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TRENT'S LAST CASE.

at her clasped hands. 'I wish you to tell him. Perhaps if you think you will guess why. . . . There! that is settled.' She lifted her eyes again to his, and for a time there was silence between them.


He leaned back at length in the deep chair. 'What a world!' he said. 'Mabel, will you play something on the piano that expresses mere joy, the genuine article, nothing feverish or like thorns under a pot, but joy that has decided in favour of the universe? It's a mood that can't last altogether, so we had better get all we can out of it.'

She went to the instrument and struck a few chords while she thought. Then she began to work with all her soul at the theme in the last movement of the Ninth Symphony which is like the sound of the opening of the gates of Paradise.