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the Lower Diggings.

Of nearly three hundred strong and well-fed men who had said good-bye to liberty at the Pillar of Farewells, only a hundred and twenty pallid and emaciated wretches stood shivering in their rags and chains when the muster was called on the morning after their arrival at Kara. Mazanoff and his escort had carried out their part of the sentence of Natas to the letter. The arctic blasts from the Tundras, the forced march, the chain and the scourge had done their work, and more than half the exile-convicts had found in nameless graves along the road respite from the long horrors of the fate which awaited the survivors.

The first name called in the last muster was Alexander Romanoff. "Here," came in a deep hollow tone from the gaunt and ragged wreck of the giant who twelve months before had been the stateliest figure in the brilliant galaxy of European Royalty.

"Your sentence is hard labour in the mines for"β€”The last word was never spoken, for ere it was uttered the tall and still erect form of the dethroned Autocrat suddenly shrank together, lurched forward, and fell with a choking gasp and a clash of chains upon the hard-trampled snow. A stream of blood rushed from his white, half-open lips, and when they went to raise him he was dead.

If ever son of woman died of a broken heart it was Alexander Romanoff, last of the tyrants of Russia. Never had the avenging hand of Nemesis, though long-delayed, fallen with more precise and terrible justice. On the very spot on which thousands of his subjects and fellow-creatures, innocent of all crime save a desire for progress, had worn out their lives in torturing toil to provide the gold that had gilded his luxury, he fell as the Idol fell of old in the temple of Dagon.

He had seen the blasting of his highest hopes in the hour of their apparent fruition. He had beheld the destruction of his army and the ruin of his dynasty. He had seen kindred and friends and faithful servants sink under the [Pg 393] nameless horrors of a fate he could do nothing to alleviate, and with the knowledge that nothing but death could release them from it, and now at the last moment death had snatched from him even the poor consolation of sharing the sufferings of those nearest and dearest to him on earth.

This happened on the 1st of December 1905, at nine o'clock in the morning. At the same hour Arnold leapt the Ithuriel over the Ridge, passed down the valley of Aeria like a flash of silver light, and dropped to earth on the shores of the lake. In the same grove of palms which had witnessed their despairing betrothal he found Natasha swinging in a hammock, with a black-eyed six-weeks'-old baby nestling in her bosom, and her own loveliness softened and etherealised by the sacred grace of motherhood.

"Welcome, my lord!" she said, with a bright flush of pleasure and the sweetest smile even he had ever seen transfiguring her beauty, as she stretched out her hand in welcome at his approach. "Does the King come in peace?"

"Yes, Angel mine! the empire that you asked for is yours. There is not a regiment of men under arms in all the civilised world. The last battle has been fought and won, and so there is peace on earth at last!"

THE END

MORRISON AND GIBB PRINTERS, EDINBURGH.
[Pg 394]

Now Ready, Third Edition.

308 pages, demy 8vo, cloth gilt, 6s.,

THE CAPTAIN OF THE MARY ROSE.
A TALE OF TO-MORROW.

By W. LAIRD CLOWES,
U.S. NAVAL INSTITUTE.

With 60 Illustrations by the Chevalier de Martino and Fred. T. Jane.

A most graphic and enthralling description of the next Naval War between France and Great Britain.

THE FOLLOWING ARE A FEW PRESS OPINIONS.

"Deserves something more than a mere passing notice."β€”The Times.

"Full of exciting situations.... Has manifold attractions for all sorts of readers."β€”Army and Navy Gazette.

"The most notable book of the season."β€”The Standard.

"A clever book. Mr. Clowes is pre-eminent for literary touch and practical knowledge of naval affairs."β€”Daily Chronicle.

"Mr. W. Laird Clowes' exciting story."β€”Daily Telegraph.

"We read 'The Captain of the Mary Rose' at a sitting."β€”The Pall Mall Gazette.

"Written with no little spirit and imagination.... A stirring romance of the future."β€”Manchester Guardian.

"Is of a realistic and exciting character.... Designed to show what the naval warfare of the future may be."β€”Glasgow Herald.

"One of the most interesting volumes of the year."β€”Liverpool Journal of Commerce.

"It is well told and magnificently illustrated."β€”United Service Magazine.

"Full of absorbing interest."β€”Engineer's Gazette.

"Is intensely realistic, so much so that after commencing the story every one will be anxious to read to the end."β€”Dundee Advertiser.

"The book is splendidly illustrated."β€”Northern Whig.

TOWER PUBLISHING CO. LIMITED,

91 MINORIES, LONDON, E.C.;

And all Booksellers throughout the Kingdom.

End of Project Gutenberg's The Angel of the Revolution, by George Griffith
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