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"That all?"

"Maude Crosse-O Frank!"

"You blessing! How grand it sounds! O Maude, what a jolly old world it is! Isn't it pretty to see the rain falling? And aren't the shining pavements lovely? And isn't everything splendid, and am I not the luckiest -the most incredibly lucky of men. Dear girlie, give me your hand! I can feel it under the glove. sweetheart, you are not frightened, are you?"

"Not now."

"You were?"

Now,

"Yes, I was a little. O Frank, you won't tire of me, will you? I should break my heart if you did."

"Tire of you! Good heavens! Now you'll never guess what I was doing while the parson was telling us about what Saint Paul said to the Colossians, and all the rest of it."

"I know perfectly well what you were doing. And you shouldn't have done it."

"What was I doing, then?"
"You were staring at me."
"Oh, you saw that, did you?"

"I felt it."

"Well, I was. But I was praying also."

"Were you, Frank?"

"When I saw you kneeling there, so sweet and pure and good, I seemed to realise how you had been given into my keeping for life, and I prayed with all my heart that if I should ever injure you in thought, or

word, or deed, I might drop dead now before I had time to do it."

"O Frank, what a dreadful prayer!"

"But I felt it and I wished it, and I could not help it. My own darling, there you are just a living angel, the gentlest, most sensitive, and beautiful living creature that walks the earth, and please God I shall keep you so, and ever higher and higher if such a thing is possible, and if ever I say a word or do a deed that seems to lower you, then remind me of this moment, and send me back to try to live up to our highest ideal again. And I for my part will try to improve myself and to live up to you, and to bridge more and more the gap that is between us, that I may feel myself not altogether unworthy of our love. And so we shall act and react upon each other, ever growing better and wiser, and dating what is best and brightest in our minds and souls from the day that we were married. And that's my idea of a marriage-service, and here endeth the first lesson, and the windows are blurred with rain, and hang the coachman, and it's hard lines if a man may not kiss his own wife-you blessing!"

A broad-brimmed hat with a curling feather is not a good shape for driving with an ardent young bridegroom in a discreetly rain-blurred carriage. Frank demonstrated the fact, and it took them all the way to the Langham to get those pins driven home again. And then after an abnormal meal, which was either a very late breakfast or a very early lunch, they drove on to

Victoria Station, from which they were to start for Brighton. Jack Selby and the two regimental fizzers, who had secured immortality for the young couple, if the deep and constant drinking of healths could have done it, had provided themselves with packages of rice, old slippers, and other time-honoured missiles. On a hint from Maude, however, that she would prefer a quiet departure, Frank coaxed the three back into the luncheonroom with a perfectly guileless face, and then locking the door on the outside, handed the key and a halfsovereign to the head-waiter, with instructions to release the prisoners when the carriage had gone-an incident which in itself would cause the judicious observer to think that, given the opportunity, Mister Frank Crosse had it in him to go pretty far in life. And so, quietly and soberly, they rolled away upon their first journey— the journey which was the opening of that life's journey, the goal of which no man may see.

KEEPING UP APPEARANCES.

It was in the roomy dining-room of the Hotel Metropole at Brighton. Maude and Frank were seated at the favourite small round table near the window, where they always lunched. Their immediate view was a snowywhite tablecloth with a shining entrée dish of foppish little cutlets, each with a wisp of ornamental paper, and a surrounding bank of mashed potatoes. Beyond, from the very base of the window, as it seemed, there stretched the huge expanse of the deep blue sea, its soothing mass of colour broken only by a few white leaning sails upon the furthest horizon. Along the sky-line the white

clouds lay in carelessly piled cumuli, like snow thrown up from a clearing. It was restful and beautiful, that distant view, but just at the moment it was the near one which interested them most. Though they lose from this moment onwards the sympathy of every sentimental reader, the truth must be told that they were thoroughly enjoying their lunch.

With the wonderful adaptability of women—a hereditary faculty, which depends upon the fact that from the beginning of time the sex has been continually employed in making the best of situations which were not of their own choosing-Maude carried off her new

character easily and gracefully. In her trim blue serge dress and sailor hat, with the warm tint of yesterday's sun upon her cheeks, she was the very picture of happy and healthy womanhood. Frank was also in a blue serge boating-suit, which was appropriate enough, for they spent most of their time upon the water, as a glance at his hands would tell. Their conversation was unhappily upon a very much lower plane than when we overheard them last.

"I've got such an appetite!"

"So have I, Frank."

"Capital. Have another cutlet."
"Thank-you, dear."

"Potatoes?"

"Please."

"I always thought that people on their honeymoon lived on love."

"Yes, isn't it dreadful, Frank? We must be so material."

"Good old mother Nature! Cling on to her skirt and you never lose your way. One wants a healthy physical basis for a healthy spiritual emotion. Might I

trouble you for the pickles?"

"Are you happy, Frank?"
"Absolutely and completely."
"Quite, quite sure?"

"I never was quite so sure of anything."

"It makes me so happy to hear you say so."
"And you?"

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