commander-in-chief Jealousy inspired officers to scheme against him Money was often scarce and sometimes not to be had His men were sometimes without food barefoot ed and half clothed Through all these trying years Gen Washington had to rely mainly on himself His volume of correspondence was enormous Thousands of letters did he write urging Congress the governors the influential men of the colonies to take this or that step to raise men or money to help on the work He was the revolution Almost always he had perfect control of his temper which was by no means mild and over his passions and his positive aggressive spirit But sometimes the overwhelming injustice of his treatment by Congress must have been a sore temptation to him And when he watched the intrepid Hamilton dash on to victory in the re doubts at Yorktown he must have felt the weight of the heavy burden he was bearing rise from his great heart so that it beat the faster1 for he knew that should Cornwallis surrender the war would probably result victoriously for the American arms The same quiet firm far seeing ter led him through the years of his life after he had laid down his sword When he stepped out of the position of commander-in-chief of the victorious army asking no reward and quietly returned to the privacy of his own home he fore shadowed the character of the nation he had so largely helped to make It should be a nation of itself not dependent on England or any other country under the globe fop its customs or its policy It was to embody principles hitherto un heard of in the annals of history It was even in the distant future to take upon itself the yoke of a burdened and op pressed people to free them from their oppression and to give them back their country with no thought of price or ad vantage And yet this was a man NEWS TRAVELED SLOWLY Washington Was in the Tomb Two Days Before New Xork Knew It Had George Washington lived and died at the close of the present century in stead of the last his death would have been known at all four corners of the globe inside two or three hours whereas it was hot known that he had passed away for several days afterward Even in Philadelphia the old capital of the United States where the Sixth Congress had just assembled it was not known that Washington was dead until Dec 10 two days afterward TVTavire trmrolorl elnulv in thnin than twenty four hours put a period tq his life The New York papers did not get the news of Washingtons death until Dec 19 and it was four days later when tha Boston papers published their first iny formation President Adams issued at proclamation advising all citizens to weafi crape on the left arm for thirty days and setting apart Feb 22 Washingtons birthday as a day when special services in honor of Washington should be held New York paid its tribute to the de parted President on Dec 31 No carts -carriages or horseback riders were allow ed in the streets through which the fun eral procession passed on the way to StJ Pauls Church where Gov Morris deliv ered the funeral oration and Bishop Sam uel Provost conducted the religious ser vices Washingtons Last Words Although some statements have been made by early biographers of Washing ton to the effect that he was bled to death by his attending physician Dr Craik there was never any foundation for thet accusations Washington was only ill two days having exposed himself to the inclemency of the weather on Thursday Dec 32J He became violently ill on the following day and expired between 10 and 1U oclock Saturday night his death beingj directly due to a cold in his throat and lungs The room in which Washington died in his Mount Vernon home is one of the most interesting portions of the colonial residence of the first President Washingtons last words spoken to Dr Craik were I am just going Have mef decently buried and do not let my body be put into the vault in less than three days after I am dead Change of Date Washington lost eleven days of his life in 1752 when 30 years of age but he iiv GEORGE WASHINGTON - fv IV- r352A n M APIi -- fM mr KBissmi jcEacBidSB p v p ill I i i -- X - eu a great deal m Ins time and bly made them up The first celebration of his birthday anniversary of which there is record occurred in Richmond Va on Feb 11 1782 old style It was a feast and soul flow day there and else where until 1793 when Feb 22 was adopted according to the new style WASHINGTONS HEADQUARTERS New Jersey House Made Famous ti the Father of His Country Four miles from Princeton N J stands one of the historic houses of the country It is the Berrian farm house made famous by the fact thnt r ttc cupiedby Washington as his cable telegraph telephone and postal WASntNGToxs headotaiitj2bs bocky cilities were an unknown quantity and ill y j it took1 days and weeks to transmit ters during a part of the revolution FT uiiiLiuu iucu nuae attuuua uuu iiiiuutta ucu tutre Uunng tUe time ngure now in tnis rapm age or invention and improvement The Alexandria Times was the first newspaper to announce Washingtons death printing on Monday Dec 16 a single paragraph obituary thus It is our painful duty first to announce to our country and to the world the death of Gen George Washington This mourn ful event occurred last Saturday evening about 11 oclock On the previous night he was attacked with a violent inflamma tory affliction in his throat which in leas thof re gress held its sesinn t t i here Mrs Washington entertained the notables of the land OTne house has it been overharJed by patriotic wont - Srrfnt coins may mementos of the patriot and is visited annually bv dreds of persons France with a population of 38518- 000 has a peace strength of 570000 war strength 4600000 Millions more -could be called out if wanted but of course they would be untrained -- - JL Y i i