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"I can trust both of you, I to be an expert, and Cai's hope." Mrs Bosenna glanced blunders were mostly lost on towards Cai, or so Cai thought. her. But 'Bias disgraced himself before his partner, who neither reproached him nor once missed a trick.

"The jokes they keep makin'!" Palmerston reported to Mrs Bowldler. (With the utmost cheerfulness he continued running to and fro between summer-house and residence under the downpour.) 66 When Mrs Bosenna said that about a merrythought I almost split myself.'

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"There's a medium in all things," Mrs Bowldler advised him. "Stand-offish should be your expression when waiting at table; like as if you'd heard it all before several times, no matter how funny they talk, As for splitting, I shiver at the bare thought."

"Well, I didn't do it, really. I just got my hand over my mouth in time."

"And what did that other woman happen to be doing?" asked Mrs Bowldler.

"I partic'l'ly noticed," said Palmerston. "She was sittin' quiet and playin' with her 'am."

The rain continuing, 'Bias at the close of supper sensationally produced two packs of cards and proposed that, as soon as Palmerston had removed the cloth, they should play what he called "a rubber to whist." He and Mrs Bosenna cut together; Cai with Dinah. Now, the two captains could, as a rule, play a good hand at whist. On this occasion they played so abominably as to surprise themselves and each other. Dinah did not profess

"I can't tell what's come over me to-night," he confessed at the end of the second rubber.

"Regatta - day!" laughed Mrs Bosenna, and pushed the cards away. The weddingring on her third finger glanced under the light of the hanging lamp. "Dinah shall tell our fortunes," she suggested.

Dinah took the pack and proceeded very gravely to tell their fortunes. She began with Captain Hunken, and found that, a dark lady happening in the "second house,' he would certainly marry one of that hue, with plenty of money, and live happy ever after.

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She next attempted Captain Hocken's. "Well, that's funny, now!" she exclaimed, after dealing out the cards face uppermost.

"What's funny?" asked Cai. "Why," said Dinah, after a long scrutiny, during which she pursed and unpursed her lips half a dozen times at least, "the cards are different, o' course, but they say the same thing-dark lady and all-and I can't make it other."

"No need," said Cai cheerfully, drawing at his pipe (for Mrs Bosenna had given the pair permission to smoke). "So long as you let 'Bias an' me run on the same lines, I'm satisfied. Eh, 'Bias?"

"But 'tis the same lady!"

"Oh! That would alter matters, nat'ch'rally."

Dinah swept the cards to gether again and shuffled them. "Shall I tell your fortune, mistress?" she asked mischievously.

"No," said Mrs Bosenna, rising. "The rain has stopped, and it's time we were getting home, between the showers."

Again Captain Cai and Captain 'Bias offered gallantly to accompany her to the gate of Rilla Farm; but she would have none of their escort.

"No one is going to insult me on the road," she assured them. "And besides, if they did, Dinah would do the screaming. That's why I brought her."

She had enjoyed her evening amazingly. She took her departure with a few happily chosen words which left no doubt of it.

After divesting himself of his coat that night, Captain Cai laid a hand on his upper arm and felt it timidly. Unless he mistook, the flesh beneath the shirt-sleeve yet kept some faint vibration of Mrs Bosenna's hand, resting upon it, thrilling it.

"The point is," said Cai to himself, "it can't be 'Bias, anyway. I felt pretty sure at the time that Philp was lyin'. But what a brazen fellow it is!"

Strangely enough, in his bedroom on the other side of the party wall Captain 'Bias stood at that moment deep in meditation. He, too, was rubbing his arm, just below the biceps.

Yet the explanation is simple. You have only to bethink you that Mrs Bosenna, like any other woman, had two hands.

(To be continued.)

TALES OF THE MERMAID TAVERN.

BY ALFRED NOYES.

VI. THE BURIAL OF A QUEEN.

PART I.

'TWAS on an All Souls' Eve that our good Inn
-Whereof, for ten years now, myself was host-
Heard and took part in its most eerie tale.
It was a bitter night; and master Ben,

-His hair now flecked with grey, though youth still fired
His deep and ageless eyes,-in the old oak-chair,
Over the roaring hearth, puffed at his pipe;

A little sad, as often I found him now
Remembering vanished faces. Yet the years
Brought others round him. Wreaths of Heliochrise
Gleamed still in that great tribe of Benjamin,
Burned still across the malmsey and muscadel.
Chapman and Browne, Herrick,-a name like thyme
Crushed into sweetness by a bare-foot maid
Milking, at dewy dawn, in Elfin-land,—
These three came late, and sat in a little room
Aside, supping together, on one great pie,
Whereof both crust and coffin were prepared
By master Herrick's receipt, and all washed down
With mighty cups of sack. This left with Ben,
John Ford, wrapped in his cloak, brooding aloof,
Drayton and Lodge and Drummond of Hawthornden.
Suddenly, in the porch, I heard a sound

Of iron that grated on the flags. A spade
And pick came edging through the door.

"O, room!
Room for the master-craftsman," muttered Ford,
And grey old sexton Scarlet hobbled in.

He shuffled off the snow that clogged his boots, -On my clean rushes!-brushed it from his cloak Of Northern Russet, wiped his rheumatic knees, Blew out his lanthorn, hung it on a nail,

Leaned his rude pick and spade against the wall,

Flung back his rough frieze hood, flapped his gaunt arms, And called for ale.

"Come to the fire," said Lodge.

"Room for the wisest counsellor of kings,

The kindly sage that puts us all to bed,

And tucks us up beneath the grass-green quilt."

"Plenty of work, eh Timothy?" said Ben.

"Work? Where's my liquor? O, ay, there's work to spare,"
Old Scarlet croaked, then quaffed his creaming stoup,
While Ben said softly-" Pity you could not spare,
You and your Scythe-man, some of the golden lads
That I have seen here in the Mermaid Inn!"
Then, with a quiet smile he shook his head

And turned to master Drummond of Hawthornden.
"New wine, new songs, and all as fresh as may!
And I begin to think

The old were better. Proof-I am growing old.
Well, I can weave the old threnodies anew.'
And, filling his cup, he murmured, soft and low,
-Yet with some passion where the central wave
Of tender repetition swelled to a height
Of sadness, then in melody died away-

A new song, breaking on an ancient shore :—

"Marlowe is dead, and Greene is in his grave,
And sweet Will Shakespeare long ago is gone!
Our Ocean-shepherd sleeps beneath the wave;
Robin is dead, and Marlowe in his grave.
Why should I stay to chant an idle stave,
And in my Mermaid Tavern drink alone?
For Kit is dead, and Greene is in his grave,
And sweet Will Shakespeare long ago is gone.

Where is the singer of the Faerie Queen?
Where are the lyric lips of Astrophel?
Long, long ago, their quiet graves were green;
Ay, and the grave, too, of their Faerie Queen!
And yet their faces, hovering here unseen,
Call me to taste their new-found œnomel;
To sup with him who sang the Faerie Queen;
To drink with him whose name was Astrophel.

I drink to that great Inn beyond the grave!

-If there be none, the gods have done us wrong.-
Ere long I hope to chant a better stave

In some great Mermaid Inn beyond the grave;
And quaff the best of earth that heaven can save,-
Red wine like blood, deep love of friends, and song.
I drink to that great Inn beyond the grave;
And hope to greet my golden lads ere long."

He raised his cup and drank in silence. Lodge
Drank with him, too, and Drummond of Hawthornden.
And then-a strange thing happened.

I saw John Ford,

"With folded arms and melancholy hat"
(As in our Mermaid jest he still would sit)
Watching old Scarlet like a man in trance.
The sexton gulped his ale and smacked his lips,

Then croaked again-"O, ay, there's work to spare,
We fills 'em faster than the spades can dig."
And, all at once, the lights burned low and blue.
Ford leaned right forward, with his grim black eyes
Widening.

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'Why, that's a marvellous ring!" he said, And pointed to the sexton's gnarled old hand Spread on that black oak-table like the claw Of some great bird of prey. "A ruby worth The ransom of a queen!" The fire leapt up! The sexton stared at him;

Then stretched his hand out, with its blue-black nails, Full in the light, a grim earth-coloured hand,

But bare as it was born.

"There was a ring!

I could have sworn it! Red as blood!" cried Ford.
And Ben and Lodge and Drummond of Hawthornden
All stared at him. For such a silent soul

Was master Ford that, when he suddenly spake,
It struck the rest as dumb as if the Sphinx
Had opened its cold stone lips. He would sit mute
Brooding, aloof, for hours, his cloak around him,
A staff between his knees, as if prepared

For a long journey, a lonely pilgrimage

To some dark tomb; a strange and sorrowful soul,
Yet not-as many thought him-harsh or hard,
But of a most kind patience. Though he wrote
In blood, they say, the blood came from his heart;
And all the sufferings of this world he took
To his own soul, and bade them pasture there;
Till out of his compassion, he became

A monument of bitterness. He rebelled;
And so fell short of that celestial height
Whereto the greatest only climb, who stand
By Shakespeare, and accept the Eternal Law.
These find, in law, firm footing for the soul,
The strength that binds the stars, and reins the sea,
The base of being, the pillars of the world,
The pledge of honour, the pure cord of love,
The form of truth, the golden floors of heaven.
These men discern a height beyond all heights,
A depth below all depths, and never an end
Without a pang beyond it, and a hope;
Without a heaven beyond it, and a hell.
For these, despair is like a bubble pricked,
An old romance to make young lovers weep.
For these, the law becomes a fiery road,
A Jacob's ladder through that vast abyss,

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