He rose to re-enter the cabin, and, passing the window, caught a glimpse

of his face reflected there; a face like, and yet unlike, his own, and

crowned with snow-white hair! In doubt and bewilderment he paced up and

down within the cabin, vainly striving to connect these fragmentary

parts, to reconcile the present with the past. As he passed and repassed

the table covered with manuscript his attention was attracted by an

odd-looking volume bound in flexible morocco and containing several

hundred pages of written matter. It lay partly open in a conspicuous

place, and upon the fly-leaf was written, in large, bold characters,-"To my Other Self, should he awaken."

He could not banish the words from his mind; they drew him with

irresistible magnetism. Again and again he read them, until, impelled by

some power he could not explain, he seized the volume and, seating

himself in the doorway of the cabin, proceeded to examine it. Lifting

the fly-leaf, he read the following inscription: "To one from the outer world, whose identity is hidden among the

secrets of the past: "With the hope that when the veil is lifted, these pages may assist

him in uniting into one perfect whole the strangely disjointed

portions of his life, they are inscribed by "JOHN DARRELL."

He smiled as he read the name and recalled the circumstances under which

he had taken it, but he no longer felt any hesitation regarding the

volume in his hands, and he began to read. It was written as a

communication from one stranger to another, from the mountain recluse to

one of whose life he had not the slightest knowledge; but he knew

without doubt that it was addressed to himself, yet written by

himself,--that writer and reader were one and the same.

For more than two hours he read on and on, deeply absorbed in the tale

of that solitary life, his own heart responding to each note of joy or

sorrow, of hope or despair, and vibrating to the undertone of loneliness

and longing running through it all.

He strove vainly to recall the characters in the strange drama in which

he had played his part but of which he had now no distinct recollection;

dimly they passed before his vision like the shadowy phantoms of a dream

from which one has just awakened. He started at the first mention of

John Britton's name, eagerly following each outline of that noble

character, his heart kindling with affection as he read his words of

loving, helpful counsel. His face grew tender and his eyes filled at the

love-story, so pathetically brief, faithfully transcribed on those

pages, but of Kate Underwood he could only recall a slender girl with

golden-brown hair and wistful, appealing brown eyes; he wondered at the

strength of character shown by her speech and conduct, and his heart

went out to this unknown love, notwithstanding that memory now showed

him the picture of another and earlier love in the far East.




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