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The Pure Pearl of Diver's Bay.
[May,

flect on what Clarice had said,—seriously to ponder; but his amazement at her words had almost taken away his power of speech.

“The Gabriel sailed from Havre,” said he, slowly. “If I went out as a deckhand in the next ship that sails”—

“Yes!”

“To scour the country—I hope I shan’t find what I look for; you couldn’t live without him.—Very likely you will think me a fool for my pains. You will not give me yourself. You would have me take away the lad from you.”—He looked at Clarice as if his words passed his belief.

“Yes, only do as I say,—for I know it must be the beat for us all. There is nothing else to be done,—no other way to live.”

“France is a pretty big country to hunt over for a man whose name you don’t know,” said Emmins, after a little pause.

“You can land what passengers sailed in the Gabriel,” answered Clarice, eager to remove every difficulty, and ready to contend wilh any that could possibly arise. “The vessel was a merchantman. Such vessels don’t take out many passengers.—Besides, you will see the world.—It is for everybody's sake! Not for mine only,—no, truly,—no, indeed! May-be if another person around here had found Gabriel, they would never have thought of trying to find out who he—belonged to.”

“I guess so,” replied Bondo, with a queer look. “ Only now be honest, Clarice; it’s to get rid of me, isn’t it? But you needn’t take that trouble. If you had only told me right out about Luke Merlyn”——

While Bondo Emmins spoke thus, his face had unconsciously the very expression one sees on the face of the hoy whose, foot hovers a moment above the worm he means to crush. The boy does not expect to see the worm change to a butterfly just then and there, and mount up before his very eyes toward the empyrean. Neither did Bondo Emmins anticipate her quiet—

“You knew about it all the while.”

“Not the whole,” said he,—“that you were married to Luke, as you say”; and the fisherman looked hastily around him, as if he had expected to see the veritable Luke.

“It isn’t to got rid of you, then, Bondo,” Clarice explained; “but I read in the Book you don’t think much of, but it’s everything to me, If ye have not been faithful in that which is another man's, who shall give you that which is your own? So you see, I am a little selfish in it all; for I want peace of mind, and I never shall have peace till it is settled about Gabriel; if I must give him up, I can.”

Bondo Emmins looked at Clarice with a strange look, as she spoke these words,— so faltering in speech, so resolute in soul.

“And if I’m faithful over another man’s,” said he, “better the chance of getting my own, eh? But I wonder what my own is.”

“Everything that you can earn and enjoy honestly,” replied Clarice.

Emmins rose up quickly at these words. He walked off a few paces without speaking. His face was gloomy and sullen as a sky full of tornadoes when he turned his back on Clarice,—hardly less so when he again approached her.

“I am no fool,” said he, as he drew near.—From his tone one could hardly have guessed that his last impulse was to strike the woman to whom he spoke.—“I know what you mean. You haven’t sent me on a fool’s errand. Good bye. You won’t see me again, Clarice—till I come back from France. Time enough to talk about it then.”

He did not offer to take her hand when he had so spoken, but was off before Clarice could make any reply.

Clarice thought that she should see him again; but he went away without Speaking to any other person of his purpose; and when wonder on account of his absence began to find expression in her father’s house, and elsewhere, it was she who must account for it. People thereat praised him for his good heart,