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Cobban, J. Mclaren

"Master of His Fate"

Then he threw off hat and coat, and stood alert and
resolute to dive to Julius's rescue when he rose, while those who manned
the yacht prepared to cast a buoy and line. Not a ripple or flash of
water passed unheeded; the flood of sunshine rose fuller and fuller over
the world; moments grew to minutes, and minutes swelled to hopeless
hours under the doctor's weary eyes, till it seemed to them as if the
universe were only a swirling, greedy ocean;--but no sign appeared of
his night's companion: his life was quenched in the depths of the
restless waters, as a flaming meteor is quenched in night. At length
Lefevre ordered the yacht to stand away to the shore, his heart torn
with grief and self-upbraiding. He had called Courtney his friend, and
yet until that last he had never won his inner confidence; and now he
knew that his friend--he of the gentle heart, the peerless intelligence,
and the wildly erring life--was dead in the hour of self-redemption.
When he had landed, however, given to the proper authorities such
information as was necessary, and set off by train on his return to
town, the agitation of his grief began to assuage; and when next day,
upon the publication in the papers of the news of Courtney's death by
drowning, a solicitor called in Savile Row with a will which he had
drawn up two days before, and by which all Julius Courtney's property
was left to Dr Lefevre, to dispose of as he thought best, "for
scientific and humane ends," the doctor admitted to his reason that a
death that could thus calmly be prepared was not lightly to be
questioned.


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