The Gavelyte, March 1912
I 111 I I 1 I c11di11" in pr ,i · 11, ill' ,v 11 op:-. i ,\ tin: d1,1t• of th 1r 111' died·'''"" ,11111111g th < I\ l ,1£ th 111, mt 1111 ,1 11tl1t rs ,ng liur-,1 f11r h ,111d ""cl ling fru111 ,,.1 ,itT th· ri•n, t IH' J~nld •n ·up .111<1 n ing ,tnd climliin' highl'r 11p 1h1 r ,, het! ti,, ,11m1o11t ,,h• n· the: ·tti11g 1111 ki. sed .u1d st,,mp ·d n gol lc11 < r, ,11, .irn1111il whi hit 111,, ,·ret1 for ,l 111 ,m 11l in ,naJ• tic weet11 · .,nil th 11 \\lfth glidt'd h ,·nn,l the re.-1lm ,,( m 111. Thi.., wrntlcl stir yo11r ;.oul lor it \\,l th n.1til11,ll nng- uf thl Lul.1iloc" and Ti11<>g,1 ·to of the so11thcrn p,trt uf the l n(,1 Empire,,, hn c Ii, c · ire in con t.int pt ril from th· burning l,1, ,l of vok,1110 · ,, hP eyer spit fn,111 011t their gaping j.1ws brand and dart of molt 'n 11H"t,1l. The ·nng,;; re,1se. :'-IPre firml) .1·ttlc the shaclt> of night. • '1111lierlc ·h,tdl'""' c1st off individualit) ,,nd h ,·omc on,• gn•at veil. The m, 011 climb out fr,1m the d.1rknes of the ea_t, mu1111ts it cl1,1riot and with 11pid .it the rein,; JH11--:1es 1r1 cl1.1 ·e Apllllo'. tiry. tctd ·. The llea\·en. bee )me mirrow ·d up,111 the bus,,m of the Titicaca The wi11d comes gently aero.-- the !lll)1tllt.1in l,tke and ru. hing u\ er the edg ... uf th· gulden cup, pa se · over the g,irdcn uf a tl10u-.;,rnd d1lfrrent tloweL kLsi11g them one by une and drav.in~ from their depth . w, t perlume ru he. with mmgli11g fragrance in upon nun'· tireJ ,en e and thrills him witt1 a life and \'igDr which compdls him to think nf the goud and nl>hle. l'he. inging of the s11uthern right hird take· the plact uf the oner of tlw Inca ludi,rn ·1 hese experience were still new and. trange to ~lr.. tintt,n and o he sat in ·ilence. I w.1~ lunging to a k c1mc,•ming Beula but dared not. As I \\:J itting and thinking there came a yuung woman-beautiful in figure a11d dre ed in white -thru the gate and d ,,·n the garden path. I knew her. Beula-e caped my lip·. \\'hy w.1s she here? Nhat brouglit her? I luoked for her father. He was uune-1 was alone with her. Ri·ing tt• my £~et I toud with ten c mu cle waiting for her to peak. She wa so beautiful standing there before me I wanttd her-I wanted her to come--hut nu. :-:ihe had failed rne-dri\·e11 me away after c,1u ·ing me to be untrue and 11uw wh,lt right had _he t > c11me? H.aising my arm and pointing the way he came, "[ said-gu.'' 'he tuuk a tep tornard but l repeated-womc1n go." 'ht turned with a . oh. 1 ,, a c.hed till he turned dtlwn the path toward the lake . Then l nutiu·d a piece nf paper tlitting in the gra tooping I µicked it up. \·alking up he path to the window uf the Inn I lot kl'd at it. lt wa worn but
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