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    Chapter 4 - Page 2

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    gentlemen," she said. "I'm glad it is not to die out. There are none too many left--in Clarendon. You are going to like me, aren't you, Phil?" asked the lady.

    "I like you already," replied Phil gallantly. "You are a very nice lady. What shall I call you?"

    "Call her Miss Laura, Phil--it is the Southern fashion--a happy union of familiarity and respect. Already they come back to me, Laura--one breathes them with the air--the gentle Southern customs. With all the faults of the old system, Laura--it carried the seeds of decay within itself and was doomed to perish--a few of us, at least, had a good time. An aristocracy is quite endurable, for the aristocrat, and slavery tolerable, for the masters--and the Peters. When we were young, before the rude hand of war had shattered our illusions, we were very happy, Laura."

    "Yes, we were very happy."

    They were walking now, very slowly, toward the gate by which the colonel had entered, with little Phil between them, confiding a hand to each.

    "And how is your mother?" asked the colonel. "She is living yet, I trust?"

    "Yes, but ailing, as she has been for fifteen years--ever since my father died. It was his grave I came to visit."

    "You had ever a loving heart, Laura," said the colonel, "given to duty and self-sacrifice. Are you still living in the old place?"

    "The old place, only it is older, and shows it--like the rest of us."

    She bit her lip at the words, which she meant in reference to herself, but which she perceived, as soon as she had uttered them, might apply to him with equal force. Despising herself for the weakness which he might have interpreted as a bid for a compliment, she was glad that he seemed unconscious of the remark.

    The colonel and Phil had entered the cemetery by a side gate and their exit led through the main entrance. Miss Laura pointed out, as they walked slowly along between the elms, the graves of many whom the colonel had known in his younger days. Their names, woven in the tapestry of his memory, needed in most cases but a touch to restore them. For while his intellectual life had ranged far and wide, his business career had run along a single channel, his circle of intimates had not been very large nor very variable, nor was his memory so overlaid that he could not push aside its later impressions in favour of those graven there so deeply in his youth.

    Nearing the gate, they passed a small open space in which stood a simple marble shaft, erected to the memory of the Confederate Dead.

    A wealth of fresh flowers lay at its base. The colonel took off his hat as he stood before it for a moment with bowed head. But for the mercy of God, he might have been one of those whose deaths as well as deeds were thus commemorated.

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