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meed of praise.' ''
Slowly he replied: ``Masters have

written in wondrous language and masters
have played with wondrous power.''

``And I so long to hear,'' she said,
almost plaintively. ``I marvel at the

invention of the composer and the skill
of the player, but there I cease.''

He looked at her intently. She was
standing before him, not a block of

chiseled ice, but a beautiful, breathing
woman. He offered her his arm and

together they made their way to the
drawing-room.

``Perhaps, some day, one will come
who can sing a song of perfect love in

perfect tones, and your soul will be
attuned to his melody.''

``Perhaps--and good-night,'' she
softly said, leaving his arm and joining

her friends, who accompanied her to the
carriage.

II
The intangible something that places

the stamp of popular approval on
one musicalenterprise, while another

equallyartistic and as cleverly managed
languishes in a condition of unendorsed

greatness, remains one of the unsolved
mysteries.

When a worker in the vineyard of
music or the drama offers his choicest

tokay to the public, that fickle coquette
may turn to the more ordinary and less

succulent concord. And the worker
and the public itself know not why.

It is true, Diotti's fame had preceded
him, but fame has preceded others and

has not always been proof against financial
disaster. All this preliminary,--and

it is but necessary to recall that on the
evening of December the twelfth Diotti

made his initial bow in New York, to
an audience that completely filled every

available space in the Academy of
Music--a representative audience,

distinguished alike for beauty, wealth and
discernment.

When the violinist appeared for his
solo, he quietly acknowledged the cordial

reception of the audience, and
immediately proceeded with the business

of the evening. At a slight nod from
him the conductor rapped attention,

then launched the orchestra into the
introduction of the concerto, Diotti's

favorite, selected for the first number.
As the violinist turned to the

conductor he faced slightly to the left and in
a direct line with the second proscenium

box. His poise was admirable. He was
handsome, with the olive-tinted warmth

of his southern home--fairly tall, straight-
limbed and lithe--a picture of poetic

grace. His was the face of a man who
trusted without reserve, the manner of

one who believed implicitly, feeling
that good was universal and evil accidental.

As the music grew louder and the
orchestra approached the peroration of

the preface of the coming solo, the
violinist raised his head slowly. Suddenly

his eyes met the gaze of the solitary
occupant of the second proscenium box.

His face flushed. He looked inquiringly,
almost appealingly, at her. She sat

immovable and serene, a lace-framed
vision in white.

It was she who, since he had met
her, only the night before, held his very

soul in thraldom.
He lifted his bow, tenderly placing it

on the strings. Faintly came the first
measures of the theme. The melody,

noble, limpid and beautiful, floated in
dreamy sway over the vast auditorium,

and seemed to cast a mystic glamour
over the player. As the final note of

the first movement was dying away, the
audience, awakening from its delicious

trance, broke forth into spontaneous
bravos.

Mildred Wallace, scrutinizing the
program, merely drew her wrap closer

about her shoulders and sat more erect.
At the end of the concerto the applause

was generous enough to satisfy the most
exacting virtuoso. Diotti unquestionably

had scored the greatest triumph of
his career. But the lady in the box had

remained silent and unaffected throughout.
The poor fellow had seen only her dur-

ing the time he played, and the mighty
cheers that came from floor and galleries

struck upon his ear like the echoes
of mocking demons. Leaving the stage

he hurried to his dressing-room and
sank into a chair. He had persuaded

himself she should not be insensible to
his genius, but the dying ashes of his

hopes, his dreams, were smouldering,
and in his despair came the thought:

``I am not great enough for her. I am
but a man; her consort should be a god.

Her soul, untouched by human passion
or human skill, demands the power of

god-like genius to arouse it.''
Music lovers crowded into his dressing-

room, enthusiastic in their praises.
Cards conveying delicate compliments

written in delicate chirography poured
in upon him, but in vain he looked for

some sign, some word from her.
Quickly he left the theater and sought

his hotel.
A menacing cloud obscured the wintry

moon. A clock sounded the midnight hour.
He threw himself upon the bed and

almost sobbed his thoughts, and their
burden was:

``I am not great enough for her. I
am but a man. I am but a man!''

III
Perkins called in the morning.

Perkins was happy--Perkins was
positively joyous, and Perkins was self-

satisfied. The violinist had made a
great hit. But Perkins, confiding in

the white-coated dispenser who
concocted his matin Martini, very dry, an

hour before, said he regarded the success
due as much to the management as

to the artist. And Perkins believed it.
Perkins usually took all the credit for a

success, and with charming consistency
placed all responsibility for failure on the

shoulders of the hapless artist.
When Perkins entered Diotti's room

he found the violinist heavy-eyed and
dejected. ``My dear Signor,'' he began,

showing a large envelope bulging with
newspaper clippings, ``I have brought

the notices. They are quite the limit, I
assure you. Nothing like them ever

heard before--all tuned in the same
key, as you musical fellows would say,''

and Perkins cocked his eye.
Perkins enjoyed a glorious reputation

with himself for bright sayings, which
he always accompanied with a cock of

the eye. The musician not showing any
visible appreciation of the manager's

metaphor, Perkins immediately
proceeded to uncock his eye.

``Passed the box-office coming up,''
continued this voluble enlightener;

``nothing left but a few seats in the top
gallery. We'll stand them on their

heads to-morrow night--see if we
don't.'' Then he handed the bursting

envelope of notices to Diotti, who
listlessly put them on the table at his side.

``Too tired to read, eh?'' said
Perkins, and then with the advance-agent

instinct strong within him he selected a
clipping, and touching the violinist on

the shoulder: ``Let me read this one to
you. It is by Herr Totenkellar. He

is a hard nut to crack, but he did himself
proud this time. Great critic when

he wants to be.''
Perkins cleared his throat and began:

``Diotti combines tremendous feeling
with equallytremendous technique.

The entire audience was under the
witchery of his art.'' Diotti slowly

negatived that statement with bowed head.
``His tone is full, round and clear; his

interpretation lends a story-telling charm
to the music; for, while we drank deep

at the fountain of exquisitemelody, we
saw sparkling within the waters the

lights of Paradise. New York never
has heard his equal. He stands alone,

pre-eminent, an artistic giant.''
``Now, that's what I call great,'' said

the impresario, dramatically; ``when
you hit Totenkellar that way you are

good for all kinds of money.''
Perkins took his hat and cane and

moved toward the door. The violinist


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