i 
A CHILD OF NATURE 
vanished life, and reconstructed the 
image of the vanished personalty, 
by the interpretation of the house 
and garden. The air of the old 
house, mellowed by the long habit 
of a man of hidden genius ; the 
simple furnishings, supplemented 
by the presence of a few books 
o{ the kind which illumine the J\, 
place where thev are gathered and 
a reveal the affinities and interests of 
the spirit to which they have min- 
istered, plied the imagination of 
- the sensitive student who had fallen 
heir to this rich heritage ot simple 
living and high thinking with sub- 
tle but searching hints of a mind to 
which, in its deep repose, the whole 
world of spiritual experience had 
J [»] [Mj] 
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