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t out of one most tremendously. I didn't believe, Nell, that I had such an amount of work in me." "You have been so gloomy lately, Will. Was that fatigue?" [Illustration: "HE KISSED HER FOREHEAD."] "Ambition on the brain, Nell," he replied, lightly--as lightly as of old--success had not destroyed the old gaiety of heart. "I've consulted a learned physician, Dr. Sydenham Celsus Galen, Wimpole Street. He says that an engagement with the right girl--he is extremely particular on that point, so that I do hope, Nell, we have made no mistake--is a sovereign remedy for all mopey, glum, dumpsy, moody, broody, gloomy, sulky, ill-conditioned vapours. It is, he confessed, the only medicine in his pharmacopoeia. All his clients have to follow that prescription. You will very soon find that those glum, dumpsy moods have vanished quite away. You will charm them away. Oh! I live again--I breathe--I think--I don't work so infernally hard--I am once more human--because I love, and because--" The girl's head rested upon his arm, and he kissed her forehead. _Portraits of Celebrities at Different Times of their Lives._ W. CLARK RUSSELL. BORN 1844. [Illustration: AGE 5 (_From an Oil Painting_)] [Illustration: AGE 17.(From a Photograph.) (_As a Midshipman._)] [Illustration: PRESENT DAY. (_From a Photo by Elliott & Fry._)] Mr. Clark Russell was born in New York of English parents. His literary taste is a natural gift, his mother being a niece of Charles Lloyd, the poet, and a cousin of Christopher Wordsworth, the late Bishop of Lincoln, and herself known as a poetess, and the authoress, among other things, of "The Wife's Dream." Mr. Clark Russell went to sea as a middy before he was fourteen, and during the next eight years picked up the thorough knowledge of seafaring life which he afterwards turned to such good use in his novels. His first book was "John Holdsworth," but it was his second story, "The Wreck of the Grosvenor," which he wrote in little more than two months and sold to a publisher for fifty pounds, which marked a new era in the evolution of the nautical novel. Since that time Mr. Clark Russell has had the sea to himself, and his descriptions of sea-scenery, and his pictures of real-life sailors, are not likely soon to find a rival. Mr. Clark Russell's latest story, "List, Ye Landsmen"--one of his very best--is now appearing in _Tit-Bits_. PRINCESS MARIE OF EDINBURGH. BORN 1875. [Illust
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