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From The Speaker

OLD ROSES.

It was a barren country, and Wadgery was generally shrivelled with heat, but he always had roses in his garden, on his window-sill, or in his button-hole. Growing flowers under difficulties was his recreation. That was why he was called Old Roses. It was not otherwise inapt, for there was something antique about him, though he wasn't old; a flavor, an old-fashioned repose and self-possession. He was inspector of tanks for this Godforsaken country. Apart from his duties he kept mostly to himself, though when not travelling he always went down to O'Fallen's Hotel once a day for a glass of whiskey and water-whiskey kept especially for him; and as he drank this slowly he talked to Vic the barmaid, or to any chance visitors whom he knew. He never drank with any one, nor asked any one to drink; and, strange to say, no one resented this. As Vic said, "he was different." Dicky Merritt, the solicitor, who was hailfellow with squatter, homestead lessee, cockatoo-farmer, and shearer, called him "a lively old buffer." It was he, indeed, who gave him the name of Old Roses. Dicky sometimes went over to Long Neck Billabong, where Old Roses lived, for a reel, as he put it, and he always carried away a deep impression of the inspector's qualities. "Had his day," said Dicky in O'Fallen's sitting-room one night, "in marble halls, or I'm a Jack. Run neck and neck with almighty swells once. Might live here for a thousand years and he'd still be the nonsuch of the back blocks. I'd patent him-file my caveat for him to-morrow if I could-bully Old Roses!"

Victoria Dowling, the barmaid, lifted her chin slightly from her hands, as she leaned through the opening between the bar and the sitting-room, and said: "Mr. Merritt, Old Roses is a gentleman; and a gentleman is a gentleman till he

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"Till he humps his bluey into the Never Never Land, Vic? But what do you know about gentlemen, anyway? You were born five miles from the Jumping Sandhills, my dear!"

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Dicky had a profound admiration for Vic. She had brains, was perfectly fearless, no man had ever taken a liberty with her, and every one in the Wadgery country who visited O'Fallen's had a wholesome respect for her opinion.

About this time news came that the governor, Lord Malice, would pass through Wadgery on his tour up the back-blocks. A great function was necessary. It was arranged. Then came the question of the address of welcome to be delivered at the banquet. Dicky Merritt and the local doctor were proposed as composers, but they both declared they'd only "make rot of it," and suggested Old Roses.

They went to lay the thing before him. They found him in his garden. He greeted them, smiling in his quiet, enigmatical way, and listened. While Dicky spoke, a flush slowly passed over him, and then immediately left him pale; but he stood perfectly still, his hand leaning against a sandal-tree, and the coldness of his face warmed up again slowly. His head having been bent attentively as he listened, they did not see anything unusual.

After a moment of silence and inscrutable deliberation, he answered that he would do as they wished. Dicky hinted that he would require some information about Lord Malice's past career and his family's history, but he assured them that he did not need it; and his eyes idled somewhat ironically with Dicky's face.

When the two had gone, Old Roses sat in his room, a handful of letters, a photograph, and a couple of decorations spread out before him; his fingers resting on them, and his look engaged with a very far horizon.

The governor came. He was met outside the township by the citizens and esorted in - a dusty and numerous cavalcade. They passed the inspector's house. The garden was blooming, and on the roof a flag was flying. Struck by the singular character of the place, Lord Malice asked who lived there, and proposed stopping for a moment to make the acquaintance of its owner, adding, with some slight sarcasm, that if the officers of the government were too busy to pay their respects to their governor, their governor must pay his respects to them. But Old Roses was not in the garden nor the house, and they left without seeing him. He was sitting under a willow at the Billabong, reading over and over to himself the address to be delivered before the governor in the evening. And as he read his face had a wintry and inhospitable look.

The night came. Old Roses entered the dining-room quietly with the crowd, far in the governor's wake. According to his request, he was given a seat in a distant corner, where he was quite inconspicuous. Most of the men present were in evening dress. He wore a plain tweed suit, but carried a handsome rose in his button-hole. It was impossible to put him at a disadvantage. He looked distinguished as he was. He appeared to be much interested in Lord Malice. The early proceedings were cordial, for the governor and his suite made themselves most agreeable, and talk flowed amiably. After a time there was a rattle of knives and forks, and the chairman rose. Then, after a chorus of "hear, hears," there was general silence. The doorways of the room were filled by the women-servants of the hotel. Chief among them was Vic, who kept her eyes mostly on Old Roses. She knew that he was to read the address and speak, and she was more interested in him and his success than in Lord Malice and suite. Her admiration of him was great. He had always treated her as a lady, and it had done her good. He had looked earnestly and kindly into her brown eyes, and

"And I call upon Mr. Adam Sherwood to speak to the health of his Excellency Lord Malice."

In his modest corner Old Roses stretched to his feet. The governor glanced over carelessly. He only saw a figure in grey, with a rose at button-hole. The chairman whispered that it was the owner of the house and garden which had interested his Excellency that afternoon. His Excellency looked a little closer, but saw only a rim of iron-grey hair above the paper held before Old Roses' face.

Then a voice came from behind the paper: "Your Excellency, Mr. Chairman, and gentlemen

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listening intently. Vic noticed that his eyes were painfully grave and concerned. She also noticed other things.

The address was strange. It had been submitted to the committee, and though it struck them as out-of-the-wayish. It had been approved. It seemed different when read as Old Roses was reading it. The words sounded so inclement as they were chiselled out by the speaker's voice. Dicky Merritt afterwards declared that many phrases were interpolated by Old Roses at the moment.

The speaker referred intimately and with peculiar knowledge to the family history of Lord Malice, to certain more or less private matters which did not concern the public, to the antiquity of the name, and the high duty devolving upon one who bore the earldom of Malice. He dwelt upon the personal character of his Excellency's antecedents, and praised their honorable services to the country. He referred to the death of Lord Malice's eldest brother in Burmah, but he did it strangely. Then, with acute incisiveness he drew a picture of what a person in so exalted a position as a governor should be and should not be. His voice assuredly had at this point a fine edge of scorn. The aides-de-camp were nervous, the chairman apprehensive, the committee ill at ease. But the governor now was perfectly still, though, as Vic Dowling thought, rather pinched and old-looking. His fingers toyed with a wineglass, but his eyes never wavered from that paper nor the grey hair.

Presently the voice of the speaker changed.

"But," said he, "in Lord Malice we have the perfect governor; a man of blameless and enviable life, and possessed abundantly of discreetness, judgment, administrative ability, and power; the absolute type of English nobility and British character!"

At the first words the governor started, and his eyes flashed searchingly, curiously Then he dropped the paper from before at the paper that walled the face and at his face, and his eyes met those of the the iron grey hair. The voice rose dis- governor, and stayed. Lord Malice let go tinct and clear, with modulated emphasis. a long, choking breath, which sounded It had a peculiarly penetrating quality. A very like immeasurable relief. During the few in the room and particularly Vic-rest of the speech - delivered in a finewere struck by something in the voice that it resembled another. She soon found the trail. Her eyes also fastened on the paper. Then she moved and went to another door. Here she could see behind the paper, at an angle. Her eyes ran from the screened face to that of the governor. His Excellency had dropped the lower part of his face in his hand, and he was

tempered voice he sat as in a dream, yet his eyes intently upon the other, who now seemed to recite rather than read. He thrilled all by the pleasant resonance of his tones, and sent the blood aching delightfully through Vic Dowling's veins.

When he sat down there was immense applause. The governor rose in reply. He spoke in a low voice, but any one lis

tening outside would have said that Old Roses was still speaking. By this resemblance the girl, Vic, had trailed to others. It was now apparent to many, but Dicky said afterwards that it was simply a case of birth and breeding men used to walking red carpet grew alike, just as studowners and rabbit-catchers did.

The last words of the governor's reply were delivered in a very convincing tone as his eyes hung on Old Roses' face. "And, as I am indebted to you, gentlemen, for the feelings of loyalty to the throne which prompted this reception and the address just delivered, so am I indebted to Mr.. - Adam Sherwood for his admirable language and the unusual sincerity of his speaking; and to both you and him for most notable kindness." Immediately after the governor's speech Old Roses stole out; but as he passed through the door where Vic stood, his hand brushed against hers. Feeling its touch, he grasped it eagerly for an instant, as though he was glad of the friendliness in her eyes.

It was just before dawn of the morning that the governor knocked at the door of the house by Long Neck Billabong. The door opened almost at once, and he entered without a word.

He and Old Roses stood face to face. His face was drawn and worn, the other's cold and calm.

"Tom, Tom," Lord Malice said, "we thought you were dead

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"That is, Edward, having left me to my fate in Burmah--you were only half a mile away with a column of stout soldiers and hillmen - you waited till my death was reported, and seemed assured, and then came on to England; for two things, to take the title, just vacant by our father's death, and to marry my intended wife, who, God knows, appeared to have little care which brother it was. You got both. I was long a prisoner. When I got free, I knew; I waited. I was waiting till you had a child. Twelve years have gone; you have no child. But I shall spare you yet awhile. If your wife should die, or you should yet have a child, I shall re

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He stretched out his hand with a motion of great relief. "I was afraid you were going to speak to-night-to tell ́all, even though I was your brother. You spared me for the sake

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"For the sake of our name," the other interjected stonily.

"For the sake of our name. But I would have taken my punishment, taken it in thankfulness, because you are alive." "Taken it like a man, your Excellency," was the low rejoinder.

"You will not wipe the thing out, Tom?" said the other anxiously. Tom Hallwood dried the perspiration from his forehead.

"It can never be wiped out. For you shook all my faith in my old world. That's the worst thing that can happen a man. I only believe in the very common people now those who are not put upon their honor. One doesn't expect it of them, and, unlikely as it is, one isn't often deceived in them. I think we 'd better talk no more about it."

"You mean I had better go, Tom."

"I think so. I am going to marry soon." The other started nervously. "You needn't be so shocked. I'll come back one day, but not till your wife dies, or you have a child, as I said."

The governor rose to his feet and went to the door. "Whom do you intend marrying?" he asked, in a voice far from regal or vice-regal; only humbled and disturbed. The reply was instant and keen. "A barmaid."

The other's hand dropped from the door. But Old Roses, passing over, opened it, and, mutely waiting for the other to pass through, said: "I do not at all doubt but there will be issue. Goodday, my lord!"

The governor passed out from the pale light of the lamp into the grey and moist morning. He turned at a point where the house would be lost to view, and saw the other still standing there. The voice of Old Roses kept ringing in his ears sardonically. He knew that his punishment must go on and on.

And it did. Old Roses married Victoria Dowling from the Jumping Sandhills, and there was comely issue, and that issue is now at Eton; for Esau came into his birthright, as he hinted he would, at his own time. But he and his wife have a way of being indifferent to the gay, astonished world. And, uncommon as it may seem, he has not tired of her.

GILBERT PARKER.

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TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.

For EIGHT DOLLARS remitted directly to the Publishers, the LIVING AGE will be punctually forwarded for a year, free of postage.

Remittances should be made by bank draft or check, or by post-office money-order, if possible. If neither of these can be procured, the money should be sent in a registered letter. All postmasters are obliged to register letters when requested to do so. Drafts, checks, and moncy-orders should be made payable to the order of LITTELL & Co.

Single copies of the LIVING AGE, 18 cents.

THE EVENING PRIMROSE.

SAD evening primrose, with your silken stole
Hung delicately sunward, what a soul
Looks from your patient eye! how frail and
pale

You stand among the flowerets! and your bowl

Shows like a vanishing phantom of the grail.

Young buds that point a finger to the blue Crowd on your stem, and youth and hope are

new,

While the sap runs; yet scarcely has the sun Warmed twice upon your petals ere their hue Fails into pallidness of death begun.

And strewn about the grass the blossoms hide
The poor discolored fragments of their pride,
Or hang disconsolate with draggled vest,
And clinging, sodden cerements, to abide
The gradual working of the Alkahest.

Was it for this you struggled into light?
That one brief day should crown a tedious
night?

Was it for this you felt your way along The paths of natural growth, that from their height

Shrill death should echo in your triumph song?

It may be so. There are who say the bliss
Requites the pain; yet could it be for this
(God knows) you opened your sweet, pa-
tient eyes

To see the sun's face once, and die in his kiss?
For me
you bloom again in Paradise.
NINA FRANCES LAYARD.

Longman's Magazine.

INADEQUACY.

THE haste, the bended knee, the cry
With eager youth's ideal warm,
The sad love in the Master's eye

That followed the departing form:
Fine ardors quenched in caution cold,
Pure dreams that never dawned again —
A picture here, to thrall and hold
The fleeting memory of men.

O weak and melancholy doom,

To his young heart's bright festival To bid fair guests and not find room, For the most gracious guest of all: To hail the Holy, greet the Just,

To ask, and crave, and still not stay, Wistful and frank to almost trust,

Yet pass to gilded want away!

O boundless misery, dismal fate

Of minds that self but half subdue, To reach, of loftiest life, the gate, And valor lack to venture thro':

To cheat the infinite desire,

To halt and falter near the goal, To kill the spirit's mounting fire,

To save the shadow, lose the soul!

A story old, yet vital now

The vision and the voice abide,
A beckoning shape with star-bright brow
Travels our paltry lives beside;

A voice that clear, persistent, low,

Softly persuades, and lingers long, Breathes where the ghosts of beauty grow From color, music, marble, song;

Calls in blue morn's bird-echoing air,

Murmurs amid the twilight pines, Whispers in sighing streams, and where The rosy globe of sunset shines; Speaks from shy blooms in spring that blow, From the still stars that beam above, From lights in conquering eyes that glow, And the strange charm of woman's love.

For duty's self-forgetful pain,

For stainless thought, for service high,
Still pleads the urgent inward strain
While one like God seems gliding by.

But we indifferent, deaf, and blind,
In mean, contented ways drift on —
Some moment we shall start to find
The voice hushed, and the pilot gone.
Spectator.
JOSEPH TRUMAN.

"SOLVITUR ACRIS HYEMS."
To Dorothy.

THE Swelling woods with songs of birds ring clear;

The earth relents, and shows another face; The lawns are cloth'd, the flowers reappear; When surly winter to the spring gives place.

No more the frost lies white upon the fields; Rich scents and sounds come floating down

the breeze;

Carpets of blossom every orchard yields;
Gardens are drowsy with the hum of bees.

So sang my best loved poets long ago,
Horace and Virgil, of their happier day,
Their southern world. Ah me! our springs
are slow,

They tease us, and they loiter by the way.

Spring mocks us now with many a golden hour Of sun and growth, half shown, then snatch'd from view;

And we are left again in winter's power:
But still, dear Dorothy, it gives us you,

A matchless gift. The wild, capricious time,
Thus giving, is forgiven: and I would make
In praise of spring, as poets us'd, a rhyme,
To say how well I love it, for your sake.
A. G.
Academy.

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