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"By close observation I do not doubt that one could tell from a single tooth not only what food the owner of it had been accustomed to eat, but what language he had spoken. I say close observation, you know. It could not be done in a day."

"I suppose not." And then the student again bent over his drawing. "You see it would have been impossible for the owner of such a jaw as that to have ground a grain of corn between his teeth, or to have masticated even a cabbage."

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Lucius," said Lady Mason, becoming courageous on the spur of the moment, "I want you to leave that for a moment and speak to me." "Well," said he, putting down his pencil and turning round. "Here I am."

"You have heard of the lawsuit which I had with your brother when you were an infant?"

"Of course I have heard of it; but I wish you would not call that man my brother. He would not own me as such, and I most certainly would not own him. As far as I can learn, he is one of the most detestable human beings that ever existed."

"You have heard of him from an unfavorable side, Lucius; you should remember that. He is a hard man, I believe; but I do not know that he would do any thing which he thought to be unjust."

"He

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arisen from the wrath of the attorney. has been to Groby Park," she said, "and now that he has returned he is spreading this report.' "I shall go to him to-morrow," said Lucius, very sternly.

"No, no; you must not do that. You must promise me that you will not do that."

"But I shall. You can not suppose that I shall allow such a man as that to tamper with my name without noticing it! It is my business now." "No, Lucius. The attack will be against me rather than you—that is, if an attack be made. I have told you because I do not like to have a secret from you."

"Of course you have told me. If you are attacked, who should defend you if I do not?"

"The best defense, indeed the only defense till they take some active step, will be silence. Most probably they will not do any thing, and then we can afford to live down such reports as these. You can understand, Lucius, that the matter is grievous enough to me; and I am sure that for my sake you will not make it worse by a personal quarrel with such a man as that."

"I shall go to Mr. Furnival," said he, "and ask his advice."

"I have done that already, Lucius. I thought it best to do so when first I heard that Mr. Dock

"Why, then, did he try to rob me of my prop- wrath was moving in the matter. It was for erty ?" that that I went up to town."

"Because he thought that it should have been his own. I can not see into his breast, but I presume that it was so."

"I do not presume any thing of the kind, and never shall. I was an infant, and you were a woman-a woman at that time without many friends, and he thought that he could rob us under cover of the law. Had he been commonly honest it would have been enough for him to know what had been my father's wishes, even if the will had not been rigidly formal. I look upon him as a robber and a thief."

"I am sorry for that, Lucius, because I differ from you. What I wish to tell you now is this -that he is thinking of trying the question again."

"What! thinking of another trial now?" and Lucius Mason pushed his drawings and books from him with a vengeance.

"So I am told."

"And who told you? I can not believe it. If he intended any thing of the kind I must have been the first person to hear of it. It would be my business now, and you may be sure that he would have taken care to let me know his purpose."

And then by degrees she explained to him that the man himself, Mr. Mason of Groby, had as yet declared no such purpose. She had intended to omit all mention of the name of Mr. Dockwrath, but she was unable to do so without seeming to make a mystery with her son. When she came to explain how the rumor had arisen, and why she had thought it necessary to tell him this, she was obliged to say that it had all

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And he shook

"My

forced as a witness to disclose his secret, of which | bobbish this morning, Sir."
he could make so much better a profit as a legal hands cordially with the attorney.
adviser. As it was, Mr. Mason had promised
to pay him for his services, and would no doubt
be induced to go so far as to give him a legal
claim for payment. Mr. Mason had promised
to come up to town, and had instructed the
Hamworth attorney to meet him there; and un-
der such circumstances the Hamworth attorney
had but little doubt that time would produce a
considerable bill of costs in his favor.

"Tidy, thank you," said Dockwrath. company last night did not do me any harm; you may swear to that."

And then he thought that he saw his way to a great success. I should be painting the Devil too black were I to say that revenge was his chief incentive in that which he was doing. All our motives are mixed; and his wicked desire to do evil to Lady Mason in return for the evil which she had done to him was mingled with professional energy, and an ambition to win a cause that ought to be won-especially a cause which others had failed to win. He said to himself, on finding those names and dates among old Mr. Usbech's papers, that there was still an opportunity of doing something considerable in this Orley Farm Case, and he had made up his mind to do it. Professional energy, revenge, and money considerations would work hand in hand in this matter; and therefore, as he left Leeds in the second-class railway carriage for London, he thought over the result of his visit with consider@able satisfaction.

He had left Leeds at ten, and Mr. Moulder had come down in the same omnibus to the station, and was traveling in the same train in a first-class carriage. Mr. Moulder was a man who despised the second-class, and was not slow to say so before other commercials who traveled at a cheaper rate than he did. "Hubbles and Grease," he said, “allowed him respectably, in order that he might go about their business respectable; and he wasn't going to give the firm a bad name by being seen in a second-class carriage, although the difference would go into his own pocket. That wasn't the way he had begun, and that wasn't the way he was going to end." He said nothing to Mr. Dockwrath in the morning, merely bowing in answer to that gentleman's salutation. "Hope you were comfortable last night in the back drawing-room," said Mr. Dockwrath; but Mr. Moulder in reply only looked at him.

At the Mansfield station, Mr. Kantwise, with his huge wooden boxes, appeared on the platform, and he got into the same carriage with Mr. Dockwrath. He had come on by a night train, and had been doing a stroke of business that morning. "Well, Kantwise," Moulder holloaed out from his warm, well-padded seat, "doing it cheap and nasty, eh?"

"Not at all nasty, Mr. Moulder," said the other. "And I find myself among as respectable a class of society in the second-class as you do in the first; quite so-and perhaps a little better," Mr. Kantwise added, as he took his seat immediately opposite to Mr. Dockwrath. "I hope I have the pleasure of seeing you pretty

"Ha ha! ha! I was so delighted that you got the better of Moulder; a domineering party, isn't he? quite terrible! For myself, I can't put up with him sometimes."

"I didn't have to put up with him last night." "No, no; it was very good, wasn't it now? very capital, indeed. All the same I wish you'd heard Busby give us 'Beautiful Venice, City of Song!' A charming voice has Busby; quite charming." And there was a pause for a minute or so, after which Mr. Kantwise resumed the conversation. "You'll allow me to put you up

one of those drawing-room sets?” he said.
"Well, I am afraid not. I don't think they
are strong enough where there are children."

"Dear, dear; dear, dear; to hear you say
so, Mr. Dockwrath! Why, they are made for
strength. They are the very things for chi-
dren, because they don't break, you know.”
"But they'd bend terribly."

"By no means. They're so elastic that they always recovers themselves. I didn't show you that; but you might turn the backs of them chairs nearly down to the ground, and they will come straight again. You let me send you a set for your wife to look at. If she's not charmed with them I'll-I'll-I'll eat them."

"Women are charmed with any thing," said Mr. Dockwrath. "A new bonnet does that." "They know what they are about pretty well, as I dare say you have found out. I'll send express to Sheffield and have a completely new set put up for you."

"For twelve seventeen six, of course?"

"Oh! dear no, Mr. Dockwrath. The lowest figure for ready money, delivered free, is fifteen ten."

"I couldn't think of paying more than Mrs. Mason."

"Ah! but that was a damaged set; it was, indeed. And she merely wanted it as a present for the curate's wife. The table was quite sprung, and the music-stool wouldn't twist." "But you'll send them to me new ?" "New from the manufactory; upon my word we will." "A table that you have never acted uponhave never shown off on; standing in the middle, you know?"

"Yes; upon my honor. You shall have them direct from the workshop, and sent at once; you shall find them in your drawing-room on Tuesday next."

"We'll say thirteen ten."

"I couldn't do it, Mr. Dockwrath-" And so they went on, bargaining half the way up to town, till at last they came to terms for fourteen eleven. "And a very superior article your lady will find them," Mr. Kantwise said, as he shook hands with his new friend at parting.

One day Mr. Dockwrath remained at home

in the bosom of his family, saying all manner | sound, honorable man, but was now considered of spiteful things against Lady Mason, and on by some to be not quite sharp enough for the the next day he went up to town and called on practice of the present day. Round and Crook. That one day he waited in order that Mr. Mason might have time to write; but Mr. Mason had written on the very day of the visit to Groby Park, and Mr. Round, junior, was quite ready for Mr. Dockwrath when that gentleman called.

Mr. Dockwrath when at home had again cautioned his wife to have no intercourse whatever "with that swindler at Orley Farm," wishing thereby the more thoroughly to imbue poor Miriam with a conviction that Lady Mason had committed some fraud with reference to the will. "You had better say nothing about the matter any where; d'you hear? People will talk; all the world will be talking about it before long. But that is nothing to you. If people ask you, say that you believe that I am engaged in the case professionally, but that you know nothing further." As to all which Miriam of course promised the most exact obedience. But Mr. Dockwrath, though he only remained one day in Hamworth before he went to London, took care that the curiosity of his neighbors should be sufficiently excited.

Mr. Dockwrath felt some little trepidation at the heart as he walked into the office of Messrs. Round and Crook in Bedford Row. Messrs. Round and Crook stood high in the profession, and were men who in the ordinary way of business would have had no personal dealings with such a man as Mr. Dockwrath. Had any such intercourse become necessary on commonplace subjects Messrs. Round and Crook's confidential clerk might have seen Mr. Dockwrath, but even he would have looked down upon the Hamworth attorney as from a great moral height. But now, in the matter of the Orley Farm Case, Mr. Dockwrath had determined that he would transact business only on equal terms with the Bedford Row people. The secret was his-of his finding; he knew the strength of his own position, and he would use it. But nevertheless he did tremble inwardly as he asked whether Mr. Round was within; or if not Mr. Round, then Mr. Crook.

There were at present three members in the firm, though the old name remained unaltered. The Mr. Round and the Mr. Crook of former days were still working partners-the very Round and the very Crook who had carried on the battle on the part of Mr. Mason of Groby twenty years ago; but to them had been added another Mr. Round, a son of old Round, who, though his name did not absolutely appear in the nomenclature of the firm, was, as a working man, the most important person in it. Old Mr. Round might now be said to be ornamental and communicative. He was a hale man of nearly seventy, who thought a great deal of his peaches up at Isleworth, who came to the office five times a week-not doing very much hard work, and who took the largest share in the profits. Mr. Round, senior, had enjoyed the reputation of being a

Mr. Crook had usually done the dirty work of the firm, having been originally a managing clerk; and he still did the same-in a small way. He had been the man to exact penalties, look after costs, and attend to any criminal business, or business partly criminal in its nature, which might chance find its way to them. But latterly in all great matters Mr. Round, junior, Mr. Matthew Round-his father was Richard— was the member of the firm on whom the world in general placed the greatest dependence. Mr. Mason's letter had in the ordinary way of business come to him, although it had been addressed to his father, and he had resolved on acting on it himself.

When Mr. Dockwrath called Mr. Round, senior, was at Birmingham, Mr. Crook was taking his annual holiday, and Mr. Round, junior, was reigning alone in Bedford Row. Instructions had been given to the clerks that if Mr. Dockwrath called he was to be shown in, and therefore he found himself seated, with much less trouble than he had expected, in the private room of Mr. Round, junior. He had expected to see an old man, and was therefore somewhat confused, not feeling quite sure that he was in company with one of the principals; but nevertheless, looking at the room, and especially at the armchair and carpet, he was aware that the legal gentleman who motioned him to a seat could be no ordinary clerk.

The manner of this legal gentleman was not, as Mr. Dockwrath thought, quite so ceremoniously civil as it might be, considering the important nature of the business to be transacted between them. Mr. Dockwrath intended to treat on equal terms, and so intending would have been glad to have shaken hands with his new ally at the commencement of their joint operations. But the man before him-a man younger than himself too—did not even rise from his chair. "Ah! Mr. Dockwrath," he said, taking up a letter from the table, "will you have the goodness to sit down?" And Mr. Matthew Round wheeled his own arm-chair toward the fire, stretching out his legs comfortably, and pointing to a somewhat distant seat as that intended for the accommodation of his visitor. Mr. Dockwrath seated himself in the somewhat distant seat, and deposited his hat upon the floor, not being as yet quite at home in his position; but he made up his mind as he did so that he would be at home before he left the room.

"I find that you have been down in Yorkshire with a client of ours, Mr. Dockwrath," said Mr. Matthew Round.

"Yes, I have," said he of Hamworth.

"Ah! well-; you are in the profession yourself, I believe?"

"Yes; I am an attorney."

"Would it not have been well to have come to us first ?"

"No, I think not. I have not the pleasure son was acting in good faith. I was always conof knowing your name, Sir."

"My name is Round-Matthew Round." "I beg your pardon, Sir; I did not know," said Mr. Dockwrath, bowing. It was a satisfaction to him to learn that he was closeted with a Mr. Round, even if it were not the Mr. Round. "No, Mr. Round, I can't say that I should have thought of that. In the first place, I didn't know whether Mr. Mason employed any lawyer, and in the next-"

"Well, well; it does not matter. It is usual among the profession; but it does not in the least signify. Mr. Mason has written to us, and he says that you have found out something about that Orley Farm business."

vinced of the contrary, and am more sure of it now than ever." This last paragraph, Mr. Round, junior, had not thought it necessary to read to Mr. Dockwrath.

"The documents to which I allude are in reference to my confidential family matters; and I certainly shall not produce them without knowing on what ground I am standing."

"Of course you are aware, Mr. Dockwrath, that we could compel you."

"There, Mr. Round, I must be allowed to differ." If you

"It won't come to that, of course. have any thing worth showing, you'll show it; and if we make use of you as a witness, it must

"Yes; I have found out something. At be as a willing witness." least, I rather think so."

66

'Well, what is it, Mr. Dockwrath ?" "Ah! that's the question. It's rather a ticklish business, Mr. Round; a family affair, as I may say."

"Whose family?"

"To a certain extent my family, and to a certain extent Mr. Mason's family. I don't know how far I should be justified in laying all the facts before you-wonderful facts they are too-in an off-hand way like that. These matters have to be considered a great deal. It is not only the extent of the property. There is much more than that in it, Mr. Round."

"If you don't tell me what there is in it, I don't see what we are to do. I am sure you did not give yourself the trouble of coming up here from Hamworth merely with the object of telling us that you are going to hold your tongue."

"Certainly not, Mr. Round."

"Then what did you come to say?"

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"I don't think it probable that I shall be a witness in the matter at all."

"Ah, well; perhaps not. My own impression is that no case will be made out; that there will be nothing to take before a jury."

"There again, I must differ from you, Mr. Round."

"Oh, of course! I suppose the real fact is that it is a matter of money. You want to be paid for what information you have got. That is about the long and the short of it; eh, Mr. Dockwrath ?"

"I don't know what you call the long and the short of it, Mr. Round; or what may be your way of doing business. As a professional man, of course I expect to be paid for my work—and I have no doubt that you expect the same."

"No doubt, Mr. Dockwrath; but as you have made the comparison, I hope you will excuse me for saying so-we always wait till our clients come to us."

Mr. Dockwrath drew himself up with some intention of becoming angry, but he hardly knew how to carry it out; and then it might be a question whether anger would serve his turn.

"Yes; I will read you a part of his letter-"Do you mean to say, Mr. Round, if you had 'Mr. Dockwrath is of opinion that the will under which the estate is now enjoyed is absolutely a forgery.' I presume you mean the codicil,

Mr. Dockwrath ?"

"Oh yes! the codicil of course."

"And he has in his possession documents which I have not seen, but which seem to me, as described, to go far to prove that this certainly must have been the case.' And then he goes on with a description of dates, although it is clear that he does not understand the matter himself-indeed he says as much. Now of course we must see these documents before we can give our client any advice." A certain small portion of Mr. Mason's letter Mr. Round did then read, but he did not read those portions in which Mr. Mason expressed his firm determination to reopen the case against Lady Mason, and even to prosecute her for forgery if it were found that he had any thing like a fair chance of success in doing so. "I know that you were convinced," he had said, addressing himself personally to Mr. Round, senior, "that Lady Ma

found documents such as these you would have done nothing about them-that you would have passed them by as worthless?"

"I can't say that till I know what the documents are. If I found papers concerning the client of another firm, I should go to that firm if I thought that they demanded attention." "I didn't know any thing about the firmhow was I to know?"

"Well! you know now, Mr. Dockwrath.

As

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"Then I shall see Mr. Mason again my- Mr. Mason wishes to see you he will write, of self." course. Good-day, Mr. Dockwrath."

As

"That you can do. He will be in town next week, and, as I believe, wishes to see you. regards your expenses, if you can show us that you have any communication to make that is worth our client's attention, we will see that you are paid what you are out of pocket, and some fair remuneration for the time you may have lost-not as an attorney, remember, for in that light we can not regard you."

"I am every bit as much an attorney as you are."

"No doubt; but you are not Mr. Mason's attorney; and as long as it suits him to honor us with his custom, you can not be so regarded." "That's as he pleases."

It is as he

"No; it is not, Mr. Dockwrath. pleases whether he employs you or us; but it is not as he pleases whether he employs both on business of the same class. He may give us his confidence, or he may withdraw it."

"Looking at the way the matter was managed before, perhaps the latter may be the better for him."

"Excuse me, Mr. Dockwrath, for saying that that is a question I shall not discuss with you."

Upon this Mr. Dockwrath jumped from his chair and took up his hat. "Good-morning to you, Sir," said Mr. Round, without moving from his chair; "I will tell Mr. Mason that you have declined making any communication to us. He will probably know your address-if he should want it."

Mr. Dockwrath paused. Was he not about to sacrifice substantial advantage to momentary anger? Would it not be better that he should carry this impudent young London lawyer with him if it were possible? "Sir," said he, "I am quite willing to tell you all that I know of this matter at present, if you will have the patience to hear it."

"Patience, Mr. Dockwrath! Why, I am made of patience. Sit down again, Mr. Dockwrath, and think of it."

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And so Mr. Dockwrath went home, not quite contented with his day's work.

THE SWORD AND THE PEN. ADMIT it, O Major of the New York State Militia! This old pen-holder of mine, which, under Providence, gives me my daily bread, is an exceedingly humble instrument when matched against your long ramrod; and this short, thick roll of spoiled paper called MS.-this poem nine times the rejected of wary and, no doubt, wise booksellers, what is it to that spoonful of powder and that ounce of lead which, being neatly adjusted and manipulated, may be the very last ration, absolutely incapable of digestion, which some poor soldier may receive; a leaded article quite unlike mine, which, although I make them as fierce as ever I can, have never been known to kill any body or any thing except the unfortunate newspapers in which they were printed? To be sure, we men of the journals are not unmindful of our dignity; we, too, have our leading columns; we, too, make a great many charges, and, not seldom, in spite of our ninth story arsenals, are in danger of assault and the enemy's foot. All of us in the word-war have been wounded in our feelings; and some of us in the other way! And do we not call that conglomeration of bunting and brass bands, and bellowing and incessant bull-dog brilliancy of the leading article description-do we not call it "a campaign?"-crying out: "Up, Guards, and at 'em!" "Strike for your altars and your fires!" "Come as the waves come!"-emitting other senile slogans and flaming formulas of placardpatriotism; legitimate heir-looms of fierce Anglo-Saxon turbulence; nay, of wild "irrepressible" Greek canvasses, likened of Solon to a sea lashed into fury by the wind of orators? Old John Zisca's skin made a good drum-head enough; but what was all its noise compared with the never ending, still beginning, devil's tattoo of The Daily Tambour, price only two cents, and clubs furnished upon the usual terms? Who arouses the people? I do-I mean "We" do!

Once aroused, who keeps them so? I do I mean "We" do! Who secured the election of Higgins Smith, Esq., of the Hon. Smith Jones Thompson? I did-I mean "We" did! Who came in for the beef and beer after the canvass? did!

Mr. Dockwrath did sit down again, and did think of it; and it ended in his telling to Mr. Round all that he had told to Mr. Mason. As he did so, he looked closely at Mr. Round's face, but there he could read nothing. 'Exactly," said Mr. Round. "The fourteenth of July is the date of both. I have taken a memorandum of that. A final deed for closing partnership, was it? I have got that down. John Kenneby and Bridget Bolster. I remember the names-witnesses to both deeds, were they? I understand; nothing about this other deed was brought up at the trial? I see the point-such as it is. John Kenneby and Bridget Bolster-both believed to be living. Oh, you can give their address, can you? Decline to do so now? Very well; it does not matter. I think I understand it all"There are some obligations," says Goldsmith, now, Mr. Dockwrath; and when we want you too great for gratitude." The Administration's again you shall hear from us. Samuel Dock- to me, for instance! But I say no more. Ha! ha! "History," says old Bernard Gilpin, "makes

wrath, is it? Thank you. Good-morning.

If

"We" did-I mean the Hon. S. J. T. And who came in for simply the bones? I did—that is, "We" did! But let it go! The President knows my opinion of his conduct. Much he cares for it! Very little, I suppose. I am still at my post, while the jolly American embassadors are packing their trunks and buying their steamer tickets, and even little Flimflam has the consulate at Deadman's Island!

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