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Show 9s 'l‘lll‘. l‘\l.‘l\' l‘HlIl'Vl' SPRING IN THE TRAIN 29 llt‘1):ll]<(‘tl.lllf‘ll\‘xt'l‘l 1"»: HII \\'::\~ The rsi1livwl'..l suppose. Ill \\'II:;I lI.:l lewd: I \\l:o am :‘Y l \\:‘.\‘ lwIll :‘Illl «I II ::I\‘..‘._'. -- llil‘ \. ‘I‘ 'w- pr ll I I: \\ Iii 11", '~,;.r;?..'.[‘ I ‘.».I it‘ip'fi-illy IIH‘IIII‘r \‘xlm Irihl me every thing." ll(‘ "11". lliml (‘\l‘l‘ I lIIl'llL'lll. Ilsll 'llll. 1-1] N \'I I':.I (|~‘l'.‘:~li‘l s' 'ILIH' III ' {-1 ~I illif. 1. TI .1 I.‘ i‘l‘l' I"'I‘i' in 1m»! I I. :1‘!': element. \xlznm :I!‘1 .I I'VE'XAI lalhri‘s great passion \vas' :jw‘iin \'\< Illil win of another have hail swt‘n- Tim'i-I f iz' i' ', ln 'I'ri‘ni-liwril‘s ini‘xl l.';.;.- ‘.‘" l fii felt "\IV ii, the Hurlllll . u.» an iiwi‘mlihlo I (winhl fan-v \\I‘..‘T Iv '\ il l: I» ‘(1\ In the. VOTIVQPIIIIIFI MI «'"xhirsi w 1:." Hf ll I‘ >515," .II .‘x I Ii:.iI l‘I‘II for him during: the iii‘ll‘l‘lll‘flll hail It "I i; v-. ".lle‘s \‘I‘l"\' liH u v >IH r! of an ii'fwt." I II,~ii-_'Iil. going to be lll‘t‘allfflil‘v in ilw nan." "I WIN lllt‘ will}. llll fill} >1"... ll" ("‘Illlll'll‘ll. («nurse l \\‘as a great rh-..I In l{‘_\' yap-TM I‘ ;..'.l she In Me. were always together. \‘t'l'y young I lu‘lit‘w‘ll "Ilels "(If We I ilwifl lI.il,l. II.;;I | n \\I.l'l! I was (:II llml >I.I‘ Ilibl 1:.1‘. 5hr >1 r'lnt'rl ll) me always to talw evirwhing' for :j!‘:i!ilwl. Ilium n In 1110 was So mysterious and >hw hail ~nvl: III‘?iIi:l4‘ I.llw\\'I" lI‘Jl‘. I always liked Ili ins to be iiolviiu'iw . . . I do still." IIO laughed, li'illlffwl for a lll"lll< nt. In: \‘.;i< plainl‘. now oll‘ on his fine white horse. ('hargin: 1hr- ~ir, to he sloppwl l>_\‘ 11" mortal (‘haIIeantn l hurl for a IIJI‘IIil'lll IIn- Iholluhl (Inltl would slip from 111," seat and It'aH‘ Ililn: I iliiIIi‘I IH‘Ilt‘H' Illiit he would have nolit‘ml my alm'n ee: but the lhulluhl HI. "Mt small stuffy carriage held III". A But. he 21:11.9 (-onseious of III": Iilm the .\nwient Mariner he fixed upon my arm his hand :Lllll >I;H‘MI into Ill\' ens: "There were oll . H‘I' lhiHL's that I'll//I"Kl me. for instance, the (-l nef dovtor in our town. 'I‘Iu‘I'I‘ W35, I i He was a IM‘J"; fat, jolly red-faced man, clean-shaver], with white hair. He was considered the best doctor in the place all the old maids went to him. He was immensely jolly, you could hear his laugh from one end of the street to the other. He was married, had a delightful little house, where his wife gave charming dinners. lie was stupid and self-satisfied. fiven at his own work he was stupid, reading nothing, careless and forgetful, thinking about golf and food only all his days. He was a snob too and would give up any one for the people at the Castle. Even when l w s a small boy I. somehow knew all this about him. My father thought the world of him and loved to play golf with him. . . . He was completely happy and successful and, popular. Then there was another man, an old canon who taught me Latin before 1 went to Rugby, an old, untidy, dirty man, whose sermons were dull and his manners bad. Ile was a failure in life- and he was a failure to himself; dissatisfied with what he used to call his ‘bundle of rotten twigs,' his life and habits and thoughts. But he thought that somewhere there was something he would find that would save him-somewhere, sometime . . . not God merely-‘like a key that will open all the doors in the house.' To me he was fascinating. He know so much, he was so humble, so kind, so amusing. Nobody liked him, of course. They tried to turn him out of the place, gave him a little living at last, and he married his cook. Was she his key 3 She may have been . . . I never saw him again. But 1 used to wonder. \Vliy was the doctor so happy and the little canon s0 unhappy, the doctor so successful, the canon so unsuccessful? I decided that the great thing was to be satisfied with oneself. termined that I would be satisfied with myself. course 1 never was-never have been. I de- Well, of Something wouldn't let me alone. The key to the door, perhaps . . . everything |