CONTENTS

Chap. Page
[Preface]vii
I.[Under The Southern Pines]1
II.[The Meeting In The Woods]15
III.[A Kindness With Mixed Motives]29
IV.[The Promise In The Rose Garden]43
V.[Frank Falls Further Under Katrine's Influence]50
VI.[Dermott Gives A Dinner At The Old Lodge]63
VII.[Katrine's Own Country]76
VIII.[Frank Yields To Temptation]88
IX.[The Truth]94
X.[To Try To Understand]104
XI.[Katrine Is Left Alone]113
XII.[The Real Francis Ravenel]121
XIII.[Dermott's Interview With Frank At The Trevoy]127
XIV.[Dermott Discovers A New Side To Frank's Character]137
XV.[Josef]143
XVI.[Mrs. Ravenel Unwittingly Becomes An Ally Of Katrine]152
XVII.[Mcdermott Visits His French Cousin]160
XVIII.[Katrine Meets Anne Lennox]172
XIX.[A Vision Of The Past]193
XX.[The Influence Of Work]212
XXI.[The Night Of Katrine's Début]219
XXII.[Frank And Katrine Meet At The Van Rensselaer's]228
XXIII.[An Interrupted Confession]234
XXIV.["i Will Take Care Of You"]249
XXV.[Katrine In New York]271
XXVI.[Dermott Mcdermott]282
XXVII.[Self-surrender]299
XXVIII.[Under The Southern Pines Once More]303

PREFACE

It is difficult to tell the story of Irish folk intimately and convincingly, the bare truths concerning their splendid recklessness, their unproductive ardor, their loyalty and creative memories, sounding to another race like a pack of lies.

When, therefore, I recall "The Singing Woman," Katrine; her beauty, her fearlessness, her loyalty, her voice of gold—it seems as if only one lost to caution and heedless of consequence would undertake her history expecting it to be believed. But there is this advantage: the newspapers, recording much of her early life, are still extant, her Paris work discussed by Josef's pupils to this day, and her divine forgetfulness the night she was to sing at the Metropolitan a known thing to people of two continents; but unrecorded of her, till now, is that, for love, like brave, mad Antony, she threw a world away.

It is impossible to tell the tale of Katrine without narrating side by side the story of Dermott McDermott; and here trouble begins, for Ireland would never allow anything written concerning him that was not flattering, and the Irish people, especially in the regions of Kildare and Athlone, have combined to make a saint of him. A saint of Dermott McDermott! Heaven save the mark!

But of Frank Ravenel's life I can speak with truth and authority. I had the story from his own lips under the pines and the stars of North Carolina, fishing the Way-Home River, or sitting together on the Chestnut Ridge, where Katrine and he first met. This was before he became—before Katrine made him—the great man he is to-day.


And two things linger with me—the first a conversation between Dermott and Katrine at the Countess de Nemours'.

"Tell me," said Katrine: "do you think any woman ever married the man who was kindest to her?"

"It's unrecorded if it ever occurred," Dermott answered.


And a second, the truth of which is less open to dispute.

"Nora," Katrine asked, "could you ever have loved any but Dennis-your first love?"

"No," answered Nora. "To an Irishwoman the drame comes but the wance."

E.M.L.