<br/><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</SPAN>
<br/><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</SPAN>
<br/><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>IN THE VIRGINIA ROOM</h2>
<p>“Childless,” was the word which she murmured
in her heart, as she entered the building
which had once been the Presidential
Mansion of Jefferson Davis and now is the
Confederate Museum. Why the thought of
her estranged daughter flashed upon her as
she came to do honor to the memory of her
long dead husband, Mrs. Desborough could
not have told, but so overwhelming was the
sadness of her mood that she could hardly
wonder if this bitter memory took advantage
of her moment of weakness to obtrude itself.
She set her lips tightly and put it determinedly
into the background. She would
not think of the daughter who was lost to
her; to-day and here no thought but should
go back in loving homage and passionate
grief to the hero whose name she bore.</p>
<p>She went at once to the Virginia Room,
bowing quickly but kindly to the custodian of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</SPAN></span>
the Museum, and as she pushed open the door
of the sad place, she thought herself alone.
The heavy April rain which was drenching
Richmond outside kept visitors away, and
the building was almost deserted. In her
yearly visits to this spot, those pilgrimages
which she had made as to a shrine, she had
once before had the Virginia Room to herself,
untroubled by the presence of strangers;
and now with a quick sigh of relief she realized
how great had been the comfort of that
solitude. To her sensitive nature it was hard
to stand before the memorials of her dead
and yet to be aware that strange eyes, eyes
curious if sympathetic, might be reading in
her face all the emotions of her very soul.
To preserve the calm necessary before the
public had always seemed to her almost like
being untrue to the memory she came to
consecrate; and to-day it was with a swelling
sigh of relief that she threw back her heavy
widow’s veil with the free, proud motion
which belonged to the women of her race
and time—the women bred in the South<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</SPAN></span>
before the war. She was an old woman,
though not much over sixty, for pain can age
more swiftly than time. The high-bred mien
would be hers as long as life remained,
and wonderful was her self-control. Again
and again she had felt unshed tears burn in
her eyes like living fire, yet had been sure
that no stranger had had reason to look
upon her as more than a casual visitor to the
museum; but to be able to let her grief have
way seemed almost a joy. She felt the quick
drops start at the bare thought. Life had left
her no greater blessing than this liberty to weep
undiscovered over the memorials of her dead.</p>
<p>At the instant a man came from behind
one of the cases, so near that she might have
touched him. Instinctively she tried to take
her handkerchief from her chatelaine, and
in her confusion detached the bag. It fell at
the feet of the gentleman, who stooped at
once to pick it up. As he held it out, she
forced a smile to her fine old face.</p>
<p>“Thank you,” she said; “I—I was very
awkward.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Not at all,” he responded. “Those bags
are so easily unhooked.”</p>
<p>The tone struck her almost like a blow.
To the disappointment of finding that she
was not alone in this solemn place was added
the bitter fact that the intruder who had come
upon her was not of her people. An impulse
of bitterness from the old times of blood and
of fire swept over her like a wave. The room
had carried her back as it always did to the
past, and after almost two-score years she
for the first time broke through the stern
resolve that had kept her from hostile speech.</p>
<p>“You are a Northerner!” she exclaimed.</p>
<p>The words were nothing, but the tone, she
knew, was hot with all the long pent-up bitterness.
She felt her cheek flush as, almost before
the words were spoken, she realized what
she had said. The stranger, however, showed
no sign of resentment. He smiled, then grew
grave again.</p>
<p>“Yes. Do not Northerners visit the Museum?
I supposed nobody came to Richmond
without coming here.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She was painfully annoyed, and felt her
thin cheeks glow as hotly as if she were still
a girl. To be lacking in politeness was sufficiently
humiliating, but to seem rude to one
from the North, to fail in living up to her
traditions, was intolerable.</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon,” she forced herself
to say. “To come through that door is to
step into the past, and I spoke as I might
have when—”</p>
<p>“When a Yankee in the house of President
Davis would have required explicit explanation,”
the stranger finished the sentence she
knew not how to complete.</p>
<p>Even in her discomposure she appreciated
both the courtesy which spared her the embarrassment
of being left in the confusion
of an unfinished remark and the adroitness
which gave to his reply just the right tone of
lightness. He was evidently a man of the
world. Her instinct, not to be outdone in
politeness, least of all by one of her race,
made her speak again.</p>
<p>“I was rude,” she said stiffly. “To-day<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</SPAN></span>
is an anniversary on which I always come
here, and I forgot myself.”</p>
<p>“Then I must have seemed doubly obtrusive,”
he returned gravely.</p>
<p>He was certainly a gentleman. He was
well groomed, moreover, with the appearance
of quiet wealth. One of his hands was
ungloved, and she noted appreciatively how
finely shaped it was, how white and well
kept. The North had all the wealth now,
she reflected involuntarily, while so many
of the descendants of old Southern families
were forced to earn their very bread by occupations
unworthy of them. They could not
keep their fine hands, hands that told of
blood and breeding for generations, as could
this stranger before her. His attractiveness,
his air of prosperity, were offensive to her
because they emphasized the pitiful poverty of
so many of her kin whose forefathers had
never known what want could be.</p>
<p>“The Museum is open to the public,” she
replied, with increasing coldness.</p>
<p>She expected him to bow and leave her.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</SPAN></span>
Not only did he linger, but she seemed to
see in his face a look of pity. Before she could
resent this pity, however, she met his eyes
with her own, and the look seemed to her
to be one of sympathy.</p>
<p>“Will you pardon my saying that I too came
here to-day because it is an anniversary?”</p>
<p>“An anniversary?” she echoed. “How
can an anniversary bring a Northerner here?”</p>
<p>“It is n’t mine exactly. It is my son’s.
His mother is a Virginian.”</p>
<p>So highly strung was her mood that she
noticed almost with approval that he had
said “is” and not “was.” He had at least
not deprived his wife of her birthright as a
daughter of the sacred soil. She began to be
aware of a growing excitement. She could
hardly have heard unmoved any allusion to
a marriage which had taken from the South
a woman born to its traditions and to its
sorrows. She felt a fresh impulse of anger
against this prosperous son of the North
who had carried away from a Virginia mother
a daughter as she had been robbed of hers.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</SPAN></span>
The cruel pang of crushed motherhood which
ached within her at the remembrance of her
own child, the child she had herself cast off
because of her marriage, was so fierce that
for a moment she could not command her
voice. She could not shape the question which
was in her heart, but she felt that with her
eyes she all but commanded the stranger to
tell her more.</p>
<p>“We live in the North,” he explained,
“but she has long promised the boy that
when he was eight he should see the relics
of his Virginian grandfather which are in the
museum here. Unfortunately, when the time
came, she was not well enough to come with
him; and as she wished him to be here on
this especial day, I have brought him.”</p>
<p>The Southern woman felt her heart beating
tumultuously, and it was almost as if
another spoke when she said in a manner
entirely conventional:—</p>
<p>“I trust that her illness is not serious.”</p>
<p>“If it were, I should not be here myself,”
he answered.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She collected her strength, which seemed
to be leaving her, and forced herself to look
around the room. She could not have told
what she expected, or whether she most
hoped or feared what she might see.</p>
<p>“But your son?” she asked.</p>
<p>The man’s face changed subtly.</p>
<p>“My father,” he replied, “was an officer
in the Union army. I wished to see this place
first, to be prepared for Desborough’s questions.
It is n’t easy to answer the questions
of a clever lad whose two grandfathers have
been killed in the same battle, fighting on
opposite sides.”</p>
<p>The name struck her like a blow. She
leaned for support against the corner of the
nearest case, and fixed her gaze on the pathetic
coat of General Lee behind the glass
which showed her as a faint wraith the reflection
of her own face. Desborough had been
her husband’s name, and this the anniversary
of his death; she felt as if the dead had
arisen to confront her, and that some imperative
call in the blood insistently responded.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</SPAN></span>
Yet she could not believe that her son-in-law
was before her, regarding her with that
straightforward, appealingly honest gaze; she
said to herself that the name was merely a
coincidence, that every day in the year was
the anniversary of the death of some Virginian
hero, and that this could not be her
daughter’s husband.</p>
<p>“Have you decided what to tell your son?”
she heard her voice, strange and far off, asking
amid the thrilling quiet of the room.</p>
<p>The stranger regarded her as if struck by
the note of challenge in her tone. His serious
eyes seemed to her to be endeavoring to probe
her own in search of the cause of her sharpness.</p>
<p>“I can do no more,” was his answer, “than
to tell him what I have always told him—the
truth, as far as I can see it.”</p>
<p>“And the truth which you can tell him here—here,
before the sacred relics of our dead,
the sacred memorials of our Lost Cause—”</p>
<p>She could not go on, but stopped suddenly
that he might not hear her voice break.</p>
<p>“He has never been taught anything but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</SPAN></span>
that the men of the South fought for what
they believed, and that no man can do a
nobler thing than to give his life for his faith.”</p>
<p>She became suddenly and illogically sure
that she was talking to her son-in-law, although
the ground of her conviction was no
other than the one she had just before rejected.
The whole thing flashed upon her
mind as perfectly simple. Her daughter
knew that on this day she was always to be
found here, and had meant to meet her, with
the little son bearing his grandfather’s name.
The question now was whether the husband
knew. Something in his air, something half-propitiatory,
something certainly beyond the
ordinary deference offered to a lady who is a
stranger, gave her a vague distrust. She was
not untouched by the desire for reconciliation,
but she had again and again resisted that
before, and least of all could she tolerate the
idea of being tricked. The possibility that
her son-in-law might be feigning ignorance
to work the more surely upon her sympathy
angered her.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Do you know who I am?” she demanded
abruptly.</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon,” he answered, evidently
surprised, “but I have never been in
Richmond before. If you are well known
here, or are the wife of some man famous in
the South, I am too completely a stranger to
recognize you.”</p>
<p>“Yet you seemed to wish to explain yourself
to me. Why?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” he began hesitatingly,
searching her face with his straightforward
gray eyes. Then he flushed slightly, and
broke out with new feeling: “Yes; I do know.
You came just as I was going away because
I could not endure the sadness of it; when
every one of these cases seemed to me to drip
with blood and tears. That sounds to you
extravagant, but the whole thing came over
me so tremendously that I could n’t bear it.”</p>
<p>“I do not understand,” she returned tremulously.
“You have such collections at the
North, I suppose.”</p>
<p>“But here it came over me that to all the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</SPAN></span>
sorrow of loss was added the bitterness of
defeat. I felt that no Southerner could come
here without feeling that all the agony this
commemorates had been in vain; and the pity
of it took me by the throat so that when I
spoke to you, you were a sort of impersonation
of the South—of the Southern women;
and I wanted to ask for pardon.”</p>
<p>She drew a deep breath and raised her
head proudly.</p>
<p>“Not for the war,” he said quickly, with
a gesture which seemed to wave aside her
pride and showed her how well he had understood
her triumph at the admission seemingly
implied in his words. “I am a Northern man,
and I believe with my whole soul that the
North was right. I believe in the cause for
which my father died. Only I see now that
if he had lived in the South, the same spirit
would have carried him into the Confederate
army.”</p>
<p>“But for what should you ask pardon, if
the North was in the right?”</p>
<p>“For myself; for not understanding—for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</SPAN></span>
being so dull all these years that I have
lived with a wife faithful in her heart to the
South and too loyal to me to speak. We in
the North have forgiven, and we think that
the South should forget. It has come over
me to-day how easy it is for the conquerors
to forgive and how hard that must be for the
conquered.”</p>
<p>“You do not understand even now,” she
said, her voice low with feeling. “Because
we are conquered we can forgive; but we
should be less than human to forget.”</p>
<p>The room was very still for a little, and
then, following out her thought, she said as
if in wonder: “And you, a Northerner, have
felt all this!”</p>
<p>He shook his head, with a little smile.</p>
<p>“It is perhaps too much to ask,” returned
he, “that you Southern women should realize
that even a Northerner is still human.”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes; but to feel our suffering, to
see—”</p>
<p>“It has always been facing me, I understand
now, in my wife’s eyes—the immeasurable<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</SPAN></span>
pathos of a people beaten in a struggle
they felt to be right; but she had been so
happy otherwise, and she never spoke of it.”</p>
<p>“In the heart of every Southern woman,”
she said solemnly, though now without bitterness,
“is always the anguish of our Lost
Cause. We cover the surface, we accept, and
God knows we have been patient; but each
of us has deep down a sense of the blood
that was poured out in vain, of the agony of
the men we loved, of how they were humiliated—humiliated,
and of the great cause of
liberty lost—lost!”</p>
<p>For long, bitter years she had not spoken
even to her nearest friends as she was talking
to this stranger, this Northerner. The consciousness
of this brought her back to the
remembrance that he was the husband of
her daughter.</p>
<p>“Has your wife no relatives in the South
who might have made you understand how
we Southern women must feel?” she asked.</p>
<p>He grew instantly colder.</p>
<p>“I have never seen her Southern relatives.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Pardon the curiosity of an old woman,”
she went on, watching him keenly; “may I
ask why?”</p>
<p>“My wife’s mother did not choose to know
the Yankee her daughter married.”</p>
<p>“And you?”</p>
<p>“I did not choose to force an acquaintance
or to be known on sufferance,” he answered
crisply. “I was aware of no wrong, and I
did not choose to ask to be forgiven for being
a Northerner.”</p>
<p>She knew that in her heart she was already
accepting this strong, fine man, alien as he
was to all the traditions of her life, and she
was not ill pleased at his pride.</p>
<p>“But have you ever considered what it
must have cost the mother to give up her
daughter?”</p>
<p>“Why need she have given her up? Marriages
between the North and the South have
been common enough without any family
breach.”</p>
<p>She was utterly sure that he knew neither
to whom he was talking nor what had been<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</SPAN></span>
the real cause of her separation from her
daughter. She experienced a sort of wild
inner exultation that at last had come the
moment when she might justify herself;
when she might tell the whole dreadful story
which had been as eating poison in her veins.
She raised her head proudly, and looked at
him with her whole soul in her eyes.</p>
<p>“If you have patience to listen,” she said,
feeling her cheeks warm, “and will pardon
my being personal, I should like to tell you
what has happened to me. My husband was
a colonel in the Confederate army. We were
married when I was seventeen, in a brief
furlough he won by being wounded at the
battle of the Wilderness. I saw him, in the
four years of the war before he fell at Five
Forks, less than a dozen times, and always
for the briefest visits—poor scraps of fearful
happiness torn out of long stretches of agony.
My daughter, my only child, was born after
her father’s death. Our fortune had gone to
the Cause. My father and my husband both
refused to invest money abroad. They considered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</SPAN></span>
it disloyal, and they put everything
into Confederate securities even after they
felt sure they should get nothing back. They
were too loyal to withhold anything when
the country was in deadly peril.”</p>
<p>She paused, but he did not speak, and
with swelling breast and parching throat she
went on:—</p>
<p>“At Five Forks my husband was killed
in a hand-to-hand fight with a Northern
officer. He struck his enemy down after he
had received his own death-wound. I pray
God he did not know the day was lost. He
had gone through so much, I hope that was
spared him. On the other side of death he
must have found some comfort to help him
bear it. God must have had some comfort
for our poor boys when he permitted the cause
of liberty to be lost.”</p>
<p>She pressed her clenched hand against her
bosom, and as she did so her eyes met those of
her companion. She felt the sympathy of his
look, but something recalled her to the sense
that she was speaking to one from the North.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“It is not the cause of liberty to you,” she
said. “I have forgotten again. I have not
spoken of all this for so long. I have not
dared; but to-day—to-day I must speak,
and you must forgive me if I use the old
language.”</p>
<p>He dropped his glance as if he felt it an
intrusion to see her bitter emotion, and said
softly: “I think I understand. You need not
apologize.”</p>
<p>“After the war,” she went on hurriedly
and abruptly, “I lived for my daughter. I
worked for her. She—she was like her
father.”</p>
<p>She choked, but regained the appearance
of composure by a mighty effort.</p>
<p>“When she was a woman—she was still
a child to me; over twenty, but I was not
twice her age—she went North, and there
she fell in love. She wrote me that she was
to marry a Northerner, and when she added
his name—it was the son of the man who
killed her father.”</p>
<p>“It is not possible!” the other exclaimed.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</SPAN></span>
“You imagined it. Such things happen in
melodramas—”</p>
<p>She put up her hand and arrested his
words.</p>
<p>“This happened not in a melodrama, but
in a tragedy—in my life,” she said. “I
need not go into details. She married him,
and I have never seen her since.”</p>
<p>“Did he know?”</p>
<p>“No. It was my wedding gift to my
daughter—that I kept her secret. That
was all I had strength to do. You think I
was an unnatural mother, of course; but—”</p>
<p>She saw that his eyes were moist as he
raised them in answering.</p>
<p>“I should have said so yesterday without
any hesitation; to-day—”</p>
<p>“To-day?” she echoed eagerly, as he
paused.</p>
<p>“To-day,” he answered, letting his glance
sweep over the pathetic memorials so thick
about them—“to-day at least I understand,
and I do not wonder.”</p>
<p>She looked at him with all her heart in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</SPAN></span>
her eyes, trying to read his most hidden feeling.
Then she touched his arm lightly with
the tips of her slender black-gloved fingers.</p>
<p>“Come,” she said.</p>
<p>She led him across the room, and pointed
to a colonel’s sash and pistols which lay in
one of the cases under a faded card.</p>
<p>“Those were my husband’s.”</p>
<p>“Those!” he cried. “You Louise’s mother?
It is impossible!”</p>
<p>“It may be impossible; but, as I said of
the other thing, it is true.”</p>
<p>“The other thing?” he repeated. “What—do
you mean the thing you said—that
my father and he— That cannot be true. I
should surely have known!”</p>
<p>“It is true,” she insisted. “At the moment
it happened they were surrounded by our
soldiers, and his own men probably did not
realize just what happened. But I—I know
every minute of that fight! One of my husband’s
staff had been at West Point with
them both, and he told me. He saw it, and
tried to come between them. Your wife<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</SPAN></span>
married you, knowing you to be the son of
the man who killed her father.”</p>
<p>The Northerner passed his hand across
his forehead as if to wipe away the confusion
of his mind. His eyes were cast down, but
she saw that their lids were wet.</p>
<p>“Poor Louise!” he murmured, seemingly
rather to himself than to her; “how she must
have suffered over that secret. Poor Louise!”</p>
<p>“You come here,” Mrs. Desborough went
on, feeling herself choke at his words, but
determined not to give way to the warmer
impulse of her heart, “and even you are
moved by these sacred relics. What do you
think they are to us?”</p>
<p>She was half conscious that she was appealing
to the memorials around her to
strengthen her in her purpose not to yield,
not to make peace with the son of the man
who had slain her husband, her hero, her
love; she felt that in harboring for an instant
such an impulse she was untrue to the Cause
which, though lost, was for her forever living
with the deathless devotion of love and anguish.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“These relics do move me,” her son-in-law
said gently. “They move me so deeply
that they seem to me wrong. I confess that I
was thinking, before you came in, that if I
were a Southerner, with the traditions of the
South behind me, and the bitter sense of
failure to embitter me, they would stir me to
madness; that I should feel it impossible ever
to be loyal to anything but the South. The
war is over. The South at last is understood.
She is honored for the incredible bravery
with which, under crushing odds, she fought
for her conviction. Why prolong the inevitable
pain? Why gather these relics to nourish
a feeling absolutely untrue—the feeling
that the Union is less your country than it is
ours?”</p>
<p>“Because it is just to the dead,” she answered
swiftly. “Because it is only justice
that we keep in remembrance how true they
were, how gallant, how brave, how noble, and—O
God!—that we make some poor record
of what we of the South have suffered!”</p>
<p>He shook his head and sighed. She saw<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</SPAN></span>
the tears in his eyes and did not attempt to
hide her own.</p>
<p>“Would you have it forgotten,” she demanded
passionately, “that the grandfather
of your son—the father of your wife—was
one of God’s noblemen? Would you have
him remembered only as a beaten rebel? I
tell you that if we had not gathered these
memorials, every clod that was wet with
their blood would cry out against us! In the
North you call these men rebels; there is no
battlefield in the South where the very rustle
of the grass does not whisper over their graves
that they were patriots and heroes! And
this, poor though it be”—and she waved
her hand to the cases around them—“is
the best memorial we can give them.”</p>
<p>He made a step forward, and held out both
his hands impulsively. She did not take
them, and they dropped again. He hesitated,
and then drew back.</p>
<p>“It must be as it is,” he said sadly. “Even
if I blamed you women of the South, I could
not say so here. Only,” he added, his voice<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</SPAN></span>
falling, “can you forget that the women of
the North suffered too? I grew up in the
shadow of a grief so great that it sapped the
very life of my mother, and in the end killed
her. Do you think I could visit that upon
the innocent head of Louise?—I did not
mean, though, to speak of myself, now that
I know who you are. I will not intrude on
you; but my little son, with your husband’s
name and his mother’s eyes, is certainly
guiltless. I will not come with him, but may
I not send him with my man to see you this
afternoon, so that I may say to Louise that
you have kissed him and given him your
blessing? Sorrow has taken away his other
grandmother.”</p>
<p>It seemed to her that she could not endure
the speaking of one syllable more. Her whole
body trembled, and she raised her hands in
an impulsive gesture which implored him to
be silent. All the old mother-love for Louise,
the passionate crying of her lonely heart for
this unseen grandson with the blood of her
dead husband warm in his veins, the grief<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</SPAN></span>
of black years and fidelity to old ideals,
warred within her, and tore her like wolves.
She cast a glance around as if to find some
way by which she could flee from this position
which it was too terrible to face. Then she
saw her companion look at her with infinite
pity and sadness.</p>
<p>“Then,” he said, “I can only say good-by.”</p>
<p>But she sprang forward as if she burst
from chains, and threw herself upon his
breast, the agony of the long, bitter past
gushing in a torrent of hot tears.</p>
<p>“Oh, my son! my son!” she sobbed.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</SPAN>
<br/><SPAN name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="l2" />
<p class="pr"><b>The Riverside Press</b><br/>
CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS<br/>
U . S . A</p>
<p class="sp"> </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="ads">
<hr class="l3" />
<p class="adtl">THE OLD PEABODY PEW</p>
<hr class="l4" />
<p class="auth">By KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN<br/></p>
<hr class="l3" />
<p class="cq">“A characteristically bright tale of a New England
life full of sentiment and humor.”—<cite>Outlook, N. Y.</cite></p>
<p class="cq">“The cheeriest of the stories by this gifted author.”—<cite>Philadelphia
Telegraph.</cite></p>
<p class="cq">“Mrs. Wiggin has never penned a more truthful
or delightful idyl of New England life.”—<cite>Boston
Herald.</cite></p>
<p class="cq">“A delightful mingling of humor and sentiment
and pathos.”—<cite>N. Y. Herald.</cite></p>
<p class="cq">“A story that compels laughter as well as tears and
makes us think better of the workaday world in which
we live.”—<cite>Budget and Beacon.</cite></p>
<hr class="l4" />
<p>With border designs and full-page illustrations in
color, $1.50.</p>
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<p class="sp"> </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="l3" />
<p class="adtl">THE PRINCESS POURQUOI</p>
<hr class="l4" />
<p class="auth">By MARGARET SHERWOOD<br/></p>
<hr class="l3" />
<p class="cq">Five charming fairy tales. “They all point a moral
that is never too apparently on the surface and they
all hold our undiverted attention through their fluent
writing, their delicate fantasy, and their exquisite simplicity.”—<cite>Boston
Transcript.</cite></p>
<p class="cq">“A whimsical view of the progress of woman ...
wise and witty.”—<cite>Kansas City Star.</cite></p>
<p class="cq">“Told with much humor and they satirize many
foibles of mankind.”—<cite>Boston Budget and Beacon.</cite></p>
<p class="cq">“Although the full significance of these delicate
fancies will be grasped only by older people, they have
enough of the fairy spirit to prove enjoyable to children
also.”—<cite>Baltimore News.</cite></p>
<hr class="l4" />
<p class="right">With illustrations, $1.50.<br/></p>
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<p class="sp"> </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="l3" />
<p class="adtl">MONTLIVET</p>
<hr class="l4" />
<p class="auth">By ALICE PRESCOTT SMITH<br/></p>
<hr class="l3" />
<p class="cq">“The best American historical novel by a woman
since ‘To Have and To Hold.’”<br/>
<span class="ct">New York World.</span><br/></p>
<p class="cq">“In dramatic force and in power and reality of dialogue
this story is one of the best of the year.”<br/>
<span class="ct">San Francisco Chronicle.</span><br/></p>
<p class="cq">“The reader thrills under the spell of a well-sustained
and adventurous tale.”
<span class="ct">Detroit Free Press.</span><br/></p>
<p class="cq">“The story of ‘Montlivet’ is as simple as it is absorbingly
interesting—it is of a quality to rise above
fads and fashions by virtue of its own power.”
<span class="ct">Chicago Journal.</span><br/></p>
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<p class="right">With frontispiece in colors, $1.50.<br/></p>
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<p class="sp"> </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="l3" />
<p class="adtl">THE WORLD’S WARRANT</p>
<hr class="l4" />
<p class="auth">By NORAH DAVIS</p>
<hr class="l3" />
<p class="cq">“Miss Davis has evolved a plot of unusual ingenuity and dotted
it with situations that are striking and unexpected.”<br/>
<span class="ct">The Times, New York.</span><br/></p>
<p class="cq">“The novel is written with a clear understanding of the people
where the scenes are laid, and the descriptive passages show
equal knowledge of the country and its outward aspects. It is
realistic, but never dull, for it has a keenness and brightness
of text that is constantly enticing.”<br/>
<span class="ct">Boston Budget.</span><br/></p>
<p class="cq">“Miss Davis deserves to be watched. She has power, style,
convincing earnestness, and, more than all, the trick of creating
atmosphere.”<br/>
<span class="ct">New Orleans Picayune.</span><br/></p>
<p class="cq">“‘The World’s Warrant’ is certainly the most unique, interesting,
and original love story of the season. The story is bold in
execution, and really exceptional in strength and power. It
would be impossible not to read it with keen interest.”<br/>
<span class="ct">St. Paul Pioneer Press.</span><br/></p>
<hr class="l4" />
<p>With frontispiece in color by <span class="smcap">F. C. Yohn</span></p>
<p class="right">Crown 8vo, $1.50</p>
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BOSTON<br/>
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<div class="tnote">
<p class="tn">Transcriber’s Note</p>
<p>Double chapter headers and blank pages between chapters were removed.
One missing opening quote mark was added. Otherwise the original was
preserved, including inconsistent spelling of the dialect.</p>
</div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />