It was just after they had finished reading and discussing Dante's

Vision. What a wonderful man Mr. Severn was that he had taken two

children and guided them through that beautiful, fearful, wonderful

story! How it had impressed him then, and stayed with him all these

awful months and days since he had trodden the same fiery way--!

He reached his hand out for the book, bound in dull blue cloth, the

symbol of its serious import. He had not opened the book since they

finished it and Mr. Severn had handed it over to him and told him to

keep it, as he had another copy. He opened the book as if it had been

the coffin of his beloved, and there between the dusty pages lay a bit

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of blue ribbon, creased with the pages, and jagged on the edges because

it had been cut with a jack knife. And lying smooth upon it in a golden

curve a wisp of a yellow curl, just a section of one of Marilyn's, the

day she put her hair up, and did away with the curls! He had cut the

ribbon from the end of a great bow that held the curls at the back of

her head, and then he had laughingly insisted on a piece of the curl,

and they had made a great time collecting the right amount of hair, for

Marilyn insisted it must not make a rough spot for her to brush. Then

he had laid it in the book, the finished book, and shut it away

carefully, and gone home, and the next day,--the very next day, the

thing had happened!

He turned the leaves sadly: "In midway of this our mortal life,

I found me in a gloomy wood, astray

Gone from the path direct:--"

It startled him, so well it fitted with his mood. It was himself, and

yet he could remember well how he had felt for the writer when he heard

it first. Terrible to sit here to-night and know it was himself all the

time the tale had been about! He turned a page or two and out from the

text there stood a line: "All hope abandon ye who enter here."

That was the matter with himself. He had abandoned all hope. Over the

leaf his eye ran down the page: "This miserable fate

Suffer the wretched souls of those who lived

Without praise or blame, with that ill band

Of angels mixed, who nor rebellious proved

Nor yet were true to God, but for themselves

Were only."

How well he remembered the minister's little comments as he read, how

the sermons had impressed themselves upon his heart as he listened, and

yet here he was, himself, in hell! He turned over the pages again

quickly unable to get away from the picture that grew in his mind, the

vermilion towers and minarets, the crags and peaks, the "little brook,

whose crimson'd wave, yet lifts my hair with horror," he could see it

all as if he had lived there many years. Strange he had not thought

before of the likeness of his life to this. He read again: "O Tuscan! thou who through the city of fire

Alive art passing,--"