Lewis Rand 
 
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Lewis Rand, by Mary Johnston, 
Illustrated by F. C. Yohn 
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Title: Lewis Rand 
Author: Mary Johnston 
Release Date: January 15, 2005 [eBook #14697] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEWIS 
RAND*** 
E-text prepared by Rick Niles, Charlie Kirschner, and the Project 
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LEWIS RAND 
by 
MARY JOHNSTON 
Author of To Have And To Hold, Prisoners Of Hope, etc. 
With Illustrations by F. C. Yohn 
Boston and New York Houghton Mifflin Company The Riverside Press 
Cambridge 
1908 
 
[Illustration: I WILL MAKE COURT TO YOU IN A COURT SOME 
DAY!] 
 
THIS BOOK IS INSCRIBED 
TO THE MEMORY OF 
JOHN TYLER MORGAN 
FOR THIRTY YEARS 
UNITED STATES SENATOR 
AND THROUGHOUT THE COURSE 
OF A LONG LIFE 
A GOOD MAN AND A PATRIOT
CONTENTS 
I. THE ROAD TO RICHMOND II. MR. JEFFERSON III. 
FONTENOY IV. THE TWO CANDIDATES V. MONTICELLO VI. 
RAND COMES TO FONTENOY VII. THE BLUE ROOM VIII. 
CARY AND JACQUELINE IX. EXPOSTULATION X. TO ALTHEA 
XI. IN THE GARDEN XII. A MARRIAGE AT SAINT 
MARGARET'S XIII. THE THREE-NOTCHED ROAD XIV. THE 
LAW OFFICE XV. COMPANY TO SUPPER XVI. AT LYNCH'S 
XVII. FAIRFAX AND UNITY XVIII. THE GREEN DOOR XIX. 
MONTICELLO AGAIN XX. THE NINETEENTH OF FEBRUARY 
XXI. THE CEDAR WOOD XXII. MAJOR EDWARD XXIII. A 
CHALLENGE XXIV. THE DUEL XXV. OLD SAINT JOHN'S XXVI. 
THE TRIAL OF AARON BURR XXVII. THE LETTER XXVIII. 
RAND AND MOCKET XXIX. THE RIVER ROAD XXX. 
HOMEWARD XXXI. HUSBAND AND WIFE XXXII. THE 
BROTHERS XXXIII. GREENWOOD XXXIV. FAIRFAX CARY 
XXXV. THE IMAGE XXXVI. IN PURSUIT XXXVII. THE SIMPLE 
RIGHT XXXVIII. M. DE PINCORNET XXXIX. UNITY AND 
JACQUELINE XL. THE WAY OF THE TRANSGRESSOR 
 
ILLUSTRATIONS 
I will make court to you in a court some day (Frontispiece) 
You are a scoundrel 
Cary saw and flung out his arm, swerving his horse, but too late 
Drink to me only with thine eyes 
CHAPTER I 
THE ROAD TO RICHMOND 
The tobacco-roller and his son pitched their camp beneath a gum tree 
upon the edge of the wood. It was October, and the gum was the colour
of blood. Behind it rolled the autumn forest; before it stretched a level 
of broom-sedge, bright ochre in the light of the setting sun. The road 
ran across this golden plain, and disappeared in a league-deep wood of 
pine. From an invisible clearing came a cawing of crows. The sky was 
cloudless, and the evening wind had not begun to blow. The small, 
shining leaves of the gum did not stir, and the flame of the camp-fire 
rose straight as a lance. The tobacco cask, transfixed by the trunk of a 
young oak and drawn by strong horses, had come to rest upon the turf 
by the roadside. Gideon Rand unharnessed the team, and from the 
platform built in the front of the cask took fodder for the horses, then 
tossed upon the grass a bag of meal, a piece of bacon, and a frying-pan. 
The boy collected the dry wood with which the earth was strewn, then 
struck flint and steel, guarded the spark within the tinder, fanned the 
flame, and with a sigh of satisfaction stood back from the leaping fire. 
His father tossed him a bucket, and with it swinging from his hand, he 
made through the wood towards a music of water. Goldenrod and 
farewell-summer and the red plumes of the sumach lined his path, 
while far overhead the hickories and maples reared a fretted, red-gold 
roof. Underfoot were moss and coloured leaves, and to the right and 
left the squirrels watched him with bright eyes. He found the stream 
where it rippled between banks of fern and mint. As he knelt to fill the 
pail, the red haw and the purple ironweed met above his head. 
Below him was a little mirror-like pool, and it gave him back himself 
with such distinctness that, startled, he dropped the pail, and bending 
nearer, began to study the image in the water. Back in Albemarle, in his 
dead mother's room, there hung a looking-glass, but it was cracked and 
blurred, and he seldom gazed within it. This chance mirror of the 
woods was more to the purpose. The moments slipped away while he 
studied the stranger and familiar in the pool below him. The image was 
not formed or coloured like young Narcissus, of whom    
    
		
	
	
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