d? Well, the people are indeed as
sheep without a shepherd; and who can wonder, seeing that there is
not a single House of Prayer kept open in the municipality? There is
a great deal of coarse levity, and even profanity of speech, and, I
fear, much immoderate drinking; but these are the effects of
blindness rather than of wickedness. From the heavier sins--from
what I may call actual, conscious vice--Eucalyptus is singularly
free. Miss Montmorency, indeed, tells me that in her experience
(which, of course, is that of a single lady, and therefore
restricted) the moral tone of the town is surprisingly healthy.
You understand that I give her judgment no more than its due weight.
Still, Miss Montmorency has lived here three years; and for a single
lady (and, I may add, the only lady in the place) to pass three years
in it entirely unmolested--'
"This was too much; and I interrupted him almost at random--
"'You remind me of the purpose of my call. I hope, if only to
satisfy Miss Montmorency, you won't mind my sounding your chest and
putting a few questions to you.'
"Seeing that I had already pulled out my stethoscope, he gave way,
feebly protesting that it was not worth my trouble. The examination
merely assured me of that which I knew already--that this young man's
days were numbered, and the numbers growing small. I need not say I
kept this to myself.
"'You must let me call again to-morrow,' said I. 'I've a small
medicine chest up at the Cornice House, and you want a tonic badly.'
"Upon this he began, with a confused look and a slight stammer:
'Do you know--I'm afraid you will think it rude, but I didn't mean it
for rudeness--really. Your visit has given me great pleasure--'
"It flashed on me that he had called himself 'a poor man.'
"'I wasn't proposing to doctor you,' I put in; and it was a shameless
lie. 'You may take the tonic or not; it won't do much harm, anyway.
But a gentle walk every day among the pines here--the very gentlest,
nothing to overtax your strength--will do more for you than any
drugs. But if you will let me call, pretty often, and have a talk--
I'm an Englishman, you know, and an English voice is good to hear--'
"His face lit up at once. 'Ah, if you would!' said he; and we shook
hands."
"As I closed the front door and stepped out upon the sidewalk, a tall
man lounged across to me from the doorway of a saloon across the
road--a lumberer, by his dress. He wore a large s
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