he and David came into the study after tea; "I suppose
ble s
vendar admitted, a
r," sai
want a Bi
boy shook
avendar chuckling,
ith a bored look; it was then that he sighed. After a while he got up and wandered about the room, his hands gripped in front of him, his lips shut tight. Dr. Lavenda
picture," Dr. L
, "is the gentlem
that was meant to be our Saviour when He was being baptized.
David asked gently, "I
o
hink the picture looks like a kind Father, then it is. And David, I
interested eyes upon his face that he was flattered into enlarging upon his theme. The child listened b
d Dr. Lavendar, when the tale was done. "Well, we
id David, thoughtfully, "and you'
hen he said, meekly, "
made n
Lavendar, "I'll h
eight, and as the clock began to strike, Dr. Lavendar, with some eagerness, opened his lips to say good night-an
y bedti
avendar blinked nervously. Young persons were generally kissed. "I should
e that other pipe. Before he had finished it
ar. "Samuel, I feel as if I had dr
nk; sometimes he foun
end
ersons are ve
vouch for that," his ca
said Dr. Lavendar. "I wish you'd tak
, "Well, you miss a lot of comfort in life. I
t down heavil
hing to think about?" Dr.
yond my comprehension! I may say candidly, that I cann
ing w
ld him one day last week to write to a man in Troy, New York, about a bill of exchange. Well, he wrote. Oh, yes-he wrote. Back comes a letter from the man, enclosing my young gentleman's epistle, with a
hunted for his spectacles. When he settled them on his nose he
ed a thousand ships, And burnt
s? I don't
ite to Troy, it made me think of those lines.' He added that not wishing to forget them, he wrote them down on a sheet of paper, and that probably he us
y, "do you recall whose face it was tha
shook h
said Dr.
y understood. "Oh, yes, I know all abou
" Dr. Lavendar said sympathetically, "but-
hutting his hands, his face very red. The o
the matter with you? Ca
his mouth as though to hide some tremb
in fun. I'm sure you know that I meant no disre
ines, but his mouth twitched. A minute afterwards he began to speak with ponderous dignity. "This love-making business is, of course, most mortifying to me; and al
l!" said D
ry humble opinion it was contemptible for a man to
up in shocked d
ries, I shall have to support his wife. According to my poor theories of pro
have put it that way,"
more, unless he stops dangling at her apron-strings,
n't do such a
l? Not put up a single barr
now what barriers
t made no
something t
are, to some extent, correct. But a man canno
he may get a bad strai
s father
w, sir, to wh
man can experience unforgiving anger, and not be crippled. You didn't foun
perfectly deaf; then he
ervedly so. She will have nothing to do with him. In stoppin
dar, "I never begrudge u
rbed in his own troubles to
of Mrs. Richie-do you think she'd be a good
e no fault to find with her. She pays her rent and goes to ch
ndar agreed nodding; "but going t
o church," the senior
o church are not good,"
ff! absolute stuff! His mother sometimes tells me of it. Why," he ended pit
tand generally is bosh
ndar tho
sense, sir; I don't pretend
on't," Dr. Lavendar said sadly; and the
ng a drama. He told his mother so. Writing
work," Dr. Lavendar agreed; "but play-wr
on writing-so she says." He sighed, and got up to put on his coat. "Well; I must go home. I suppose he has been i
with his coat. "Gently does
ould reach Sam's mind, some one touch that would stir his heart! Yet when he brought his perplexity to Dr. Lavendar, he was only told to hold his tongue and keep his hands off. The senior warden said to himself, miserably, that he was afraid Dr. Lavendar was getting old, "Well, I mustn't bother you," he said; "as for Sam, I suppose he will go his own gait! I don't know where he gets his stubbornness from.
," said Dr