The Constitution of the United States A Brief Study of the Genesis, Formulation and Political Philosophy of the Constitution
TO THE HON. HARRY M. DAUGHERTY ATTORNEY-GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES A TRUE AND LOYAL FRIEND, A FAIR AND CHIVALROUS FOE With whom it is the author's great privilege to collaborate as Solicitor-General in defending and vindicating in the Supreme Court of the United States the principles and mandates of its Constitution _Chamonix_, _July_ 14 1922 _Preface by the Earl of Balfour_[1] I have been greatly honoured by your invitation to take the chair on
reflected, he would send an order to have the trunk forwarded and Miss
Stearne would not dare refuse. For a time she must do without her pretty
gowns.
Instead of studying her text books she studied the railway time-card.
She had intended asking Miss Stearne to permit her to take the five-
thirty train from Beverly Junction the next morning and since the recent
interview she had firmly decided to board that very train. This was not
entirely due to stubbornness, for she reflected that if she stayed at
the school her unhappy condition would become aggravated, instead of
improving, especially since Miss Stearne had developed unexpected
sharpness of temper. She would endure no longer the malicious taunts of
her school fellows or the scoldings of the principal, and these could be
avoided in no other way than by escaping as she had planned.
At ten o'clock she lay down upon her bed, fully dressed, and put out her
light; but she dared not fall asleep lest she miss her train. At times
she lighted a match and looked at her watch and it surprised her to
realize how long a night can be when one is watching for daybreak.
At four o'clock she softly rose, put on her hat, took her suit case in
hand and stealthily crept from, the room. It was very dark in the
hallway but the house was so familiar to her that she easily felt her
way along the passage, down the front stairs and so to the front door.
Miss Stearne always locked this door at night but left the key in the
TO THE HON. HARRY M. DAUGHERTY ATTORNEY-GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES A TRUE AND LOYAL FRIEND, A FAIR AND CHIVALROUS FOE With whom it is the author's great privilege to collaborate as Solicitor-General in defending and vindicating in the Supreme Court of the United States the principles and mandates of its Constitution _Chamonix_, _July_ 14 1922 _Preface by the Earl of Balfour_[1] I have been greatly honoured by your invitation to take the chair on