unnaturally hot with the fierce sun and suffocating damps that appeared to steam forth from subterranean cauldrons, he worked unfaltering, sometimes with a helper, sometimes with none. There were times when, exhausted, he would lie down in the half-dug graves and there sleep until able to go on; and many a midnight found him under the spectral moon, all but hidden by the rank nightshade as he bent over to mark out the lines of one of those narrow mortal cellars.

Nature soon smiles upon her own ravages and strews our graves with flowers, not as memories, but for other flowers when the spring returns.

It was one cool, brilliant morning late in that autumn. The air blew fresh and invigorating, as though on the earth there were no corruption, no death. Far southward had flown the plague. A spectator in the open court-square might have seen many signs of life returning to the town. Students hurried along, talking eagerly. Merchants met for the first time and spoke of the winter trade. An old negress, gayly and neatly dressed, came into the market-place, and sitting down on a sidewalk displayed her yellow and red apples and fragrant gingerbread. She hummed to herself an old cradle-song, and in her soft, motherly black eyes shone a mild, happy radiance. A group of young ragamuffins eyed her longingly from a distance. Court was to open for the first time since the spring. The hour was early, and one by one the lawyers passed slowly in. On the steps of the courthouse three men were standing: Thomas Brown, the sheriff, old Peter Leuba, who had just walked over from his music store on Main Street; and little M. Giron, the French confectioner. Each wore mourning on his hat, and their voices were low and grave.

“Gentlemen,” the sheriff was saying, “it was on this very spot the day befoah the cholera broke out that I sole’im as a vagrant. An’ I did the meanes’ thing a man can evah do. I hel’ ’im up to public ridicule foh his weaknesses an’ made spoht of ’is infirmities. I laughed at ’is povahty an’ ’is ole clo’es. I delivahed on ’im as complete an oration of sarcastic detraction as I could prepare on the spot, out of my own meanness an’ with the vulgah sympathies of the crowd. Gentlemen, if I only had that crowd heah now, an’ ole King Sol’mon standin’ in the midst of it, that I might ask ’im to accept a humble public apology, offahed from the heaht of one who feels himself unworthy to shake ’is han’! But, gentlemen, that crowd will nevah reassemble. Neahly ev’ry man of them is dead, an’ ole King Sol’mon buried them.”

“He buried my friend Adolphe Xaupi,” said François Giron, touching his eyes with his handkerchief.

“There is a case of my best Jamaica rum for him whenever he comes for it,” said old Leuba, clearing his throat.

“But, gentlemen, while we are speakin’ of ole King Sol’mon we ought not to fohget who it is that has suppohted ’im. Yondah she sits on the sidewalk, sellin’ ’er apples an’ gingerbread.”

The three men looked in the direction indicated.

“Heah comes ole King Sol’mon now,” exclaimed the sheriff.

Across the open square the vagrant was seen walking slowly along with his habitual air of quiet, unobtrusive preoccupation. A minute more and he had come over and passed into the courthouse by a side door.

“Is Mr. Clay to be in court to-day?”

“He is expected, I think.”

“Then let’s go in; there will be a crowd.”

“I don’t know; so many are dead.”

They turned and entered and found seats quietly as possible; for a strange and sorrowful hush brooded over the court-room. Until the bar assembled, it had not been realized how many were gone. The silence


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