247 strength, the need of the soul to find peace ? Here he sat, day after day, helpless, unable to save the boy, who but for him would have gone to perdition years ago. c No one can help me,' he had said the other night. He could not, that was true. He realised that he was exhausted from praying and waiting, and that it would be better to go to bed. And when he closed his eyes tonight, or in the morning, he must leave the boy's fate in God's hands. On the way to bed he noticed that the light was still burning in the kitchen. Frans and Stien were sitting there, in silence, with folded arms. And he knew well what they were thinking as they sat. He said it was getting late and went upstairs in front of them ; he did not see how Frans and Stien, who qame after, followed him with their eyes as he entered his room. Early the next morning he was in the shop again. Those who knew him well noticed that he was absorbed in thought. When he looked up he would fix his eyes on someone as though amazed to see him there*. Often he stared through the window with his brows raised. It seemed to him that people were changed. When he looked at them their faces seemed larger, pale, the eyes dark. Briemen, on the other side of the road, stood perpetually at the window looking in his direction, and when he turned round to do up a parcel, he appeared to be talking about Weren-