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rse, told him nothing about Bude) kept him apprised as to the conduct of her trustees. They had acted with honourable caution and circumspection. Their advertisements guardedly appealed to men of daring and of scientific distinction under the age of thirty-five. A professorship might have been in view for all that the world could see, if the world read the advertisements. Perhaps it was something connected with the manufacture of original explosives, for daring is not usually required in the learned. The testimonials and printed works of applicants were jealously scrutinised. At personal interviews with competitors similar caution was observed. During three weeks in August the papers announced that Lord Bude was visiting the States; arrangements about a yachting match in the future were his pretence. He returned, he came to Scotland, and it was in a woodland path beside the Lochy that his resolution failed, and that he spoke to Miss McCabe. They were walking home together from the river in the melancholy and beautiful close of a Highland day in September. Behind them the gillies, at a respectful distance, were carrying the rods and the fish. The wet woods were fragrant, the voice of the stream was deepening, strange lights came and went on moor and hills and the distant loch. It was then that Bude opened his heart. He first candidly explained that his heart, he had supposed, was dead--buried on a distant and a deadly shore. 'I reckon there's a lost Lenore most times,' Miss McCabe had replied to this confession. But, though never to be forgotten, the memory of the lost one, Bude averred, was now merged in the light of a living love; his heart was no longer tenanted only by a shadow. The heart of Miss McCabe stood still for a moment, her cheek paled, but the gallant girl was true to herself, to her father's wish, to her native land, to the flag. She understood her adorer. 'Guess _I_'m bespoke,' said Miss McCabe abruptly. 'You are another's! Oh, despair!' exclaimed the impassioned earl. 'Yes, I reckon I'm the Bride of Seven, like the girl in the poem.' 'The Bride of Seven?' said Bude. 'One out of _that_ crowd will call me his,' said Miss McCabe, handing to her adorer the list, which she had received by mail a day or two earlier, of the accepted competitors. He glanced over the names. 1. Dr. Hiram P. Dodge, of the Smithsonian Institute. 2. Alfred Jenkins, F.R.S., All Souls College, Oxf
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