of you supposed that a man could live in the same house with her without falling in love with her, did you?"
His brother, and newly acquired brothers-in-law rushed forward to seize his hand. To each of them Wilhelmina presented a flushed and dutiful cheek. Her sisters did not come forward. Harriet managed to cross the room to put her arms round her father. He had come into the room not to assist in the discussion,- he had not known that a discussion was in progress, but to find a book which he had mislaid. In the years of Wilhelmina's gentle administration he had occasionally
forgotten that he had been trained to keep his books in the library. Harriet embraced him tenderly.
"We can forgive her for treating us this way," she mourned; "it is you for whom we resent it, Father. To go out of your house alone, and be married at the clergyman's without an engagement, without attendants, without-"
Father shook himself free.
"Now, Harriet," he said, "don't be a goose. If you are talking about Wilhelmina's wedding, she had an attendant. I was the attendant. Wilhelmina, where is my book?"
THEY trak
HEY have hauled in the gang-plank; the breast-line crawls back;
Of the storm and the night, and across to the mouth Of the harbor, where stretching far out to the south, Run the lights of the town.
Swinging slowly, we turn,
Pointing out for mid-lake, past the long pier, where burn The red harbor-lights, where the great billows churn, Blow on blow, on the spiles, spilling down the white foam- But I've written the home-folks that I'm coming home.
And I'm coming; huddled close by the slow-falling rail, Blinking red through the mist and the spray, while the hail Rattles down the wet decks, lifting high, with the wail Up the wind of the fog-horn, and behind on our trail, And we nose straight out in the teeth of the gale, I know by the throb that the engines prevail, And-steady, my courage!-unless the stars fail, We 'll make it.
But tell me, O gray eyes and blue, Did you know, in your watching, O dim eyes and true, In that black night's wild fury, while the storm-signals flew, While the waves beat us back, and the hoarse whistles blew Did you know, O my dear ones, I was coming to you?
The silence of midnight; the hiss of the swell; The creaking of timbers; the close cabin smell; The slow-swaying shadows; the jar of the screw; The wind at the shutter; the feet of the crew; The cry of a child-is he coming home, too?
There's a rent in the night, and a star glimmers through; The skies clear above us; the west banks up brown; The wind dies across us; the sea 's running down; And across the dim water, still breaking in foam, Stretches out the far shore-line-and I 'm coming home.
The hills smile a welcome, the long night is past, And the ship 's turning into the harbor at last. The engines slow down; we steal through the slip, Past the low-burning lamp, and with quivering lip, Call down to the life-savers, cheering us on.
The weary throb sends us straight into the dawn, Fair and white up the bay, half asleep, all adream, In its translucent purple and pearl. Just a gleam Out there of the earliest sail; here the curl Of the first lazy smoke from a cabin, a girl Loops up the long vines at the doorway. A swirl Of white water behind us; then a stir at the dock. Steam slowly! The head-line- the stern-line-the shock As we swing alongside, and across the plank flock Wan faces, with breath still a-quiver, the roar Of the night still above and about them, the floor Still uncertain; but over the grateful, brown loam We crowd to the shore-boat-and I 'm coming home.
And away to the north, over depths of cool green From the bluffs overhead, where the deep-set ravine Digs down to the heart of the wood, while a stream Trickles out over sands drifting white and the pier Reaches out through the water to meet us! We 're here!
From the pier to the boat-house and far down the shore Flutters back to the group at the old farm-house door The word that I 'm coming; and from wrinkled old hands, As the dear old feet toil through the weary, white sands, Bringing welcome and welcome, from boat-house and strand, The hurrying, white-wingèd signals all come-
God pity the mortal who has never come home.
And I? I'm not worth it. But, gray eyes and blue! While the storms beat about me, O dear hearts and true! Or the fogs, flinging far, blot the stars from the blue, If the pole-star leads on or the rudder swings true, It's not heaven I 'm after-I 'm coming to you.
But heaven it will be when down the blue dome Flutter out the white signals that I 'm coming home.
Owned by Mr. Henry Clay Frick
FRANZ SNYDER'S WIFE. BY VANDYKE
(TIMOTHY COLE'S WOOD ENGRAVINGS OF MASTERPIECES IN AMERICAN GALLERIES-V)
SCENE AT THE CORONATION OF KING GEORGE V AND QUEEN MARY,
IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY, JUNE 22, 1911
FROM A LITHOGRAPH BY JOSEPH PENNELL, BASED ON SKETCHES MADE DURING THE REHEARSAL AND THE ACTUAL CEREMONY
The center of the picture shows the "theater" with steps, erected at the junction of choir, sanctuary, and transepts where the King, after being crowned, sat enthroned, and received homage.
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