in their old age, and take Annie away also/' he said to himself, half audibly, as he continued his gaze over the dim expanse of silence that surrounded him on every hand.
There was no answer. He gave Sukie the rein and bowed his head upon his hands, and wept. How long he remained alone, absorbed in the mingled emotions that possessed him, he did not know. He took no note of time, and Sukie moved leisurely over the plain, daintily cropping the tender grass.
"I was ambitious, selfish, and exacting," he exclaimed at last, as a sharp gust of wind slapped him in the face. "Annie doesn't complain; but she is fading from my sight. It is all my fault. If she could be happy, she would soon be well. I wonder if I ought not to take her back to her father and mother and her childhood's home. Everybody would laugh; but what should I care? Are not the life and happiness of my wife worth more to me than all the world's approval?" Then, after a long silence, he tightened the reins and said: "Come, Sukie; let's go back to camp. Right or wrong, I must go ahead. I've burned my bridges behind me."
As he expected, Scotty was found sitting in the midst of an audience at Mrs. McAlpin's camp-fire. He was discoursing on his travels in Egypt, and had collected about him quite a crowd.
"The earth is old, very, very old," the teamster was saying. He arose to make room for Captain Ranger, as he passed the reins to Jean, who, with Mary and Marjorie, had been an enraptured listener. "The comparative topography of Central America and northern Africa excites the liveliest speculation. When I was in Darien, I found many features among the ruins abounding in the jungles of the isthmus, strikingly similar to those one sees in the land of the Pyramids. True, the analogy is not always apparent, because the almost total absence of rain in Egypt is exchanged for an almost total