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Motion Picture Magazine, July 1914 (1914)

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^SS'ANAY) ■ *4Ku ■*/*■. eras ,4i .7- ^J bV Aue-x aHder Lowe-ll \ ^ ^«£ This story was written from the Photoplay of MAIBELLE HEIKES JUSTICE "We look before and after, And pine for what is not; Our sincerest laughter With some pain is fraught; Our sweetest songs are those That tell of saddest thought" Life and Death — God and Man—Finite and Infinite —how nearly are they linked! What little, fragment- ary things make them indissol- uble ! A sudden breath of musk-rose after a May rain—the moon-path leading over black waters—the gold gleam of a child's curl in some sordid by- way—the glad, triumphant note of a bird-song in the dark! Just as the tiny songster had given to the morning sunshine the glad anthem of his captive heart, so he was giving it now to the moonlight. Angela, roused from her slumbers by the liquid outpouring, listened, in- credulous. Trilling, sweetly de- fiant, exultant, the little thing of golden feathers was singing in the night. An odd choke caught the girl's throat as she listened; to her, lapped in the fine rai- ment of luxury from birth, petted, beloved, undenied, that rapturous melody seemed some- thing quite apart — something strangely sweet, and very sad, and very, very brave. 1 ' In the dark,'' she murmured,