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Tous les autres exemplaires originaux sont film6s en commengant par la premidre page qui comporte une empreinte d'impression ou d'illustration et en terminant par la derniire page qui comporte une telle empreinte. Un des symboles suivants apparaitra sur la dernidre image de cheque microfiche, selon le cas: le symboie — ► signifie "A SUIVRE ", le symbole V signifie "FIN". Les cartes, planches, tableaux, etc., peuvent dtre filmds d des taux de reduction diff6rents. Lorsque le document est trop grand pour §tre reproduit en un seul clich6, il est film6 6 partir de Tangle supdrieur gauche, de gauche d droite, et de haut en bas, en prenant le nombre d'imaqes n^cessaire. Les diagrammes suivants illustrent la m6thode. 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 DAISY I>liiKV. I'lKH- -HI. "^^BBt^ DA'SV !'•-■'' '■ ' ' :- 'A '« •^ ^ fe.' l»Mi>iv, if;- r1 1" ■4- tiT'- -"i. DAISY !•) ItY \^\ . MARSHALL SAUNDERS Author of " Beautiful Joe^^ " A little child shall lead them " I'Hn.AnEl.PHlA CMART-ES H. BANES 1420 Chestnut Street PUBLISHER'S NOTE T'h ■' little story, by ^Jvli.vs Jvlcii'shall §aundcrs. author of '" fOt-'i-Hitiful d)oe," appcurcJ some y cars ocio in B IKllOIKl, in the interc'vSts of o bencV( Mit institution. It h us seemcu vvor Widt ou blicoti ion. unJ hen:o it is thy of brought out in Its present dress 1'h e intantile grace una quaint Ways of the little chiki; her influence in shapinc] a somewhat Warped life, With all its incidental lessons, and the final happy endincj of it all, Will ijivV the little story, We arc sure, a Wide audience and a cordial reception. CONTENTS (Chapter I A Baby's Grace, • . 7 (chapter 11 )unshine ar.cl §hadov\', 25 ©lapter HI ••Ainiost Lfost, • t 39 Gilitiptcr IV [fifth's Benediction, . . 49 CHAPTER I A. BABY'S Grace ' i.-y H/4.''^^'^^. 5A.JMB e\7ening, Jv|rs. IDrummoncl, the tired, careWorn v\'oman who presided oVer our boardinc^ house, i-vj* cjlaiiced dov\n the Well-spread table, and in- formed us that the nex't day we w\-re to hav'e a neW boarder — a JVlr. Robertson, a youiKj bank clerk who had lately come from England to our prosperous (ianadian toWn. 1 knew the lad by reputation, and the ne.^t morning when he sauntered into the dining room, 1 looked at him carefully. y-oox- boy, his eye Was heavy, and his step languid. \w his foolish I [ lO DAISY encieav'ors to "see life/' he Was fust losiny the purity of heart unJ mind with vvhieh lie IkkI c|iiitteJ his far-avVuy home, oiul it Was mukiiicj its mark upon hiiTi ill a way not to he mistaken. j|c sat opposite me, and | eould see that he Was makiiicj a mere pretence of takinc] his bnukfast. • . . Presently, there w"as a remark frcMii „Mrs. Brummond's end of the table. T'lif child Was speaking— the child par excellence, \ov there Was not another one in the house. She was a curi- ous little creature — willful, disdainful, nec|lected by her mother, and suspicious of all t)ther mortals. K'tting she despised, and invariably shovVed symp- toms of displeasure if disturbed in her fuVorite occupation of playing with an uijly, yellow cut in dark corners of the house. But the stranyest DAISY II thincj of all v\"a?; her ouietncss. I^hc neVer roinpi'J iiki' Dtlur children, neVer prattled; indeed, she rarely spoke at all, so We v\"ere all attention as she pointed to young Kobertson w'ith her spoon, and said in a clear, babyish Voice, 'MiJats a bei'ry fine-lookin' boy, mamma. " CiVerybody smiled, for the boy in question, though manly and stalwart in appearance, had a decidedly plain face. 'Tie blushed a little, and bent oV'er his plate. JVlrs. lijjrummond took her hand from the coffee-urn long enough to lay it on Itjciisy's head: "push, child, you must not talk at the tal)le." " VYL'niov'e dot hand." said the child, in a displeased tone. Then rapping on the table With her spoon, to call Kobertson's attention, she asl^ed, "Boy, what's your name?" 12 DAISY '■|v)latul rvibertson," he replied. With an em- barrassed lauqh. lijuisy, intensely interested, and altocjether re- gardless of the boarders' amused glances, said in a stage whisper, while she solemnly Wagged her curly head, "Woland Wobertson. | lov'e you." Then scrambling out of her high-chair, she ran down the long room, and peremptorily demanded a sect o\-\ his k^nee. Jle started, looked annoyed, then sheepish, and finally took her up. |t did not suit his ti-nglish reser\7e to be made the cynosure of all eyes. IOui:>y sedately arranged her flounces, then Watched him playing With his food. "Ron't you like fwicusseed chicken?" she asked, gently. "Yes," he said; "but | am not hungry." "(%ome mornin's | eat nuffin too," she suid, DA/SY 13 in a relieved Way, " more partickler when 1 huVe a cjlass of milk in do nicjht. W' lund,"' tenderly pattinij the hund around her Waist, "'did you hac'e a dwink in de nicjht? ' Robertson's face became scarlet. §he VieWed him With the utmost solicitude. Then turnint] to a lady ne.'^t her, who had finished her .breakfast, and Was indolently fanning herself, " |j)ive me dot fan. de poor darlin' is hot." Both on that occasion and many subsec^aent ones, Daisy amused us by the epithets she be- stowed upon her fax'oritc. Wc found that she had not been an inattenti\?c obser\7er of the many nevvly married couples that had sojourned at '^..', eMrs, lOrummond's. ^3^^ Robertson Was fanned for several minutes — li)aisy striking his face, 14 DAfSY With an rx'tra noW <\x\^ then for his nose, in her awkw'urJ zi'ul, until | WonclercJ ot his Patience. Suddenly, he pushed back his choir, said he had finished his breakfast and that she had better qet down. This gav'e rise to a stroke of childish policy. She ordered the tublc-maid to brint) her hitherto neglected plate of porridge, and puttinc) the spoon in Robertson's hand insisted upon his feeding her. j[c complied with a pretty good grace. lUaisy kept up ^\w unbroken scrutiny of his f.icc. and presently dodging a spoonful of milk, laid a pink forefinger on his upper lip. There Was just the faintest suspicion of a moustache there. "| fordet what you call dis," she saia, '' moss — moss " '\Moustache," he replied, abruptly bringing the porridge feeding performance to a close, and DArSY 15 puttmi] hiT on her tiny feet. G)hc ran out of tlic rooni alter him. piillincj the nankin from her neck as she vCent. When | reached the hall, |\ohertson sriv^^ taking doWn his hat from thi' rack, Itjaisy in close attendance. !?)he vVas just nrefac- inc] a remark With. " Woland. lov^e," when &|V|rs. liJrummond came out of the dining room. "k)aisy," she said, peevishly, "you must say JVlr. IXobertson." " pow' berry cross you arc dis mornin'," said the child, throwing a glance at her over her shoulder; then turning to nohertson. she went o\\ to ask him whether he Would soon come back, to see her. ■ ■ ■ ...... ''sNo. ' he replied, his hand on the door. "I lunch in toWn : you w'on't see me till evening." I 'he child's face fell, and she turned silently aw'ay. Went out guick^ly, and overtook him before he i6 . DAJSY rcochfd the conuT ()f the struct. '^Thut child seems to haVc token quite a fciney to you." 1 stiid quietly; •'• 1 neVer before kneW her to show" so much interest in any one. "1 don't know why she does." he answered awkwardly, and With some impatience, "unless it is owing to my haN?ing spoken to hci' the other day. Vj'hen 1 Went to engage my room, she Was sitting in a corner alone, and 1 eas?c her a picture I happened to haN7c in my pocRct." jie stopped suddenly. j^e did not tell me then, nor did 1 fmd out until long afterWard, that the little, lonely child had reminded him of a dead sister of his, and that when he ga^e her the picture, he gaVe her a kiss With it. I made some trite remark about the softening and good influences a child can throw around DAISY 17 one — I did not intend to hint at all that he Was in need of such influences; but so suspicious Was he in his daWning manhood, that he resented my remai'k, and relapsed into profound silence. -A minute later, he left nie, under the pretence of tak,in(j a short cut to the bank. I did not see him again until evening. I entered the dining room on the first stroke of the dinner bell. ^rs. lOrummond had just preceded me. I could not help smiling at her dismayed face. l^aisy, With e>5cited, ner\7ous mo\7ements, Was dragging her high-chair from the head of the table, to a place near Robertson's. '^ I hat young man has beWitchod the child," she said fretfully. "e)he slapped me just noW, because j Would not let her put on her best dress for him." t8 daisy Wliile she Was spea^inc] iXobcrtson entered the room. Tie Was in better spirits than in the morninij. When his eye fell on lOaisy, sittinc^ flushed vVith Victory beside his plate, he smiled and pinched her cheek as he sat doWn. Itjurinc] the proaress, of the meul he showed a certain amount of attention to the scrap of humanity at his side; and she, With no eyes for the other people at the table, hung on his looks, and With a more practical interest in his Welfare, Watched eV'ery morsel of food that Went into his mouth. 0nce she said impatiently to me, "You Wed-haired man, you — don't you see dot Woland Wants some \7ecje- tables? Hoss some c|uick." i)inner o\7er, all scattered about the house. E)aisy nevVr retired earlier than (.my other per- son, so 1 Watched her curiously to see what the DAISY 19 Would do. Kobcrlson hud gone to his room. With (■' disuppoinled air she seated herself on the loWesi step o\ the staircase. §ome yount] men standincj about the hall tried to tease her. ''lO(-ihy dear," said one of them mischievously, "['•n afraid you're going to be a flirt." "what's dot?" she said, holding out inv'iting arms to the yelloW cat that Was sneaking about my boots. "A fhrt is an animal With eyes all oVer its head, and an enormous mouth, and it goes about the vVorld eating men," ex'plained another. I'oor lOuisy — she Was yet at the stage of believ'ing everything she heard. e)he shrugged her while shoulders, as she said, "lOrefful!" and hugged lu'r dingv cut a little closer. bresently they all luucjhed. (a)he had throWn the cat to 30 DAISY the floor, tind snruncj to her feet. lAohcrtson Was coming downstairs, Very carefully dressed, a licjht overcoat throw'n oVer his arm. [ifVidently, it Was his intention to spend the evening with some of his friends. lejaisy inquired Wistfully whether he Was going out, and on his replying in the affirmative, she asked whether it Was "Work" that Was taking him — that term signifying to her something that could not be neglected. "Jno, l^jaisy," he said, trying to escape her . detaining hands, "I am going to sec a play." " W^lflnd," she said beseechingly, "Won't you stay an' play Wid mean' l^ompey?" pointing toWard the yellow cat, that 'as glaring at him from under hall chair. It Was not a \'cv\f inviting prospect. "He DAISY 21 laughed, put her aside, saying, "borne other time, little girl," and Went tow'ard the hall door. T'he child Watched him, her little breast heav'ing, her hands clenched tightly ^n the folds of her dress. pe Was going to lea\7e her, the only person in the house whom she cared for. I 'he disappointment Was too great, "c'h. Woland — | fcHight you Would stay," she said, in a choRing \7oice. Then dropping on the white fur rug at her feet, she burst into a perfect pass'on of tears. This Was such an unprecedented pro:eeding on the part of the self-contained child, that a crowd of an:sious faces soon surrounded her. "WhateWr is the matter With the child? ' said her mother c]uerulously, as she bent over the pink, sobbing bundle. ".^he hasn't cried since the day she fell dovVnstair.-, an^i nearly \(^\V'A herself." 22 DAISY Robertson hurried back at the sound of the Wailing Voice. " Tias she hurt herself? he asked anxiousl ly. yie looked astonished when We e)C- plained the cause of*' her emotion. "JiJon't cry, Daisy/' he said, "1 Will stay With you to-morroW evening." I he child's sobs redoubled. jie hesitated, looked at his Watch, then muttered " \ suppose 1 Would be a brute to |ea\7e her like this." "Daisy," 1 whispered in her curly locks, "he is going to stay With you." A shriek of Joy, and the child Was on her feet, clinging to his hand With an enthusiasm that made him turn aWay With a half-foolish air. 1 he ne)^t tvVo hours Were uninterrupted bliss for Daisy. ^he spent them in one of the parlors, leaning against Robertson's knee, looking at photographs of the DAISY 2% Athenian JVlarbles. They Were e\7idently (?reek to hep, but one glance at Robertson Would smooth out her little, puzzled forehead. At ten o'clock her little head drooped and she soon fell fast asleep, so that he carried her upstairs, her face bordered by its curls resting confidingly on his shoulder. When he came doWn, I saW him glance irresolutely at the clock, as if uncertain whether to go out or not, | asked him whether he Would like to come to my room. | had some curios which 1 had picked up in my rambles about the World which 1 thought Would be of interest to him. Some of them 1 told him Wore from Athens, and bore some relation to the cMar- blcs he had been e>^amining. jle thanked me \-ery politely, but \7ery stiffly, and said that at some , future time he Would like to see them. In i 94 VAISY some Wa^, he hardly kneW why, he felt Very sleepy this e\?ening, and Would go to bed at once. jie Went, and thougits of his little companion Went With him as he sunk to a rest purer and sweeter than that which had been his during the Weeks preceding. • 1 1 ♦ CHAPTER II SUNSHINK AND SHADOW 25 M^-M-. ^m/^^'\^^im^^'% ^mSm=^^ 5T^pE ne>^t day Was Sunday. A^ 1 came downstairs in the morn- ing I saw that Daisy Was in her old place, on the lowest step of the staircase. My salutation she returned With reser\7e, but presently | heard a gay, "JVlornin', dear," and turning around, saW that she Was holding up her face to Robertson for a kiss. Before they entered the dining room, she made solicitous incjuiries about his night's rest, 'hje lauohed shortly. "\ ha\'en't slept so Well for many a night/' he said. jler little face brightened, and they Went together to the table. 27 28 DAISY 1 hi- (.'liuivli lu'Ils wVi-f I'iiujinc] when \Ve fiiiisliej breakfast, uiiJ some oiu; laiK)hiiK]ly uskctl lOuisy whcM-e she vVcis (]oinq to ntteiKl service. ''i^'U are teasiii me,' she said rcbukinalv; ''vou know' I beriy seldom go out." 'Ms)oes no one take you for Walks?" ask,ed Kobertson. | he child shook her head, and said that her mamma Was alvVays busy. \\\q lad drew up his stalwart frame, stifled some k.ind of an indicjnant cx'clamation, and looked nityincjly doWn at the pale, delicate ficjurc o\ the child. ||)aisy Was vVatching him attentively. '"Woland," she said inijuiringly, " 'rjaCe you any vVork dis mornin' ?" "Jno, ©aisy." I hen can't you div'c mc a Wall\?" Jler little hand stole confidingly in his. "Her S. DAISY n tctu; Was coax'iiuj in the e^^treme. Jle laughed, and .^uid: "^^^'y vVcll — cjo ask your mamma," 111 dclicjhtcd surprise, she scampered to her mother's end of the tabic. '', Mamma, may 1 go a-Walkin' vVid Wo — Wid ,]Vlithter Wobcrtson?" ^Mrs. lOrummond looRed up, hastily ran her eyes o\"cr lOaisy's shabby frock, then ov'er Robertson's handsome suit of clothes. "You hav'e nothing fit to vVeur, child." [daisy's face became the picture of despair. "The child looks Very v\vll as she is," interposed Robertson drylv, us he Walked toWard them, "and it is a Warm day; she only Wants a bonnet. [Daisy listened in delight, then when her mother's consent w'us gained, seized Robertson's fingers and pressed them to her lips. >.Not long after I had taken my seat in church that morning, a tall M younc] man With a cl"ilJ clincjinc] to him, came Walk- ,f ing up the aisle .« to a seat in front of me. 10 my surprise, Robertson and lOaisy. Jle, | fear, ,_, , napped a little during the sermon. J\|ot a '^^?Q» Word Was lost on lOaisy. £)he sat bolt upright, her hands clasped in front of her, her eyes fi>;(d on th.) clergyman. <7\t the close of the service, vVe found ourselv'es near each other and vValked home together, <^/\s We passed through the hot, sunny streets, Robertson, as if to apologize for being in church, said, ""After We got outdoors this morning, Itjaisy insisted upon going to church, to see the clergyman 'wing de bells.*" ;. . '■) 30 DAISY 3f ''Tl't' ^"liild is cilinosl CI heathen," | ansWcrcd, in c5 lovV Voice; "I Wish her mother Would send her to Sunday-school." [daisy's sharp caucjht my remarL " U dat where little chillens cjo Sunday afternoons, Wid pi't-lly books imder dere arms? "fes," I replied; "Wouldn't you like to t]o too? ''J^ay I, Woland?" eacjcrly. ''1 Will be berry tjood." ■pe laucjhed, and said that they must ask her mamma to giv'e the subject her consideration. Por the rest of the day, IDi-nsy followed Robertson about the house liRc a pet doc]. Toward e\"enin^|, some of his friends came in, and he shook himself free from her, and Went up to his room With them. -After a time, they all 32 DAISY came troopincj downstairs. The soutul of their merry Voices floated to the room where | was sittiiic). But they Were all hushed, when a baby- ish Voice asked, "Are you yoincj out, Roland?" Robertson resorted to artifice to pre\7ent the recurrence of a scene. '-Baisy," he said, "my friend here, JVfr. E)unforth "— laying his hand on the shoulder of the youth nearest him— "is a yreat admirer of yelloW cots. go you suppose that Pompey could be persuaded to Walk upstairs and say '^j-|oW-do-you-do' to him?" "©h yes, dear boy," said the child, trottmcj downstairs to fulfill her favorite's behest. \^hen the sound of her footsteps died uWay, there Was subdued laughter, and some one said. " Vf ho is that pretty child, Robertson?" Then the dc bunged, and there Was silence. loor DAISY 33 Vhcn 1 heard lejuisy returning, | Went to the door. G)he cume hurrying along, firmly holding the disconsolate-looking, yellow animal under her arm. A hiank look overspread her face when she suW that 1 vVas sole occupant of the hall. "Where is ,JVlithter Wobertson?" she inguired of me in a dignified Way. " pe has gone out,' 1 said, as gently as I could. " Won't you come and talk to me for a little while ? " l|)isregarding the latter part of my sentence, she said mournfully, " [£)o you Woolly fink so ? " 1 nodded my head. %\^.: let the cat slip to the floor, With a Wrathful ''(^et downstairs, you Wetched beast. ' and then Went silently avVay. 1 here Was a little, dark, corner ni'ur a luick stair- case, to which she often retreated in times of 34 DAISY great trouble. There | thinR she passed the ne)Jt hour. ^bout nine o'elock she appeared and from that time until nearly e\'i:v\- cne in the house had yone to bed, she Woi) .-rLj ?pression of terrible an- quish on his face. Suddenly he composed his features, and Went toWard the child's room. I paused on the threshold. The room Was /^^ .4= ■frt dimly liqhted and as quiet as ^ •»^ Ij the gra\?e. Between the win- ''^\ \1 J \ clov\s. on her mother's r 1 \n L^y^ Itircje bed, /^ Child Iciy-^^l^ a little, frail, v\"hite ghost, ^// her skin deathly pale, | )^ and drawn chau5ted child. A sWcet, almost seraphic » smile, flitted o\'er her little face. Then a doubt assailed her. With a last, supreme effort, she tried to raise herself, ^\\\^ look in his face. "Are you comin' too, Woland? 'A look of blank despair met her lov'ing cjlanc.c. Surprised and bewildered, she shook off for an instant her cominc] letharcjy. "Woland," she said shar,.!y, "I sha'n't i.)o to hea\?en Widout you." T'iien she sank back o\\ the pilloW — her e\\s closed. 'T'h*' friqhtful tension in vvhich the lad held himself ^a\7e Way. j[^'V little fintjei's slipped 48 BA/SY fro.n his cjrasp^ and ho fell bucR in a dead faint. '^ ^^•^' "^'t disturb the little one hoWcvVr, and in ^' l'"le time he Was hin.self acjain, and anxiously Watchinc] the comincj of the end. CHAPTER IV LiKK'iS BBNKrjICTION 49 |p' v\\' voor, short-siyhted mortals had the p!an- ninc] of our lives, hoW strancjcly Would they be laid out! 1 had imagined that the child Was goiriL] to die, in owlcr that her influence oVer the life that had become so strangely miXed up \A,'ith hers might li\'e. It had not occurred to me that th(^ lad, thrown into a state of desperation and feeling himself l>randed as her murderer, might I'e templed to i:o'ii.e rash act. 1 hank heaWn, he Was not put to it. 1 he child did not die, I'ut li\'ed to I'e a further blessing to him. When he vVal\^'d from his sW^nin. We Were able to v\hispei' in his cov that she had jallen into a guii't sleep — that possil'lv there had I'een a mistake niade. pe staggered to hi- (eet, 5» 52 DAISY and sat by the sleeping chilJ |or c\ v\hilc, v\itli a kidk^ oj one who has received a reprieve from death, then Went to his room and shut himself in. prom that hour he w\is a different crea- ture. The heavy stamp of affliction had been laid upon him. Tie Was a man noW, in the best sense of the Word. l(L)ay by day, Ifjaisy steadily improved; Kobert- son Was constantly With her, and until she w'as able to run about on her own small feet, he carried her everywhere in his strong arms. Sometimes he Would Walk up and down the halls for hours at a time, listening to her childish confidences and telling her stories With the utmost patience and gentleness. -^And his demotion did not cea^e when her strength returned. jjle solitary life Wa^ ut an end. jl'^'f ^^^ '^''^^ r re I . i. DAISY 53 time he spent v\'ith her. T'hi.'^ had the inevitable effect of lesseninc] his intercourse With his former boon companions. .They had claimed a monop- oly of his time. JNoW he got in with another set — these jolly, good felloWs, who kept him out in the daytime, playing out-door games, and sending him home so e:^hausted that he Wanted no further e)^citement for the night, but a book. a comfortable seat, and Daisy's good-night kiss. The child Was pro\7ing a guardian angel to him, and not only to him, but to all the house. An astonishing change had come o\Vr her since her illness. She Was always gentle noW, nev'er sullen, and cheerful sometimes to gayety. I'hf boarders had all taken to petting her— she Was a link to bind them together and make them less selfish — and she seemed to uppreciote their utten- 54 DAISY tions, though her preference for Robertson Wa? dt^cidedly marked. E^en JV|i^^. ©rummond v\'os changing. She often took ©aisy on her lap now, and 1 had seen her brush av^\\\/ a tear when the child tried to smooth out her Wrinkles with her tiny hand. It Was late in the summer when \0a\sy re- cov'ered from the fev'er. All through the autumn, Robertson ga\7e her Walks and driv'es, bought her picture-book,s and toys to amuse herself With during his absence, and With a sense of grati- tude far beyond her years, her little heart seemed running ov'er With lov'e toWard him. Bt-'fore the autumn closed my business con- nections took me ^w^lay, and for sev'eral years I Was a stranger to PuirfaX'. Pne Winter day, when the air \\'\is thick With snowflakes, 1 came ■ • DA/SV 55 back. My first thoughts Were of the Brum- moiuls and \\o\am\ Robertson. §trancje to say, he Was one of the first men 1 met. jie knew me at once, ga\7e me a hearty tjreetmi;], and insisted upon my going along With him to his house. There Was no need to ask hitn hoW he Was getting on. pis surroundings shoWed Worldly prosperity, his face, the happy, upright man. 44e looked graW when 1 spoke of the ISrum- monds. " |?oor M^s. Drummond — she has been dead for tWo years. §he Was utterly Worn out." ■ "And Daisy?" "He stroked a hcaCy moustache. Jlis object, I think. Was to conceal a smile. "§he is m England at school. jier holidays she spends with my people." * V \\ V _. "AnJ do they like hor?" .-^U T ^J -- "Immensely. i^Slie- has qroWn to l)e a /^^'£'f Very ^'^VV\.. beuLitiful girl, both in disposition K and \'^/ looks." Then openint) his cout, he ^^dreW f from an inner pocket a picture — the head of a \ lo\'ely young girl. ^ j scarcely recognized the delicate child of old. "And does she keep up her/ de\7otion to you?" "She does." "He gu\"e me a de- .v^ cidedly amused glance; carefully replaced (^^ ne)Ct the photograph tWo or three pressed , white field daisies that had fallen out, and / / put it back, in his pocket. "•And vchat is to become of her?" 1 Went on curit)usly. "jle looKcd about his handsome, but solitary i i^ ii I DAISY 57 draWiiu] fooin. "I cim ^joiiu] to Eiujlutul in th sPi'iiK), U> ^H'l luT," lu- said VMlli u laiitjh. ha\i' Iricd liviiKj vvilhout lur, uiul 1 can tMulurv it no lunyiT, The EmJ. f%<-'