He turned over some papers in his desk, and chose one. It was in Lily's pretty handwriting.
'I am charged with this little message. Oh, my darling!' and the old man cried bitterly.
'Pray, read it—you will understand it—'tis easily read. What a pretty hand it was!'
So Devereux took the little paper, and read just the words which follow:—
'My beloved father will, I hope, if he thinks it right, tell Captain Richard Devereux that I was not so unkind and thankless as I may have seemed, but very grateful for his preference, of which I know, in many ways, how unworthy I was. But I do not think we could have been happy; and being all over, it is a great comfort to friends who are separated here, that there is a place where all may meet again, if God will; and as I did not see or speak with him since my dear father brought his message, I wished that so much should be said, and also to say a kind good-bye, and give him all good wishes.
'LILIAS.'
'Friday evening.'
Captain Richard Devereux read this simple little record through, and then he said:—
'Oh, Sir, may I have it—isn't it mine?'
We who have heard those wondrous aërial echoes of Killarney, when the breath has left the bugle and its cadences are silent, take up the broken links of the lost melody with an answer far away, sad and celestial, real, yet unreal, the fleeting yet lingering spirit of music, that is past and over, have something in memory by which we can illustrate the effect of these true voices of the thoughts and affections that have perished, returning for a few charmed moments regretfully and sweetly from the sea of eternal silence.