to.  Remember your own theory that contrast is about the only thing
   that makes life endurable.  This is my party and Mr. Lockhart's;
   your whole duty tomorrow night will consist in being nice to the
   Norwegian girls.  I'll warrant you were adept enough at it once. 
   And you'd better be very nice indeed, for if there are many such
   young Valkyries as Eric's sister among them, they would simply tie
   you up in a knot if they suspected you were guying them."
   Wyllis groaned and sank back into the hammock to consider his
   fate, while his sister went on.
   "And the guests, Mr. Lockhart, did they accept?"
   Lockhart took out his knife and began sharpening it on the sole of
   his plowshoe.
   "Well, I guess we'll have a couple dozen.  You see it's pretty
   hard to get a crowd together here any more.  Most of 'em have gone
   over to the Free Gospellers, and they'd rather put their feet in
   the fire than shake 'em to a fiddle."
   Margaret made a gesture of impatience.  "Those Free Gospellers
   have just cast an evil spell over this country, haven't they?"
   "Well," said Lockhart, cautiously, "I don't just like to pass
   judgment on any Christian sect, but if you're to know the chosen by
   their works, the Gospellers can't make a very proud showin', an'
   that's a fact.  They're responsible for a few suicides, and they've
   sent a good-sized delegation to the state insane asylum, an' I
   don't see as they've made the rest of us much better than we were
   before.  I had a little herdboy last spring, as square a little
   Dane as I want to work for me, but after the Gospellers got hold of
   him and sanctified him, the little beggar used to get down on his
   knees out on the prairie and pray by the hour and let the cattle
   get into the corn, an' I had to fire him.  That's about the way it
   goes.  Now there's Eric; that chap used to be a hustler and the
   spryest dancer in all this section-called all the dances.  Now he's
   got no ambition and he's glum as a preacher.  I don't suppose we
   can even get him to come in tomorrow night."
   "Eric?  Why, he must dance, we can't let him off," said
   Margaret, quickly.  "Why, I intend to dance with him myself."
   "I'm afraid he won't dance.  I asked him this morning if he'd
   help us out and he said, 'I don't dance now, any more,' " said
   Lockhart, imitating the laboured English of the Norwegian.
   "'The Miller of Hofbau, the Miller of Hofbau, O my Princess!'"
   chirped Wyllis, cheerfully, from his hammock.
   The red on his sister's cheek deepened a little, and she
   laughed mischievously.  "We'll see about that, sir.  I'll not admit
   that I am beaten until I have asked him myself."
   Every night Eric rode over to St. Anne, a little village in
   the heart of the French settlement, for the mail.  As the road lay
   through the most attractive part of the Divide country, on several
   occasions Margaret Elliot and her brother had accompanied him. 
   Tonight Wyllis had business with Lockhart, and Margaret rode
   with Eric, mounted on a frisky little mustang that Mrs. Lockhart
   had broken to the sidesaddle.  Margaret regarded her escort very
   much as she did the servant who always accompanied her on long
   rides at home, and the ride to the village was a silent one.  She
   was occupied with thoughts of another world, and Eric was wrestling
   with more thoughts than had ever been crowded into his head before.
   He rode with his eyes riveted on that slight figure before him, as
   though he wished to absorb it through the optic nerves and hold it
   in his brain forever.  He understood the situation perfectly.  His
   brain worked slowly, but he had a keen sense of the values of
   things.  This girl represented an entirely new species of humanity
   to him, but he knew where to place her.  The prophets of old, when
   an angel first appeared unto them, never doubted its high origin.
   Eric was patient under the adverse conditions of his life, but
   he was not servile.  The Norse blood in him had not entirely lost
   its self-reliance.  He came of a proud fisher line, men who were
   not afraid of anything but the ice and the  devil, and he had
   prospects before him when his father went down off the North Cape
   in the long Arctic night, and his mother, seized by a violent
   horror of seafaring life, had followed her brother to America. 
   Eric was eighteen then, handsome as young Siegfried, a giant in
   stature, with a skin singularly pure and delicate, like a Swede's;
   hair as yellow as the locks of Tennyson's amorous Prince, and eyes
   of a fierce, burning blue, whose flash was most dangerous to women.
   He had in those days a certain pride of bearing, a certain
   confidence of approach, that usually accompanies physical
   perfection.  It was even said of him then that he was in love with
   life, and inclined to levity, a vice most unusual on the Divide. 
   But the sad history of those Norwegian exiles, transplanted in an
   arid soil and under a scorching sun, had repeated itself in his
   case.  Toil and isolation had sobered him, and he grew more and
   more like the clods among which he laboured. It was as though some
   red-hot instrument had touched for a moment those delicate
   fibers of the brain which respond to acute pain or pleasure, in
   which lies the power of exquisite sensation, and had seared them
   quite away.  It is a painful thing to watch the light die out of
   the eyes of those Norsemen, leaving an expression of impenetrable
   sadness, quite passive, quite hopeless, a shadow that is never
   lifted.  With some this change comes almost at once, in the first
   bitterness of homesickness, with others it comes more slowly,
   according to the time it takes each man's heart to die.
   Oh, those poor Northmen of the Divide!  They are dead many a
   year before they are put to rest in the little graveyard on the
   windy hill where exiles of all nations grow akin.
   The peculiar species of hypochondria to which the exiles of
   his people sooner or later succumb had not developed in Eric until
   that night at the Lone Star schoolhouse, when he had broken his
   violin across his knee.  After that, the gloom of his people
   settled down upon him, and the gospel of maceration began its work.
   "If thine eye offend thee, pluck it out," et cetera.  The
   pagan smile that once hovered about his lips was gone, and he was
   one with sorrow.  Religion heals a hundred hearts for one that it
   embitters, but when it destroys, its work is quick and deadly, and
   where the agony of the cross has been, joy will not come again. 
   This man understood things literally: one must live without
   pleasure to die without fear; to save the soul, it was necessary to
   starve the soul.
   The sun hung low above the cornfields when Margaret and her
   cavalier left St. Anne.  South of the town there is a stretch of
   road that runs for some three miles through the French settlement,
   where the prairie is as level as the surface of a lake.  There the
   fields of flax and wheat and rye are bordered by precise rows of
   slender, tapering Lombard poplars.  It was a yellow world that
					     					 			br />
   Margaret Elliot saw under the wide light of the setting sun.
   The girl gathered up her reins and called back to Eric, "It
   will be safe to run the horses here, won't it?"
   "Yes, I think so, now," he answered, touching his spur to his
   pony's flank.  They were off like the wind.  It is an old
   saying in the West that newcomers always ride a horse or two
   to death before they get broken in to the country.  They are
   tempted by the great open spaces and try to outride the horizon, to
   get to the end of something.  Margaret galloped over the level
   road, and Eric, from behind, saw her long veil fluttering in the
   wind.  It had fluttered just so in his dreams last night and the
   night before.  With a sudden inspiration of courage he overtook her
   and rode beside her, looking intently at her half-averted face. 
   Before, he had only stolen occasional glances at it, seen it in
   blinding flashes, always with more or less embarrassment, but now
   he determined to let every line of it sink into his memory.  Men of
   the world would have said that it was an unusual face, nervous,
   finely cut, with clear, elegant lines that betokened ancestry.  Men
   of letters would have called it a historic face, and would have
   conjectured at what old passions, long asleep, what old sorrows
   forgotten time out of mind, doing battle together in ages gone, had
   curved those delicate nostrils, left their unconscious memory in
   those eyes.  But Eric read no meaning in these details.  To him
   this beauty was something more than colour and line; it was a flash
   of white light, in which one cannot distinguish colour because all
   colours are there.  To him it was a complete revelation, an
   embodiment of those dreams of impossible loveliness that linger by
   a young man's pillow on midsummer nights; yet, because it held
   something more than the attraction of health and youth and
   shapeliness, it troubled him, and in its presence he felt as the
   Goths before the white marbles in the Roman Capitol, not knowing
   whether they were men or gods.  At times he felt like uncovering
   his head before it, again the fury seized him to break and despoil,
   to find the clay in this spirit-thing and stamp upon it.  Away from
   her, he longed to strike out with his arms, and take and hold; it
   maddened him that this woman whom he could break in his hands
   should be so much stronger than he. But near her, he never
   questioned this strength; he admitted its potentiality as he
   admitted the miracles of the Bible; it enervated and conquered him.
   Tonight, when he rode so close to her that he could have touched
   her, he knew that he might as well reach out his hand to
   take a star.
   Margaret stirred uneasily under his gaze and turned questioningly
   in her saddle.
   "This wind puts me a little out of breath when we ride fast,"
   she said.
   Eric turned his eyes away.
   "I want to ask you if I go to New York to work, if I maybe
   hear music like you sang last night?  I been a purty good hand to
   work," he asked, timidly.
   Margaret looked at him with surprise, and then, as she studied
   the outline of his face, pityingly.
   "Well, you might--but you'd lose a good deal else.  I shouldn't
   like you to go to New York--and be poor, you'd be out of
   atmosphere, some way," she said, slowly.  Inwardly she was
   thinking: There he would be altogether sordid, impossible--a
   machine who would carry one's trunks upstairs, perhaps.  Here he is
   every inch a man, rather picturesque; why is it?  "No," she
   added aloud, "I shouldn't like that."
   "Then I not go," said Eric, decidedly.
   Margaret turned her face to hide a smile.  She was a trifle
   amused and a trifle annoyed.  Suddenly she spoke again.
   "But I'll tell you what I do want you to do, Eric.  I want you
   to dance with us tomorrow night and teach me some of the Norwegian
   dances; they say you know them all.  Won't you?"
   Eric straightened himself in his saddle and his eyes flashed
   as they had done in the Lone Star schoolhouse when he broke his
   violin across his knee.
   "Yes, I will," he said, quietly, and he believed that he
   delivered his soul to hell as he said it.
   They had reached the rougher country now, where the road wound
   through a narrow cut in one of the bluffs along the creek, when a
   beat of hoofs ahead and the sharp neighing of horses made the
   ponies start and Eric rose in his stirrups.  Then down the gulch in
   front of them and over the steep clay banks thundered a herd of
   wild ponies, nimble as monkeys and wild as rabbits, such as horse-
   traders drive east from the plains of Montana to sell in the
   farming country.  Margaret's pony made a shrill sound, a neigh that
   was almost a scream, and started up the clay bank to meet them, all
   the wild blood of the range breaking out in an instant.  Margaret
   called to Eric just as he threw himself out of the saddle and
   caught her pony's bit.  But the wiry little animal had gone mad and
   was kicking and biting like a devil.  Her wild brothers of the
   range were all about her, neighing, and pawing the earth, and
   striking her with their forefeet and snapping at her flanks.  It
   was the old liberty of the range that the little beast fought for.
   "Drop the reins and hold tight, tight!" Eric called, throwing
   all his weight upon the bit, struggling under those frantic
   forefeet that now beat at his breast, and now kicked at the wild
   mustangs that surged and tossed about him.  He succeeded in
   wrenching the pony's head toward him and crowding her withers
   against the clay bank, so that she could not roll.
   "Hold tight, tight!" he shouted again, launching a kick at a
   snorting animal that reared back against Margaret's saddle.  If she
   should lose her courage and fall now, under those hoofs--  He
   struck out again and again, kicking right and left with all his
   might.  Already the negligent drivers had galloped into the cut,
   and their long quirts were whistling over the heads of the herd. 
   As suddenly as it had come, the struggling, frantic wave of wild
   life swept up out of the gulch and on across the open prairie, and
   with a long despairing whinny of farewell the pony dropped her head
   and stood trembling in her sweat, shaking the foam and blood from
   her bit.
   Eric stepped close to Margaret's side and laid his hand on her
   saddle.  "You are not hurt?" he asked, hoarsely.  As he raised his
   face in the soft starlight she saw that it was white and drawn and
   that his lips were working nervously.
   "No, no, not at all.  But you, you are suffering; they struck
   you!" she cried in sharp alarm.
   He stepped back and drew his hand across his brow.
   "No, it is not that," he spoke rapidly now, with his hands
   clenched at his side.  "But if they had hurt you, I would beat
   their brains out with my hands.  I would kill them all.  I
   was never afraid before.  You are the only beautiful thing that
   has ever come close to me.  You came like an angel out of the sky.
					     					 			>   You are like the music you sing, you are like the stars and the
   snow on the mountains where I played when I was a little boy.  You
   are like all that I wanted once and never had, you are all that
   they have killed in me.  I die for you tonight, tomorrow, for all
   eternity.  I am not a coward; I was afraid because I love you more
   than Christ who died for me, more than I am afraid of hell, or hope
   for heaven.  I was never afraid before.  If you had fallen--oh, my
   God!"  He threw his arms out blindly and dropped his head upon the
   pony's mane, leaning ]imply against the animal like a man struck
   by some sickness.  His shoulders rose and fell perceptibly with his
   laboured breathing.  The horse stood cowed with exhaustion and
   fear.  Presently Margaret laid her hand on Eric's head and said
   gently:
   "You are better now, shall we go on?  Can you get your horse?"
   "No, he has gone with the herd.  I will lead yours, she is not
   safe.  I will not frighten you again."  His voice was still husky,
   but it was steady now.  He took hold of the bit and tramped home in
   silence.
   When they reached the house, Eric stood stolidly by the pony's
   head until Wyllis came to lift his sister from the saddle.
   "The horses were badly frightened, Wyllis.  I think I was pretty
   thoroughly scared myself," she said as she took her brother's arm
   and went slowly up the hill toward the house.  "No, I'm not hurt,
   thanks to Eric.  You must thank him for taking such good care of
   me.  He's a mighty fine fellow.  I'll tell you all about it in the
   morning, dear.  I was pretty well shaken up and I'm going right to
   bed now.  Good night."
   When she reached the low room in which she slept, she sank
   upon the bed in her riding dress, face downward.
   "Oh, I pity him!  I pity him!" she murmured, with a long sigh
   of exhaustion.  She must have slept a little.  When she rose again,
   she took from her dress a letter that had been waiting for her at
   the village post-office.  It was closely written in a long,
   angular hand, covering a dozen pages of foreign note-paper, and
   began:
   My Dearest Margaret: if I should attempt to say how like
   a winter hath thine absence been, I should incur the risk of
   being tedious.  Really, it takes the sparkle out of everything. 
   Having nothing better to do, and not caring to go anywhere in
   particular without you, I remained in the city until Jack Courtwell
   noted my general despondency and brought me down here to his place
   on the sound to manage some open-air theatricals he is getting up. 
   As You Like It is of course the piece selected.  Miss
   Harrison plays Rosalind.  I wish you had been here to take the
   part.  Miss Harrison reads her lines well, but she is either a
   maiden-all-forlorn or a tomboy; insists on reading into the part
   all sorts of deeper meanings and highly coloured suggestions wholly
   out of harmony with the pastoral setting.  Like most of the
   professionals, she exaggerates the emotional element and quite
   fails to do justice to Rosalind's facile wit and really brilliant
   mental qualities.  Gerard will do Orlando, but rumor says he is
   epris of your sometime friend, Miss Meredith, and his memory
   is treacherous and his interest fitful.
   My new pictures arrived last week on the Gascogne.  The
   Puvis de Chavannes is even more beautiful than I thought it in
   Paris.  A pale dream-maiden sits by a pale dream-cow and a
   stream of anemic water flows at her feet.  The Constant, you
   will remember, I got because you admired it.  It is here in
   all its florid splendour, the whole dominated by a glowing
   sensuosity.  The drapery of the female figure is as wonderful
   as you said; the fabric all barbaric pearl and gold, painted
   with an easy, effortless voluptuousness, and that white,
   gleaming line of African coast in the background recalls
   memories of you very precious to me.  But it is useless to
   deny that Constant irritates me.  Though I cannot prove the