This picture will exert a strange fascination upon many who see it. Others will see it and fail to understand. Passing over the first part, which is a repetition of the oft-told story of a girl marrying a man whom she did not love because she was forced to do it, and looking at the second part, where the couple suddenly realize what they are to each other, an intensely dramatic series of views is presented. They are simple enough, yet they contain elemental human passion, and because they do contain it will appeal to many hearts. One of the most striking features is the emphasized fact that the lion among men needs love quite as much, more, perhaps, than the weakling. Often some little woman is quite as necessary to the daily life of this lion as are other of his essentials. The woman's mistake in this was the same as women make in everyday life—they do not understand lions; and so they drift apart, and not always do stock panics come just in time to overcome the evil and tell them how to heal their differences. The scene in the stock exchange is realistic, but nothing can overshadow the dramatic qualities inherent in the last part of the picture. - The Moving Picture World, May 7, 1910