"I don't know this writing from New York," said Mrs. Sidney, opening the next letter. [20] [20] Glancing over it she gave a startled exclamation. "Whew!" breathed the boy, reading over her shoulder. "Poor Aunt Mary!" "Isabel, Aunt Mary has gone!" exclaimed Mrs. Sidney. "What! I didn't know she was ill. She wasn't ill. Who is there to attend to things? Who wrote you?" "Eliza Brewster. This is from her. It was very sudden. She had been at work at her easel an hour before. How sad it seems! How lonely! I wish we had both been there, Isabel. There is the letter." Phil took it across to Mrs. Fabian. "You see. She was buried day before yesterday. Oh, I'm glad we had that little interchange in the summer. Eliza loves her, but, after all, she is not her own." Phil mechanically opened another letter. His thoughts were with that unknown relative with cravings like to his, working through the gathering years toward a goal which had ever retreated before her. He unfolded a business letter. It enclosed a small sealed envelope addressed to himself in another handwriting. "Aunt Mary's!" said his mother. The son's[21] arm was again around her as with heads close together they perused the following:— [21] My dear Grand-Nephew, Philip Sidney:— My dear Grand-Nephew, Philip Sidney When you open this letter, I shall have gone to a world where surely I shall be permitted to come nearer to the source of beauty. My family all consider me a failure. I know it. They have laughed at my poor efforts. I know it; but since your mother wrote to me a month ago, sending me your sketches and telling me your longings, I have felt that out in the free Western country, there lives one with my blood in his veins, who will understand the thirst that has led me on, and nerved me to untiring effort—that has made it my only hope of happiness to live as I have lived, and work as I have