<h3>CHAPTER XIX.</h3>
<p><span class = "dropcap">H</span><span class = "firstword">ope</span>
sinks a world of imagination. It in almost every instance never fails to
arm the opponents of justice with weapons of friendly defence, and gains
their final fight with peaceful submission. Life is too often stripped
of its pleasantness by the steps of false assumption, marring the true
path of life-long happiness which should be pebbled with principle,
piety, purity, and peace.</p>
<p>Next morning, after the trying adventure of the lonely outcast, was
the scene of wonder at Dilworth Castle. Henry Hawkes, the head gardener
under the Marquis of Orland, on approaching the little summer-house in
which Irene Iddesleigh so often sat in days of youth, was horrified to
find the dead body of a woman, apparently a widow, lying prostrate
inside its mossy walls. “Lord, protect me!” shouted poor Hawkes, half
distractedly, and hurried to Dilworth
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_187" id =
"page_187">187</SPAN></span>
Castle to inform the inmates of what he had just seen.</p>
<p>They all rushed towards the little rustic building to verify the
certainty of the gardener’s remarks. There she lay, cold, stiff, and
lifeless as Nero, and must have been dead for hours. They advised the
authorities, who were soon on the spot.</p>
<p>What stinging looks of shame the Marquis cast upon her corpse on
being told that it was that of the once beautiful Lady
Dunfern—mother of the present heir to Dunfern estate!</p>
<p>Lying close at hand was an old and soiled card, with the words almost
beyond distinction, “Irene Iddesleigh.” In an instant her whole history
flashed before the unforgiving mind of the Marquis, and being a sharer
in her devices, through his nephew Oscar Otwell, ordered her body to be
conveyed to the morgue, at the same time intimating to Sir Hugh Dunfern
her demise.</p>
<p>It transpired at the inquest, held next day, that she was admitted
the previous night to the grounds of Dilworth Castle by the porter at
the lodge, giving her name as “Irene Iddesleigh.”</p>
<p>She must have taken refuge in the little construction
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_188" id =
"page_188">188</SPAN></span>
planned under her personal supervision whilst inhabiting Dilworth Castle
during her girlhood, and, haunted with the never-dying desire to visit
once more its lovely grounds, wandered there to die of starvation.</p>
<p>No notice whatever was taken of her death by her son, who obeyed to
the last letter his father’s instructions, and carried them out with
tearless pride.</p>
<p>The little narrow bed at the lowest corner on the west side of
Seaforde graveyard was the spot chosen for her remains. Thus were laid
to rest the orphan of Colonel Iddesleigh, the adopted daughter and
imagined heiress of Lord and Lady Dilworth, what might have been the
proud wife of Sir John Dunfern, the unlawful wife of Oscar Otwell, the
suicidal outcast, and the despised and rejected mother.</p>
<p>She who might have swayed society’s circle with the sceptre of
nobleness—she who might still have shared in the greatness of her
position and defied the crooked stream of poverty in which she so long
sailed—had she only been, first of all, true to self, then the
honourable name of Sir John Dunfern would have maintained its standard
of pure and noble distinction, without being spotted here and there with
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_189" id =
"page_189">189</SPAN></span>
heathenish remarks inflicted by a sarcastic public on the administerer
of proper punishment; then the dignified knight of proud and upright
ancestry would have been spared the pains of incessant insult, the
mockery of equals, the haunted diseases of mental trials, the erring eye
of harshness, and the throbbing twitch of constant criticism.</p>
<p>It was only the lapse of a few minutes after the widowed waif left
Dunfern Mansion until the arrival of her son from London, who, after
bidding his mother quit the grounds owned by him, blotted her name for
ever from his book of memory; and being strongly prejudiced by a father
of faultless bearing, resolved that the sharers of beauty, youth, and
false love should never have the slightest catch on his affections.</p>
<p class = "illustration">
<ANTIMG src = "images/the_end.png" width = "298" height = "162" alt = "The End" title = "The End"></p>
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