60. The old man to whom he had been given in care, The trouble which our youth was thought to bear His Mother and his Sister come and say That he must give this message from the dead, A soul upon the earth which should no longer stay. 61. A dream the Jesuit deem'd it; a deceit ... The Father said, and then dismiss'd it from his mind. 62. But the old Indian came again ere long Might yield, regarding his desire sincere, Nor wait for farther time if there were aught to fear. 63. Considerately the Jesuit heard, and bade Life's business then for him would be complete, And 't was to tell him this they left their starry seat. 64. Came they to him in dreams?... he could not tell. And round about their presence when they came There shone an effluent light as of a harmless flame. 65. And where he was he knew, the time, the place,... Their love had drawn them from their happy sphere; That dearest love unchanged they came to show; And he must be baptized, and then he too might go. 66. With searching ken the Jesuit while he spake 67. Regular his pulse, from all disorder free, He answer'd. Nothing troubled him in mind; And seem in serving him a joy to find? ; He had no want, no pain, no grief, no fear But he must be baptized; he could not tarry here. 68. Thy will be done, Father in heaven who art! His feeling was that hour with fear allied; And while he knelt his eyes seem'd larger and more 69. His wish hath been obtain'd, and this being done His soul was to its full desire content. The day in its accustom'd course pass'd on, The Indian mark'd him ere to rest he went, How o'er his beads, as he was wont, he bent, And then, like one who casts all care aside, Lay down. The old man fear'd no ill event, When, "Ye are come for me!" Yeruti cried; "Yes, I am ready now!" and instantly he died. NOTES то A TALE OF PARAGUAY. So he forsooth a shapely boot must wear.· - Proem, p. 12. His leg had been set by the French after their conquest of Pamplona, and re-set after his removal to his father's house. The latter operation is described as having been most severe, but borne by him in his wonted manner without any manifestation of suffering. For some time his life was despaired of. "When the danger of death was past, and the bones were knit and becoming firm, two inconveniences remained: one occasioned by a portion of bone below the knee, which projected so as to occasion some deformity; the other was a contraction of the leg, which prevented him from walking erect or standing firmly on his feet. Now as he was very solicitous about his appearance, and intended at that time to follow the course of a military life which he had begun, he inquired of his medical attendants in the first place whether the bone could be removed which stood out in so unsightly a manner. They answered that it was possible to remove it, but the operation would be exceedingly painful, much more so than any which he had before undergone. He nevertheless directed them to cut it out, that he might have his will, and (as he himself related in my hearing, says Ribadeneira,) that he might wear fashionable and well-fitting boots. Nor could he be dissuaded from this determination. He would not consent to be bound during the |