not exactly; I don't know," he said dubiously; then, in an
absent way, "it was that letter set me to think of him all day, I
suppose."
"Why, pa, I declare," cried Netty, starting up, "if I didn't forget all
about it, and I came down expressly to give it to you! Where is it? Oh!
here it is."
She drew from her pocket an old letter, faded to a pale yellow, and gave
it to him. The ghost started suddenly.
"Why, bless my soul! it's the very letter! Where did you get that,
Nathalie?" asked Dr. Renton.
"I found it on the stairs after dinner, pa."
"Yes, I do remember taking it up with me; I must have dropped it," he
answered, musingly, gazing at the superscription. The ghost was gazing
at it, too, with startled interest.
"What beautiful writing it is, pa," murmured the young girl. "Who wrote
it to you? It looks yellow enough to have been written a long time
since."
"Fifteen years ago, Netty. When you were a baby. And the hand that wrote
it has been cold for all that time."
He spoke with a solemn sadness, as if memory lingered with the heart of
fifteen years ago, on an old grave. The dim figure by his side had bowed
its head, and all was still.
"It is strange," he resumed, speaking vacantly and slowly, "I have not
thought of him for so long a time, and to-day--especially this
evening--I have felt as if he were constantly near me. It is a singular
feeling."
He put his left hand to his forehead, and mused--his right clasped his
daughter's shoulder. The phantom slowly raised its head, and gazed at
him with a look of unutterable tenderness.
"Who was he, father?" she asked with a hushed voice.
"A young man--an author--a poet. He had been my dearest friend, when we
were boys; and, though I lost sight of him for years--he led an erratic
life--we were friends when he died. Poor, poor fellow! Well, he is at
peace."
The stern voice had saddened, and was almost tremulous. The spectral
form was still.
"How did he die, father?"
"A long story, darling," he replied gravely, "and a sad one. He was very
poor and proud. He was a genius--that is, a person without an atom of
practical talent. His parents died, the last, his mother, when he was
near manhood. I was in college then. Thrown upon the world, he picked up
a scanty subsistence with his pen, for a time. I could have got him a
place in the counting-house, but he would not take it; in fact, he
wasn't fit for it. You can't harness Pegasus to the cart, you kno
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