Part 42 (1/2)

The Manders soon removed to the little house where d.i.c.kory was born. The mansion of their daughter and her husband was a hospitable place and a lively, but the life there was so wayward, erratic, and eccentric that it did not suit their sober lives and the education of their young daughter. So they dwelt contentedly in the cottage at the head of the cove, and there was much rowing up and down the river.

It was upon a fine morning that the ex-pirate Ichabod thus addressed a citizen of the town:

”Yes, sir, I know well who once lived in the house I own. I knew the man myself; I knew him at Belize. He was a dastardly knave, and would have played false to the sun, the moon, and the stars had they shown him an opportunity, bedad. But I also knew his daughter; she sailed on my s.h.i.+p for many days, and her presence blessed the very boards she trod on. She is a most n.o.ble lady; and if you will not admit, sir, that her sweet spirit and pure soul have not banished from this earth every taint of wickedness left here by her father, then, sir, bedad, stand where you are and draw!”

THE END

RECENT FICTION.

SOME WOMEN I HAVE KNOWN.

By MAARTEN MAARTENS, author of ”G.o.d's Fool,” etc. With Frontispiece.

”Maarten Maartens stands head and shoulders above the average novelist of the day in intellectual subtlety and imaginative power.”--_Boston Beacon._

THE WAGE OF CHARACTER.

By JULIEN GORDON, author of ”Mrs. Clyde,” etc. With Portrait.

Julien Gordon's new novel is a story of the world of fas.h.i.+on and intrigue, written with an insight, an epigrammatic force, and a realization of the dramatic and the pathetic as well as more superficial phases of life, that stamp the book as one immediate and personal in its interest and convincing in its appeal to the minds and to the sympathies of readers.

THE QUIBERON TOUCH.

A Romance of the Sea. By CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY, author of ”For the Freedom of the Sea,” ”The Grip of Honor,” etc. With Frontispiece.

”This story has a real beauty; it breathes of the sea. Fenimore Cooper would not be ashamed to own a disciple in the school of which he was master in these descriptions of the tug of war as it was in the eighteenth century between battle-s.h.i.+ps under sail.”--_New York Mail and Express._

s.h.i.+PMATES.

A Volume of Salt-Water Fiction. By MORGAN ROBERTSON, author of ”Masters of Men,” etc. With Frontispiece.