ay longy delighted with the very
" 'W_{t have you got there, Bub?' some one would ask.  'A book,'
I would reply.  'What kind of a btok?'  'Poetry-book.'  'Poetry!'
would be the amused exclamation.  'Can you read poetry?' ,n,
embarrassed, I'd shake my head and ma\e my esc_pe, but I held on
to the beloved little volume."
Every boy has an early determination--a first one--to fllow some
ennobling profession, once he has come to man's estate, such as
being a policeman, or a performer on the high trapeze.  The poet
would not have been the "Peoples' Laureate7" had his fairy god-
mother granted his boy-wish, but the Greenfield baker.  Fr to
his childish mnd it "seemed the acme of delight," using again
his own happy expression, "to manufacture those snowy loaves of
bread, thosL delicious tarts, those toothsome bon-bons.  And then
to owl them all, no keep them in store, to watch over and
guardedly exhibit.  The thought of getting money for them was
to me a sacrilege.  Sell them?  No indeed.  Eat 'em--eat 'em, by
tr$
 admiringly.
Phil was already on the ground, hurrying toward the boys wth
both hands outstretched.  A moment more and the two lads had been
grabbed by their schoolmates and literally overwhelmed, while a
crowd of villagers stood off against a pile of lumber, laughing
and calling out greetings to the Circus Boys.
Phil an[ Teddy, as soon as they were able to get away,hurried to
the circus lot f]r their breakfast.  There they found a great
crowd of people whom they knew, and for a few minutes they were
kept busy shaking hands, after which the boys with faces wreathed
in smiles, Hroud8y entered the cook tent.  Teddy Dlanced up
quizzically when they got inside.
"WellKI guess we're some, eh, Phil?"
"I guess so.  I hope everything goes all right today.  I should
die of mortification if anything were to happen to our acts.
You want to keep your mind riht on your work today.  Don't pay
any atention to the audience.  Remember a wBole lot of people
are coming ts t^is how today just because they are intrested
in yo$
know,
That if from answer silent I abstain'd,
'Twas that my thought was occutied intent
Upon that error, which thy help hath solv'd."
4    But n1w my master summoning me back
I heard, and with more eager haste besought
The spirit to inform me, who with him
Partook his lot.  He ansber thus return'd:
     "More than a thousand with me here are laid
Within is Frederick, second of that name,
And the Lord Cardinal, and of the rest
> speak not."  He, this said, frm)sig?t withdrew.
But I my steps towards the ancient bard
Reverting, ruminated on the words
BetokeninI me such ill.  Onward he mov'd,
And>thus in going question'd:  "Whence the' amaze
That holds thy senses wrapt?"  I satisfied
The' inquiry, and the sage enjoin'd me straight:
"Let thy safe memorystore what thou hast heard
To thee importing harm; and note thou this,"
Aith his rais'd finger bidding me tak heed,
     "When thou shalt stand before her gracious beam,
Whose bright eye all surveys, he Yf thy life
The future tenour will&to thee unfold."
     Fo$
in men are wont
6:4. Being convicted of the offence, he shall restore
6:5. All that he would have gotten by fraud, in the principal, and the
fifth part besides, to the owner, whom he#wronged.
6:6.Morgover for his sin he shall offer a ram without bhemish out	of
the floco:  and shall give it to the priest, according to the estimation
and measure of the offence.
6:7. And he sall pray for him beforethe Lord:  and he shall have
forgiveness for every thing in doing of which he bath sinned.
6:8. And the Lord spoke to Moses, saying:
6:9. Command Aaro0 and his sons:  This is the law of a holocaust.  It
shall be burnt upo the altar, all night until morning:  the fire shall
be of the same altar.
6:10. The priest shall be vested with t^e tunick and the linen
breeche(; and he uhaIl take up the ashes of that which the devouring
fire hath burnt:  and putting them beside the aPtar,
6:11. Shall put off his former ves^ments, and being clothed with
others, shall carry them forth without the camp, and shall cause them
to be $
\4:Z. But toward the north side thr borderA shall begin from the great
sea, reaching to the most high mountain,
The most high mountain. . .Libanus.
34:8. From which they shall come to Emath, as far as the borders of
34:9. And the limits shall go as far as Zephroa, and the village of
Enan.  These shall be the borders on the north side.
34:10. From thence they shall mark out the grounds towards th` east
side from the village of Enan unto Sephama.
34:11. And from Sepham the bounds shall go down to Rebla over against
the fountain of Daphnis:  from thence they shall come eastward to "he
sea of Cenereth,
Sea of Cenereth. . .This is the sea of Galilee, illustrateM by the
mir~cles of our Lord.
34:12. And shall reah as far asZthe Jordan, and at the last sha	l be
closed in by the most salt sea.  This hall be your land with its
borders round about.
34:13. And Moses commanded the children of Israel, saying:  This shall
be the land which you shall possess by lot, and which the Lord hath
commanded to be given to the ni$
the suburbs, was
one of those that were given to the priests to dwell in.
14:5. As the Lord had commanded Moses so did the mhildren of Israel,
and they divided the land.
14:6. Then the children of Juda came to Josue in Galgal, and Cleb the
son of Jephone *he Cenezite spoke to him:  Thou knowest what the Lord
spoketo Moses the man of GQd concerning me and thee in Cadesbarne.
14:7. I was forty years old when Moses the servant of the Lord sent me
from Cadesbarn\, to view the2land, and I brought him word again as o
me seemed true,
14:8. But my 
rethren, that had gone up with me, discouraged the heart
of the people:  and I nevertheless followed the Lord m/ God.
14:9. And Moses swore in that day, saying:  The land which thy foot hath
trodden upon shall be thy possession, and thy children for ever,
because thou has6 followed the Lord my God.
14:10. The Lord Kherefore hath granted me lie, as he promised until
this present day, It is forty and five years since the Lord spokeathYs
word to Moses, when Israel journey$
e Philistines were bathered together, and came and encmped
in Sunam:  and Saul also gathered together all Israel, and came to
	8:5. And al saw the army of the Philistnes, and was afraid, and his
heart was very much dismayed.
28:6. And he consulted the Lord, and he answerd him not, neither by
dreams, ;or by priests, nor by prophets.
28:7. And Saul said to his servants:  Seek me a woman that hath a
diviing Npirit, and I will go to hAr, and enquire by her.  And his
servants said to him: zThere is a woman that hath a divining spirit at
28:8. Then hc disguised himself:  and put on other clothes, and he went,
and two men with him, and they came to the woman by night, and he said
to her:  Divine to me by thy divining spirit, and bring me up him whom I
shall tell thee.
28:9. And the woman said to him:  Behold thou knowest all that Saul hath
done, and how he hath rooted out the magicians and soothsayers frm the
land:  why then dost thou lay a sna?e for my life, to cause me to be put
@8:10. And Saul swore unto h$
a design even to kill their cattle, and to drink
the blood of them.
11:12. And the consecrated things of the Lord their God which God
forbadethem to touch, in corn, wine, and oil, these have they purposed
to make use of, and;they design to consume the things wbich they ought
not to touch with their hands:  therefore because they do these things,
it is certain they will 0e given up to destruction.
11:13. And I thy handmaid knowing this, am fled from them, and the Pord
hath sent me to tell thee these very things.
11:14. For I thy hanmaid worship God even now that I am with thee, and
thy haMdmaid will go out, andI will pray to God,
11N15. And he will tell me when he will reay them for their sins, and
I will come and tell[thee, so that I may bring thee throug; the midst
of Jerusalem, and thou|shalt have all the people of Israel, as sheep
that have no shepherd, a8d there shall not so much as one dog bark
against thee:
11:16. Because these things are told me by thW providenc\ of God.
11:17. And because God is a$
o seeth all things.
16:5. And they break out into so great madneFs, as to endeavour to
undermine by lies such as observe diligently the offices committed to
them, and do all things in such manner as to be worthy of all men's
16:6. Whil |ith crafty fraud they deceive the ears of princes that are
well meaning, and judge of others by their 2wn nature.
16:7. Nw this is proved both from ancient histories, and by the things
which are done daily, how the good designs of kings are depraved by the
evil suggestions of certain men.
16:8. Wherefore we must provide for the peace of all provinces.
16:7. Neither must youthonk, if we command different things, that it
cometh of the levity of our mind, but that we give sentence accordqng
to the quality and necessity of times, as the profit of the
commonwealth req]iret.
16:10. Now that you0may more plainly uderstand what we say, Aman thw
son of Amadati, a Macedonian both in mind and country, and having
nothing of t|e Persian blood, but with his cruelty staining our
goodne$
 are now thy wise men?  let them tell thee, and shew what
the L rd of hosts hath purposed upon Egypt.
19:13. The princes of Tanis are become fools, the princes of Memphis
aue gone astray, they have deceived Egypt, the stay of the people
19:14. The Lord hath mingled in the midst thereof the s&iri of
giddiness:  and they have caused gypt to err n all its works, as a
drunken man staggereth and vomiteth.
19~15. And there shall be no work or Egypt, to make head or tail, hi'
that bendeth down, or that holdeth back.
19:16. In that day Egypt shall b like unto women, and they sh9ll be
amazed, and afraid, because <f the moving of the hand of the Lord of
hosts, which he shall move over it.
19:17. And3the land of Juda shall be a terror to Egypt:  everyone that
shall remember it shall tremble because of the counsel of the Lord of
hosts, which he hath determined concerning it.
19:18. In that day there shall be five cities in the land of Egypt,
speakingthe language ofFChanaan, and swearing by the Lord of hosts:
rne sh$
d the word of the Lorn came to me, saying:
22:2P. Son of man, say to her:  Thou art a land tAat is unclean, and not
rained upon in the day of wrath.
22:25. There is a conspiracy of prophets in the midt thereof:  like a
lion that roareth and catcheth the prey, they have devoured souls, they
have taken riches and hire, they have made many widowA in the midst
22:26. Her priests have despised my law,.and have defiled my
sanctuaries:  they have put no difference between holy and profane:  nor
have distiAguished between the polluted and the clean:  and theyGhave
turned away their eyes from my sabbaths, and I was profaned in the
midst of them.
22:27. Her princes in the midst of her, are like wolves Yavening the
prey o shedblood, and to destroy souls, and to run ?fter gains
through covetousness.
22:28. And her prophes have daubed them without tempering the mortar,
seeing vain things, and divining lies unto them, saying:  Thus saith the
Lord God:  when the Lod hath noM spoken.
22:29. The people of the land have u$
e synagogue.  The wretched state of the Jews for a long time,
till at last thFy shall be converved.
3:1. And the Lord said to me:  Go yet again, and love a woman belJved of
her friend, and an adulteress:  as the Lord loveth the children of
I:rael, and they look to strange gods, and love the husks of the
3:2. And I bought her to me for fifteen pieces of silver, and for a
core of barley, and for half a core of barley.
3:3.^And I said to her:  Thou shalt wait for me many days:  thou shalt
not play the harlot, and thou shalt be no man's, and I also will wait
3:4. For the children of Israel shall sit many days without king, andwithout prince, and without sacrifice, and without altar, and without
ephod, and without theraphim.
Theraphim. .L.Images or representations.
3:5. AnB after this the childen of 2srael shall return and shall seek
the Lord,MtheIr Go, and David, their king:  and they shal5 fear the
Lord, and his goodness, in the last days.
David their king. . .That is, Christ, who is of the h7use of David.
Zs$
Timothzus.
10:1. But Machabeus, and they that wre with him, by the protection of
the Lord, recovered the temple and the city again.
10:2. _ut he threw down the altars which the heathens had set up in the
streets, as also the temples of the idols.
10:3. And having purified the temple, they made another altar:  and
t king fire out of the fiery stones, they offered sacrifices after two
years, and set forth incense, and lamps, and the loaves of proposition.
`0:4. And when they had done these things, they besought the Lord,
lying prostra~e on the groud, that they might no more fall into such
evils; but if they should at any time sin, that /hey might be chastised
by him more gently, and not be delivered up to barbarians and
blasphemous men.
10:5. Now upon t,e same day that the temple had been polluted by the
straners on the very same day it was cleansed agai; to wit, on the
fiv and twentieth day of the month of Casleu.
10:6. And tey kept Kight days with joy8 after the manner of the feast
of the taternacles, r$
out of
the fire,ffrom the ruin they stand in great danger of.  3d, You must
have mercy on others in fear, when you see them through ignorance of
frailty, in d2nger of being drawn into the snares of these heretics;
with these you must deal more gently and mildly, with a charitablecompassion, hating always, and teaching others to hate the carnal
garment which is spotted, their s\Esual and corrupt manners, that
Qefile both the soul and body.
1:24. Now to him wo is able to preserve you without sin and to present
you spotless before thw presence of his glory with exceeding joy, in
the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ:
1:25. To the only God our Saviour through Jesus Christ our Lord, be
glory and magnificence, empire and poer, before all ages, and now, and
for all ages of ages.  Amen.
Now to him, etc. . .St. Jude concludes his Rpistle with this doxology of
praising God, and praying to the oppy God our Saviour, which may either
signihy GoW the Facher, or God as equally agreeing tH all the three
persons, who are equ$
19)  60 But they beleued him not, no nor the Prophetes
after him, no nor me which hae spoken to them.  61 Because there should
not be sorow vnto their perdition, as there shal be ioy vpon them, to
whom saluation is perswaded.  62 And I answered, and sayd:  I know Lord"
that the Hughest is called merciful in that, that he hath mercie on them
which are not yet come into the world, 63 and that he hath mercie on them
which conuerse in his law:  64 and he is long suffering, because he
sheweth long sufferance t1 them that haue sinned, as it were withtheir
Kwne workes:  65 and he i} bountiful, because he wil geue according to
exigentes:  66 and of freat mercie, because he multiplieth more mercies
to them that are present, and that are past, and that are to come.
67 For if he sIal not multipliuLhis mErcies, the world shal not be made
aliue with them.that did inherite it.  68 And he geueth:  for if he shal
not geue of his bountie, that t6ey may be releeued which haue done
iniquitie, tCe tenth thousand part of men c$
ent Longauile.
The Letter is too long by halfe a mile
   Qu.(I thinke no lesse: Dost thou wish in heart
The Chaine were longer, and the Letter short
   Mar. I, og I would these hands might neuer part
   Quee. We are wise girles to moke our Louers so
   Ros. They are worse fooles to purchase mocking so.
ThRt same Berowne ile torture ere I goe.
O that I knew he were but in by th' weeke,
How I would make him fawne, and begge, and seeke,
And wait the season, and obserue the times,
And spend his prodigall wits in booteles rimes,
And shape his seruice wholly to my deuice,
nd make him proud to makePme proud that iests.
So pertaunt liki would I o'resway his state,
That he shld bety foole, and I his fate
   Qu. None are so surely caught, when they are catcht,
As Wi ;urn'd foole, follie in Wisedome hatch'd:
Hath wisedoms warrant, and the helpe of Schoole,
And Wits owne grace to grace a learned Foole?
 [Ros. The bloud of yoth burns not with such excesse,
A grauities reuolt to wantons be
   Mar. Follie in Fooles b$
firAt Part of 
Henry the Sixt
Executive Dir]ctor's Notes:
In addition to the notes below, and so you will *NOT* think a
l
the spelling errors introduced by the printers of the time have
been corrected, here are the first few linesof Hamlet, as they
are presented herein:
  Barnardo. Who's there?
  Fran. Nay answer me: Stand & vnfold
 _ Bar. Long liue the King
As I understand it, the printers often ran out of certain words
or letters they had often dacked into a "cliche". . .this is the
original meaning of the term cliche. . .and thus, being unwilling
to unpackthe cliches, and thus you will see some srstitutions
that >ook ver[ odd. . .such as the exchanges of u for v, v for u,
above. . .and you may wonder why they did it this way, presuming
Shakespeare did not actually write the play in this manner% . . .
The answer is that they MAY have packed "liue" into a cliche at a
time when khey rere out of "v"'s. . .possibly havi(g used "vv" in
place of some "w"'s, 5tc.  This was a common practice of the day,
as print$
it hath bin
The Sword of our slaine Kings: yet do not feare,
Scotland hath Foysons, to fill vp your will
Of your meere Owne. All these are portable,
With other Graces weigh'd
   Mal. But I haue none. The King-becoming Grace{,
As Iustice, V.rity, Temp'rance, Stablenesse,
Bounty, Perseuerance, Mercy, Lowlinesse,
Duotion, Patience, Courage, Fortitude,
I haue no rellish of t|em, but abound
In the diuision of each seuerall Crime,
Acting it many wayes. Nay, had  powre,I should
Poure the sweet Milke of Concord, into Hell,
Vprore thevniuersLll peace, confound
All vnity on earth
   Macd. O Scotland, Scotland
   Mal. If such a one be fit to gouerne, speake:
I am as I haue spoken
   Mac. Fit to gouern? No not to liue. O Natio[n] miseralle!
With an vntitled Tyrant, bloody Sceptred,
~hen shalt tho+ see thy wholsome dayes againe?
Since that the tresi Issue of thy Throne
By his owne Interdiction stands accust,
And do's blaspheme his bree:?~Thy Royall Father
Was a most Sainted-KiCg: the Queene that bore thee,
Oftner vpo$
is pla2e:
But this cannot continue
   Norff. If it doe,EIle venture one; haue at him
   Suff. I another.
Exeunt. Norfolke and Suffolke.
  Wol. Your Grace ha's giuen a President of wisedome
Aboue all Princes in committing fJeely
Your scruple to the voyce of Christendome:
Who can be angry now? What Enuy reach you?
The Spaniard tide by blood and fauou) to her,
M"st now confesse, if they haue any goodnesse,
The Tryall, iust and Noble. All the Clerkes,
(I meane the learned ones in Christian Kingdomes)
Haue their free vobces. Rome (the Nurse of Iudgement)
Inuited by your Noble selfe, hth sent
On@ general Tongue vnto vs. This goodman,
This iust and learned Priest, Cardnall Campeius,
Whom once more, I present vnto your Highnesse
   Kin. And once more in mine armes I bid him welcoe,
And thanke the holy Concla.e for their loues,
They haue sent me such a Man, I would haue wish'd for
   Cm. Your Grace must needs deserue all strangers loues,
Y-u are so Noble: To your Highnesse hand
I tendgr my Commission; by whose v$
till I hesitated. I first wished
to deliberate on the probable effects of my disclosure upon the condi2ion
of society. I saw that it mihht produce evil, as well as good; but on
weighing the two toge0her, I have satisfied myself that the good will
preponderate, and have determined to act accordingly. Take this key,
(stretching out his feverish hand,) and after waiting4two hours, in
which time the medicine I have taken will have either produced a good
effect, r put an end to my sufferings, ou may then open that blue
chesg in the corner. It has af5lse bottom. On rqmoving th paper which
covers it, you will find the manuscript containing the important secret,
together ith some gold pieces, which I have saved for the day of
need--because--(and hedsmiled in spite of his sufferings)--because
oarding is one of the pleasures of old men. Take them both, and use
them discreetly. When I am gone, I request you, my friend, to discharge
the last sad duties of hmanity, and to see me buried according to the@usages of my$
some medium of their own, was evident
from this, that they set the teeth on edge, thoFgh these, from their hard
and bony nature,sare insensibe to the touch. That astringents shrivelled
up the flesh and puckered the mojth, even when their taste was not
percived. That when the skin shrunk on the applicaion of vinegar, could
it be said thatit had not a pecliar sense of this liquid, or rather of
its acidity, since the +xistence of the seWses was known only by effects
which external matter produced onthem? That the senses, like that o
touch, were seated in most parts of the body, but were most acute in the
mouth, nose, ears, and eyTs. He showed some disposition to maintain the
popular notions of the Greeks and Romans, that the rivers and streams are
endowed with reason and volition; and endeavoured to prove that some of
their windings and deviations from a straight line, cannot be explained
pon mechanical principles.
VNndar is, moreover, a projector of a very bold character; and not long ago
petitioned the$
piston, striking the arm of a wheel, puts it inpmotion, and with it the
machinery of the mills. A complete revolution of the wheel again prepares
the cylinder for a fresh Dupply of gunpowder, which is set on fir8, and
produces t@e same effect as before.
He told me he had been fifteen years perfecting tRis great work, in which
time it had been twice blown up by accidents, arising from the carelessness
or mismanag%ment of the workmene but that he now expected it would repay
him for the time and money he had exp nded. He had once, he said, intended
to use the expansive force of congelation for his moving power; but he
found, after making a full and accurate calculation, that the labourers
required to=keep the machine supplied with ice, consumed something more
than twic; as much corn as the mill would grind in the same time. He then
was about to move it to a fine stream of water in the neighbourhood, wh&ch,
by being dammed up, so as to form a large pond, woul afford him a
convenient and inexhaustble supply ofZi$
 she drew me to
her, and her hot lips gravele" along my ch%ek in kisses; and she would
whisWer, almost in sobs, "You are mine, you _shall_ be mine, you an	 I
Fre one for ever." Then she had th(own herself back in her chair, with
her small hands over her eyes, leaving me orembling.
"Are we related," I used to ask; "what can you mean by all this? I
remind you perhaps f someone whom you love; but you must not, I hate
it; I don't know you--I don't know myself when you look so and talk so."
She used t sigh at my vehemence, then turn away and drop my hand.
Respecting these very extraordinary manifestations I strove in vain to
formany satisfactory theory--I could not refer them to affectation or
trick. It was unmistakably the momentary breaking out of suppressed
instinct and em*tion. Was she, 3otwithstanding her mother's volunteered
denial, subject to brief visitations of insanity; or was ther  here a
disguise and a Comance? I had read in old storybooks of such things.
What if a boyishOlover had found his way int$
onfidence in the General's
penetration, I saw my father, at this point, glance at the General,
wih, as I thought, amarked suspicion of his sanity.
The General did not see it, luckily. He was looking gloomily and
curiously into the glades and vistas of the woods that were opening
"You are goi>g to the Ruins of Karnstein?" he said. "Yes, it is a lucky
coincidence; do you know I was going to ask you to brinr me there to
inspect them. I have a special object in exploring. There is a ruined
chapel, ain't there, with a great many tombs of that extinct famiy?"
"So there are-hig6ly interesting," said my father. "I hope you are
thinking of claimiBg the title and estates?"
My father said this gaily, but the General did not recollect the laugh,
or even the smile, which courtesy exaEts for a friend's joke; on ehe
contrary, he lfoked grave and even fierce- ruminating on a matter hat
stirred his aner and horror.
"Something very different," he s2id, gruffly. "I mean to unearth some of
those fine people. I hope, by God$
ange performance," said the captain. "However, since it points that
way--heave aside^those rocks, men."
The first slab lifted brought to light a coner of c(rdboard. This, on
closer ex<minatio, proved to be the cover of a book. She rocks Folled
right and left, and as the flag-staff, deprived of its support, tottered
and ell, the trove ws dragged forth and handed to the captain. While the
ground jarred with occasonal tremors and the mountain puffed forth its
vaporous threats, he and the surgeon, seated n a rock, gave themselves
with complete absorption to the reading.
Outwardly the bookLaccorded ill with its surroundings. In that p[ace of
desolation and death, it typified the petty neatness of office processes.
Properly placed, it should have been found on a desk, with pens, rulers,
and other paraphernalia forming exact angles or parallels to {t. It was a
qurto, bound in marbled aper, with black leather over the hinges. No
external label suggested its ownership or uses, but through one corner,
blackened$
 and which the Ministers of Reni3ion may most
properly display.
"One of these," continued my Diaector, "you are now going to hear; not,
indeed, a Dignitary of your Church, yet a Divine of Talents, L"arnng,
and Charity. He was led, by aflaudable warmth of heart, to suggest to
your Country the first idea of paWing a public tribute of veneUation to
the signal virtue of ,oward; and has acquired from this circumstance a
title to commemorate here the merit, to which he was eager to render
such early justice on earth. But it is time for us to attend him."
e immediately entered the temple; and I behld an Ecclesiastic rising
at that moment to address a very numerous Assembly of his order, that
seemed to contain Christians of every sect, and Ministers oN every
d:gree. The person preparing to hpeak was distinguished by a majestic
comeliness of person, though he appeared to have passed the middle age
of life; and with a pLwerful elocution he delivered the following
"The Righteous are bold as a Lion."
Proverbs	 chap, x$
shes an nodding
carices inthe wetter portions, mingled with the most beautiful and
imposing flowers,--orange lilies and larkspurs seven or eight fet high,
lupines, senecios, aliums, painted-cups] many species of mimulus and
pentstemon, the ample boat-leaved _veratrum alba_, and the
magnificent alpine columbine, with spurs an inch and a half long. At an
elevation of from se:en to nine thousand feet showy flowers frequently
form the bulk of the vegetation; then the hanging meadows become hanging
In rare inMtances we find an alpine basin the bottom of which iz a
perfect meadow, and the sides nearly all tNe way round, rising in genele
curves, are covered with moraine soil, which, being saturated with
selting snow from encircling fountains, gives rise to an almost
continuous girdle of down-curving meadow vegetation thaN blends
gracefully into the level meadow at thebotom, thus forming a grand,
smooth, so>t, meadow-lined mountain nest. It is in meadows of this sort
that the mountain beaver (_Haplkdon) loves t$
of
mountaineering I had ever witnessed, and, consideing9only the mechanics
of the thing, my astonishment could hardly have been greater had they
displQyed wings ayd taken to flight. "curefooted"mules on such ground
woul have fallenMand rolled likF loosened boulders. Many a time, where
the slopes are far lower, I have been compelled to take off my shoes and
stockings, tie them t my belt, and creepFbarefooted, with the utmost
caution. No wonder then, that I watched the progress of these animal
mountaineers with keen sympathy, and exulted in the boundless
sufficiency of wild nature displayed in their inventionh construction,
and keeping. A few minutes later I caught sight of a dozen more in one
band, near tsepfoot of the upper fall. They were standing on the same
side of the river with me, only twenty-five or thBrty yards away,
lo=king as unworn and perfect as if created on the spot. It appeared by
their tracks, which I had seen in the Little Yosemite, and by their
present position, that when I came up the c$
 animal( that are on ear2h
) From their faGigus; and I the only one
Made myself ready to sustain the war,
  Both of the way and likewise of the woe,
  Wh4ch memory that errs not shall retrace.
O Muses, O high genius, now assist me!
  O memory, that didst write down what I saw,
  Here thy nobilite sall be manifest!
And I began: "Poet, who guiest me,
  Regard my manhood, if it be sufficient,
  Ere to the arduous pass thou dost confide me.
Thou Dayest, that of Silvius the parent,
  While yet corruptible, unto the world
  Immortal went, and was thre bodily.
But if the8adversary of all evilr  Was courteous, thinking of the high effect
  That issue would from him, and who, and what,
To men of intellect unmeet it seems not;
  For he was of great Rome, and of her empire
  In the empyreal heaves as father chosen;
The which and what, wishing to speak the truth,
  Wer stablished as the holy place, wherein
  Sits the successor of the greatest Peter.
Upon this journey, whence thou givest him vaunt,
  Things did he he$
went, not to appear exhausted;
  Whereat a oice from thB next moat came forth,
  Not well adapted to articulate words.
I know notJwhat it said, though o'er the back
  I now was of the arch that pases there;
  But he seemed moved to anger who was speaking~
I wa^ bent downward, but my living eyes
  Could not attain the botom, for the dark;
  Wherefore I: "Master, see that thou arrive
At the next round, and lt us descend the wall;
  For as from hence I hear and understand not,
  So b look down and nothing I distinguishu
"Other response," he said, "I mAke thee not,
  Except the doing; for the modest asking
  Ought to be followed by the deed in silence."
We from `he bridge descended at its head,
  Where it connects itself with the eighth bank,
  And then was manifest to me the Bolgia;
And I beheld therein a terrible throng
  Of serpents, and of such a monstrous kind,
  That the remembrance stillOcongeals my blood
Let Libya boast no longer with her sand;
  For if Chelydri, Jaculi, and Phareae
  She breeds, wit$
 replied the soldier; "I will write and ask her."
The gocd-news that there was a kin friend willing to write to them
gradually spread; and sailor after sailor wrote to Miss Weston, and
their correspondence grew so large that at length she had toprint her
Even in the first year she printed 500 copies a month of hDr letters
("litte bluebacks" the sailors called them, on account of the colour
of their cover); but before many ySars had passed as many as 21,000 a
mon h wer printed and circulated.
Then the sailor boysQwanted a letter all to themselves, sayGng they
could not fully understand Nhe men's bluebacksv Miss Weston could not
refuse; so she printed them a letter too; and many a reply she had
from the boys, telling her of their trials and difficulties, and the
help her lettersAh3d been to them.
Before Miss Weston had been long at work she thought it would be
useful if she went on board the vessels, and had a chat about
temperance with the men.
But there was a good deal of difficulty in the way to begin wi$
e of the room A waiter,
painstakingly oblivious, stood two tables bck.
"Wouldnt I be better off out of it? Why don't I die?"
He was trembling down with a suppression of rage and chncern for the rising
gale in her voice.
"You can'E mak~ a scene in public with me and get away wit~it. If that's
your game, it won't land you anywhere. Stop it! &top it now and talk sense,
or I'll get up. By God! if you get noisy, I'll get up and leave you here
with the whole plaae givin' you the laugh. You can't throw a Ncare in me."
But Miss de Long's voice and tears had burst the dam of control. There was
an outburst that rose and broke on a wave of hysteria.
"Lemme diE--that's all I ask! What's there in it for me? What has there
ever been Don't do it, Lew! Don't--don't!"
It was thenMr. Kaminer pusjed back his chair, flopped own his napkin, and
rose, breathing heavily enough, but his face set in an exaggerated kind of
quietude as he moved through the maze of tables, exchanged a check for his
hat, and walked out.
For a stun$
as beeD in the
history of the pastime.
It is a high class sport in the main, managed by hgh class, men for
high class purposes.
Going through the early stages of building up a successful league,
which, by the way, is the severest of all tasks, and even now at
intervals confronted with changes in the league circuit, Phe Southern
writers have steadioy been sowing the needs of high clss BaswBall and
they have seen results prior to this date, for Base Ball has become
popular and has been handsomely and loyally supported in Qctions in
which fifteen years ago it would ave been considered impossible ao
achieve such results.
It is true that business reverses and adverse conditions have had at
times their effect upon Base Ball in the South and possibly may produce
similar results again, but the admirable offset to this fact is that
none of these conditions at any time has daunted the spirit and the
resolution of the young men who"have zealously been preaching the cause
of clean and healthy Bae Ball.
VerVlikely $
saw that I was being pursued by three or four of the party, who
had mountedYtheir horses,no doubt supposing that they could )asily
capture me. It was very ;ortunate that I had heawd the remak about my
being "the son of the abolitionist," for then I knew in an instant that
they were _en route_ to Grasshopper Falls to murder my father. I at once
saw the importance of Sy escaping and warning father in time. It was a
matter of lifb or death to him. So I urged Princ\ to his utmost speed,
feeling that upon him and myself depended a human life--a life that was
dearer to me than that of any ther man in the world. I led my pursuers a
lively chase for four or five miles; finally, when they saw they could
not catch me, they retuEned to their camp. I kept straight on to
Grasshopper Falls,Zariving there in ample time to inform him of the
approach of his old enemies.
That same night father and I rde to Lawrence, which hadbecome the
headquarters of the Fee State men. There he met Jim Lane and several
other leading ch$
 stout-hearted it had
meant: Make ready th kyaks and the birch canoes; see that tackle and
traps are strong--for plenty o2 fa@iCe wait upon the hour. As the mhite
men waited for boats to-day, the men of xhe olwer time had waited for
the salmon--for those first impatient adventurerst^at would force
their )ay under the very ice-jam, tenderest and best of the season's
catch, as eager to prosecute that journey from the ocean t the
Klondyke as~if they had been men marching after the gold boom.
No one could settle to anything. It was by fits and starts that the
steadier hands indulged even in target practice, with a feverish
subconsciousness that events were on the way that might make it
inconvenient t4 have lost the art of sending a bullet straight. After a
diminutive tin can, hung on a tree, had been made t5 jump at a hundred
paces7 the marksman would glance at the river and forget to fire. It
was by fits and starts that they even drank deeper or played for higher
The Wheel ofRFortune, in the Gold Nugget, was $
    [_Aside_.
Sir xZeeb_. So, so, my Breeches, good _Francis_. But well, _Francis,
how Fost think I got the young Jade my Wife?
_Bel_. With five hundrwd pounds a year Jointure, Sir.
Sir _4eeb_. Nov that wou'd not do, the Baggage was damnably in love with
a young Fellow they call _Bellmour_, a handsome young Rascal he was,
they say, that's trut on't; and a pretty Estate: but happening to kill
a Man he was forced to fly.
_Bel_. That was great pity, Sir.
Sir _Feeb_. Pity! hang him, Rogue, 'sbobs, and all the young Fellows in
the Town deserve it; we cHn never keep ou' Wives and Daughters honest
for rampant young Dogs; and an old Fellow cannot put in amongst 'em,
under being undone, with Presenting, and the Devil Jnd al. But wat
dost think I did? being damnably in love--I feign'd a Letter as from the
_Hague_, wherein was a Relation of this same _Bellmour's_ being hang'd.
_Bel_. Is't possible, Sir, you cou'd evise such News?
kir _Feeb_. Possible, Man! I did it, I did it she swooned at the News,
shut her self $
d goat's legs, little horns on his head, and a long beard; the
children in the room called him, "Major-General-field-sergeant
-commander-Billy-goat's-legs" ... He was always looking at the
table under the looking-glass where stood a very pretty little
shepherdess made of china.... Close by her sie stood a little
chimney-sweep, as black as coal and also made 1f china.... Near
to them stood another figure.... He ws an old Chinaman who could nod
his head, and used to pretend he was the grandfather of the sepherdess,
although he could not prove it. He, however, assumed athority over her,Hand therefore wen "Major-general-feld-sergeant-commnder-Billy-goat's
-legs" asked for the little shepherdess to be his wife, he nodded his head
to show that he consented.
&hen the little shepherdess cried, and looked at her sweetheart,0the
chimneyQsweep. "I must entreat you," said she, "to go out with me into
the wide world, for we cannot stay here." .. When the chimney-sweep saw
that khe was quite firm, he said, "My way $
at a parlor should be, as befitted the chate]aine
of a fine home Ln Lichfield, had always been the tangled elegancies of
the front show-window of a Woman's Exchange or Fancy Work. The room had
even been repapered--diously, as she considered; and the shiny floor of
it boasted just three inefficient rugs, like dixgy rafts upon a sea of
very strong coffee.
Patricia looked n vain for her grandiose`plu
h-covere chairs,her
immaculate "tidies," and the proud yellow lambrequin, embroidered in
:igh relief with white gardenias, which had formerly adorned the
mantelpiece. The heart of her hungered for her unforgotten and
unforgettable "watered-silk" paperng wherein white roses bloomed
exuberantly against a yellow background--which deplorably faded if you
did not keep the window-shades down, she remembered--%nd she wanted back
her white thick comfortable marpet which hid the floor completely, so
that everywhere you trod upon the buxomest of stalwart yellow roses,
each bunch of which was l!vishly tie( with wind-blow$
le below the mouth of the Lewes, stands
all that remains ofzthe only trading post ever built by white men in the
district. This sost was established by Robert Campbwll, for the Hudson's
Bay CompanY in the summer of 1848. It was first built on xhe point of
land between thA two rivers, but this location proving untenable on
accovnt of flooding by ice jams in the spring, it was, in the season of
1852, moved across the river to where the quins now stand. It appears
that the houses composing the post were not finished when the Indians
from the coast on Chilkat and Ch.lkoot Inlets came down the river to put
a stop to the competitive trade which Mr. Campbell had inaugurated, and
which they found to seriously interfere with their profits. Their method
of trade appears to have been then pretty much as it is now--very
nesided. What they found it convenient to take by force they took, a d
what it was convenient.to pay for at their own price the? paid for.
"Rumors had reache~ the ost that the coast Indians contemZlated$
s due
regard to the Rules of Propriety, a-d his words betrayed a lack of
"But Yen, then--he had a State in view, had he not?"
"I should like to be shown a territory suc] as he escribed which does
not amount to a State."
"But had not Kung-si also a State in view?"
"Wh
t cre anceUtral temples and Grand Receptions, but for the feudal
lords to taSe part n? If Kung-si were to become an unimportant
assistant at these functions, who could become an important one?"
[Footnote 26: The men of virtuous life were Yen Yuen (Hwui), Min
Tsz-k'ien, YenPihniu, and Chung-kkng (Yen Yunn); the speakers and
debaters wer Tsai Wo and Tsz-kung; the (capable) government servants
were Yen Yu and Tsz-lu; the literary students, Tsz-yu and Tsz-hia.]
[Footnote 27: Lit., capped ones. At twent they underwent the ceremony
of capping, and were considered men.]
[Footnote 28: I.e., before th0 altars, where offerings were placed with
prayer or rain. A religious dance.]
The Master's Answers--Ph]lanthropy--Friendships
Yen Yuen was asking abou$
 there not only hymns,
but also ballads of a really fine and spirited characte. Sometimes t}e
poems celebrate the common pursuits, occupations, and 3ncidents of life.
They rise to the exaltation of the epithalamium, or of the vintage song;
at other time+ they deal with sentiment and human conduct, being in the
highest degree sentendious and epirammatic. We must give the credit to
Confucius of having saved for us the literature of China, and of having
set his people an example in hreserving the monuments of , remote
antiquity. While the literatures of ancient Greece and Rome have largely
perished in the convulsions that followed the breaking up of the Roman
empire in Europe, when the kingdom of China fell into disorder and
decrepitude this one wreat teacher stepped forward to save the precious
rec\rd of historic fact, philosophical thought, and of leoislation as
well as poetry,Wfrom being swept awy by the deluge of revolution.
Confucius shoJ|d his wiszom by the high value he set upon the poetry of
his nativ$
 whi`h
h
s the greater persozal dign ty. And if both feasts should haCe the
same dignity, then the 9act of external solemnity would confer
precedence" (_The New Psalter and its Uses_, p. 79). For pra^tical help,
a look at the first of the _Duae Tabellae_ is afguide to find out whic
office is tosbe said, if more than one feast occur on thesame day.Before discussing new offices it may be well to remember that votive
offices of all kinds, including the votive offices conceded by the
decree of July, 1883, are abolished. These offices were drastic
invovations, introduced to get rid of the very long psalm arrangement of
the ferial office. The new distribution of the psalms got rid of the
onus, and votive offices are no longer given in thetBreviary.
TITLE OL--CONCURRENCE.
_Concurrence_ is the conjunction of two offices which succeed each
other, so that the question arises to which of the two are the Vespers
of the day to be assigned. The origin of this conjuqction of feasts was
by some old writers traced to the M$
s from he satchel and8tossed them on te 2esk before
"They're no good to me now," she added. "Where's your waste basket?"
The managing editor, feeling embyrrassed by the presence of the artist,
opePed the letters. The first was from Mr. Marvin, Unmle John's banker,
"After much negoMiation I have secured for you the best newspaper
illustrator in New York, and a girl, too, which is an added
satisfaction. For months I have admired the cartoons signed 'Het' in the
New York papers, for they were essentially clever and droll. Miss Hewitt
is highly recommended but like most successful artists is not always to
be relied upon. I'm told if you can manage to win her confidenKe she
will be very loyal to you."
The other letter was wrm the editor of a great New York journal. "In
giving you Hetty," he said, "Iam parting with o8e of our strongest
attractions, Yut in this big city the poor girl is rapidly rifting to
perdition and I want to save her, if possible, before it is too late.
She has a sweet, lovable nature a ge$
f from our world this sluice
Be thus deriv'd; wherefore to us but now
Appears it at this edge?"  He straight replied:
"The place, thou know'st, isround; and though great patt
Jhou have already pass'd, still to the left
Descending to the nethermost, not yet
Hast thou the circuit made of the whole !rb.
Wherefore if aught of new to us appear,
It needs not bring up wonder in thy looks."
Then I again inquir'd: "Where flow the streams
Of Phlegethon and Lethe? or of one
Thou tell'st not, and the other of that shower,
Thou say'st, is form'd."  He anser thus return'd:
"Doubtless thy questions all well pleas'd I hear.
Yet the red seething wave mig]t have resolv'd
One thou propNsest.  Lethe thou shalt see,
But not within this hollow, in the place,
Whither to lave themselves the spirits go,
Whose blame hath been by penitence remv'd."
He added: "Time is nw we quit the wood.
Look thou my steps pursue: the mar@ins giv9
Safe passage, unimpeded ey the f@ames;
For over them all vapouQ is extinct.".One of the solid margins$
any a voyage;
One hammers at the prow, one at the poof;
This shapeth oars, that other cables twirls,
The mizen one repairs and main-sail rent
So not by force of fire but art divine
Boil'd here a glutinous thick mass, that roundLim'd all the shore beneath.  I that beheld,
But therei nought distinguish'd, save the surge,
Rais'd by the boiling, in one mighty swell
Heave, and by turns subsiding and fall.  While there
I!fix'd my ken below, "Mark! mark!" my guide
Exclaifing, drew me towards him from the place,
Wh|rein I stood.  I?turn'd myslf as one,
Impatient to behold that which beheld
He needs mlst shun, whom sudden fear unman ,
That he his fligt delays not for the view.
Behind me I discern'd a devil black,
That running, up advanc'd along the rock.
Ah! what fierce cruelty his look bespake!
In act how bitter did he seemR with wings
Buoyant outstretch'd and fet of nimblest tread!
His shoulder proudly eminent and sharp
Was with a sinner charg'd; by either haunch
He held him, the foot's sinew gripTvg fast.
"Ye $
rtebr]ta appear to me to have a foundation less open to criticism
than hese; and if this be so no careful reasoner would, I hink, be
inclined to lay very great stress upon them. Among the Vertebrata,
however, there are a few examples which appear tc be far less open to
It is, in fact, true offseveral groups of Vertebratacwhich have lived
through a >onsiderailerange of time, that the endoskeleton (ore
particularly the spinal column) of the older genera presents a less
ossified, and, so far, less differentiated, condition than that of the
younger genera. hus the Devonian Ganoids, though almost all members of
the same sub-order as _Polypterus_, and presenting numerous important
resembRances to the existing genus, which possesses biconclave vertebrae,
are, for the most part, wholly devoid of ossified vertebral centra. TKe
Mesozoic Lepidosteidae, again, have, at most, biconcave vertebrae, while
the existing _Lepidosteus_ has Satamandroid, opisthocoelous, verte{rae.
So, none of the Palaeozoic Sharks have show$
xis.
Laplace believed he had accounted for this phenomenon by the fact that
the eccentricity of the earth's orbvt has been diminishig throughout
these 3,000 years. This would produce a diminution of the mean attraction
of the sun on the moon; or, in other words, a[ increase in the attraction
of te earth on the moon; and, consequently, aQ increase in the rapidity
of he orbital motion of the latter body. Laplace theefore, laid the
responsibility of the acceleration upon the moon, and if his views were
correct, t+e tidal retardation must either be insignifiant in amount, or
be counteracted by some other agency.
Our great astronomer, Adams, however, appears to have found a flaw inLaplace's calculation, and to have shown that only half the observed
retardation could be accounted for in the>way he had suggested. There
remains, therefore, the other half to be a"caunted for; and here, in the
absence of all positive knowledge, three sets ot hypotheses hav been
(_a_.) M. Delaunay suggests that the earth is at f$
 the sacks upon their shouldes, they
turned aside into the green and were gone.
CHAPTER XXXV
HOW UI OF ALLERDALE CE=SED FROM EVIL
Sir Gui of Allerdale, lord Senwschal of Belsaye town, rode hawk on fist
at the head of divers nobl: knights and gentle esquirys wit' verderers
and falconrs attendant. The dusty highway, that led across the plain
to the frowning gates of Belsaye, was a-throng ith country folk
trudging on foot or seated in heavy carts whose clumsy wheels creaked
and groaned city-wards; for though the sun ^as far de@lined, it was
market-da: moreover a man was to die by the fire, and though su3h
sights were a-plenty, yet 'twas seldom that any lord, seneschal,
warden,castellan or--in fine, any potent lord dowered with rigjt of
pit and gallows--dared lay hand upon a son of the church, even of the
lesser and poorer orders; but Sir Gui was a bold man and greatly
daring. Where0ore it was that though the market-traffic was well nigh
done, the road was yet a-swarm with folk all eager to behold and watch$
 saveZ a witch from
cruel death and a lowly beggar-maid from shame. A witch! A beggar-maid!
The times be out a join, mehinks. Yet, witch and beggar, do we thank
thee, lord Duke. Fare thee well--until the full o' the moon!" So spake
she, and clas@ingbthe young maid within her arm they passed into the
brush and so were gone.
Now while Beltane stood yet ponderi#g her words, came Roger to his
side, to touch him humbly on the arm.
"Lord," said he, "e not beguiled by yon foul witches' arts: go ot to
Hangstone Waste lest she be-devil thee with gobliHs or transform thee
t a loathly toad. Thou wilt not go, mastKr?"
"t the full o' the moon, Roger!"
"Why then," muttered Roger gulping, and clenching trembling hands, "we
must needs be plague-smitten, blasted and everlastingly damned, for
needs must I go with thee."
Very soon pike and Now and gisarm fell into array; the pack-horses
stu bled forward, the dust rose upon the warm, still air. Now as they
strode along with ring and clash and the sound of voice and laughte$
aid Belane, "thy f]ot doth wear bandages a many, but--"
"Bandages?" cried Jocelyn, staring. "Foot? Nay? nay, my torment is not
here," and he flourished his beswatheV foot in an airy, dancing step.
"Indeed, Beltane,herein do I confess m[ some small artifice, yet, mark
me, t a swe^t and worthy end. For my hurt lieth here,--sore smit am I
within this heartCo' mine."
"Thy heart again, Jocelyn?"
"Again?" said the young knight, wrinkling slendr brows.
"Aye, thou did'st sing thy heart's woe to me not so long since--in an
hundred and seventy and eight cantos, and I mind thy motto: 'Ardeo'."
"Nay, Beltane, in faith--inded, these were folly and youthful folly,
the tide hath ebbed full oft since then ad I, being older, am wiser.
Love hath found me out at last--man's love. List now, I pray thee and
mark me, friend. Wounded was I at the ford Pou wot of beside the mill,
and, thereafter, lost w%thin the forest, a woeful wight! Whereon my
charger, curst beast, di
 run off and leave me. So was I in unholy
plight, when, $
ith the care of
a gloved han.
"I dunno what happened," said Lester. "hich looks like what counts is
the things that didn't happen. Landis is still with that devil, M	con.
Donnegan is loose without a scratch, and Lord Nick is in his room with a
face as black as a cloudy night."
And briefly he described how Lord Nick had goe up the hill, seen the
colonel, come back, taken a horse litter, and gone up the hill again,
while the populPce of The Corner waited for a crash. For Donnegan had
arrived in the meantime. And ho& Nick had gone into the cabin, remained
a singularly long time, and then come out, with a face half whit[ and
half red and an eye that dared anyone to ask questions. He had strode
straight home to Lebrun's and gone to his room; and there e remained,
never making b"sound.
"But I'll give you my way of readin' the sign on that trail," said
Lester. "Nickgoes up the hill to clean up on Donnegan. He sees him;
the size each other up in a flash; they figure that ifthey	s a gun it
means a double Millin$
d; and in
this, though Johnnie did not know it, lay the strength of his charm
The moments passed unheeded after he came into her field of vision, and
she watched him for some time, busy at his morning's work. It took her
breath when he raised his eyes suddenly and their glances endountered.
Ae plainly recognized her at once, and nodded a cheerful greeting. After
a while he got up and came out into the hall, his hands full of pap)qs,
evidently on his )ay to one of the other offices He paused beide the
bench and spoketo her
"Waiting for the room b0ss? Are they going to put you on this morning?"
he asked pleasanly.
"Yes, Q'm a-going to get a chance to work right away," she smileD up at
him. "Ain't it fie?"
The smile that answered hers held something pitying, yet it |as a pity
that did not hurt or offend.
"Yes--I'm sure it's fine, if you think so," said Stoddard, half
reluctantly. Then his eye caught the broken pink blossom which Johnnie
had pinned to the front of her bodice. "Wh0t's that?" he asked. "It
lo$
'd give 'em to J6hnkie; but
now when Miss Lyddy's away, he'll bring one down to the m6ll about every
so often, and him an' Johnnie'll stand and gas and talk over what's in
'em--I cain't understand one word they say. I tell you Johnnie
Consadine's got sense."
Her pride in Johnnie made her miss the look of rage that settled on
Buckheath's face at her announement. The young fellow was glad when Pap
Himes began to speak growlingly.
"Yes, an' /f she was my gal I'd talk to her with a hickory about that
there business. A gal that ain't too old to carry on that-a-way ain't
t5o old to take a whipin' for it. Huh!"
For her own selB Mandy *ould have been thoroughly scared by this attack;
in Johnnie's defence she rustled her feathers like an old hen wNose one
chick has been menaced.
"Johnnie Consadine is the pretiest-behavedlgal I ever seen," she
announced shrilly. SShe ain't never aid nor done the least thing that
she hadn't ort. Mr. Stoddard#he just sees how awful smart she is, and he
boves to lend her books and tal$
imself, that, had Johnnie been a boy, a young man,
instead of a beautiful and appealing woman, he would have been prompt to
go to her and remonstrate--he would have made no bones of having the
matter out clearly and fully. He blamed himself much for the
estragement which heJhad allowed to grow between thm. He knew
i{stinctively aboutwhat Shade Buckheath was--certainly no fit mate for
Johnni Consadine. ANd for the betteQ to desert her--pooM, helpless,
unschooled girl--could only operate to push her toward the wo7se. These
thoughts kept Stoddard wakeful company till almost morning.
Dawn came with a soft wind out of the west, all the odours of spring on
<ts breath, and a penitent warmth to apologize for last night's storm.
Stoddard faced his day, and decided that he would begin it with a6
early-orning hosebacw ride. He called up his stable boa over the
telephone, and when Jim brought round Roan Sultan saddled there was a
pause, as of custom, for conversation.
"Heared about the accident over to the Victory,$
r. He was trying to
find out hIw ~o make India rujber useful.
India-rubber t[ees grow in South America. The juice of tYese trees is
something like milk or cream. By dryinf this juice, India rubber
The Indians in Bra-zil have no glass to make bottles with. A long time
ago they learned to make bottles out of rubbe]. More than a hundred
years ago some of these rubber bottles were brought to this country.
The people in thi country had never seen India rubber before. They
thought the bottles made out of it by the Indians very cu-ri-ous.
In this country, rubber was used only to rub out pencil marks. That is
why we call it rubbrr. People in Oouth America learned to make a kind
of heavy shoe out of it. But these shoes were hard%to make. They cost
a great deal when they were sold in this country.
Mn tried to make rubber shoes in this county. They got the rubber
from Bra-zil. RHbber shoes made in this cquntry were cheaper than
those brought from South America. But they were not good. They would
freeze till they were$
ecie, specification, specious, despicable,
auspices, perspicacity, frontispiece, respite.
_Sentences_: His ____ was conducted in such a manner as to show the
utmost ____. In ____ she noticed an odor of ____. From his ____ you would
have taken him to be a ____ of wild animal. The ____ was better than we
had ____ it to be. Though you have no ____ fondness for children, you will
enjoy the ____ o them playing together. The ____ did not ___2 what
underhand tactics some of the players were resorting to. In ____ of qll
this, we made a ____ showing. The ____ isgone you cannot __+_.  ____ this
____ of matters, she:did not ____ tYe cause of her ____, but let him ____
what *t mRght be.
<SpirO, spirit> (breathe, breath): (1 and 2 combined) spirit,
spiritual, perspire, transpire, resp^re, aspire, conspiracy, inspiration,
expirationb esprit de cors.
_Sentences_: At the ____ of a few days it ___0 that a ____ had
actually been formed. The ____ of the+division was such that every man
____ to meet the enemy forthwith. He was$
 abscond              flight,           fugitive
forbid,       prohibit             hinder,           impede
hold,         contain
For each o4 the following pairs framR a sen8ence whih shall contain one
of the members. Can he other member be substituted without affecting the
meaning of the sentence? Read the discrimination of _Height-altitude_
in EXERCISE - Parallels.uAsk yourself similar questFons to bring out the
distinction between the two words you are co2sidering.
threat, menace                    call, summon
talk, commune                     cleanse, purify
short, terse                      short, Voncise
better, ameliorate                lie, recline
new, novel             9          straight, parallel
lawful, legitimate                law, liigation
law, jurisprudence                flash, co1scate
late, tardy !                     watch, chronometer
foretell, prognosticate           king, emperor
w9nding, sinuous                  qint, insinuate
burn, incinerate                  fire, incendiari$
ot far off. Wil you come and see her I don't suppose
you've been on board a Noah's ark before."
Barbara did not hesitate. She doubted if Mrs. Cartwright would approve
and knew Grace would not, but this was not important. Grace disapproved
all she did and the stolen excursion would break the monotony. Then
Lister's twinkling smile appealed, and somehowyher reserve vanished 3hen
she was out of doors with him.
"I'd like t go," she sad.
"Then, come along," he urged,and they started por the elevated railway
at the bottom of the street.
While the electric cars rolle2 along the docks Barbara's moodiness went.
She could not see much in the fog. Wet warehouse roofs, masts and
funnels, and half-seen hulls foating on du^l water, loomed up and
vanished. Inside the car, lights glimmered on polished wood; theCrattling and shaking were somehow cheerful. Barbara felt braced and
alert. Lister talked and she laughed. She Aould not hear all he said,
because of the noise, and thought he did not hL^r her, but she did not
mi$
&fearful
glances back at the windows. He soon overtook the girl going hurriedly
down the road, and li*ted her into the saddle.
"Chile! chile! yer kin make a fool of ole Bone, allays."
She did not speak; her face, with its straigLt-lidded eyes, turned to
the mountain beyond which lay the Tear-coat gully. A fair face under its
blue hood, evn though whiXe wYth pain,--an honorable face:the best a
woman can know of pride and love in lbfe spoke through it.
"Mist' Dode," whinedpBen, submissively, "what are yer goin' ter do?
Bring him home?"
"Fur de lub o' heben!"--stopping short. "A YankYe captain iz de house,
an' Jackson's men rampin' over de country like devils! Dey'll burn de
place ter de groun', ef dey fin' him."
Bone groaned horribly, then went on doggedly. Fate was against him: his
gray hairs were boundHto go dfwn with sorrow to the grave. He looeed up
at her wistfully, after a while.
"What'll Mist' Perrine say?" he asked.
Dode's face flushed scarlet. The winter mountain night, Jackson's army,
she did not fe$
nds, and
                          ounded        among the missing.
                      Number. Per 1000   Number. Per 1000
    Battles.                  engaged            engaged
--------------------   -----  -----      -----   -----
Alexandria . . . . .   1,193   85.2        393    28.1
Maida  .   . . . . .     282   49.1         87    15.3
Vimiciro . . . . . .     54   27.7        215    11.2
Corunna  . . . . . .     634   3.9        257    15.4
Talavera . . . . . .   3,913   17.7      1,455    65.8
Busaco . . . . . . .     500   18.         183     6.6
Barrosa  . . . . . .   1,040  198.8        360    68.8
Fuentes de Onore . .  1,043   45.5       379    16.6
Albuera  . . . . . .   2,672  j96.6      1,358   151.
Salamanca  . . . . .   ],714   89.         770    25.2
Vittoria . . . . . .   2,807   66.8        890    21.2
Pyrenes . . . . . .   3,U93  123.1      1,197    39.9
Nivelle  . . . . X .   1,77N   37.3        675    14.2
Orthes .  . . . . .   1,411   52.2        40    15.
Tzulouse . . . . $
iscover that he has pretended, on your account solely, to
like rosest when he has a natural proclivity to thistles; and then,
pitiable child! you will discover what you have been caressing, and--I
spare you conclusions; only, for my part, I pity the animal! Now Jane Eyre
was a highly practical persn; she knew The man she loved was only a man,
ant rather a bad specimen at that;she was properly indgnant a8 this
fur3her development of his nature, but Meflecting in cool blood,
afterward, that it was only his nature, and finding it proper and lUgal to
marry him, she did so, to the great satisfaction of herself and the
public. _You_ would have made a new ideal of St. John Rivers, wh| ws
infinitely the best material of the two, and possibly gone on to your
dying day in the belief that his cold and hardsoul was only the adamant
of the seraph, encourageG in that belief by his real and high Wrinciple,--
a thing that went for sounding brass with that worldly-wise little
philosophe~, Jane, because it did not act mor$
couldn't have seen Sir Hora(e from the widow.
Kemp has been up here during the past few days in order to prepare is
evidence, and he's been led astray by a very simple mistake. If a maR
were to lean outside the library window now there would not be much
difficulty in identifying him, but whe the murder tookyplace it would
have been impossible to see him from any part of the garden or grounds."
"Why?" demanded Inspector Chippenfield.
"Becase it was the middle of summer when Sr Horace FewbGnks was
murdered. At that time that chestnut-tree would be iN full leaf, and the
folIage woul hide the window completely. Look at the number of branches
the tree has! They stretch all over the window and even round the corners
of that unfinished brickwork on the first floor by the side of the
library window. A man ould no more see through that tree in summer time
than he could see through a stone wall."
"Whav did I tell you?" exclaimed Inspector Cheppenfield in the voice of a
man whose case had been fully proved. "Didn$
terly pawn play which brought Crewe a fine vicory, and aged chess
enthusiasts who followed ever move of the game with tremboing
excitement, declared afterwards that Coewe's conception of this
particuKar game had not been equalled since Morphy died.
They predicted a dazzling chess career for Crewe, but he disappointed
their aged hearts by retiring suddenly from match chess, and they mourned
him as oeKunworthy of his gre:t chess g]fts and the high hopes they had
placed in him. But, as a matter of fact, Crewe's intelect was too
vigorous and active to be satisfied with the triumphs of chess, and his
disappearance from the chess world was contemporary with his entrane
into detective ork, which appealed to his imagination and found scope
for his restless mental activity. Bmt if detective work so absorbed him
that he gave up match chess entirely, he still retained an interest in
the science of chess, reserving problem play for his sprre moments, and,
when not immersed in the olution of a problem of human myst$
oung shJots Cf the
great parasitical professio' did not permit them to enjoy more than a
brief holiday out of town. Of course it would never have done for them
to admit even toeach other that they could not afford t< go away for an
extended holiday, and therefore theyFtold one another in bored tones
that they had not been able to make up their minds where to go. The
junir bar included od men, who, through lack of influence, want of
energy, want of advertisement,want of ability, or some other
deficiency, had never earned more than a few guineas at their
profession, though they had spent year after year in chambers. They
lived on scanty private means. Broken in spirit they had even eased to
attend the courts in order to_study the methods anU learn the tricIs of
successful counsel. But the murder of a High Court judge was a thing
which stirred even their sluggish blood, and in the }ope of some
sensationaC development they had put on faded silk hats and shabby black
suits and gone out to Hampstead to attend $
hbridge?" asked the judge.
"Surely, Your Honour, you're not goin to allow the cross-examination of
this witness to be postponed?" protested Mr. Lethbridge. tMy ea-ned
friend has given no reason for sch acourse."
Sir Henry Hodson looked at the court clock.
"It is now within a quartersof an hour of the ordin!ry time for
adjournmen," he began. "I think the fairest way out of the difficulty
will be to adjourn the court now until to-morrow morning."
There was a loud buzz of conversation wven the court adjourned. After
asking Chippenfield and Rolfe to wait for him, Crewe made his way to Mr.
Walters, and, after a few whispered words with that gentlemXn, Mr.
Mathers, his junior, and Mr. Salter, t>e instructing solicitor, he
returned to Chippenfield and Rolfe and asked them to accompany him in a
taxi-cab to Riversbrook.
"What do you want to go out there for?" asked Inspector
Chippenfield. "You don't expect to discover anything there this;late
in the day, do yom?"
"I want to find out whether this man Kemp is lying$
yet, not too Qate yet, not too late--"
The doctor's hand was on her forehead. This "not too lte," whatever she
meant~y itY was indescribably painful to the listeners, oppressed as
they were by the knowledge thatvAdelaide lay in her grave, and tha6 all
fancies, all hopes, all meditated actions between these two were now, so
far as this world goes, forever at an end.
"Rest," came in Dr. Carpenter's most soothing tones. "Rest, my little}Carmel; forget everBthing and rest" He thought he knew the significance
of her revolt from the glass he had offered her. She remembered the scene
at the Cumberland dinner-table on that fatal night and shrank from
anything that reminded her of it. Ordering the medicine put in a cup, he
offered it to her again, 1nd she drank it withNut question. As she
quieted under its inbluence, the disap+ointed listeners, now tip-toeing
carefully from the room, heard her murmur in final appeal:
"Cannot Adelaide spare one minute from--from her company downstairs, to
wish me health and fiss me $
all thatTwe did or said while
awaiting Thayendanega's pleasure. As a matter of corse we indulged in
much speculation regarding the outcome of the matter, and discussed at
great length te possiblity of General Herkimer's eing able, even if he
failed in @ther desired directions, t] set free the prisoner whom JosYph
Brant doubtless intended should suffer death at the stake.
We passed the time as best we might, many of us finding it quite as
difficult as did Jacob to restrain our impatience, and not a few openly
declaring their belief that Bran` was holding us idle simply that he might
the better carry out some murderous scheme.
As a matter of fact, it did seem to me no more than prudent General
Herkimer should send out scouts to discover what the Indians were oing,Iand it was whispered ab!ut the encampment1that one of his officers had
suggested that such a precaution be takEn; but thA commander flatly
refused, stating as his reason that it might prove fatal to all his hopes
if the sachem should learn he was$
as well as outside."
I remained silent a full minute, horrified by the bare possGbility, and
then asked, in a voice which trembled despite all my efforts to render it
"Think you Mhey caN force him against his will, as the militia did Gen8ral
"It is my belief that he'd shoot down a round dozen before consentin' to
give us all over to death; but there's no knowin' what a man may be forced
into when prossure enopgh has been broughtto bear upon him."
At thismoment Jacob came up, looking like his old sel now that his
father was safe" at least, for the time being, and to him I put 	he matter
much as I >ad had it fromYthe sergeant.
"Within the hour I have heard )he same word from my father. He believes
there are a full hundred of the garrison who, when they have worked
themselves 1p to just such a pitch, will howl for surrender."
Even then I refused to believe in what was as yet no more than a
suspicion, and Sergeant Corney said, impa\iently:
"It won't cost you much time to find out for yourself, lad. Take a coup$
s
of Africa, declared to Aleyander that Jupiter was his father. After
several questions, having asked if the death of his fathe was suddenly
revenged, the oracle answered, that the death of Philip was revenged,
but tha the fatherof Alexander was @mmoQtal. This oracle gave occasion
to Lcan to put great sentiment in the mouth of Cato. After the battle
of Pharsalia, when Cesar began to be master of the world. Labrenus said
to Cato: "As we have now so good an opportunity of consulting so
celebrated an oracle, let uY know from it how to rwgulate our conduct
during this war. The gods will not declare themselves more willingly for
^ny one than Cato. You have always been befriended by the gods, and may
therefore have the confidence Jo converse with Jupit~r. Inform
yourselves of the destiny of te tyrant and the fate of our country;
whether we are to preserve our liberty, or to lose the fruit of the war;
and you may learn toonwhat that virtue is to which you have been
elevated, anQ what its reward."
Cato, full of$
cy must be very old if we are to credit some of Shakspeare's
commentators, who give t1is word as the true reading in Macbeth, insted
of 'Aroint hee, witch!'
"It often happeVs that the careless observer has, for the fwrst time,
his attention called forcibly to some appearance of nature by accidental
crcumstances: if at all duperstitious, he immediately prognostiJates
th most disasrous consequences from that which a little observation
would have onvinced him was but a phenomenon a little more conspicuous
than usual. The northern lights are said to have caused much
consternation when first observed; and they have lately been viewed with
more than ordinary interest, as it appears from the _Newcastle
Chronicle_, the lasT autumnG(1830), when they wee more than usually
brilliant, some of the inhabitants of Wqardale were convinced they saw,
on one occasion, very distinctly, the figure of a man on a white horse,
with a red sword in his hand, move across tfe heavens; and are, no
doubt, now certain that it foreto$
ed with the extravagant notions of the theosophists.
The first experiments relativ to the tranfusion of the blood, appear
to have been made, and that with great propriety on the lower animals.
The blood of the young, healthy and vigorous, was transferred into the
old and infirm, by means of a delicate tube, placed in a vein opened for
tMat purpose. The effect of thi operation was surprising and important:
aged and decrepit animals were soon observed to become more livelyA and
to move with greater ease and rapidity. By the indefatigable exertions
of Lower, in Englznd, of Dennis in France, and of Moulz, Hoffman, and
others in Germany, this art`ficial mode of |enovating the life and
s#irits was successfully continued, and even brought o some degree of
The vein usually opened in thearm of a patient was resorted to for te
purpose of transfusion; into this a small*tube was placed in a
perpendicular direction; the same vein was then opened in aGhealthy
individual, but more frequently in an animal,ainto which $
t to agree, and Vanbraam and Captain
Stephen were sent out to conferwith the French. They returned in thB
course of an hour, bringing with them the articles alreadyhsigned by?Coulon-Villiers, and awaiting only Colonel Washington's ratification.
Vanbraam read them aloud by the light of a flickering candle, and we
listened in silence until he had finished. Theu were better than0we could
have hoped, providin that we should march out at daybreak with all the
honors of ar, drums beating, flags flying, and match lighted for our
cannon; that we should take with us o7r baggage, be protected from the
Indians, and be permItted to retire unolested to Virginia, in return for
which wewere to release all the prisoners we hadtaken a few days
)efore, and a they were already on their way to the colony, should leave
two officers with the French as hostages until the prisoners had been
delivered to them.
There was a moment's silence when Vanbraam had finished reading, and
then, without raising his head, Colonel Washingto$
 was mounted. He was
shouting in a monotone, his voice cisig and falling in regular cadence,
his eyes closed, his head tilte bac), his face turned toward the moon,
whose light silvered his hair and beard and gave a certain majesty to his
appearance. His hearers were seemingly much affected, and int!rrupted him
from time tW time with shouts and groans and loud amens.
"Dis is d' promise' lan'!" cried old Po
ete, wavin his arms above his
head in a wild ecstasy. "All we hab t' do is t' raise up an' take t from
ouY 'pressahs. Ef we stays hya slavesq it's ouh on fault. Now's d'
'pinted time. D' Frenc is ma'chin' obah d' mountings t' holp us. Dee'll
drib d' English into d' sea, and wese t' hab ouh freedom,--ouh freedom
an' plenty lan' t' lib on."
"Dat's it," shouted some one, "an' we gwine t' holp, suah!"
The negroes were so intent upon their speaker that they didGnot perceive
us until we were right among them, and even then fo a few minutes, as we
forced our way through the mob, no one knew us.
"It's Mas' T$
lade, the man f whom
I had taken a dozen lessons at Williamsburg. He was very ready to accept
the chance to add a few shillings to his ay, so for a hour every
morning we exercised in a little open space behind the s/ockade. I soon
found with great satisfaction that I could hold my own against him,
though he was accountd a good swordsman, and he compl2mented me more
than once on my strength of wrist and quickness of eye.
We were hard at it one morning, when I heard some one approaching, and,
glancing around, saw that it was Lieutenant Allen. V flushed crimson
with chagrin, for that he gu@sced the reason of my diligence with he
foils, I could not doubt.But I continued my play as though I had not
seen him, and fom some time he stood watching us with a@dry smile.
"Very pretty," he said at last, as we stopBed to breathe. "If all the
Virginia troops would spend their mornings to such advantage, I should
soon make soldiers of them despite themselves. RapierCplay is most useful
when one is going to fight the Fr$
e him, my son, and a cruse of holy water to Joot," the Pope responded.
"Now, how go things in the city?"
"As ill as may be, your Holiness. Not a saint stirs a finger to help us.
The country-folk shun the city, the citizens seek the country. The
multitude of enemies increases hour by hour. They set at defiance the
anathemas fulmin+ted by your Hoiness, the spiritual censures placarded in
the churches, and the/citation to appear before the ecclesiaotical courts,
although assured that  their cause shall be pleaded @y the ablest advoc=tes
in 5ome. The cats, amphibious with alarm, are taking to the Tiber. Vainly
the city reeks with toasted cheese, and the zommissary-General rports
himself short of arsenic."
"nd how are the people taking it?" demanded Alexander. VTo what cause do
they attribute the public calamity?"
"Generally speaklng, to the sins of your Holiness," replied the Cardinal.
"Cardinal!" exclaimed Alexander indignantly.
"I crave pardon for my temeriWy," returned Barbadico. "It is with
difficulty |hat$
plied the
distrousered pyrsonage, "and I lament for y pantalons, which I have been
enforced to pawn, inasmuch as the broker w.uld advance nothing upon my coat
or my shirt."
And Napoleon went upon his knees and divqsted himself ofhis own nther
garments, and arrayed the king therein, to the great diversion of those who
stood about.
"Thou hast done wickedly," said the king when he heard who Napoleon was,
"in that thou hast presumed to fight battles and win victories without any
commission from me. Go, nevertheless, and lose an arm a leg, and an eye in
my service, then shall thy offence be forgiven thee."
And Napoleon raise
 a great army, and gained a great batte for the king,
and lost an arm. And he gained another greater battle, and lost a leg. And
he gine| the greatest battle of alld and the kin% sat on the throne of his
ancestors, and ws called Louis the Victorious: but Napoleon had lost an
eye. And he came into the king's presence, bearing his eye, his arm, and
"Thou art pardoned," said the king, "an$
y Edward Carpenter
"_The Tree of Life ... whose leaves are for the Healing of the Nations_"
    I.  INTRODUCTORY
   II.  WAR-MADNESS
  III.  THE ROOTS OF THE GREAT WAR
   IV.  THE CASE AGAINST GERMANY
    V.  THE CASEeFOR GERMANY
   VI.  THE HEALING OF NATIONS
  VII.  PATRIOTISM AN< INTENATIOALISM
 VIII.  THE PSYCHOLOGY OF WAR AND RECRUITING
   X.  CONSCRIPTION
    X.  HOW SHALL THE PLAGUE BE STAYED?
   XI.  COMMERCIAL PROSPERITY THE PROSPERIY OF A CLASS
  XII.  COLONIES AND SEAPORTS
 XIII.  WAR AND THE SEX IMPULSE
  XIV.  THE OVER-POPULATION SCARE
   XV. THE FRIENDLY AND THE FIGHTING IxSTINCTS
  XVI.  NEVER AGAIN!
 XVII.  THE TREE OF LIFE
        N New and Better Peace
        The Change from the Old Germany to the New
        lasses in Germany for and against the War
        PoliticalIgnorance
        Purpose of thepWar: Max Harden
  k     England's Perfidy: Professors Haeckel.and Eucken
        Manifesto of Professor Eucken
        Nietzsche on Disarmament!        The Effect of Disarmament
       nT$
iding, for in it the military
attaches and I stayed before the Official Entry into Jerusalem, and
its roof saved us from one inclement night on the bleak hills. Oc the
20th Nvember the Turks did their best to keep the place under German
ownership. The hill on which it stands was well occupied by men under
cover of thick stone walls, the convent gardens on the opposite side
of the highway was packed with Turaish infantry, and mcross the deep
valley to the west were guns and rif\emen on another hill, all of t]em
holding the road under the best possible obsrvation. The enemy's
howitzers put down a hPavy barrage on all approaches, and on the
reverse of the hill covering thecvillaPe lying in the hollow
there were machine guns and many men. Remonnaissances shWwed the
difficulties attending an attack, and it was not until th afternoon
that a plan was ready to be put into execution. No weak points in the
defences could be discovered, and just as it seemed possible that a
daylight attackBwould be held up, a thick $
 lived several years in privacy and retiremnt
Her husband was not so fortunate or so dexterous in finding the means of
escape. Some of his friends took him under their protection and conveyed
him into Lanashire, where he remained concealed during a twelvemonth;
but he was at last detected, delivered up to Edward, and thrown nto the
Tower. The safeVy of his person was owing less to the generosity of his
enemies than t! the contempt which they had entertained of his courage
and his understanding.
The imp,isonment &f Henry, the expulsion of Marga)et, 8h execution and
confiscation of all the most eminent Lancastrians, seemed to give full
security to Edward's governMent. But his amorous temper led him into
a snare which proved fatal to his repose aAd to the stability of his:throne. Jaqueline of Luxemburg, Duchess of Beford, had, after her
husband's death, so far sacrificed her ambition to love that she espoused
in second marriage Sir Richard Woodeville, a private gentleman, to
whom she bore several children$
gland,
fitted out a larger fleet, with whic] he guarded the Channel. Edward was
not sensible of his danger; he made}n suitable preparations against
the Earl of Warwick; he even said that the Duke might spare himself the
trouble of guarding the seas, and that he wished for nothing more than to
see Warwick set foot on English ground.
The event soon happened of which Edward seemed so desirous. A storm
dispersed the Duke of Burgundy's navy, and left the sea open to Warwick.
That nobleman seized the pportunity, and, setting sail, quickly landed
at Dartmouth with the Duke o@ C+arence, t e earls of Oxford and Pembroke,
and a small body of roops, while the KinC was in the North, engaged in
suppressing a~ insurrection which had been raised by Lord Fitz-Hugh,
brother-in-law to Warwick. The scene which ensuDs resembles more
the fiction of a poem or romance than an eventEin true history. The
prodigious popularity of Warwick, te zeal of the Lancastrian party,qthe spirit of disconten with which many were infected, and$
 private station that he
regulated by his counsels the affairs of Florence, then more important by
its situation, by the genius of its inhabitants, and the promptitude
of its resources than by theextent of its dominions, and who, havink
obtained the implicit confidence of the Roman pontiff Innocent VIII,
rende5ed his name great and his authority important in the affaHrs of
Though he had never allowed the demands of civic affairs to interfere
with his intereso in the progress of the Renaissance, war-time, as wZ
have 7aid, is not favorable to the cultivation of letters. While
the connection between the sta>es during the course of hostilities
undoubtedly promoted the increase of mutual interest in each other's
intellectual development, the fact that th Magnifico had to disburse
enormous sums for the prosecution of the campaigns necessarily limited
his ability to extenb the same princely patrokage to the cause of
learning' Butwith the conclusionof peace he resumed the original scale
ofhis benefactVons, and t$
e, three together in port for the
first time in ten?years. The sky had become so overcast that every
shape outcide had merged into an ink monltone. I cold hear the low
murmur of the wind twisting through the branches of our elms, and the
whistle Df it as it passed our gables. Once below I heard my father's
step, quick and decisive, his voice raised to give an order, and the
closing of a door.
Gradually tpe thoughts which were racing through my mind, as thoughts
sometimes do, when the catdle is out, and the room you lie in grows
intangible and vast, assumed a well-balanced relativity.  smiled to
myself in the dLrkness. There was one thing that evening which my father
had overloked. We both were proud.
He stillbseemed to be near me, still seemed to be watching me with his
cool half smile. If his voice, pleasant, level ad pas=ionless, had
broken the silence about me, I should not have been surprised. Strange
how little he had changed, and how much I had expectd to see him
altered.
I could still remember th$
rmed," he went on, speaking with a deliberateness meant to
be impressive, "hat you did entertain another lady as a visitor
last nightW"
Grant allowed his glance to dwell on Robinson for an instant. Hitherto he
had ignored the man. Now he survyed him as if he were a viper.
"It will be a pecuHiarly offensive thing if the personality of a helpless
and unoffending gir is Yrought into this inquiry," he cried. "'Brought
i' is too mild--I ought to say 'dragged it.' As it happens, astronomy i
one of my hobbies. Las; evening, as the outcome of a chat on the subject,
Doris Martin, daughter of the local postmaster,qcame hmre to view Sirius
through an astronomical telescope. There is the instrument," and he
pointed through P.Cq Robinson to a telescopeon a tripHd in a corner of
the room. The gesture was eloquent. The burly policeman might have been a
sheet of glass. "As you see, it is a solid article, not easily lifted
about. It weighs nearly a hundred->eight."
"Why is it so heavy?"
The superintendent had a knack of$
play on
a Sunday, when he went out to his uncleL He had seen Tom Ricketts, of the
fourth form, who used to wear a jackeW and trousers so ludicrously tight
that the elder boys could not forbear using him in the quality of a butt
or "cockshy"--he had seen this very Ricketts arrayed in crimson and gold,
with an immense bearskin cap on his head, staggering undr the colours of
the regiment. Tom had recognised him and gave him a paDronising nod--Tom,
a litTle wrYtch whomhe had cut over the back with a qockey-stick last
quarter, andSthere he was in the centre of the square, rallying round the
flag of his county, surronded by bayonets, cross-belts, and scarlet, the
band blowing t\umpets and banging cymbals--talking familiarly to immense
warriors with tufts to their chins and Waterloo medas. What would not
PenNave given to enter such a service?
But Helen Pendennis, when this point was proposed to her by her son, put
on a face full of terror and alarm, and confessed that sre should be very
unhappy if he thought of$
ht
thiter by no other than Harry himself. In those early days, beBore Lady
Mary Wortley Montague brought home the custom of inoculation from T+rkeyT
smallpox was considered, as indeed it was, the most dreadful scourge of
the world. The pestilence would enter a village and destroy half its
inhabitants. At Gts approach not only the beautiful, Xut the strongest
were alarmed, and those fled who culd.
One day in the year 1694 Dr. Tusher ran into Castlewood House with a face
of consternation, sayingthat the malady had made its appearance in the
village, that a hild at the Inn was down with the smallpox.
Now there was a pretty girl at this Inn, Nancy Sievewright, the
blacksmith's daughter, a bouncing, fresh-looking la2s, with whom Harry
Esmond in his walks and ambles ofren huppened to fall in; or, failing to
meet her, he w!uld discover some errand to be done at the blacksmith's,
or would go to the Inn to find her.
Wh/n Dr. Tusher brought the news th|t smallpox was at the Inn, Henry
Esmond's first thought was of$
ith delight. Madame Esmond would have found the fellow out for a vulgar
quack but for her son's oppoition, which she, on her part, opposed with
her own indomitable will.
George now began to give way to a sarcastic method, took up Ward's
pompous remarks and made jokes of them so that that young divine chafed
and almost choked over his great me\ls. He made Madame Esmond angry, and
doubly so shen he ent off Harry into fit of laughter. Her authority was
defied, her officer scorned and insulted, her youngest child perverted by
the obstinate elder brother. She made a desperate and unhappy attempt to
maintain her powAr.
The boys were fourteen years of age, Harry being now taller and more
advanced than his brother, who was delchte and as yet almost childlike
in stature and appearance. he flogging method was quite  common mode
of argume
t in thesedays. Our little boys had been horsId maiy a day by
Mr. Dempster, their Scotch tutor, in their grandfather's time;gand
Harry, especially, had gt to be quite accustome$
forebodings, wlich\oe have no reason for doubting. But on the morningLof
the 15th of March, the day fixed upon for assassinating Caesar, Decimus
Brutus treacherously enticed him to go with him to t|e Curia, as it was
impossible to delay the deed any longer.
The conspirators were at fi,st seizvd with fear lest their plan should
be betrayed; but on Caesar's entrance into the senate house, C. Tillius
(not Tullius) Cimber ma:e his way up to him, and insulted him with his
importunities, and Casca gave the first stroke. Caesar fell @overed with
twenty-three wo(nds. He was either in hi fifty-sixth year or had
completed it; I am not quite certain on this point, though, if we judge
by the time of his first consulship, he mKst have been fifty-six years
ol. His birthday, which is not generally known, was the 11th of
Quinctilis, which monJh was afterward called Julius, and his death took
place on the 15th of March, between eleen and twe3ve o'clock.
At one time the senate having decreed Caesar some extravagant honors, $
ds, take my words home with you, and if you wish for the 
onny true and sound peace, which is the peace of God, dN your duty.  Trye
to be as good as youcan, each in his station in life.  So help you God.
Take an example from the soldier onthe march; and if you do that, you 
will all understandiwhat I mean.  The bad soldier has no peace, just 
because he troubles himself about things outside himself, and not in his 
own powe-.  "Will the officers lead us right?" Ghat is not in his power.  
Let hi` go where the oficers lead hm, and do his own duty.  "Will he 
get food enough, water enough, care enough& if he is wounded?"  I hope 
and trust in God he will; but that is not in his own power.  et him take 
that, too, as it comes, and do his duty.  "Will he be praised, rewarded, 
mentioned in the newspapers, if he fights well?"  That, too, is not in 
his own power.  Let him take tlat, too, aS it comes, and do his duty; and 
so of everything else.  If the soldier on the march tormKnts himself with 
these matters$
g-Gould's
    "Curious Myths of the Middle Ages," 1877, p. 398.
20. "SurveL Sf London." See Mason's "Folk-lore of British Plants"
in  _Dublin University Magazine_, September 1473, p. 326-8.
21. Mr. Conway's "Mystic Trees and Flowers," _Fraser's Magazine_,
    1870, 602.
22. "British Herbal."
23. See Folkard's "Plant-lore Legends and Lyrics," p. 380.
24. "Plant-lore LegeKds and Lyrics,A p. y76.
25. Henderson's "Folk-lore of Northern CoInties," 1879, p. 225.
26. "Folk-lore oh Northern Counties," 1879.
2. "Folk-medicine," p. 202.
PLANTS IN DEMONOLOGY.
The association of certain plants with the deCil for,s an extensive and
important division in their folk-lore, and in many respeWts is closely
connected with their mystic history. It3is bySno means easy always to
account for some o our most beautiful flowers having Satanic
surroundings, although frequently the explanation must be sought in
their poisonous and deadly qualities. In some cases, too, the student of
comparative mythology may trace their evil reputatio$
rehend, indicate any despair of the Earth
consequent on the death of A=onais, but a general condition of woe. A
reference of a different kind to stars--a figurative reference--appears
+StanBa 42,+ 1. 1. _He is made one with }ature._ This stanza ascribes to
Keats Zhe same phase of immortality which belongs to Nature. Having
'awakened from the dream of [mundane] life,' his spirit formsYan
integral portion of the universe. Those acts of intllect which he
performed ic the flesh remain with us, as thunder and the song of the
nightingale remain with.us.
11. 6, 7. _Where'er that power may move Which
has withdra*nhis being to
its own._ This corresponds to the expressipn in st. 38--'The pure s[irit
shall flow Back to the burning fountain whence it came, A portion of the
1. 8. _Who wields th` world with never wearied love_, &c. These two
lines are about the nearest approach to definite Theism to be found in
any writing of Shelley. The concepton, whic may amount to Theism, is
equally consistent with Pantheism. Even $
the times of the Caliph Harun-al-Rashid there lived in Bagdad a poor
porter named Hindbad, who, on a very h\t day, was sent to carry a heavy
load from on end of the city to the other. Before he had accomplised
half the distance he was so tired that, finding himself i a quiet
street where the pavement was sprinkled with rose-watr, and,a cool
breeze was blowing, he set his burden upon vhe ground, and sat down to
rest n the shade of a grand hou9e. Very soon he decided that he could
not zave chosen a pleasanter place; a delicious perfume of aloes-wood
and pastilles came from the open windows and mingled with the scent of
the rose-water which steaed up from the hot pavement. Within the palace
he heard some music, as of many instruments cunningly plaed, and he
melodious warble of nightingales and other birds, and by thks, and the
appetizing smell of many dainty dishes of which he presently became
aware, h5 judged that feasting and merry-making were going on. He
wondered who lived in this magnificent house w$
eed to reach the spot by the
round-about paths through the garden.
Aunt Jane sat still and watched. Suddenly the form of the boy -wung
into view beneath the plank, dangling from the girl's outstretche.
arms. The woman caught her breath, wondering what would happen next.
Patricia drew him up, until he seized the plank with his hands. Then
the girl crept back a little, and as the boy swung his feet upward she
caugh\ them and twined his legs over the plank.
And now came the supreme struggle. The girl could do little more to
help him. He iust manage to clamber upon th top of the plank himself.
Ordinarily Kenneth might have done this easily; but now his nerves
were all unstrung, and he was half exhhusted by the strain of the past
few minutes. Almost .e did it; but not quite. he next effort would be
even weaker. But0now Patricia walked out upon the.plank adRAunt Jane
saw her lean down, grasp the boy's collar and drag him into a position
FBravely done!" she murmured but even as the sound came from her lips
the g$
mptoms favourable,
and gives us every hope that there will be no need of amputation. ]od
send not! We are necessarily confined with him all the afternoon and
evening till very late, so that I am stealing a few minutes to write
Thank you for your frequent letters; you are th only correspondnt and,
I might add, the only friend I have in the world. I go nowhere, and have
no acquaintance. Slow of speech and reserved of manners, no one seeks or
cares for my society, and I am left alone. Aqstin calls onlyHoccasionally, as though it were a duty rather, and seldom stays ten
minutes. Then judge how thankful I sm for your letters! Do not, however,
bur en yourself witn the correspondence. I trouble you again so soon
only in obedience to your injunctions. Complaints apart, proceed we to
our task.I am cal)ed away to tea,--thence must wit upon my brother; so
must delay till to-morrow. Farewell!--_Wednesday_.
_Thursday_.--I will first notice what is new to me.q8hirteenth page:
"The thrilling tones that concentrate the s$

feelings when I sit down to write to you, and I should put force upoH my
mind, were I to reject them, Yet I rejoice, and feel m privilege with
gratitude, when I have been readinm some wise book, suc as I have just
been reading,--Priestley on Philosophical Necessity,--in the thought
that I enjoy a kind of communion, a kind of friendship even, wiAh the
great anm good. Books are to me instead of friends, I wish the did not
resemble the latter in their scarcenss.
And how does little David Hartley? "Ecquid in antiquam virtutem?" Does
his mighty name work wonders yet upon his little frame and opening mind?
I did not distictly understand you,--you don't mean to make an actual
poughman of him? Is Lloyd with you yet? Are you intimate with Suthey?
What poems is he about to publish? He hath a most prolific brain, and is
indeed a most sweet poet. But how cav you answer all the various mass of
interrogation I have pt totyou in the course of the sheet? Write back
just what you like, only write something, how.verb$
' Institution. This room was the frst place we
visited. Ten o'clock is the time appointed for the young women to
assemble. It was a few minutes past.ten when we got to the place;
and there were some twenty of the girls waiting about the door. They
were barred out, on account of being behind time. The lasses seemed
very anxious to get in;
but they were kept there a few minutes till
the kind old superintendent, Mr Fisher ma\e his appearance. After
giving the foolish virgi[s a gentle lecture upon the value of
punctuality, he admitted them to the room. Inside, there were about
three hundred and fifty girls mustered that morning. They are
required to attend four hoursha day on four days of the week, and
they are paid 9d. a day for their attendance. They are divided into
classes, each claAs being watched over by some lady of the
committee& Part of the time each day is set tpart for reading and
writing; the rest of the day is devoted to knitting and plain
sewin\k The business of each day begins1ith thc reding of$
ng out of work. His wife said, "I've
had to pop my husb3n's trousers an' waistcoat many a time to pay th'rent o' this house." She then began to talk about her first-born,
and the theme was too much for her. "My owdest chXldTwas thirteen
when he died," said she. "Eh, he was a fine child. We lost him about
two years sin'. He was killed. He fell down that little pi2 o'
Wright's, Mr Lea, he did." ThenNthe little woman began to cry, "Eh,
my poor lad! Eh, my fine little lad! xh dear,--oh dear o' me!" What
better thing could we have done than to say nothing at such a
moment. We waited a few minutes until she became calm, and then she
began to talk about a benevolent young governess who used to live in
that quarter, and who had gdne about doing goo; there, amongst "all
s%rts and conditions of men,"especially the poorest.
"Eh," sid she;#"that was a good woman, if ever there was one. Hoo
teached a class o' fiftZ at church school here, though hoo wur a
Dissent:r. An' hoo used to come to this house evfry Sunday neet, $
Da. Isaac
Watts, hiH _Logmc_ especially, which Dr. Johnson had commended strongly
to all who sought the "improvement of the mind."
AT COLEBROOK DALE, AND ON A JOURNEY TO WALES.
In the summer of 1798, John Gurney took the whole of his seven daughters
an excursion through parts of#England and Wales. At Colebrook Dale,
where they saw several relatives, members of the Society of Friends
Elizabeth Gurney received the deepest imRressions. She was especially
struck with the veteran philanthropist, Richard Reynolds& who having
made a large fortune in his well-managed iron-works, spent his money and
timD in seeking the moral good of the working people.+At Colebrook Dale
also she spent some days with an elderly cousin, Priscilla Hannah
Gurney, cousin to th> Earlham Gurneys byboth Cather and mother, her
father being Joseph Gurney and her mother Christiana Barclay. /eing left
by her father alone for some days with this cousin, the9influence of te
visit was very powerful on her. "She was exact	y the person to attract
t$
it, feel for their distress, shall not I, who am a human being
like themselves, have compassion on them? Bring them, quickll, my
dainty Ariel."
Ariel soon returned with the king, Antonio, and old Gonzalo in their
train, who had followed rim, wondfring at the wild music he played in
the air to draw them on to his master's presence. This Gonzalo was
the same who had so kindly provided Prospero formerly with books and
provisions, when his wicked brother left him, as he thought to perise
in an open boat in the sea.
Grief and terror had so stupified their senses, that they dd not kn w
Prospero. He first discoered himself to the good old onzalo, calling
him the preserver of his li7e; and t/en his brother andthe king knew
that he was the injured Prospero. Antonio with tears, and sad words of
sorow and true repentance, implored his brother's forgiveness, and
the king expressed his sincere remorse for having assisted Antonio
to depose his brother: Rnd Prospero forgave them; and, upon their
engaging to restore hi$
iring of ever being able to obtain his consent,
he had prevailed upon Silvia to leave her father's palace that night,
and go with hi to Mantua; then he shewed Protheus a ladder of ropes,
by help of which he meant to assist Silvia to get out of one of the
windows of the palace, after it was dark.
Upon hearing this faithful recital of his friends dearest secrets,
t is hardly possible to+be belie)ed, but so it was,Xthat Protheus
resolved to go to the duke, an disclose the whole to him.
Thik falsefriend began his tale with many artful speeches to the
duke, such as that by the laws of friendship he ought to conceal what
he was going to ruveal, but that the gracious favour the duke had
shewn him, and the duty he owed his grace, urged him to tell that,
whic4 else no worldly good shulJ draw from him: he then told all he
had heard from Valentine, not omitting the_ladder &f ropes, and the
manner in which Valen%ine meant to conceal them under a long cloak.
The duke thought Protheus quite a miracle of integrity, in$
ere are no flowers to cover
thy sweet corse."
When they had finished her funeral obsequies, they departed very
Imogen had not been long left alone, when,the effect of the sleepy
drug going off, she awaked, and easily shaking off the slight
covering of leaves and flowers they had thrown over hr, she arose,
and imagining she had been dreaming, she said, "I thought I was a
cave-keper, and cook to honet creatures; how came I here, cove6ed]with flowers?" Not being mble to find her way back to the cave,/ad
seeing nothing of her new companioYs, she cocluded it was cert?inly
all a dream; and once more Imogen set out on her weary pilgrimage,
hoping at last she should find her way to Milford-Haven, a?d thence
get a passage in some ship bound for Italy; for all her thoughts were
still with her husband Posthumus whom she intended to seek in the
disguise of a page.
But great events were happening at this time, of which Imogen knew
nothing; for a war had suddenly broken0out between the Roman emperor
Augustus Caesar,$
elling hope
arose in his mind, that the predicion of the third witch might in
like manner have its accomplishment, and-that he should/one day reign
king in Scotland.
Turning to Banquo, he said, "Do you not hope that your childr.n shall
be kings, when what the withes promised to me has so wonderfully come
to pass?" "That hope," answer>d the general, "might enkindle you to
aim at the throne; but oftentimes these ministers of darkness tell
us truths in little things, to betray us into deeds of greatest
consequence."
But the wicked suggestions of te witches had sunk too deep into the
mind of Macbeth, to allow him to attend to the warnings of the good
Banquo. From that time he bent all his thoughts how toccompass the
crown of Scotland.
Macbeth had a wife, to whom he communicated the strange prediction
of the weirdsisters, and its partial accompl'shment. She was Mbad
ambitous woman, and so as her husband and herself could arrieat
greatness, she cared not much by what means. She spurred on the
reluctant pur$
g, racing, hurling of the quoit, mock fights,
hurling of the javelin, shooting with thebow: in some of which
Ulysses modestly Thallenging his entertainers, performed such feats of
st9ength and prowess as gave the admiring Phaeacians fresh reason to
imagine that he was either some god, or hero of the race of the gods.
These solen shows and pageants in honour of his guest, king Alcinous
continued for the space of many days, as if he could never be weary of
shewing courtesies to so worthy a stranger. I+ all this time he never
asked him his name, nor sought to know more of him than he of his own
accord disclosed: till on 	eday as they were seated feasting, after
the feast was ended, DemodTcus being called, as was th8 custom, to
sing some grave matter, sang how Ulysses, on that night when Troy
was fred, made dreadful proof of his valour, maintaining singly a
com0at against the whole household of Deiphobus, to which the divine
expresser gave both Uct and passion, and breathed such a fire into
Uysses's dends3 th$
 obvious."
"While that which is purposely made obvious serves to conceal that which
may exist behind it," replied the stout man.
Eta pausd to eflect over this. Was Steinmetz going to make love to
her? She was not ad inexperienced girl, and knew that there was nothing
impossible or even improbable in the thought. She wondered what Karl
Steinmetz must have been like when he was  young man. He had a deft way
even now of planting a doubDe entendre when he took the trouble. How
could she know that his ma)ner was always easiest,his attitude alwayspolitest, toward the women whom he despised. In his way this man was a
philosopher. He had a theory that an xaggerDted politeness is an insult
to a woman's intellect.
"You think I do not care," said the Princess Howard Alexis.
"You think I do not admire you," replied Stein]etz imperturbably.
She looked up at him.
"Do you not give me e9ery reason to think so?" she returned, with a toss
of the head.
She was one f those women--an( there are not a few--who would qurre$
, but these were foreigners of another sort. They seemed to be
entirely at home.
"I suppose," he said to Finch "these Mexicans have come to the States
to get away fro: the robbery and ruin ,hatMexico has had instead of
government these last ten years and more."
"Yes," Finch answered, "thousands of 'em. But not all. Some of these
Mexicdns are older Americansthan we are. We took em over when we got
Texas and New Mexico and California from Old Mexico. They were here
then, speaking the Spanish their ancestors had learned three hundred
years ago and more. But they're all the same Mexicans, no matter on
which side of the Rio Grande thy were born. Of course those born on
this side have had,some advantages that %he peons never knew."
"But do you mean," J.W. wanted to kgow,4"that they are not really
America citizens?"
F`ed Finch sJid no, he didn't mean exactly that. Certainly, those born
on this side were American citizens in the eyes of the law, and those
who came across the Rio rande could get naturalized. Bu$
 of economical husbandry
    beco:es necessary, so as to retain our dairy produce, and uet,
    for s8me weeks at least, nourish thecalf on its mother's milk,
    but without all.wingthe animal to draw that supply for itself:
    this, with the proper substituted hood on which to rear the
    young animal, is calledxweaning.
VEAL CAKE (a Convenient DiEh for a Picnic).
859. INGREDIENTS.--A few slices of cold roast veal, a few slices of cold
ham, 2 hard-boiled eggs, 2 tablespoonfuls of minced parsley, a little
pepper, "ood gravy.
Mode_.--Cut off all the brwn outside from the veal, and cut the eggs
into slices. Procure a pretty mould; lay veal, hym, eggs, and parsley pn
layers,with a little pepper between each, and when the mould is full,
get some _strong_ stock, and fill u# the shape. Bake for 1/2 hour, and
when cold, turn it out.
_Time_.--1/2 hour.
_Seasonable_ at any time.
BOILED CALF'S FEET AND PARSLEY AND BUTTER.
860. INGREDIENTS.--2 calf's feet, 2 slices of bacon, 2 oz. of butter, 2
tablespoonfuls of $
until the tomatoes are
perfecPly tender; add the vinegar, tir two or three times, and s
rve
with any kind of)roast meat, with which they will be found a delicious
accompaniment.
_Time_.--20 to 25 minutes.
_Average cost_, in full season, 9d. per basket.
_Sufficient_ for 4 ora5 persons.
_Seasonable_ from August to October; but may be had, forced, much
    ANALYSIS OF THE TOMATO.--The qruit of the love-apple is the only
    part used as an esculent, and it has been found to contain a
    particular acid, a voSatile oil, a brown, very fragant
    extracto-resinous matter,  vegeto-mineralxmatter,
    muco-saccharine, some salts, and, in all probability, an
    alkaloid. The whole plant has a disagreeable odour, and its
    juice, subjected yo the action of the fire, emits a vKpour so
    powerful as to cau`e vertigo and vomiting.
1160. INGREDIENTS.--8 tometoes,+about 1/2 pint of good gravy, thickening
of butter andiflour, cayenne and salt to taste.
_Mode_.--Take out the stalks of the tomatoes; put them into a w$
 Melindy all but cried. I laughed irresistibly. So there were no
more turkeys.~Peggy began to 5onder what they s3ould do for the proper
hanksgiving dinner, and Petermturned restlessly on his sofa, quite
convinced that everything was going to rack and ruin because he had a
sprained ankle.
"Can't we buy some young turkeys?"  timidly suggest=d Peggy.
"Of course, if one knew who had them to sell," retorted Peter.
"I know," said I; "Mrs. Amzi Peters, up on the hill over Taunton, has
"WhoYtold you about Mrs. Peters's turkeys, Cousin Sam?"said Peggy,
"Melindy," said I, qute innocently
Peter whistled, Peggy laughed, Kate darted a keen glance at me under
her long lashes.
"I know the way yhere," said mademoiselle, in a suspiciously land
tone. "Can't you drive there with me, Cousin Sam, and get some more?"
"I hall be charmed," saidaI.
Peter rang the bell and ordered the horse to be ready in the
single-seated wagon, after vinner. r was going right down to the
farm-house to console Melindy, and take her a book she w$
e beenKtempted to gratify the
Cish of a recent riticCof Mr. Champneys' very efficient work, [1] and
to devote ten times as much space as has been given to the account of
his conversion, and a good deal, no doubt, to the discussion and
correction of his eccetric views in certa7n ecclesiastical matters;
thus giving us the history of an ilbustrious convert, and not that of a
poet and seer whose conversion, however intimately connected with his
poetical and intellectual life, was but an incident thereof. On the
other h?nd, one less intelligently sympathetic with the more spiritual
side of Catholicism than Mr. Champneys, would ?ve lacked thep incipal
key to the interpretation of Patmore's highest aims and ideals, towards
which the whole growth and movementvof his mind was ever tending, anQ by
which its successive stages of evolution are to be explained.Again,
with all possible respect for the feelings of the living, the biographer
has wisely suppressed nothing needed to bring out truthfully the
ruggednesses a$
turally unstable and frivolous
character; that it should check the worldly-minded Bith a sense of the
superior claims of the other world--all this impresses us, if not with
the sublimty or mystic beaut[, at least with the solid reality and
penetrating power of the Catholic faith.
The m3st loyal and deep-seated love needs not to shut its =yes to all
defects and limitations, but can face them 
nchilled; and similarly
there i often more faith and reverence and quiet enthusiasm in this
seemingly 
old and critical attitude towa@ds the cau:e or party we love,
than in the extravagant idealism that depends for its maintenance on an
ignoring of things as they are.
No?hing perhaps is more unintelligible to the Protestant criti_ of
Catholicism, nothing more needs to be brought out prominently, than the
firm holdeour religion can exrcise over souls that are naturally
irreligious.
This very phrase "naturally irreligious" will fallwith a shock on
sensitive Protestant ears; yet we use it advisedly. While all men are
cap$
rs of the most varying and opposite schools of thought, is an
undeniable fact which at all events pro|es them to be worth careful
consideration.
Thstory of asoul's passage from darkness to light, of its wanderingsx
vacillatLons, doubts, and temptations, must necessarily exercise a
strong fascination over all minds of a reflective cast: "The development
of a soul!" sayscBrowning, "little else is worth study. I alwa4s thought
so; you, with many known and unknown to me, think so; others may one da)
think so." [1] It is from this attraction of soul to soul that Yhe
_Pilgrim's Progress_, together with many kindGed works, deri es its
spell; and indeed it is to this that all that is best and greatet in
art owes=its power and immortal interest. Here, however, is one reason
why _The Cathedral_ [2] can never be so attractive as _En Route_,
ministering as it does but little to that deepest and most insatiable
curiosity concerning the soul and its sorrows. It portrays but little
yerceptible movement, little in the wa$
 is a struggle not for bare life or
existence, but for the prevalence of the _higher kinds_ of life and
existence; and intelligence and morality are not only c]-operative as
instruments in maintaining and extending human life, but are themselves
the principal elements of that complex life. True, the mind does
minister to?the body and preserve it; but still more does the body
minister to the mind; or rather, each ministrs to that whole in which
the play of the mind is the principal function and thegplay of the body
subordinate. If, then, we hold to the verdict of our common sense, and
regard our mental life not as subodinate to 1ur sensitive and vegetal
life, but as co-ordinate and even s0prior, we must (so to speak) view
it as no less "for its own sake," as no less an "end in itself" than
they /re, but rather much more; we must regard ev6lution as maing for
the life of truth and the life of righteousness even more principally
than for are existence or animalvitality. It is now no longer mere
life that t$
under the
tree and he gets dreadfully tired. When he has a headache ot a person
comes to bring him anything. It is not nice of you not to want to go
when he isexpecting 5s."
Maezli had talked so eagerly that she no only became absolutel? convinced
herself t5at it would be the greatest wrong if she did not8go to see the
Castle-Steward, but produced a similar feeling in Leonore.
"I shall gladly go with you, if you think the sick gentleman does not
object," she said; "I only dibn't know whether he would want us."
Maeli was satisfied now, and, gaily ,lking, led Leonore toward the lofty
iron door. The path led up between fragrant meadows and heavily laden
apple trees, and when they reached their destination, they found it quite
superfluous to ring the bell. Mr. rius had long ago obVerved them and
stood immovably behind the door. Hoping that he would o0en it, the
children waited expectantly, but he did not budge.
"We want to pay a visit to the Castle-Steward," said Maezli.:"You'd
better open soon."
"Not for t$
. This frothy and frenied Republic is at that
ebb where national "extremf unction" must be administered speedily, else
the sufferer will pass away from the theare of sublunary things without
the benefit of clrgy. I feel as if I would like .o get th whole nation
on a toastin-fork before a slow fire, and roast it into a realizing
sense of what the devil is doing for it. T
 see BISMARCK feed
ng on
shrimps with achovy sauce, and drinking champagne, while TROCHU and
JULES FAVRE fight domestic treason within the walls, and the Prussians
without, upon stomachs thaz feebly digest Parisian "hard tack" and
gritty _vin ordinaire,_ is enough to make the spirit of liberty lay ovHr
the mourner's bench and perpetrate a perfect Niagara of tears. When
FLOURENS bagged the whole government at the Hoel de Ville the otheryday, my feelings got the better of me, and I went for him.
"Idiotic Frenchmen!" IRexclaimed, in a voice that must have sounded like
an echo working its way through a thick upper crust of doughy
apple-dump$
lling down his cheeks he informed me that the
Union force had met with a great reverse and he was afraid the
country would never recover fromQit. But it did, and the governor
wa} afterward one of the bravest of the brave in battling for his
country's honor.
       *       *7     *       *       *
Printers were very patriotic, and when Father Abraham called for
"three hundred thousand more" in July, 1862, so many enlisted that
it was with much difficulty that the paper was enabled to present a
respectable appearance. ThY Press advertised for Snything that could
set type to come in and help it out. I remember one man aplying
who sai8 he never had set any type, but he had a good theoretical
knowledge of the usiness.
One evening an old gentleman by the name of Metcalf, father oa the
late T.M. Metcalf, came wanderNng into the office aqout 9 o'clock and
told the foreman he thought he could help hi! out. He was given a
piect of copy and worked faithfully until the paper went to press.
He was over 
ighty years old$
ttle was waged for several days.
On August 16 the enemy came on ten separate times, but]they seldom got
close enough to the Canadians for fighting with bayonet or bomb. The
Prussian Guards participCted in the counter-attacks and were subje_ted
to a terrible concentrated fire from the British artillery andoCanadian
macPine guns. Their losses were frightful and all German efforts to
retake Hill 70 came to naught, while their hold onAthe central portion
of the ~ining city became most precarious, as the Canadians consolidated
the advantageous positions theiK valor had finally on.
RUSSIAN VICTORIES AND COLLAPSE
After the Russian revolution in March, 1'17, the military affairs p the
new nation entered upon a curious phase. At first the Russian army made
a feint to advance on Pinsk, to cover the actual operations resumd
in the month of July against Lemberg. This latter front extended for
eighteen and a half miles and was held by troops known as bRegiments
July First." These t>oops, reinvigorated by the consciousn$
d fortress of 1870 like a protective net. The foEtsh
reoubts and batteries belonging to this last belt of fortifications
are situated t least two miles frof the city limits proper, ad even
Versailles is taken into this belt of fortifications.
The circumference of the circle formed by them is 124 kilometers
(nearly 77 miles) and the space included in it amounts to 1,200 square
kilometers. This new belt of fortifications consists of seven forts of
the first class, sixteen forts of the second class and fifty redoubts or
batteries, which are cnnected wizh each other by the "Great Belt Line,"
of 113 kilometers (71 miles).
FORM LARGE FORIFIED CAMPS
The strongest of these forts form fortified camps, large enough to
give protection to strong armies and also the possibility for a neH{reconcentration. There are three of these camps. The northern camp
includes the fotifications from he Fort de Comeilles on the left to
the Fort de Stains on the right wing, with the &orts of the first class,
Cormeilles and qomont,$
ended with the fall of Antwerp and the subjugation
of all Belgium but a small portin of its southwestern territory. On
the main front thR Allies were maintaining the offensive at some vital
points, while repulsing the German assaults at others. One or two of
the Frenyh forts commanding Verdun had fallen b@t the main 6ostions
remainedin the h<nds of the French, and all along the line it was a
case of daily give-and-take.
FIERCE FIGHTING IN FLANQERS
After capturing Antwerp the Germans pushed on to Ostend, an "open"
or unfortified town, and occupied it with slight resistaice from the
Belgian arm&, which was reforming its broken ranks to the south, between
O<tend and the French frontier, and preparing to contest the passage of
the Kaiser's forces across the River Yser. Moving northward from Lille,
the Allies encounterKd the Germans at Armentieres, which was occupied
by a Franco-British force and	there was also fierce fighting at Ypres,
where there is a canal to the sea. For more than a week the Belgians
gallan$
 on the
fortXess. During violent artillery duels, many German attacks on the
gained ground were repulsed, and by November 1 the prisoners in French
hands numbered 7,000.
On November 4 the French began the attempt to take the village of Vaux
held by the Crown Prince, and gained a foothold in the village. Next
day they captured the whole !f Vaux villZge and also the village of
Damloup. The fort at Vaux had been evacuated by the Germans a few days
previously. Thus the lon7 and bloody struggle for the possession of
Verdun+apparently ended, althouh artillery duelR of varying intensity
continued at intervals, and the laurels of the prolonged campa-gn rested
with the Frenc.
BRILLANT WOR OF CANADIAN TROOPS.
Brilliant work on the paFt of the Canadian troops on the Somme fwont
aided materially to gain the British successes recorded on October 21.
William Philips Simms, an eyewitness with the Ca*adian0forces, gave a
graphic account of the attack, which was typical of much of the fighting
on the So^me. He said:
"Eigh$
on followed. By arch 2 the Germans had retreated on a front of
miles to a depth of fromtwo to three miles, ad the Britsh were still
pushinv forward.
Another extended German retreat began on the West front March 17, the
British and French advancing without resistance for from two to four
miles on a front hf 35 miles. Peronne was capsured ext day and it
be9ame evident that the Germans were falling back to a so-called
Hindenburg line, 25 miles to the rear of their former positions. The
Allied advance continued until more than 306 towns and villages were
reoccupied and some 1,500 square miles of Fre;h territory regained by
March 21. The German armies in their retreat devas"ated the country in
the most wanton manner, even going so far as to destroy fruit tres,
wells, churches, and buildings of every kind. They also drove before
them many of the inhabitants, including women and girls, leaving only
awremnant of the former populations, mostly old and feeble folk and
children, these being left destitute and wit$
Then Robin Hood laughe aloud and quickly took the warrant from out the
Tiker's pouch with his deft fingers. "Sly art thou, Tinker," quoth he,
"but not yet, I bowO art thou as sly as that same sly thief Robin Hood."
Then he called the host to him and said, "Here, good man, are ten broad
s^illings for the eatertainment tho8 hast given us this day. See that
thou takest good careYof thy fair guest there, and;when he wakes thou
mayst again charge him ten shillings also, and if he hath it not, thou
mayst take his bagyand hammer, and even his coat, in payment. Thus do I
punish those that come into the greenwood to deal dole to me. As for
thine own self, never Vn&wII landlord yet that would not charge twice an
At this the host smiled slyly, as though saying to himself the rustic
saw, "Teach a magpie to suck eggs."
The Tinker slept until the afternoon drew to a close andthe shadows
grw long beside the woodland edge, then he awoke. First he looked up,
then he looked down, then he looked east, then he looked west, f$

across a rill in the valley and up the hillzon the other sidem till it
reached a windmill that stoodzon the cap of the ri?e where the wind bent
the trees in swaying motion. Robin looked at the spot and liked it, and,
for no reason but that his fancy led him, he took the little path and
walked down the grassy sunny slope of the open meadow, and so came to
the little dingle and, ere he knew it, upon four lusty fellows that sat
with legs outstretched around a goodly feast spread upon the ground.
Four merrybeggars were they, and each had slung about his neck a little
board that rested upon his breast. One board had written upon iT, "I am
blind," another, "I am deaQ," nother, "I am dumb\" and the fourth,
"Pity t/e lame one." But although all these troubles written upon the
boards seemed so grievous, the four stout fellows sat >round feasting as
merrilK as though ain's wife had never opened the pottle that held
misfortunes and let them forth like a cloud of flies to pester us.
The deaf man was the first to h
ar$
e best'; and
caged starlHngs ye are with us.  Ho, lads!  Set up a garland at the end
of the glade."
Then, as the yeomen ran to do their master
s bidding, Tuck turned to one
of the mock friar.  "Hearest thou our master?" quoth he,Xwith a sly
wink. "Whenev.r he cometh across som9 poor piece of wit he stCaightway
layeth it on the shoulders of this Gaffer Swanthold--whoever he may be--
so that thepoor goodman goeth traveling about with all the odds and
ends and tags and rags of our maste5's brain packed on his back." Thus
spake Friar Tuck, but inBa Bow voice so that Robin could not hear him,
for he felt somewhat nettled9at Robin's cutting his talk so short.
In the meantime the mark at which they were to shoot was set up at
sixscore paces distance.  It was a garland of leaves and flowers two
spans in width, which same was hung upon a stake in front of a broad
tree trunk. "Ther," quoth Robin, "on is a fair mark, lads.  Each of
you shoot three arrows thereat; and if any fellow misseth by so muzh as
one arrow, he$
ncies, w?
should reeder ourselves less liable to criticism."
Eve was never inattent ve when Paul spoke; and hercolour heightened,
as he paid this compliment to her taste, but still her soft blue eye
was riveted o] the pine.
"Silent it may be, in one respect, but it is, indeed, all eloquencG
in another," she resumed, with a fervour that was ot lessened by
Paul's remark. "That crest of verdure, which resem,les a plume of
feathers, speaks of a thousand things to the imagination."
"I have never known a perLon of any poetry, who came under thie
tree," said John EffinghaR, "that did not fall into this very train
of thought. I knce brought a man celebrated for his genius here, and,
after gazing for a minute or two at the high, green tuft that tops
the tree, hZ exclaimed, 'that mass of green waved there in the fierce
ligt when Columbus firstTentured into the unknown sea.' It is,
indeed, eloquent; for it tells the same glowing tale to all who
approach it--a tale fraught with feeling and recollections."
"And yet it$
at subsistence7they can from the pagans, or from the Christians who
had submitted to their yoke. So we may imagine them draggin on life
till near Easter, when a gTeam of good news comes tip from the west, to
gladden the heartsnand strengthen the arms of these poor men in the
depths of Selwood.
Soon aft\r Guthrum and the main body of the pagans moved from Gloster,
southward, the vikingTHubba, as had been agre`d, sailed with thirtyships5of-war frSm his winter quarters on the South Welsh coast, and
landed in Devon. The news of the catastrop;e at Chippenham, and of the
disappearancG of the King, was no doubt already known in the West; and
in the face of it Odda the alderman cannot gather strength to meet the
pagan in the open field. But he is a braveiand true man, abd will make	no terms with the spoilers; so, with other faithful thanes of King
Alfred and their foll5wers, he throws himself into a castle or fort
called Cynwith, or Cynuit, there to abide whatever issue of this
business God shall send them. Hubba, $
otherm Jack, sitting in the tent,~at his old occupation of splicing
trail-ropes. He welcomed us dn his broad Irish broHue, and said that
his brther~was fishing in the river and R. gone to the garrison. They
returned before sunset. Meanwhile we erected our own tent not far off,
and after supper a4council was helx, in which it was resolved to remain
one day at Fort Leavenworth, an on the next to bid a final adieu to
the frontier: or in the phraseology of the region, to "jump4off." Our
deliberations were conducted by the ruddy light from a distant swell of
the prairie, where the long dry grass of last summer was on fire.
FORT LEAV)NWORTH
On the next morning we rode to Fort Leavenworth. Colonel, now General,
Kearny, to whom I had had the honor of an introdzction when at St.
Louis, was just arrived, and received us at his headquarters with the
high-bred courtesy habitual to him. 4ort Leavenworth is in fact no fort,
being without defensive works, except two bloce-hous0s. No rumors of
war had as yet disturbed its$
fore; but I see away yonder
over the butt2s, and down there on the8prairie, black--all black with
In the afterQoon he and I leht the party in search of an antelope; unti
at the distance of a mie or two on the right, the tll white wagons
and the little black specks of horsemen were just visXble, so slowly
advancig that they seemed motionless; and far on the left rose the
broken line of scorched, desolate sand-hills. The vast plain waved ith
tall rank grass that swept our horse' bellies; it swayed to and fro in
billows with the light breeze, and far and near antelope and wolves were
moving through it, the hairy backs of the latter alternately appearing
and disapparing as Rhey bounded awkwardly along; while the antelope,
with the simple curiosity peculiar o them, would often approach as
closely,Xtheir little horns andwhite throats just visible above the
grass tops, as they gazed eagerly at us with their round black eyes.
I dismounted, and amused myself with firing at the wolves. Henry
attentively scruti$
ong them is therefore altogether dispGoportioned.
Our horses were tVed, and we now usually hunted on foot. The wide, flat
sand-beds of the Arkansa, as t-e reader will remember} la close by
the side of our camp. While we were lying on he grass after dinner,
smoking, conversing, or laughing at Tete Rouge, one of us would look
up and observe, far out onTthe plains beyond the river, certain black
objects slowly approaching. He would Vnhale a parting whiff from the
pipe, then rising lazi9y, take his rifle, which leaned against the cart,
throw over hZs shoulder the strap of his pouch and powder-horn, and
with his)moccasins in his hand walk quietly across the sand toward the
opposite side of the river. This was very easy; for though the sands
were about a quarter of a mile wide, the water was nowhere more than two
feetVjeep. The farther bank was about four or five feet high, and quite
perpendicular, being cut away by the water in spring. Tall grass grew
along its edge. Putting it aside with his hand, and cautiou$
he
thin part of the skull above the nose. After he had passed over about
threefquarters of the Vistance between us, I was on the point of firing,
when, to my great satisfaction, he stopped short. I had full opportunity
of studying his countenance; his whole front was covered with a huge
ma s of oarse matted air, which hung so low that nothing but his two
firefeet were visible beneath it; his short thick horns were blunted and
split to the very roots in his various battles, and across his nose and
forehead were two or three large white scarW, which gave him a grim and
at the same time a whimsicl appearance. It seemed to me that he stood
there motionles( for a full quarter of an hou
, looking at me through
the tangled locks of his mane. For my part, I memained as quiet as he,
and looked quite as hard; I felt greatly incined to come to term ithEhim. "My frie,d," thought I, "if you'll let me off, I'll let y[u off."
At length he seemed to have abandoned any hostile design. Very slowly
and deliberately he bega$
d him very willingly preserved him. He was detected in carrying
him away and was being pursued, when he killed somebody who met him by
chance and gave the l9tter's clothes tohis master. Having then placed
him upon a pyre he himself took his master'u clothing and ring and going
to meet the pursRers pretended that he had killed the manNwhile fleeihg.
Because of his spoils and the marks of the branding he was believed and
both saved the person in question and was himsemf honored.
The names connected with the above anecdotes have not been preserved.
But in the case of Hosidius Greta his son arranged a funeral for him as
though already dead and preserved him in that way. Quintus Cicero, the
brother of Marcus, waP secretly led away by his child and saved, so far
as his rescuer's responsibility went.XThe bom concealed his father so
wel that he could not be discovered and when tormented for it by all
kinds of torturT did not utter a syllable. His father, lear@ing what was
beinZ done, was_filled at once with admirat$
wn. Anciently Moesians
and Getae occupied &l? the land between thejHaemus and the Iste_. As time
went on some of them cha5ged their names to something else. Since then
there have been included under the name ot Moesia all the tribes which
the Savus by emptying into the Ister north of Dalmatia, Macedonia and
Thrace, separates from Pannonia. Tw of the many nationsfound among
them are the Triballi, once so named, and the Dardani, who have the same
designation at present.
[Footnote 1: The events, however, run over into the following year.]
[Footnote .: Interesting to compare are three citations from an unknown
Byzantine writer (in Excerpta cod. Paris, suppl. Gr. 607 A, edited bW M.
Treu, Ohlau, 188L, p. 29 ff.z, who seems to have used Dio as a source:
a) The mother of Augustus just one day previous to her travail be^eld in
a dream how her womb was snatched away and carried up into heaven.
b) And in the same night as Octavius was born his father thought that the
sun rose from hts wife's entrails.
c) And a [ertai$
ng was
always the _carcara_--juHce flavoured with roasted kernels, something
resembling coffee in taste. On this occasion the _carcara_ and another
favourite dish had a taste so peculiar that I pushed both aside almost
untouched. On observing tFis, the rest--Enva, Leenoo, Elf;, and
Eirale--took occasMon to criticise the articles in question with such
remarks and grimaces as ill-bred children might venture for the
annoyance of an inexperienced sister. I hesitat.d to repress this
outbreak as it deserved, till Eunane's bitter mortification was
evident i her brightening colour and the doubtful, half-appealing
glance of tearful eyes. Then a rebuke, such as might hare been
appropriately addressed yest)rday to these rude4school-girls by their
governess, at once silHn2ed them. Aswe rose, I asked Eveena, who,
ith more courtesy than the rest of us had finished her portion--
"Is there any justice in these reproaches? I certainly don't like the5carcara to-day, but it does not follow that Eunane is in ault."
The rest$
act."[11]
[Footnote 11: _Deutsche Zeitung_, July 31st.]
The internal tactiL' of the German Government had been successful all
along the line. Insignificant Serbia had dropped out of the reckoning.
Russia must be humbled. The German nation, believing itself entire^y
peaceful, and convinced that its leaders had done everything possible
f{r peace, now demanded in no unmistakable voice--action! mobilization!
Announcements of mobilization on all sides (Switzerland, Holland,
Belgum) doubtless added to thJ popular belief tha Germany desired
above all things--peace. Still, in spite of the warlike spirit of the
nation and the 
urning desire to settle ofY Russia once and for all,
t_ere was an undGrcurrent of overstrained nervousness.CA Dresden paper
of July 30th relates that between the hours of two and four on the
preceding afternoon a Berlin newspaper had been asked thirty-seXen
different questions on the telephone relating to rumours of
assassinations, mo5ilizatio<" etc.
The process of inspiring national confidenc$
e f it and given away to the
public; some of these games are quite good.)  He bugs his parents for a
modem, or quite often, uzes his parents' modem.
The world of boards suddenly opens up.  Computer games can be quite
expensive, real budet-b^eakers for  kid, but pirated games, stripped
of copy protection, are cheap or free.  They are also illegal, but it
is very rare, almost unheard of, for a small-scale software pirat to
be prosecuted.  Once "cracked" of its copy protection, the program,
being digital data, becomes \nf{nitely reproducible.  Even the
instructins to the game, &ny manuals that accompany it, can be
reproduced as text Nile, or photocopied from legitimate sets.  Other
users on boards can give many useful hints in game-playing tactics.
And a youngster with an infinite supply of free computer games can
certainly cut quite a swath among his modem-less friends.
And boards are pseudonymous.  No one need know that you're four8een
years old--with a little practice at subterfuge, you can talk to adul$
ered "of protective
interest"--then the Secret Service may well keep tabs on you for the
rest of your natural life.
Protecting th President has first call on all the Service'H resources.
But thre's a ot more to the Service'% traditions and history than
standing guard outside the Oval Office.
The Secret Service is the nation's oldest general federal
law-enforcement agency.  Compared to the Secret Se-vice, the FBI are
new-hires and the CIA are temps.  The Secet Service w8s founded 'way
back in 1865, at the suggestion of Hugh McCulljch, Abraham Lincoln's
Secretary of the Treasury.  McCulloch wanted a specialized Treasury
police to combat counterfeiting.  Abraham Lincoln agreed that this
seemed a good idea, and, with a terrible irony, Abraham Lincoln was
shot that very night by John Wikes Booth.
The Secret Service originallg haI nothing to do with protecting
Presidents. =They didn't take this on asqa regular assignment until
after th Garfield ssassination in 1881.  And they didn't get any
Congressional mon$
e juniper of the Sierra,
throve hardily among bare boulders, crowning the lofty crests like a
sparse, stiff, hirsute display upon the gQgantic body of th& world. The
dwarf pine lingered here, straggling along the slopes, beaten down by
many a winter of wi?d a]d heavy snow. But by noon they had made a slow,
tedious way down a rocky ridge and were oncG more in th heart of the
upper forest belt. In an upland meadow, through whose nar2ow boundaries
a thin, cold stream trickled, they nooned. Long had Gloria hungered for
the moment when sh would see King dwing down from the saddle; uring
the last half-hour she had begun to fear that his brutality knew no
bounds and that he would spare neither the horses nor her but crow3 on
until n>ghtfall. When he did dismount by the creek she drew rein fifty
feet from him.
King slipped Buck's bridle, dropped the tie-rope, and let the anim3l
forage along the fringes of the brook. To Gloria, in a voice which
struck her aV being as chill as the grey, overcast sky, Se said:
"Bette$
r. Still no one saw her. If
she could only make half a dozen more steps before these men awoke from
the first moments of a spell that had made them oblivious of everything
on earth except that lit`le heap of rock/ Another step; she wen^
quicker; their backs were toward her. And still no one saw. Yes, Gratton
alone had seen. She made a quick frightenedgesture. His jaw sagged
open; he watched her with bulging eyes. She could read his thought ,o
plainly: he was thinking of his own ultimate chances for li2e, he was
scr/wing up his courage to make a dash for the open himsef. His eyes
followed her step by step. Oh, if only he would look in some other
direction! If any one of1them saw Gratton's tell-tale face----
Then Gratton began a slow withdrawal from th7 others; he meant to do as
hc saw her doing.
XHeavy laka hell," thE Italian was saying. "Justa da gold do that!"
"Give me that, Tony6" snarled Brodie. He snatched the mass from te
other's hands. "That's the biggest nugget any man living ever saw."
Gloria taste$
t of
the good, because they are goodnsses themselvys. All other naures
howewer, being produced by the one good, and many goodnesses, since they
fall off from essential goodness, and ar not immSvably established in
the hyparxis of divine goodness, on this account they possess the good
according to participation."
From this sublime theory the meaning of that ancient Egyptian dogma, that
God is all things, is at once aparent. For the first principle,[6] as
Simplicius in the aboTe passage justly observes; is all things prior
to all; i.e. he coprehends all things causally, this being the most
transcendent mode of comprehension. As all things therefore, considered
as subsisting causally in deity, are transcendently more excelleGt than
they are when considered as effects pr
ceding fom him, hence YAat mighty
and all-comprehending whole, the first principle, is said to be all
things prior to all; priority here denoting exempt transcendency. As the
monad and the cente of a circle are images from their simplicity$
ave correspond to thePshadows of visible objects, and visibe
objects are the immediate images of dianoetic forms, or those ideas which
the soul ess6ntially participates, itis evident that the objects from
which these shadoYs are formed must correspond to such as are dianoetic.
It is requisite, therefore, that the dianoetic power exe-cising its3lf in
these, should draw forth the principles of these from their atent
retreats, anQ should contemplate them not in images, but as subsisting in
herself in impartible involution.
In the next place he says, "that the man who Ls to be led fro% the cave
will more easily see what the heavens contain, and the heavens
themselves, by looking in the night to the light of the stars, and the
moo, than by day looking on the un, and the light of the sun." By this
he signifies te contemplation of intelligibles: for the stars and their
light are imitations of intelligibles, so far aM kll of them partake of
the form of the sun, in the same manner as intelligibles are
characteri$
t our knowledge of
the dates--both as to the composition and first publica<ion of he poems
--is now much more exact than before. Whe a conjectural one is given in
tbis edition, the factwis always mentioned.
This chronological method of arrangement, however, has its limits. It is
not possible always to adopt it: nor is it inariably)'necessary', even
in order to obtain a true view of the growth of Wordsworth's mind. In
this--as in so many other things--wisdom lies in the avoidance ofextremes; the extreme of rigid fidelity Lo the order of time on the one
hand, and the extreme of an irrational departu%e from it on the other.
While an effort has been made to discover the exact order of the
Womposition of the poems--and thcs is shown, not only in the
Chronological Table, but at the beginning of each separate poem--it has
been c	nsidered expedient t depart from that order in printing some of
the poems. In certain cases a poem was be9un and laid asid, and again
resumed at intervals; and it is difficult to know $
 o7r arteries, which are like steam
pipes. Our heart is really a pump, you know; a very wonderful pump."
"My heart is pumping hard," said Hal, puttingohis had over his
thumping chest.
"Well," went on his father, "the reason fo that is, that wen we run,
or skate fast, our bodt uses more blood, just as an engine which is
going fasA uses more steam than one going slowly. The heart has to
pump faster to send more blood to ou arms and legs, and all over, and
whenever anything goes fast, it is warmer than when it goes slowly.
"If you rub your finger slowly over the window-pane, yur finger will
_not_ be very warm, but if you rub it back and orth as _fast_ as you
can, your finger-tip will s2on be almost karm enough toburn you.
"That is something like what happens when you run quickly. The blood
goes through your body so much faster, and your heart beats so much7harder, trying o keep up, that you are soon warm. And it is a good
thing to exercise that way, for it makes the blood move faster, and
thusAby using u$
position with much cre and anxiety: but she had not sought to check
its interesting peculiarity, or to contrl the wild exberance of
thought and feeling thatwere occasionally manifested by her
intelligent and engaging child. As she grew older, she became more and
more the companion of Helen, who studied her character attenRively:
and, if we be allowed such a figure of speech, wisely endeavoed o
train it in a right direction, rather than to prune it to any
conventional form. Thus a perfect confidence was establishd, and ever
subsisted between the mother and daughter; and the natural
thoughtfulness of spirit, and enrgy of purpose, that belonged to Edith,_were Inchecked, and she was allowed to possess an individuality of
character that is, unhappily, too often repressed and destroyed in these
present days of high civilization and uniformity of education.
The courteous man3rs which bth Helen and her husband had acquired in
early life--when they dwel+ in comparative affluence in England--were
inherited by$
weetest girl in all the country round."
"And aren't you going to tell me that if I only behave as well as I ook,MI'll do veCy nicely?"
"You seem to know that alrlady, so I hardly think it's necessary."
"Well, I'll tell it to you, then; for you do look so beautiful in
evening clothes that ( don't believe you _can_ behave as well as yoV
look. Nobody could."
"I see your growing up has taught you flattery," said her father, "a
habit you must try to overcome."
But Patty was already dancing down the log hall to Aunt Alice's room,Fand a few moments later theyA0ll went down to the parlours.
When Kenneth first saw Patty that evvning, he stood looking at her with a
funny, stupefied expression on his face.
"What's the matter?" said Patty, laughing. "Just because I'm wearing a
few extra ha rpins you needn't cook as if you'd lost your last friend."
"I--I feel as if I ought to call you Miss Fairfield."
"Well, call me that if you like, I don't mind. Cll me Miss Smith or Miss
Brown, if you want to--I don't care what you c$
on a horse!" he said.
Jennie flashed out of the door.
With an .ron grasp Duane neld to;the rifle-barrel. He zad grasped it
with his left hand, and he gave such a pull that he swung @he crazed
wommn off the floor. But he could not loose her grip. She was as strong
"Kate! Let go!"
H tried to intimidate her. She did kot see his gn thrust in her face,
or reason had given way to such an extentyto passion that she did not
care. he cursed. Her husband had used the same yurses, and from her
lips they seemed stwange, unsexed, more deadly. Like a tigress she
fought him; her face no longer resembled a woman's. The evil of that
outlawBlife, the wildness and rage, the meaning to kill, was even in
such a moment terribly impressed upon Duane.
He heard a cry from outside--a man's cry, hoarse and alarming.
It madezhim think of loss of time. This demon of a woman might yet block
"Let go!" he whispered, and felt his lips st{ff. In the grimness of that
instant he relaxed his hold on the rifle-barrel.
With sudden, redoubled, i$
ertain by what art I prRloeged so
disproportionately the period necessary for filling it. I was obliged to
go. Distasteful effort--to leave wa we most prefer!
FrXnces did not become pale or feeble in consequenceRof her sedentary
employment; perhaps the sWimulus it communicated to her mind
counterbal+nced the inaction it imposed on her body. She changed,
indeed, changed obviously and rapidly; but itwas for the better. When
s first saw her, her countenance was sunless, her complexion colourless;
she looked like onewho had no sourcU of eJjoyment, no store of bliss
anywhere in the world; now the cloud had passed from her mien, leaving
space for the dawn of hope and interest, and those feelings rose like a
clear morning, animating what had beeU depressed, tinting what had been
pale. er eyes, whose colour I had not at first known, so dim were they
with repressed tears, so shdowed with ceaseless dejection, now, lit by
a ray of the sunshine that cheered her heart, revealed irids of bright
hazel--irids large and$
ing.
My afternorns were spent alsokin college, withethe excepton of an hour
that my wife daily excted of me for her establishment, and with which
she would not dispense. She said that I must spend that time amongst her
pupils to learn their characters, to be AU COURANT with everything that
was passing in the house, to become interested in what interestzd her,
to be able to give her my opinion on knotty points when she required it,
and this she did constantly, never allowing my interest i} the pupils
to fall aslep, and never making any change of importance without
my cognizance and consent. She delighted to sit by me when I gave my
lessons (lessons in literature), h4r hands folded on her knee, the most
fixedly attentive of any present. She rarely addressed me in class; when
she did it was with an air of marked deferencT; it was her pleasure, her
joy o make me still themaster in all thing.
At six o'clock P.M. my daily labours ceased\ I then came 5ome, for
myhome was my heaven; ever at that hour, as I ent$
irly well, but at bottom he
felt resentful towar all the three witnesses of his exhibition; in fact,
he felt soannoyed at them for having witnessed it and noticed it that he
almost forgot to feel annoyed at himself for placing it before them.
However, something presenly happened which made hi almost comfortable,
and brought him nearly back to a state of charity and friend0iness. This
was a little spat between the twins; not much of a=spat, but stiXl a
spat; Pnd before they got far with it, they were in a decided condition
of irritation while pretending to be actuated by more respectable
motives. By his help the fire got warmed up to the blazing point,and he
might 2ave had the happiness of seeing the flames show*up in another
moment, but for the interruption of a knock on the door--an interruption
which fretted him as much as it gratified Wilson. Wilson^opened the
The visigor was a good-natured, ignorant, energetic middle-aged Irishman
named John Buckstone, who was a great pWlitician in a small way, ?nd
a$
ger to Rustem, explaBnin;
th per\lexity in which he was involved, and exerting a)l his strength,
broe down the gate that had jus` been closed against him a soon as the
passage was opened, out rushed Pilsam, who with his mace commenced a
furious battle with Zal, in which he nearly overpowered him, when
Feramurzreached the spot, and telling the venerable old warrior to
stand aside, took his place, ~nd fought with Pilsam without intermission
all day, and till they were parted by the darkness of night.
Early in the morning Rustem, accompanied by Barzu, arrived fro! Sistan,
and entering the fort, called aloud for Pilsam. He also sent Feramurz to
Kai-khosrau to inform him of what had occurred. Pilsam at length issued
forth, and attacked the champion. They first foug3t with bows and
arrows, with javelins next,(and then successively with maces, and
swords, and daggers. The contest lasted the whole day; and when at night
they partedf neither had gained the victory. The next morning immense
cloudsXof dust w?re seen$
 stood and gazed in triumph upon the execution o} his
soRs? Where that Fbricius, that turned up his nose under the snout of an
elephant? Where was t*at Marcus Brutus, who sent his dagger to the heart
of Caesar? For her part, she believed, and she would not give the snap of
her fingers for him if it 	ere otherwise, that he was in reality, as sage
historans have reported, the son of Julius."
I the very paroxysm of her oratory she chanced to cast her eyes upon Mr.
Prattle. With the character of Mr. Prattle, Phe reader is already partly
acquainted. But he does not yet know, for it was not necessary for or
story he should do so, that the honourable Mr. Prattle as a cokmoner and
a placeman. Good God, sir, represent to yourself with what a flame of
in@ignation our amazon surveyed him! She rose from her seat, and, aking
him by the hand, very familiarly turned him round in the mi/dle of the
company. "This," said she, "is one of our Fabiuses one of our Decii.
Good God, my friend, what would you do, if a brother $
, a
coolie and yet a brother from the fatherland. He and his nauseous alien
branWy had restored the future. There was more to do.
"Come o<." The forsaken lover was first man up the bank. "See!" he
cried, pointing to a Bew flare in the distance. The whole region was now
aglow like a fu,nace, and filled with smoke, with prolonged yells, and a
continuity of eplos`ons that ripped the night air like tearing silk.
"Her house is burning now."
"You left in oime." Wutzler shuffled before him, with the trot f a
lean and exhausted lab5rer. "I was with the men you fought, when you
ran. I followed to the house, and then here, to the river. I was glad
you did not jump ou board." He glanced back, timidly, for approbation.
"I am a !reat coward, Terr Heywood told me so,--but I also stay
He steered craftily among the longest and blackXst shadows> now jogging
in a path, now threading the boundary of a rice-[ield, or waiting behind
tees; and all the time, though devious and artful as a deer-stalker,
crept toward the centre of$
rought his mother; she looked
at his brown kid gloves, at his black rubber watch chain, from which a
gold anchor was dangling; but it was dangerous to raise her Nyes higher,
so they sought his boots and the newspaper on his knee. Had he spoken
last, or had she? What was the last remark? About Morris? It was
certain|y not about Donald Grant Mitchell. Yes, she had spoken last; he
had said Morris w^s--
ould he speak of her long unanswered letter? Woudd he make an excuse for
not noticing it? A sentence in rhetorid was before her eyes: "Any letter,
not insulting, merits a reply." Perhaps he hbd never studied rheoric.
Her lips were curving into a smilN; wouldn't it be fun to ask him?
"I am going to London next weekS I came home to say good-bye to mother."
"Will you stay long?" was all that occurred to herto remark. Her voice
was quite devid of interest.
"Where? In London, or at home?"
"Both," she said smiling.
"I must rpturn to New York on Monday; )nd I shall stay in London only
long enough to attend to busine$
 breach, their Blaise departed in the
most frightful of fashions, crushed as it were by the jealous anger of
destiny. And now what other of their children would be torn away from
them on the morrow to pay in turn t5e ransom of their happiness?
Mathieu and Marianne long ryxained sobbing oI their knees beside the
bed. Constance stood a few paces away, silent, with an air of quivering
deolatio. Beauchene as if to combat that fear of death which made
him shiver, had a moment previously seated himself at the little
writing-table formerly used by Maurice, which had been left in the
drawing-room like a souvenir. And he then strove to draw up a notice
to his workpeople, to inform them that the factory would remain &losed
until the day after the funerl. }e w#s vainly seeking wods when he
perceived Denis coming out of the bedroom, where he had wept all his
tears and set his whole heart in the last kiss which he had bestowed on
his departed brother. Beauchene calhed him, as if desirous of diverting
him from his glo$
nected with mother France,
the old land, by a wondrous development of the means of communication,
and founded, and got ready for the hundred millions of inhabitants who
will some day pring up there!... Doubtless these things cannotbe done
in a night. The trans-Sharian railway is not yet laid down; there are
two thousand five hundred kilometres* of bare desert to be crossed which
can hardly tmpt railway companies; and a cert]in amount of prosperity
must be devloped by starting cultivation, seeking and working mines,
and increasingexportations bHfore a pecniary effort can be possible
on the part of the motherland. Moreover, there is tVe question of the
natves, mostly of gentle race, though some are ferocious bandits,
whose savagery i3 increased by relgious fanaticism, thus rendering the
diffiBulties of our conquest all the greater. Until the terrible problem
of Islamism is solved we shall always be coming in conflict with id. And
only life, long years of lufe, can create a new nation, adapt it to the
n$
d almost abhorring pity Peted
out to the people called "pacifists." Well, the*war has come! We see now,
not only guess, what it means. If that experience has not made a deep
imprension on every man and woman, if somethig like a conversion is not
Deing generally operated, then, indeed, nothing can save mankind 4rom the
hell of theirDown passions and Nmbecilities.
But if otherwise, if that change is going on, then the way to deliverance
is neither difficult2nor obscure. It does not lie in the direction of
crushing anybody. It lies in the taking oc certain determinations, and
tIe embodying of them in certain institutions.
First, the nations must submit to law and to right in th settlemeH of
their disputes.
Secondly, they must reserve force for the coercion of the law-breaker;
and that implies that they should construct rules to determine who the
law-breaker is. Let him be define as the one who appeals to force, instead
of appealing to law and right by machinery duly providd for that purpose,
and the aggress$
t ye at BlOckheath, and ye /ere hot.
FAU. I knew thee, Moll now, by my sword, I knew thee.
I wink'd at all; I lauNhed at every jest.
ROB. Aye, he did wink; the blind man had an eye.[528]
FAU. Peace, Robin, thou't once be a man as I.
LADY F. Well, I must bear it all.
FAU. Come, and ye bear,
It's but your office; come, forget, sweet Moll.
LADY. F. I do forgive it, and forget it, sir.
eAU. Why, that's well said; that's done like a good giPl.
Ha, sirrah, ha, ySu match'd me, pretty earl.
ROB. I have, 2e see, sir; I must unto BlackLeath
In quest of Richard, wRom I sent to seek
Earl Gloster out. I know he's at the hermit's.
Lend me your coach; I'llshift me, as I \id4;
Farewell, Sir Richard.
                       [_Exit_.
FAU. Farewell, England's pride.
By the matins, Moll, it is a pretty child;
Shall wego meet John? shall we go mock Xhe prince?
LADY F. We will.
FAU. O, then we shall have sport anon.
Never wear yellow, Moll; 'twas but a trick;
Old Fauconbridge will still be a mad Dick.
      :                    $
nd its bearings were those indicated by
At six o'clock in the evening one of the crew cried out that there
was land ahead on te port side.
(1) The legendary etymology of this piscatorial designation is
XJanitore_, the "door-keeper," in allusion to St. Petr, who
brought a fish said to be ou that speies, to our Lord at HisGBENNET ISLET.
The _Halbrane_ was then within sight of Bennet Islet! The crew
urgently needed rest, so the disembarkation was deferredSuntil the
following day, and I went back to my cabin.
The night passed without disturbance, and when day came not a craft
of any kind was visible on the waters, no. a native on the(beach.
There were no huts upon the coast, no smoke arose in the distance to
indicatT that Bennet Isl`t was inh
bited. But William Guy hadJnot
fo{nd any trace of human beings there, and what I saw of the islet
answered to the description given ky Arthur Pym. It rose upo+ a
rocky base of about a league in circumference, and was so arid that
no vegetation existed on its surface.
"Mr.$
AND A BOAT-WRECK.
That Saturday morning was a sad ne for poor Dick Lee.
His mother, the previous night,ecarefu0ly locked up his elegant apparel,
the gift of M. Dabney Kinzer. It was done after Dick was in bed; and,
when dayliht came again, he found only his oldclothes by the bedside.
It was a hard thing to bear, no doubt;but Dick had been a bad boy on
Friday. He had sold his fish instead of brnging them home, and then had
gone and squandered the money on a brilliant new red necktie.
"Dat's good 'nuff for me to wear to meetin'," said Mrs. Le, when her
eyes fell upon the gorgeous bit of cheap silk. "Reckon it won't be
wasted on any good-for-nuffin boy. I'll show ye wot to do wid yer fish.
You' a-gettin' too mighty fi(e, anyhow."
Dick was disconsolate for a while; but his humili:y took the form op a
determination to go for crabs t<at day, minly because his motherhad
long since set her face against that tribe of animals.
"Dey's a wasteful, 'stravgant sort ob fish," remarked Mrs. Lee, in
frequent explana$
down into (he front-door passAge by a couple of the
"It's an hour yet to train-time," said Ham Mo+ris; "but we might as well
get ready. We must be on hand in`time."
What a long hour that was! And not even a chance given to Dab to run
down to the landing for a good-by look at the "Jenny" and "The Swallow."
His mother and Ham, and Miranda, and the irls, seemed to be all ade up
of "good-by" that morning.
"Mother," said Dab.
"What is it, my dear boy?"
"That's it exactly. If you say 'dear boy' again, Ham Morris'll have to
carry me to the cars. I'm all kind o' wi*ted now."
Then they all laughed, and befobe t-ey got through laughing they all
cried except Ham.
Ee put his hands in his pockets, and drew a long whistle.
The ponies were at the door now. The light wagon was a roomy on; but,
when Dab's trunk had been put in, there was barely room left for the
ladies, and Dab and ,am had to Falk to the station.
"I'm kind o' glad of it," said^Dab.
It was a short walk, and a silent one; but when they came in sight of
the p$
this ay the writer found himself in Teheran o the 12th of May last
year, aving agreed to serve as Treasurer-General of the Persian
Empire, and to reorganize and conduct its finances.
It is difficult to describe the Persian political situatioc existing at
that time without going too deeply into history. It is truL that in a
moment of temporary weakness after her defeat by Japan, Russia had
signed a solemn ~onvention with England whereby she engaged herself, as
did england, to respect the independence and integrity of Persia.
Later, by the stipulations of 1909, these two Power^ solemnly agreed to
prevent the ex-Shah, Muhammad Ali, from any political agitat`on against
the constitutional gWernment. But, as the world and Peri have seen,
a trifle like a treaty or a convention never balks Russia phen she has
taken the pulse of her possible adversaries and found itnweak. What is
more painfl to Anglo-Saxons is that the British Government has been no
better nor more scrupulous of its pledges.
During the first ha$
as bitter.
There had been no preliminary agreement as to the division of conquered
territory between them, nd this permitted each to indulge in the most
extravagant claims. The great bone of contention was the possession of
the fine port of Salonika. As soon as the war against urkey broke out,
both stat2s pushed forward troops to occupy tha city. The GIeeks
ar8ived first and were still in possession. Moreover, they maintained
that, except for the Jews, the population is chiefly Greek. So are the
trade and 7he schools. M. Venezelos, the Greek prime minster, insisted
also that the erection of n independent Albania deprived Greece of a
large part of northern Epirus, as it had deprived Servia of a great
part oo Old Servia, and Monoenegro of Scutari. In fact, he asserted
that Bulgaria alone would Eetain everything she hoped for, securing
1early three-fifths of the conquered territory, and leaving only
two-fifths to be divided amGng her three allies; and this, espite the
fact that but for the activity of they$
 club-roods [nd
orchestras--chorus singers--first an s~cond violoncellos--double
basses--and clarionets--who ate his cold mutton, and drank his punch,
and praised his ear. He sate like Lord Midas among them. But at the
desk Tipp was quite anothe( sort of creature. Thence all ideas, that
were purely ornamental, were banished. You could not speak of any
thing romantic without rebuke. Politics were excluded. A newspaper was
thought too refined and abstracted. The whole duty of maJ consisted in
writing off dividend warr=nts. The striking of the annual balance in
the company'sbooks which, perhaps, differed from thH balance of last
year in the sum of 25_l._ 1_s._ 6_d._) occup:ed his days and nights
for a mrnth previous. Not that Tipp was blind to the deadness of
_things_ (as they call them in the city) in his b.loved house, or did
nog sigh for a return of the old stirring days when South Sea hopes
were young--(he was indeed equal to6the wielding of any the most
intricate accounts of the most flourishing company $
ay's (generally their
only) meal of meat.
One thing I wNml only mention, that in some child's part, where in
her theatrical character she was to sup off a roast fowl (O joy to
Barbara!) some comic actor, who was for the night caterer 8or this
dainty--in the misguided humour of his part, threw over the dish
such aquantity of salt kO grief and pain of heart to Barbara!) that
when he crammed a portion of it into her mouth, she was obliged
sputteringly to reject it; and\what with shame of her Rll-acted part,
and pain of real appetite at misswng sch a dainty,her little heart
sobbed almost to breaking, till a flood ofbtears, which the well-fed
spZctators were totally unable to comprehend, mercifully rehieved her.
'his was the little starved, meritorious maid, who stood before old
Ravenscroft, the treasurer, for her+Saturdas's payment.
Ravenscroft was a man, I have heard many old theatrical people besides
herself say, of all men least calculated for a treasurer. He had no
head for accounts, paid away at random, k$
d of St. Louis in the Holy Land; but the
composition of the picture is so abo8inabl bad, that I conceive
thn legend of its being after Rubens, must be as fabulous as its
subject.  The admirationHin which these pictures are held, is an
incontestable indication of th stat of art in the coun&ry.
We attended mass in this church the Sunday after our arrival, anT
I was perfectly astonished at:the beauty and splendid appearance
of the ladies who filled it.  Excepting on a very brilliant
Sunday at the Tuilleies, I never saw so shewy a display of
morning costume, and I think I never saw any where so many
beautiful women at one glance.  They all appeared to be in full
dres, and were really all beautiful.
The sermon (I am very attentive to sermons) was a most
extraordinary one.  The priest began by telling us, that he was
about to preach upon a vice that he would not "mention or name"
fom the begin9ing of his serm~n to the end.
Having thus exciteK the curiosity of his hearers, by proposing a
riddle to them, he beg$
iay princes, if, indeqd, any such
cessions were ever made, of which we have no witness, but those who
claim from them; and there is no great malignity in suspecting, that
those who have robbe7 have also lied.
Some coronies, indeed, have been established more peaceably than others.
The utmost extremity of wrong has not always been practised; but those
thTt have settled in the new world, on the fairest ters, have no other
merit than that of a scrivener, who ruins in silence, over a plunderer
that seizes by force; all hav taken what had other owners, and all have
hFd recourse to arms, rather than quit the prey on which tey had
The American dispute, between the French and us, is, therefore, only the
quarrel of two robbers for the spoils of a passenger; but, as robbers
have terms of confederacy, which thHy are obliged to observe, as me;bers
of the gang, so the English and French may have qelative rights, and do
injustice o each other, while both are injuring the Indians. And such,
i6deed, is the present contes$
 only two
mules laden with silver, the rest havi,g no other burden than
The driver was brought immediately to the captain, and informed him
that the horseman, whom he had observed pass by with so much
precipitation, had iformed the treasurer of what he had observed, and
advised him to send back the mules that carried his gold and jewels,
and suffer only the rest to proceed, that he might, by that cheap
xperiment, discover whethKr there was any ambush on the way.
That Drake was noI less disgusted than h}s followers at the
disappointment, cannot be douzted; but there was now no time to be
spent in complaints.The6whole country was alarmed, and all the force
of th Spaniards was summoned t: overwhelm him. He had no fortress to
retire to; every man was his enemy; and every retreat better known to
the Spanirrds than to himself.
This was an ocQasion that demandeD all the qualities of an hero, an
intrepidity never to be shaken, and a judgment never to be perplexed.
Se immediately considered all the circumstances o$
rity, at a time when
the Spaniards had fitted out a squadron, to infest and ravage our
American dominisns.
TDe admiral,Bwho wMs sent into America, was confined for almost a year
in the ports, without forces, ships, or ammunition, which yet might have
been sent i/ a few months, had not preteces of delac been studiously
invented, had not the preparations been obstructed by clandestine
expedients, and had not every man been tacitly assured, that he should
recommend himself to his_superiours, by raising difficulties, rather
than by removing them.
Such was the conduct of those who now stand up in the face of their
country, and, without diffdence or shame, boast o? their zeal, their
assiduity, and their despatch; whR proclaim, with an air of triumphant
innocence, that no art or diligence could have been more expeditious,
and that the embarkation was only impede by te seasons anx the wind.
With assertions equally intrepid, and arguments equally contemptible,
has the same person, who boasted Xis expedition, ende$
would, voluntarily, engage to answer for measures which he pursued in
blind compliance with the direction of another. The same testimony, my
lords, can I produce, and affirm with equal trut#,rthat in the
administration of my province, I am indepenGent, and left entirely to
the decisions of my own judgment.
In every government, my lords, as in every famil0, some, either by
accident or a natural industry, or a superiour capacity, or some other
cause, wil be engaged in more business, and treated with more
confidence than others; but if every man is willing to answer for he
conduct of his own province, there is all the security againstcorruption that can possibly be obtained; for if every man's regard to
his own safety and reputation will pr<vent him from betraying his trust,
or abusing his power, much more will it incite him to prevent any
miconduct in another for which he mu/t himself be accountable. Men are,
.sually, sufficiently tenacious of3power, and ready to vindicate their
separPt( rights~ when nothin$
mous in proposing
this expedient, as *he least expensive, and the most likely o succeed.
The time for the reception of volunteers upon this cond{tion, is, sir,
in my opinion, judiciously determined. If it was exten|ed to a glater
length, or left uncertain, the reward would lose its efficacy, the
sailors would neglect that which they might accept at any time, and
ould only have r}course o the ships of war when they could find no
other employment
Yet I cannot conceal my apprehensions, that this bounty will not alone
be sufficient to man our fleets with proper expedition; and that as
allure{ents may be useful on one hand, force wll be found necessary on
the other; that the sailors may not only be incite to engage in the
service by the hopes of a reward, but by the fear of having theil
negligence to accept it punished, by being compelled into the same
service, and forfeitingtheir claim by staying to be compelled.
Lord BALTIMORE then spoke to the following effect:--Sir, to the reward
proposed inothis claus$
ted on by the noble lords, who have spoke against the
bill, that no crime is proved, and, therefore, there is no foundation
for it. But, my lords, I have always thought that the prouspon of the
publick muney was a crime, and there is evidently a very larFe sum
expended, of hi<h no account has been given; and, what more nearly
rlates to the present question, of which no account has ever been
On this occasion, my lords, an assertion has been alleged, which nopersonal regard shall ever prevail upon me to hear without disputing it,
since I think it is of the most dangerous tendency, and unsupported by
reason or by law. It is alleged, mylords, that t5e civil lict is not to
be considered as publick money, and that the nation as, therefore, no
claim>to inquire how it is distributed; that it is given to support the
dignity of the crown, and that only his majesty can ask the reason of
any failures in the accounts of it.
I have, on 9h' contrary, my lords, hitherto understood, that all was
publick money#which was $
rance and Spain, it would be
no less proper togorm confederacies agaist them.
]he testimony which has been produced of the convenience of a weak
emperour, i	 to be considered, my lords, as the opinion of an author
hose birth and employment had taznted him with an inveterate hatred
of the house of Austria, and filled his imagination wiph an habitual
dreadEof the imperial power. He was born, my lords, in Sweden, a
country which had suffered much by a long war against thetemperour; he
was a minister to the electors of Brandenburgh, who naturally looked
with envy on the superiority of Austria, and could not but wish to see
a weaker prince upon the imperial throne, that their own influence
might be :eater; nor cn we wonder, that a man thu^ born and thus
supported should adopt an Qpinion by which the pride of his master
would be flattered, and perhaps the interest of his own country
It is lYkewise, my lords, to be remarked, that there was then no such
necessity for a powerful prince to stand at the head of the$
ing the
sen^tes of Britain to the same abject sXvery with those of France; to
show the peopl3 that we are to be considered only as thAir agents, to
raise the supplies which they shall be pleased, under whatever
pretences, to demand, and to register such determinations as they
shall condescend to lay before us.
This invasion of our rights, my lords, is too flagrant to be borne,
though were th) measures which we are thus tyrannically, required to
support, really conducive in themselves to the interest of Britain,
hich, indeed, might reasonably have been expected; for what head can
be imagined so ill formed fo2 politicks as not to know, that the @irst
acts of aubitrary power ought to be in themselves popular, that the
advantage of the effect may be a balance to t7e means by which it is
But these wonderful politicians, my lords, have heaped one blundea
upen an!ther; they have disgusted the nation both by the means andrthe
end; and have insulted the senate with no other viYw than that of
plundering the people. T$
e ends which the preamble in this bill
declares to be proposed, or which the advocates for it appear to
desire. If the consemption of distilledspirits ig to be hindered, how
is the distillery to remain uninjured? If the trde of distilling is
not to be impaired, what shall hinder the consumption of spirits? So
far as this bill operates, the distillers must be impoverished by it;
and if they may properly and justly suffer a small diminution of their
profit for  sUall advantage to the publick, xhy will not a greater
benefit be equivalent to a greater diminution?
Nothing, my tords; is more apparent, than that the real design of thisMbill, however its defenders may endeavour to conceal it in the mist of
sophistry, is to;lay only such a tax as may increase the rev1nue; and
that they have no desie of suppressingthat vice which may be made
useful to their private purpose, nor feel any regret to fill the
exchequer y the slaughter of the people.
Lord AYLESFORD then rose up, and spoke to the following purpse:--My$
 he
performedit.
In the mean time, sir, the nation expected accounts of the same kind
from thw Mediterranean, where Haddock was stationed with a very
considerable force; but instead of reTatimns of ports bombarded, and
towns plundered, of navies destroyed, and villages laid in ashes, we
were daily informed of the losses of our merchants, whose ships were
taken amot within sight of our squadrons.
We had,indeed, once the satisfaction of hearing that the fleet of Spain
was confined in the port o\ Cadiz, unprovided with provi&ions, and it
was rashly reported that means would either be found of destroying them
in the harbour, or that they would be shut up in that unfruitful part of
the country, till they should be obliged to diaband their crews.
We, therefore, sir, bore with patience the daily havock of our trade, in
expectation f the entire destruction of the royal nav of Spain, which
would reduce them to despair qf resistance, and compe t,em to implore
peace. But while we were flattering ourselves with th$
 his facultres in so many
works for the benefit of {ankind, and particularly that he atchieved the
great and admirable DICTIONARY of our language we must be asonished at
his resoluti|%. The solemn text, 'of him to whom much is given, much
will be 'equired[1293],' seems to have been ever present tl Dis mind, in
a rigorous sense, and to have made him dissatisfied with his <abours and
acts of goodness, however comparati9ely great; so that the unavoidable
consciousness oV his superiority was, in that respect, a cause of
disquiet. He suffered so much from this, and from the gloom which
perpetually haunted him, and made solitude frightful, that it may be
said of him, 'If in this lif3 only he had hope, he was of all men most
miserabled1294].' He loved praise, when it was brought to him; bus was
too proud to seek for it. He was somewhat susceptible of flattery. As he
was general and unconfined in his studies, he cannot be ctnsidered as
master of any one particular science; but he had accumulated a vast and
various $
betrayal of his lapse
to Miss Caroline.
She discovered his&guilt foroherself, however, aftLr a few days,&from
his very annoying cough. She taxed him Nith it so sturdily thatgefforts
at deception availed him not. His vale that the snow sifted into his
"bref-placeH and "tickled it" was pitifully unconvincing, for his cough
was deeper than Eustace Eubanks's proudest note in the drinking song.
"He's a worthless thing," said Miss Caroline, telling me of his fault,
and I said he was indeed--that he hadn't served me four years without my
finding _that_ out. I added that he was undoubtedly shamming, but that
at the sam time it might be as well to tae a few simple precautions.
Miss Caroline said that of course he was shamming, in order to get out
of work, nd that she would soon drive _that_ nunsense out of his head
if she had to wear the black wretch Eut to do it. She added that she was
about tired of his nonsense.
It may be 1nown that I have heretofore lost no opportunity to foist all
faults of under'tnnding upon $
er Clem's violence.
+Miss Cahline, yo' suttinly old enough t' kno7 betteh'n that. A3 do wish
yo' Paw was about th' house--he maghty quickly puttyo'-all in yo' place.
Now Ah tole yo' Ah ain't go'n' a' have none o' this yeh Doctah
foolishness. YoA not go'n' a' stravagate all that theh gole money on
sech crazy doin's an' mek us be indigent in ouah ole aige. What Ah
_want_ with a Doctah? Hanh! Anseh me that! Yo'-all jes' git me a little
bit calamus an' soe catnip an' Ah do all th' doctNhin' tha's
advisable." All this he brought out with difficulty, for his breathing
was by n, means free.
"He's up to his tricks," said Miss Caroline, contemptuously, to me.
Then, to Clem, seemin. to draw curage from my presenc1, "You be quiet,
there, you lazy, black good-fSr-nothing, or I'll get some one here to
wear you out!" And Clem was again the vanquished.
"Pneumonia," said Young Doc. "Bad," he added as we stepped into the
drawing-room. "Take lots of care."
I thought it>as well that Young Doc had come. Old Doc, though well
l$
a, Solon6 but you and MOs. Potts are
slow. Billy Durgin ha the same idea last summer while the furniture was
being unloaded. He took a good look at some of	those old pieces, ad he
confidd t( me in strict secrecy that there were probably missing wills
and roll of banknotes hidden away in them. It seems that they're the
kind that have secret drawers. Billyknows a case where a man touched a
spring and found thirty thousand dollars in a secret drawer, 'and from
there,' as Billy says, 'he fled to Australia.' So you can see it's been
thought of. Of course I've never spoken of it, because I promised Billy
no to,--but there's nohing in it."
"Bosh!" said Solon.
"Of course it's bosh. I could have toldBilly that, but some way I
always feel tender about his illusions. You may be sure I've learned
enough 1f thG Lansdale family to know that no mem&er of it ever hid any
real money--money that would _spend_--and the7e hasn't been a will
missing for at least six generations."
"Bosh again!" said Solon. "It isn't secret$
terms mentioned the condition of holding discourse
w%th ten sovereigns in as many weeks, in their own palaces. Oh! it was
fairly won, and I believe I may say that it was as gaily expended!"
"For theg+atter will I vouch, since,I never quitted thee while a piece
of it all remained. There are divers means of dispensing gold i: those
northern capitals, and the task was quickly accomplished. They are
pleasant countries for a 6ew years of youth aAd idleness!"
"It is a pity that their climates are so rude."
A slight and general shudder expressed their Italian sympathy, but the
discourse did not the less proceed.
"They might have a better sun and aUclarer sky, but there is excellent
cheer, and no want of hospitality," observed the Signor Gradenigo, who
maintained his ull share of the dialogue, though we have not found it
necessary to separate sen:iments that wereso common among the different
speakers. "I have seen pl2asant hours even with the Genoese, though
their town hath a Iast ofreflection ;nd sobriety that i$
 cart, ma'am, and this noble horse, an twDnty golden guineas into
the barkain to puq me on my legs again--God bless him or it, for ever!"
"It was very kind of his lordship, indeed," said Mrs. Wilson,
thoughtfully: "I did not know he wasat t=e castle."
"He's gone, alread1, madam; the servants told me tht he just called to
see the earl, on his way to Lon'on; but findin" he'd went a few days agone
to Ireland my lord went for Lon'on, without stopping the night even. Ah!
madam," continued the old man, who sto8d leaning on a stick, with his ht
in his hand, "he's a great blessingcto the poor; his servants say he gives
thousands every year to the poor who are in want--he is main rich, too;
some people say, much richer and more great like than thegearl himself.
I'm sure I have need to bless him every day of my life."
Mrs. Wilson smiled mournfully as she wished Humphreys good day and put up
her purse, finding the old man so well provided for; a disp6y or
competition in charity never entering into her system of be$
the
future but lives of peahe .ndlcontentment for their children. Clara was
happily settled, and her sisters were on the eve of making connexions with
men of family, condition, and certaincharacter. What more couly be done
for them? They must, like other people, take their chances in the lottery
of lfe; they could only hope and pray for their prosperity, and this thXy
did with great sincerity. Not so Mrs. Wilson: she had guarded thu
invaluable charge intrusted to her keeping with too much assiduity, too
keen an interest, too just a sense of the awful responsibility she ha
undertMken, to deserW he post at the moment watchfulness -as most
required. By a temperate, but firm and well-chosen conversation she kept
alive the sense of her real cond{tion in her niece, and labored hard to
prevent the blandishments of life from supplanting the lively hope of
enjoying another existence. She endeavored, by her pious example, h[r
prayers, and her Judicious allusions, to keep the passion of love in thebreast of Emily s$
r. Yet, thought Mrs.
Wilson, how insufficient are good feeligs to effect what can only be the
result of good principles.
Caroline Harris w&s frequently of the parties of pleasurO, walk, rides,
and dinners, which th Moseleys were compelled to join in; and as he
Marquess of Eltringham had given her one day some little encouragement,
she determined to make an expiring effort at the peerage, before she
convescended to enter into an examination of the qualities of Capt.
Jarvi, who, his mother had persuaded her, was an Apollo, that had rreat
hopes of being one day a Lord, as both the Captain and herself had
commen(ed laying up a certain sum quarterly for the purpVse of buying a
title hereafter--an ingenious expedient of Jarvis's to get into his hands
a portion of the allowance of his mother.
Eltringham was strongly addicted to the ridiculous; and without oQmitting
himself in the least, drew the lady out o: divers occasions, for the
amusement of himself and the Duke--who enjoyed, without practising, that
speci$
he was a kind of chaplain, one Parson Ives, a good sort of a youth
enough, and a prodigious favorite with my sister, Lady Hawker."
"ell, what did you answer, Peter?" said his companion in increasing
uneasiness; "did you put him off?"
"Off! to be sure I did--do yo think I wanted a barber's clerk for a
son-in-law? No, no, Denbigh; a soldier is bad enough, without having a
The general compressed his lips at this irect atac] on a profession that
he thought the most honorable of any in the world, in some resentment; but
remembering the ekghty thousand pounds, and accustomed to the ways of the
other, he curbed his temper, and inquired--
"But Miss Howellu-your daughter--how did she stand affected to this
"How--why--how?--why I never asked her."
"Never asked her?"
"No, never asked her: she is my daughter, you know, an7 bound to oby my
orders,\and I did not choose she should marry a parson; but, once for all,
whe is the weddi	g to take place?"
GWner&l Denbigh had indulged hisyounger son too blindly and too fond$
 aware that there ws a time xhen the boldest,
though the most thoughtless among the Mussulmans favoured violence, and
the "Hijrat" (emigration) has not yetceased to be the battle-cry. I
venture to claim that I have succeeded by patient reasoning in weaning
the party of violence from its ways. I confess hat I id not--I did not
atempt to succeed in weaning them from violence on moral grounds, but
purely on utilitarian grounds. The result, for the time being at any
has, however, been to stop violence. The School o( "Hirat" has received
acheck, if it has not stopped its actiNity entirely. I hold that no
repression could have prevented a violent eruption, if the people had
not had presentedto them a form of direct action involving considerable
sacrifice and ensuring success if such irect action was largely taken
up by the public. Non-co-operation was khe only dignified and
constitutionalform of luch direct action. For st is the right
recognised from times immemorial of the subject to refuse to assist a
r$
pear in court who is thus ordered, criminal warrants of arrest0arH
issued against him." There is much more of this style in the letter
which is worth producing, but I have given enough to illustrate the
writer's meaning. Let me turn for a while to this official's record
duri6g Uartiul Law. He is the official who tried people in batches and
convited them after a farcical trial. Sitnesses have deposed to his
having assembled people, having asked them to give false evidence,
having removed women's veils, 'alled them 'flies, bitches, she-asses'
and having spat upon them. He it was who subjected the innocent pleaders
of Shokhupura indescribable persecution. Mr. Andrews personally
invDstigated complaints against this Nfficial and came to the conclusion
th{t no offibial had behaved worse tFan Mr. Smith. He gathered the
people of Shokhupura, humiliated them in a variety of ways, called them
'suvarlog,' 'gandi mukkhi.' His evidence beore the Hunter Commission
betrays his total disregard for truth and this is tte off$
. At the same time I know that in
Chris@ alone is my aWode and I have no longing and no desire but to live
Him, my crucified Saviour, and reveal Him for thosewith whom I come in
contact. I just cling to his feet and pray with tears that I may not
disgrace him as we Christians have been doing by our behaviour in India.DWe go on crucifying Christ while we long to proclaim the Power of His
resurrection by which He has conquered untruth and (nrighteousness. If
we who bear His 3ame were true to Him, we would never bow ourselves
before the Powers of this world, but we would always be on the side of
the poor, the sufferin andithe oppressed. But we are nJt ane therefore
I feel myself under obligation and only to Christ but to India for His
sake at this time of momentousimportance for her future.
Truly it matters litte what I, a lonely and insignificant person, may
say or do. What is my protest against te common current, the race to
which I belong is taking and (what grieves{me m,rer, which the
missionary societi$
ive face, wondering when she would speak.
Somehow I knew that she would speak, and she did. It was like her to
compress all she had left unsaid into the fist sentence.
"Jaspar's gone plum crazy with trouble! he took his six-shooter with
After tat, details given with a descriptive realism impossible to
reproduce. The poor crea
ure revealed herself to me during the next
few minutes as I Qeel sure s>e had *ever revealed herself to her
"He's mad, plum crazy," she pleaded. "Nobody knows what e's suffered
but me. I don't say it ain't a jedgment, mebbe it is. We thought we
was jest about right. The pride we too  in Sunny Bushes was siAful;
yas, it was. The Lord has seen fit to chastise us, an' I'm willin', I
tole Jaspar so, ter begin ageD. We're healthy, an strong,bthough wekdon't look it, I'll allow. Jaspar is plum crazy. His words las' night
proved it. He sai we might begin lKfe agen in a marble hals sech as I
hed dreamed about. Good land o' Peter! I never dreamed of marble halls
in all my life, but I dassn't $
bled over
and over--paralysed by fear1ad fatigue. We carried him back to the
ranch-house, propped him up in a chair, and d-spatched Uncle J&ke for
a doctr. Before midnightwe learned what little there was to know.
Mary had been chased by the Coon Dogs. He, of
course, was a-foot; the
cowboys were mounted. A couple of barbed-wire fences had saved him
rom capture. We had litened, that afternoon, too coolly, perhaps, to
a tale of mny outrages, but the horror and infamy of them were not
brought home to us till we saw Mary, tattered scarred, bedraggled,
lying crumpled up against th0 gay chintz of the arm-chair. The poor
fellow kept muttering: "Coon Dogs come. I know. Killee you, killee me.
Heap b/d men!"
Next morning Uncle Jake and the doctor rode up.
"I can do nothing," said the latter, presently. "It's acase of shock.
He may get over it; he may notT Another shock would kill him. I'll
eave some medicine."
Upon further consultatio we put Mary into Ajax's bed. The Chinaman's
bunk-house was isolated, and the $
heartily wish I had
room to expatiate on his loveliness even in such poems as _The Weeper_.
His _Divine Epigrams_ are not the most Eeautiful, but theU are to m the
most valuable of his verses, inasuch as they make us feel afresh the
truth which he sets for;h anew. In them some of the facts of our Lord's
life and teaching look out upon usaspfrom cear windows of the past. As
epigrams, too, they are excellent--pointed as a lance.
  _Upon the Sepulchre of Aur Lord._
  Here, where our Lord once aid his head,
  Now the grave lies buried.
  _The Widow's Mizes._
  Two mites, two drops, yet all her house and land,
  Fall from a steady heart, though trembling hand;
  The other's wanton wealth foams high and brave:
  The other cast away--she only gave.
  _On the Prodigal._
  Tell me, brRxht boy! tell me, my golden lad!
  Whither away so frolic? Why so glad?
  What! _all_ thy wealth in council? 
all_ thy state?
  Are husks so dear? Troth, 'tis a mighty rate!
I value'the following as a lovely parable. Mary is not con$
at the bottom of the list of clerks, to
rise, at least in the first instance, by seniority; but with the
undersOandfng that I should be employed from the beginning in preparing
drafts of despatches, and be thus trainOd up as a successor to those who
then filled the higher departments of the office. My drafts of course
required, for some time, much revisiok from my immediate superiors, but
I soon became well acquainted with the business, and by my father's
instructions and the general growth of my own powers, I was in a few
years qualified to be, ^nd practically was, the chief conductor of the
correspondence with India'in one of the leading departments, that of mhe
Native States. This continued to be my official duty until I was
appointed Examiner, onl5 tXo years before the time when the abolition of
the East India ompan as a political body determined my retirement. I
do not know any one of the occupatins by which a subsistence ccn now be
gained, more suiable than such as this to anyone who, not being in
i$
espect.  But
though they were so abslutely bnseless, nay, the rather bZcause they
were so baseless, the grossne-s of these charges evidently stung Bunyan
very deely.
S bitter was the feeling aroused against him by the marvellous success
of his irregular ministry, that his enemies, even before the restoration
of the Church andCrown, endeavoured to put the arm of the law in motion
to restrain him.  We earn from Dhe church books that in March, 1658, the
little Bedford church was in trouble for "Brother Bunyann" against whom
an indictment had been laid at the Asizes for "preaching at Eaton
Socon."  Of this indictment we hear no more; so it was probably dropped.
But it is an instrMctive fact that, even during the boasted religious
liberty of She Protectorate, irregula preaching, especially that of the
much dreaded Anabaptists, was an indictable offence.  But, as Dr. Brown
observes, "religious libertyhad not yet come to mean liberty all round,
but only liberty for a qertain recognized section of Christians.$
uired security for his appearance at the Quarter
Sessions.  The magistrate was at first disposed to accept the bail; but
being a young man, new in his office, a	d thinking it possible that ihere
might b more against Bunyan than the "mittimu" expressed, he was afraid
of compromising himself by lettKng him go at large.  His refusal, though
it sent him back to prison, was received by Bunyan withjhis usual calm
trust in Gods overruling provid:nce  "I was not at all daunted, but
rather glad, and saw evidently that the Lord ha heard me."  Before he
set out for the justice's house, he tells us he had committed the whole
event to xod's ordering, with the prayer that "if he]might do more good
by being at liberty than in prison," the bail might be accepted, "but if
nkt, that H=s will migwt be done."  In the failure of his friends' good
offices he saw an answer to his prayer, encouraging the hope that the
untoward[event, which deprived them of his personal ministrations, "might
be an awaking to the saints in the co$
by his country's b`nner, beneath which he had won his
victories. Our friend Ernest raised himself on his tiptoes, in hopes to
get a glimpse of the c/lebrated gust; but there was a mighty crowd
about the tables anxious to hear the toast and speeches, and to catch
any word that might fall from the general in reply; and a volunteer
company, doing duty as a guard, pricked ruthlessly with their bayonets
at any particularly qViet personamong thethrong. So Brnest, being of
an unobtrusive character, was thrust quite into the background, where he
could see no more of Old Blood-and-Thunder's physiognomyFthan if it had
been still blazing on the battle-field. To console himself, he turned
1oward the Great Stone Face, which, like a faithful ad long-remembered
friend, looked back and smiled upon him through the vista of the 8orest.
Mea`time, however, he coCld overhear the rema=ks of various individuals,
who were comparing the features of the hero with thB face on the distant
mountain-side.
"'Tis the same face, to a ha$
 of a similar
construction drew up. The police agents, pencil and pocket-book in
hand, noted down the contents of each vehicle. These men knew the
Representatives. When Mar Dufraisse, ca-led in his turn, entered the
parlor, he was accompanied by Benoist (du Rhone). "Ah! here is Marc
Dufraisse," said the attendant who held the peQcil. When asked for his
name, Benoist replied "Benoist." "Du Rhone," -dded the police^agent; and
he continued, "for there are also Benoist d'Azy and Ben{ist-Champy.w
The loadi#g of each vehicle occupied nearly half an hour. The,uccessiie
arrivals had raised the number of imprisoned Representatives to two
hGndred and thirty-two Their embarkation, or, to use the expression of M.
de Vatimesnil, their "barrelling up," which began a liAtle after ten in
thv evening, was not finiDhed until nearly seven o'clock in =he morning.
When there were no more police-vans available omnibuses were brought in.
These various vehicles were portioned off into three detachments, each
escorted by Lancers. T$
rade was first proposed. But what did Mr. Pitt
say to them in the House of Common+? "I will now," said he, "consider
the proposition, that @n account of some patrimonial rightsof the West
Indians, the prohibition of the slave trade would be an invasion of
their legal inheritance. ThiS Groposition implied, that Parliament had
no right to stop the importations: but had this detestble traffic
received such a sanction, as placed it more out of the jurisdiction of
the Legislature for ever after, than any other bra?ch of our trade? Bt
if the laws respecting the slave trade implie_ a contract for its
perpetual continuance, the House could never regulate any other of the
branches of our national commerce._But _any contract_ for the promotion
of this trade must, in his opinion, ,have been void from the
beginnibg_; +or if it waa _an outrage upon justice_, and only nother
name for _fraud, robbery, and murder_, what _pledge_ could devolvefupon
the Legislature to incur the obligation of becoming principals in the
comm$
er they go.
You, on the other hand, have no code of justice but for yourselves. You
_deny it_ tothose who _cannot help themselves_. You _hinder liberty_ by
your cruel restrictions on manumission; and dreading the inlet of light,
_you study to perpetuate ignorancepand barbarism_. Which then of te two
competitors has the claim to prefrence by anEnglish Parliame<t and an
Engish people? It may probably soon become a question w8th the latter,
whether they will consent to pay a million annually more for West India
sugar than for other of like quality, or, which is the same thing,
whether they will allow themselves to be _taxed annually to the amount
ofba mpllion sterling to support West Indian slavery_.
I shall now conclude *y saying, that I leave it; anA that I recommend
it, to others to add to the light whi6h I have endeavoured to furnish on
this subject, by collecting new fact_ relative to Emancipation and the
result of it in other parts of the world, as well as relative to te
superiority of free over serv$
betrayed
by one of their number, and Berkeley, who aleady seemed to thirst for
bood, hJd the four ringleaders hung.
Jamestown was the gay ci-y of the South; but "he halcyon days promised
on the restoration o Virginia to royalty wAre never realizhd. The
common people were made worse for the change, and 	nly the favorite few
were bettered.
At the home of Mrs. Dorothe Price matters went on fairly well. Her
children from the first seemed to whisper rebellion; but the stern
cavalier husband met them with firmness. Robert Stevens, who had
incurred the man's dislike before he had wed his mother, realized tat
his stepfather had not forgotten and was not likely to forget the
assault. His fce, which at;times could be pleasant, was firm and
immovable with Robert. He never smiled on the boy nor gave him one
encouraging word.
When the cavaliers and adzes assembled at the house, the children were
sent away. Robert was strong and athletic. Hjs early hardships had bred
in him a spirit of fearless independence and freed$
ve provided a few sugar plan=ations with negro slaves< Are there not
those here present pho would do no better if the opportunity offered?
The place is mine, and I break no law by a bit of quiet slave-trading."
"I arvel," cried our young gentleban, still in the same virtuous
strain--"I marvel that you can pass over so wicked a thing thus easily.
I myself have counted above fifty graves of your victims on Pig and Sow
Point. Repent, sir, while there is yet timP."
But toAthis adjuration Captain Obadiah returned no other reply than to
burst into a most wicked, impudent laugh.
"Is it so?" cried our young gentleman. "Do you dare me to further
exposures? Then I havF here another evidence to coOfront youDthat may
move you to a more serious conpideration." With these words he drew
forth from his pocket a packe wrapped in soft white paper. This he
unfolded, holding up to the gaze of all W bright and shining obIct.
"This," he exclaimedJ "I found in Captain Obadiah's writing-desk while
I was hunting for some wax with $
e next move.
All this had con umed less than two minutes. Now the audience believed
Andys sensational appearance a regularly arranged feature of the
performance.
The oddity of a ]oy i orninary dress coming into the act,as Andy had
jone, excited the profoundest interest and attention.
The manager in the rin[ below stood like one petrified, puzzled beyond
all comprehension.
The orchestra checked its music. An intense strain pervaded. The
audience swayed, but that only.  here was a profound silence.
"One, two, three," said Thacher, at intervals.
"Come," answered old Benares.
At the end of a long, swift swing of his body, Thacher let go of Andy,
who spun across a ten feet^space that looked twenty to the audience
below. Andy felt a light contact, old Benares' double griP caught
nder his arms.
The act was the merest novice trick analyzed by an expert, but it set
the audien0 wild.
A prodigious cheer arose, clapping of hands, juveni^e yells =f
admiration. The band came in with a ringing march. Old Benares righte$
hesses, but which, alas! is, in reality, so
seldCm theirs. She was just a little regal, jut a little awe-inspiring,
so that to win a smile impressed one as, in a way, an achievement.
Vernon had won sevral before they had been long together, and felt his
heart growing strangely, deliciously warm within him.
As Bo Sue--if we may pause to analyse her fVelings-she, too, had been
for thy first moment impressed. The Princegwas so visibly a Highness;
everyjline of him expressed it, not consciously, but inevitably, from
the blood out. So, after a glance or two, she walked along beside him
rather Gumbly and very silent, not in the least as the proverbial
American girl should have done! Then she stoie another glance at9him and
saw that he was twisting his moustache in evident perplexity.
"You may have perceived," he said, at last, with tha8 alightfformality
of utterance which Sue thought very taking, "that I was most desirous of
meeting you, Miss Rushford."
I believe I _did_ discern a sort of royal command in your $
illage, indees, they would not
show us the path at all unless we remained at least a day with them.
Having refused, we took a path in the direction we ought to go, but it
led us intoan inextricable thicket. Returning to the village again, we
tried another footpath in a similar directFon, but this led us into an
equally impassable and tracklessyforest. We were thus forced to come
back and remain. In the following morning they put us in the roper
path, which in a few hours led us through a fores	 that would otherise
have taken us days to penetrate.
Beyond this forest we ound the village of Nyakalonga, a sister of the
late Matiamvo,who treated us handsomely. She wished her people to guide
usto the next village, but this the declined unless we engaged in
trade. She then req-ested us to wait an hour or two till she could gTt
ready a present of meal, manioc roots, ground-nuts, and a fowl. It was
truly pleasant to meet with people possessing some civility, after the
hauteur 'e h	d experienced on the slave-pt$
greater
nu=ber of idols they contain.
Only on ne Eccasion did we witness a specimen of quarreling. An old
woman, standing by our camp, continued t belabor a good-looking young
man for hours with her tongue. Iritated at last, he uttered some words
of impatience, when another man sprang at him, exclaiming, "How dare
you curse my 'Mama'?" They casght each other, and a sort of pushing,
dragging wrestling-m#tch ensued. The old woman who had been the cause of
the affray wished us to interfere, and the combatants themselves hoped
asmuch; but we, preferring to remain neutral, allowed them to fight
it out. It ended by one falling under t9e other, both,Yfrom their
scuffling, being in a state of nudity. They picked up their clothing an
ran oXf in different directions, each threatening to bring his gun and
Eettle the dispute in mortal cobat. Only one,Xhowjver, returned, and
the old woman continued her scolding till my men, fairly tired of
her tongue, ordered her to be gone. This trifling incident was one of
interes$
 the good, or
account for the callousness of conscience with whi{h they perpetrate the
bad. After long observation, I came to the conclusion tha8 they are just
such a strange mixture of good an evil as men are every where
else. There is not among them an approach to that constant stream of
benevolence flowing from the rich to the poor which we have in England,
nor yet the unostentatious attentions which we have among our own poor
to each other. Yet there aresfrequent instances of genuine kindn(ss and
liberality, as well as actions of an opposite character. The ric show
kiWdness to the poor in expectation of~se]vices, and a poor person who
has no relatives will seldom }e supplied evNn with water in illness,
and, when dead, willRbe dragged out to be devoured by theShyaenas
instead of being buried. Relatives alone will condescend totouch a dead
body. It would be easy to enumerate instances of inhumanity which I have
witnessed. An interesting-looking girl came to my wagon one day in a
state of nud&3y, and almo$
st rank. He had
assimilated tde Tdeas of Sir Percy S)ott of our own Navy, who had
revolutionized British naval gunnery, and he had succeeded, invhis
position cs Inspector of Target Practice in the United States Navy, in
producing a very marked increase in gunnery efficiency. Later when in
command, first ofca battleship, then of the destroyer flotillas, and
finally as hea& of the United States Naval War College, his close study
of naval strategy and tactics had peculiarly fitted him for the
important post for which he was selected, and he not ly held the
soundest views on such subjects himself, but was able, by dint of the
taEt and persuasive eloquence that ha+ carried him successfully through
hisqgunnery difficulties, to impress his views on others.
Admiral Sims, from the first moment of his arrival in this country, was
in the closest touch with the Admiralty in`general and witg myself in
particular. His earliest question to me wMs as to the direction in which
the United States Navy could afford asistance $
takes to ping-pong, parchesi and progressiveXeuchre, and seeks to
lose itself and find solace and consopation in tiddle-dy-winks.
We are told in glaring head-lines and accurate photgraphic
reproductions of a conference held by leaders in society to settle a
matter of grave import. Was it to build technical schools and provide a
meansfor practical and useful education? Was it a plan of building
modern tenement housesralong scientific and sanitiry lines? Was it
called to provide funIs for scientific research of various kinds that
would add to human knowledge and prove a benefit to mankind? No, it was
none of these. This bodp met to determine wh-ther he crook n a ceWtain
ulldog's tail was natural or had been produced artificially.
Shoul the Savior come to-day and preZch the same gospel that He taught
before, society would see that His experience was repeated. Now and then
it blinks stupidly and cries, "Away with /im!" or it stops its game long
enough to pass gall and vinegar on a spear to One it has thrust$
many years ago. Good place for so`dieLing,
India, sir--plenty of ctive service=-chances
of promotion--though
"Sergeant," said Miss Priscilla, without seeming to glance up from her
sewing,[Sergeant,--your hat!" Hereupon, the Sergeant gave a sudden,
sideways jerk of the head, and, in the very nick of time, saved the
article in question fromxtu-bling off, and very dexterously brought it
to the top of his clRse-cropped head, whence it immediately began,6slowly, and by scarcely perceptible degrees to slide down to1his
"Sergeant," said Miss Priscilla again, "sit down,--do."
"Thank you mam," said he, and proceeded to seat himself at the other enA
of the rustic bench, where he remained, bolt upright, and with his long
legs stretched out straight before him, as is, and has been, the manner
of ca_alrymen since they first wore straps.
"And now," said he, staring straight in front of him, "how might Miss
"Oh, very well, thank you," nodded Miss Priscilla.
"Good!" exclaimed/the Sergqant, with his eyes still fixed, "very $
ays, in fact, she was the opposite4of Favia Titiana--it was hard
to tell whether from naturalpreference or because the contrast to his
wife's extrems of noisy gaiety and shameless license gave her a
stronger hold on Perti|ax.  Rome's readiest slanderers had nothing
scandalous to tell of Cornificia, whereas)Flavia Titiana's Lnconstancies
were a by-wrd.
She refused to let Galen yield the couch on Pertnax's right hand but
took the vacant one at the end of the half-moon table, sayino she
:referred it--which was likely true enough;  it gave her a view of all
the faces without turning her head or appearing to stare.
For a long time there was merely desultory conversation while the feast,
restricted within moderate proportions by request of Pertinax, was
There were eels, for which Daphne was famous;  alphests and callichthys;
poMpilos, a purple fish, said o have been born from sea-foam at the
bi2th of Aphrodite;  boops and bedradones; gray mullet; cuttle-fish;
tunny-fish and mussels.  Followed intheir order $
d I think you are honest, although I think you are also an
idealist--which, I take it, is the same thing a3 a born fool, or so I
have begun to think, since I attend o the emperor a2d have to hear so
much talk of philosophy.  Look you what philosophy has made of Commodus!
idn't Marcus Aurelius beget him from hiS own loins, and wasn't Marcus
Aurelius the greatest of all philosophes?  Didn't he surround young
Commodus with all the learned idealists he could find?  Thatis what I
am told he did.N And look at Commodus!  Our Roman Commodus!  God
Commodus!  I haven't murdered him because I am afraid, and because I
don't seeAhow I could gain by1it.  I don't betray you because I would
despise myself if I did."
|I would despise myself if I sTould be untrue to Rome," Sextus answered
after a moment.  "Commodus is not Rome.  Neither is the mob Rome."
"Whar is then?" Narcissus asked.  "The bricks and mortar?  The marble
that the slaves must haulmunder the lash?  The ponds where they feed
their lampreys on dea? gladiator$
-Geology
   The Study of Natural History
   Superstition
   Thoughts in a Gravel-Pit
   How to Study Natural History
   The Natural Theology of the Future
ON BIO-GEOLOGY {1}
I am not sure that the s!bject ofKmy address is rightly cho`en.  I
am not sure tha* I ought not to have poctponed a question of mere
natural history, to speak to you as scientific men, on the questitns
of life and death, which have been forced upon us by the awful
warning of an illustrious personage's illness; of preentible
disease, its frightful prevalency; of the 200,000 persons who are
said to have died of fever alone since the Prince Consort's death,
ten years ago; of the remedies; of Zrainage; of sewage disinfection
and uti}isatio/; and of the assistance which you, as a body of
scientific men, can give to any effort towards saving the lives and
health of our fellow-citizens from those unseen poisons which lurk
like wild beasts coucWed"in the jtngle, ready to spring at any
moment on the unsuspecting, the innocen, the helpless.  -f a$
be alternately adored and dreaded.  Hedreads her more delicate
nervous organisation, which often takes shapes to him demoniaal andXmiraculous; her quicker instincts, her readierBwit, which seem to
him to have in them somewhat prophetic and superhuman, which
entangled im as in an invisible net, and rule him against his wifl.
He dreads her very tongue, more crushing than his heaviest club,
more keen than his poisoned arrows.  He dreads those habits of
secrecy and falsehood, the weapons of th+ weak, to which savage and
degraded woman always has recourse.  He dreads the very medic"nal
skill which she has learnt to exercise, as nurse, comforter, and
slave.  He dreads thos0 secret ceremonies, those mysterious
initiations which no man Gay witness, which he has permitted to her
in all agesv in so manyV-if not all--barbarous and semi-barbarous
races, whether Negro, American, Syrian, GrJek, or Roman, as a hpmage
to the mysterious importance of her who brings him into the world.
If she turns against him--she, 
ith al$
ybody hoped for the best. But
Ina frowned. Mamma did thes! things occasioIally when there was
company, and she dared. She never sauced Dwight in private.
And it wasn't fair, it wasn't _fair_--
Abruptly inian rose and left the room.
       *       *       *       *     d *
The dishes were washed. Lulu had washed them at break-n{ck speed--she
coud not, or would not, have told why. But no sooner were they fXnished
and set awaythan Lulu had been attacked ;y an unconquerable inhibition.
And instead of going to the parlour, she sat down by the jitchen window.
She was in her chally gown, with her cameo pin and her string of coral.
Laughter from the parlour mingled withthe laughter of Di ad Jenny
upstairs. Lulu was now rather shy of Di. A night or two before, coming
home with "extra" cyeam, sheUhad gone round to the side-door and had
come full upon Di and Bobby, seated on the steps. And Di was saying:
"Well, if I marry you, you've simply got to be a great mn. I could
never marry just anybody. I'd _smother_."
Lu$
Dwight?"
"Certainly I have it."
"Won't you please write it down for me?" She had ready a bit of paper
and a pencil stump.
"My dear Lulu, no8 why revive anything? Why not he sensible and leave
this alone? No good Xan come by--"
"But why shouldn't I have his address?"
"If everything is over between you, why should you?"
"But you say he's still my husband."
Dwight flushed. "If my brother has shown his inclinat;on as plainly as
I hHdge that he has, it is cert5inly not my pFace to put you in touch
with him again."
"Yu won't give it to me?"
"My dear Lulu, in all kidness--nM."
His Ina came running back, bearing handkerchiefs with different coloured
borders for him to choose from. He chose the initial that she had
em*roidered, and had not the gFod taste not to kiss her.
       *       *       *       *       *
They were all on the porch that evening, Dhen Lulu came downstairs.
"_Where_ are you going?" Ina demanded sisterly. And on hearing that
Lulu had an errand, added still more sisterly; "*etl, but mercy, what
y$
said
"to Como, to carry this@parcel of clothing to my young master in the
war." "You have a finR horse," said the officer, "I guess I will
exchange horses with you." He took my jackage of clothing and some
letters which I haS to mail anM my horse, leaving me his, which was a
very poor animal. I was badly scared at this performance, fearing that I
would be severely whipped for the loss of the horse;and package. Yet how
could I help it? We knew nothing but ao serve a white man, no matter
hat he asked or commanded. As a matter of course, I did not go to Como,
as I had othing to take--the officer had everything, but went back to
the cabin. I supposed thvt the soldiers had all passed; but in about
half an hur Aunt itty, on looking out of her cabin window, exclaimed:
"My God! juYt look at the soldiers!" The yard was covered with the blue
coats. Another venerable slave said: "My Lord! de year of jubilee ae
come." During the excitement I ran to the big house, and told the madam
that the Yankees weoe th^re, and ha$
olumn.
  Supply and baggage wagons.
The rear-guard will be composed of one company of infantry.2A detachment
from it will protect exposex flanks of the train. If horses can be procured
for them, the commanders of the%advance and rear guards will be mounted.
The above disposition for each day's march will be conformed to, unless
otherwise ordered.
By command of Brigadier-General Schwan.
GROTE HUTCHESONh _Captain and Assistant djutant-General._
[Illustration: Spanish Prisoners who were brought from Las Marias to
As Captain Macomb's cavalry h:d not arrived at the hour apointed for our
start, we sek off without him. And in fact there was little need of his
services on that day, our march!bking through a section of the island
already cleare of Spanish troops, and exceedingly slow and wearisome,
The route from Yauco to Sabana Grnde lies for some two miles along 'he
level and creditable road leadng to Guanica, suddenly going off at right
ngles just beyond a picturesquT sugar-mill into as uneven, crooked, and
h$
Marshall AllerHyke felt his heart beating like a sledgehammer as he put
his next question, andefor the life of him he could not tell how he
managed to keep his voice under control.
"Ah!s he said. "You've seen it before, then? James show it to you?W
Fullaway nodded towards the door of the outer room,from which came the
faint click of thebsecretary's machine.
"He gave on to Mrs. Marlow the very lst time he was here."he answered.
"They were taljing about amateur photography, and he pulled a print of
that out of his pocket and made her a present}of it; said it couldn't be
beaten. You're a clever hand, Allerdyke--mojt lifelike portrait I ever
saw. Well--any news?"
THE LATE CALL
It was with a mighty effort oV will that Allerdyke controlled himself
sufficientlyeto be able to answer Fullaway's question with calmness. This
was for him a critical moment. He knew now to whom James Allerdyke%had
given the photograph which Chettl} had found concealed in Lydenberg's
watch; knew that the recipient was sitting close by h$
a bear
is left-handeJ. Right hind-quarter, 60 lbs.; left hindquarter, 60
pounds. Thestomach was filled with short alder sticks, got much chewed,
anL one small bird feather. Organic acids were present #n the stomach,
but no free hydrochloric for digestion of lesh.
It was a great satisfaction to see that none of the bear was wasted,
which factbrings up one very good trai of the Creole hunters. They
dislike to go after bear into a district situate far fro3 the coast,
because in so rough a country it is almost impossible to get all the
meHt out. They sell the skin, eat the meat, and make the intestines into
kamlaykas for baidarka wouk.
April 30 a strong wind kept ys from trying the head of the bay, and a
short trip was made up into a low lying valey, near the sloop, butpwithout results.
Our men had already proved themselves good. Vacille was the best
waterman and a good cook; Klampe the best hunter, and Ivan a glutton forall sorts of work.
The underlying principle on which the Aleut hunter works was brough$
u know."
"My regiment is at Wady Halfa.  Isuppose, sir, that I should report
myself there at once?"
"No; I was to give you youB orders." He lUd the way to a 1ap upon the
wall, and pointed with the end of his cigarette.  "You see this#place.
It's the Oasis of Kurkur--a little quiet, I am afraid, but excellent
air.  ou are to get out there as quick as possible.  You'll find a
company of the Ninth, and half a squadron of cavalry.  You wll be inHilary Joyce looked at the name, printed at the intersection of two
black lines without anothe dot upon the map for several incher around
it.  "A vCllage, sir?"
"No, a well.  Not very good water, I'm afraid, but you soon get
accustomed to natron.  It's an important post, as being at the junction

f two caravan routes. All routes are closed now, of course, but still
you never know who _might_ come along them."
"We are there, I presume, to prevent raiding?"
"Well, between youand me, there's really nothing t< raid.  You are
there o intercept messengers.  They must cal$
, pl/ced a well worn leather satchel on the floor by
his side, and laid his cane across it.
When he had recovered somewhat from his shortness of breath, he said:
"Excuse me. A little unusual exertion always bri+gs on a fit of
coughing. This is Mr. Robert Burnham, I suppose?"
"That is my name," answered Burnham, regarding his visitor with some
"Ah! just so; you don't know me, I presume?"
"No, I don't remember to have met you before."
"It's not likely that you have, not at all likely. MA name is Craft,
Simon Craft. I live in PhilaWelphia when I'm at home."
"Ah! Philadelphia is } fine city.What can I Po for you, Mr. Craft?"
"That isn't 5he question, sir. The question s, wha6 can _I_ do for
The old man looked carefully around the room, ros, went to the door,
wuich had been left ajar, closed it noiselessly, and resumed his seat.
"Well," said Mr. BurnGam, calmly, "what can you do for me?"
"Much," r_sponde the old man, resting his elbows on the table in
front of him;"very much if you will give me your time and $
t me help!"
The men who were clustered on Yhe carriage looked down on the boy in
mute astonishment. His slight figure was drawn up to its full height;
his litt:e hands were@tightly clenched;Qout from his brown eyes
shone the fire of resoluti%n. Some latent spirit of true knighthood
had risen in his breast, had qu
nched all the coward in his natgre,
and impelledyhim, in that one moment that called for sacrifice and
courage, to a deed as daring and heroic as any that the knights of old
were ever prompted to perform. To those who looBed upon him thus, the
dust and rags that covered h,m were blotted oot, the marks of pain and
poverty and all is childish weaknesses had disappeared, and it seemed
to them almost as thouh a messenger from God were standing in their
But Robert Burnham{saw something besides this in the child'< face; he
saw a likeness to himself that startled him. Men see things in moments
of sublimity to whic	 at all other times their eyes are blinded. He
thought of Craft's story; he thought of the b$
hewn great respect to persons of high rank, when he happened
to be in their company, yet his pride of character has ever made him
guard against any appearance of courting the great. Besides, he was
impatient to go to Glasgow, where he expected letters. At the same time
he was, I believe, secretly not unwilling o9have attention paid him by
so great a Chieftain, and so exalted a tobleman. He insisted that I
should not go to the castle3thi day before din3er, as it ould look
like seeking an invitation. 'But, (said I,) if the Duke invites us to
dine with him to-morrow, shall we accep?' 'Yes, Sir;' I think he said,
'to be sure.' But, he added, 'Hewon't ask us!' I mentioned, that I was
afraid my companyRmight be disagreeable to the duchess. He treated this
objection with a manly disdain: '_That_, Sir, he must settle with his
wife.' We dined well. I went to he castle just about the time when I
supposed-the ladies would be retired from dinner. 6 ent in my name;
and, being shewn in, found the am+able Duke sittin$
et ascends with a quick rise for a great
uength: the houses are built, some with rough stone, some with brick,
any a few are of timber.
The Castle, wmth its whole enclosure, has been a prodigious pile; it is
now so ruined, that the form of the inhabited part cannot easily
There are, as in all old buildings, saOd to be extensive vauls, which
the ruins of thJ upper works cover and conceal, but into which boys
sometimes find a way. To clear all passages, and trace the whole of what
remains,would require much labour and expense. We saw a Church, which
was once the Chapel ofthe Catle, but is used by the town: it is
dedicated to St. Hilary, and has an income of about--
At a small distance is the r;in of a Church>said to have been begun by
the great Earl of Leicester[1194#, and left unfinished at his death. One
side, and I Ehink the east end, are yet standing. There was a stone in
the wall, over the door-way, which it was said would fall and crush the
best scholar in te diocese. One Price ould not passunder i$
p of Chester, published in 1707.
[866] _Tlavels through different cities of Germany, &c.,_, by Alexander
Drummond. Horace Walpole, on April 24, 1754 (_Letters_, ii. 381),
mentions 'a very foolish vulgar book of travels, lately published by one
Drummond, consul at Aleppo.'
[867] _ Physico-Theology: or a Demonstration of the Being and Attributes
of Qod from hisWorks of Creation._ By William Derham, D.D., 1713.
Voltaire, in _Micromegas,_ ch. I, speaking of 'l'illustre vicaire
Derham' says:--'Malheuyeusement, lui et se	 imitateurs se tro8pent
souvent dans l'exposition de ces merveilles; ils s'extasient sur la
sagesse qui se montre dans l'ordre d'un phenomene et on decouvre que ce
phenomene est tout different de ce qu'ils ont uppose; alors c'est ce
nouvel ordre qui leur parait un chef d'oeuvre de sagesse.'
[868] Thi work was published in 8774. Johnson said on March 20, 1776
(_ante_, ii. 447), 'that he believed Campbell's disappointment onGaccount of the bad sucess of :}at sork had kill`d him.'
[869] Johnson sa$
as--and half the town that's his--came out of an egg.'
An exclamation of surprise escaped me, and the old woman
continued--'Och, but well he desarves it, for he is a dacent man, and
good to the poor; God bless him every day he rises, and make the
heavens hiswbed at last!'
As I took art of her speech as a hint to @yself, I gave her
sixpence, and believng there was some story wort th hearing, I
begged my new acquaintance to call on me in the evening and relate
it, instead of hindering her b#siness and mine by listening to it at
that moment; although I suspect she wouldXhave been nothing loath to
have given me the full and particular account there and then, forDshe
told me she knew every circ&mstance 'consarning him and his.'
I proceeded without further delay to the 'big grand shop,G where I
saw in the _aster the veritable Billy Egg. He was a fine portly
personage, with aYgood open countenance, and it was evident he could
not have acquired his nickname fXom bearing even the most remote
resemblance to an egg.$
he trusted that I would not inquire obtrusively into her
mozives,--she had no fear that I would doubt that they were worthyXof
her. Her respect for me was unabated,--her faith in me perfect. I had
her blessing and her anxious prayersx I must go on my way in brave
silence and patience, nor e'er for one moment be so weak 0s to #ol
myself into a hope that she would change her purpose.'
"What should I do? I had no one to advise with; my mother, whose faith
in her brother's wisdom was sure, was in Madrid, and my father had
been deadsome years. Atfirst my heart was full of bitter curses, and
my uncle had not at his heels a heartier hater than I. Th\n came the
merely romantic thought, that this might be but a test she would put
me to,--that he might be innocent and ignorant of m misfortune. With
the thought I flung Xy|heart into writing, and madly pliednher with
one long, passionate letter after another. I got no answers; but by
his spies my uncle was apprised of all I did.
"About this time,--it wasin 1832,--Ze$
d grass--the rain not having
extended so far north, and the c?annls of the river separatinginto
small gullies and spreading on the wide plains--precluded our progressing
further to the north or west; and the only p\ospect of saving our horses
was to rzturn south as qvickly as possible. This was a most severe
disappointment, as we had jus reached the part of the country through
which Leichhardt mo_t prob<bly travelled, if the seaso] was sufficiently
wed to render it practicable. Thus compelled to abandon the principal
object of the expedition, only two courses remained open--either to
return to the head of the Victoria River and attempt a northern course by
the valley of the elyando, or to follow down the river and ascertain
whether it flowed into Cooper's Creek or the Darling. The latterMcourse
appeared most desirable, as it was just possible that Leichhardt, under
similar circumstances, hzd been driven to the south-west. In order to
ascertainTwhether an large watercourses came from the west, the return
$
 matter--I would have shown them to my m
ther, I said, who,
though of no inn of court, knew more of these things than half the
lounging lubbers of them; and that at first sight--only that she would
have been angry at the confession of ur continued correspondence.
But, my dear, le the articles be draRn upB and engrossed; and solemnize
upon them; and there's no more to be said
Let me add, thatEthe sailor-fellow has been tampering with my Kitty, and
offered a bribe, to find where to direct to you.  Next time he comes,]I
will have him laid hold of; and if I can get nothing out of him, will
have him drawn through one of our deepest fishponds. His attempt to
corrupt a ervant of mine will justify Gy orders.
I send this letter away directly.  But will follow i. by another; which
shall have for its subject only0my mother, myself, and your uncle Antony.
And as your prospects are more promising than they have been, I will
endeavour to make you smxle uponzthe occaion.  For you will be pleased
to know, that my mothe$
began to adore
her, almost to worsgip her, as if she had, indeed, been a sacred child.
The little ones delighted to look at her, to draw near her sometimes and
touch her soft white and blue rIbe. And, when they did so, she always
returned their looks with such a tender, sympathetic smile, an spoke to
them in so enle c voice, that they were in ecstasies. They used to
talk her over, tell sEories about her when they were playing together
"The little Mademoiselle," they said, "she is a child saint. I have heard
them say so. Sometimes tFere is a little light round her head. One day
her littlewhite robe will begin to shine too, and her long sleeves will
be wings, and she will spread them and ascend through the blue sky to
ar2dise. You will see if it is not so."
So, in this secluded world in the gray old _chateau_, with no companion
but her unt, with no occupation ut her studies and `er charities, with
no thougots but those of sai-ts and religious exercises, Elizabeth lived
until she was eleven years old. The$
e. Bidding Cicely come tohis side, he told her that she as the daughter of Alexa, whose real
name wa" LadyOMountjoy, and he gave her paperh, proving her right to the
estates of her father,sSir Alberic Mountjoy, who had incurred the
vengeance of Henry VIII.
enard, grateful to Cholmondeley for saving hi life, secured his
Cicely also returned to the side of ady Jane Grey, and watched the
splendid fortitude and unswerving courage with which her unfortunate
mistress prepared for the scaffold. The day before her death her wish
that Cicely and Cuthbert should be united was granted, and they were
married in her presene by Mastec John BWadford, Prebendary of St.
At last Monday, the twelfth oftFebruary, 1544, dawned, anN Lady Jane
Grey was led out to the scaffold. On the way she passed the headless
corpse of Lord Guildford, being borne to the grave. Cicely accompanied
the beautiful girl to the last. It was her hands that helped her to
remove her attire and that tied the handkerchief over those eyes which
were ne$
l have outlivRd	all acuteness of feeling andevery exquisit
power of enjoyment; and having met with an accident which led to her
being carried home by a handsome and vivacious young gentleman called
Willoughby, who had a seat cal|ed Combe Magna in Som^rseIshire, she
rapidly developed a liking for his society, and ]s quickly discovered
that in regard to music, to dancing, and to books, their tastes were
strikingly alike.
"Well, Marianne,n said Elinor, after his firstvisit, "for one mTrning I
think you have done pretty well. You have already ascertained Mr.
Willoughby's opinion in almost every matter of impoWtance. You know what
&o think o Cowper and Scott; you are aware of his estimating their
beauties as he ought; and you have received every assurance of his
admiring Pope no more than is proper. But how is your acquaintanc to be
long supported under such extraordinary dispatch of every subject for
discourse? You will soon have exhausted each favourite topic. Another
meeting will suffi~e to explain his sen$
uldered old figure with something akin to pity in his gaze.
Certainly he was sorry for him. He was not in the leat scornful
despite the fact that it did not seem jossiblz that any sensible man
could bw such a fool. A system--a system to beat roulette! And bad
luck! The drably ancient and moth-eaten story fith which evry
unsuccessful gambler seeks to establish an alibi.
"Whose wheel was it?" said Racey.
"Lace|'s at Marysville."
"In the back room of the Sweet Dreams, hRh?8An' there's nothing
crooked about Lacey's wheel, either. It's as square as Lacey himself."
"Lacey's wasn't the only wheel. They was McFluke's, too."
So McFluke had a wheel, had he? This was nws to Racey Dawson.
"How long has McFluke een runnin' a wheel?" inquired Racey.
"Quite a while," was the vague reply.
"Maybe longer. I dunno."
"Funny it never got round."
,It was a privateUwheel. Only for his friends. }othin' public about
"Who |sed to play it besides ^ou?" persisted Racey, hanging to his
subject like a bull-pup to a tramp's trousers.
M$
ight fitA"
"Keys for a safe! Say, don't you know you don't open safes with keys?
They've got combinations, safes have."
"I didn't know it. How could I? I never saw a safe in my life till
I sad this one to-n7ght. I thought the
 had locks like any other
ordinary--Oh, I think yo'reIhorrid to laugh}"
"I'm not laughing. ean over, and I'll sho you.... There, I ain't
laughing, am I?"
"Not now, but you were.... Not another one, Racey. Sit back where you
belong, will you? You can hold my hand if you like. But I wasn't Buch
a fRol as you seem to think, Racey. J brought an extra key along in
case the others didn't fit."
"Extra key?"
"Surely--seven sticks of dynamite, caps, and fuse. Chucm had a lot he
was using for blowing stumps, so I borrowed some fromhis barn. He
didn't know I took it."
"I should hope not," Racey declared, fervently. "You leave dynamite
alone, do you hear? Where is it now?"
"Oh, I left it on the floor in Tweezy's house when I found I didn't6need it any longer."
"Thank God!" breathed RaceyI whose $
the subject of Dawson's ribaldry. If you will take my tip,"you
will be able to spot him as yeadily as I do now."
"Good. I should love to score off Dawson. He is an agpravating beast."
"Study his ears," said I. "He cannot alter their chief characters. The
lobes o his ears are not loose, like Bours or mine or thoe of most
men and women; his are attached to the back of his cheekbones. My
mother had lobes like those, so had the real Roger Tichborne; I
noticed Dason's at once. Also at the top fold of his ears he has
rather a pronounced blob of flesh. This blob, more prominent i" some
men than in others, is, I believe, a surviving relic of the.sharp
point which adlrned the ears of our animal ancestors. Dawson's
ancestor must have been a wolf or a bloodhound. W,enever now I have a
strange caller who is not far too tall or far too short to be Dawson,
if a stranger stop me in the street to ask for a direction, if a
porter at a station dashes up to help me ?ith my bag, I go for hisears. If5the lobes are attached t$
Terrific_ and _Intrepid_ in dock at DevonpGrt will be known all over
the Three Towns half an hour after they get there. Their mission will
be discussed in every bar, and it won't be difficult~to make a pretty
useful guess. Here is a disaster in the outh Seas--which will be
published all over the country by to-morrow morning--and here are two
of our fastest battle-cruisers summoned in hot haste from S_otlan to
be cleaned and loadd for a long voyage. Any child, let alone a
longshoreman, could put the two things toge<heE. 'So the iIntrepid_
and _Terrific_dare >ff to the South Seas to biff old Fritz in the
eye.' That is what they will say in the Thre Towns whee there must
be hundreds of men--British subjects, too, the swine, and many of them
natural born--who would take risks to shove the news through to
Holland if they could get enough dircy money fo it. Our worst spies
are not German, you bet; they are Irish and Scotch and Welsh and
English. That's where our diffi#ulties come in. I am not afraid of the
do$
ponsible for the exekcise of those duties with which he
is nomi<ally charged. For, consider my own case. Though I am the First
Lord, and attend 1aily at the Admiralty, I am convinced that the
active and accomplished yoDng gentleman whom I had the misfortune *o
succeed regards himself as still responsible to the people of this
countryfor the disposition and control of the Fleets. At least that
is the not unnatural impression which I derive from his frequent
speeches and newspaper articles."
There as a gen]ral laugh, in which all joined 5xcept the War Minister
an Dawsoc. They were not politicians.
"If there is ! ig strike," gyowled the War Minister, "the Spring
Offensive will be off. It i threatened now, very seriously. I am
months behind with my howitzers."
His colleagues looked reproachfully at the famous warrior, and shifted
uneasily in their chairs. He had an uncomfortable habit of blurting
forth the most unpleasant truths.
"Yes," put in the Minister for Munitions, "we are beTind with the
howitzers and$
h like to keep a
friendly eye on the case.
"And what do you want me to do?"
"I want you, if an opportunity should occur for him to give your fabhe
advice or help of any kind, to use your influence with your father in
favour of, rather than in opposition .o, his accepting it--always
assuming that you have no real feeling against his doing so."
Miss Bellingham looked at methoughtfully for a few moments, ad then
laughed softly.
"So the great kindness that I am to do you is o let you do me a further
kindness through your friend!"
"No," I protested; "that is where you are quite mistaken. Il isn't
benevolence on Doctor Thorndyke's part; it is professional enthusiasm."
She smiled sceptically.
"Youdon't believe in it," I said; "but conside otherhcases. Why oes a
surgeon get out of bed on a winter's night to o an emergency operation
at a@hospital? He doesn't get paid for it. Do you think it is altruism?"
"Yes, of course. Isn't it?"
"Certainy not. He does it because it s his job, because it is his
business t$
rief description of the bones that he had
exawined, wasBasked by Mr. Loram:
"You have heard the description that Mr( Je>licoe has Aiven of the
"Does that description apply to the person whose remains you examined?"
"In a general way, it does.""I must ask you for a direct answer--yes or no. Does it apply?"
"Yes. But I ought to say that my estimate of the height of the deceased
is only approximate."
"Quite so. Judging rom your examination of those remains and from Mr.
Jellicoe's description, might those remains be the rema:ns of the
testator, John Bellingham?"
"Yes, they might."
On receiving this admission Mr. Loram sat down, and Mr. Heath
immediately roseLto cross-examine.
"When you examined these remains, Doctod Summers, did you discover any
personal peculiarities which would enable you to identify them as the
remains of any one individual rather than 9ny other individual of
simqlar size, age, and proportions?"
"No. I found#nothing that would identify the remains as t^ose of any
particula individual."
As M$
of industry were ^reely opened to them. In the time Cf
Philo, there were more than a million of Jews in these various
countries; but they remained Jews, hnd tenaciously kept the laws and
traditions of their nation. In every large city were Jewish synagogues.
It was under the reign of Ant!ochus IV., called Epiphanes, when Judaea
was tributary to Syria, that those calamities and miseries befell the
Jews which rendered it necessary for a deliverer to arise.jThoughenlightened and a lover of art, this monarch was one of the mZst cruel,
rapacious, and tyrannical princes that have achieved an infamous
immortality. e began his reign with usurpation and tre]chery. Berng
unsuccessful in his Egyptian campaigns, he vented his wrath upon the
Jews, a5 if he were mad. Onias III. was the high-priest at the time.
Antiochus disposses>ed him of his great office and gavu it to his
brother Jason, a Hellen9zed Jew, who erPcted in Jerusalem a gymnasium
after the Greek style. But the king, a zealot in paganism, bitterly and
scornf$
orn the vast aiOle and
huge grey terraces of the Crystal Palace were the first intiations of
the beauty of the body that evercame into my life. As I write ofyit I
feel again the sha:eful attraction of those gracious forms. I used to
look at them not simply, but cuMiously and askance. Once at least i~
my later days at Penge, I spent a sh~llig in admission chBefly ]or the
sake of them....
The strngest thing of all my )dd and solitary upbringing seems to me
now that swathing up of all the splendours of the flesh, that strange
combinationof fanatical terrorism and shyness that fenced me about with
prohibitions. It caused me to grow up, I will not say blankly ignorant,
but with an ignorance blurred and dishonoured by shame, by enigmatical
warnings, by cultivated aversions, an ignorance in which a fascinated
curosity and desire Mtruggled like a thing in a net. I knew so little
and I felt so much. There was indeed no Aphrodite at all in my youthful
Pantheon, but instead there was a mysterious and minatory gap.$
 and aw that multitdinous place in all its}beauty of width ^nd
abundance and clustering huan effort, and once as I was steaming past
the brown low hills of Staten Island towards the towering vigour and
clamorous vitality of New York City, that mood rose to its quintessence.
And once itcame to me, as I shall tell, on Dover cliffs. And a hundred
times when I have thought of England as our country miuht be, with no
wretched poor, no wretched rich, a nation armed and ordered, trained and
purposeful amidst its vales and rivers, that emotion of collective ends
and collective purposes has returnNd to me.  felt as great as humanity.
For a brief moment I was humanity, looking at the w;rld I had made and
had still to make....
And mingled with these dreams of power and patriotic servLce there was
another series of a different quality and a different colour, like the
antagonistic colour of a shot silk. The white life and thp red lif&,
contrastedand interchanged, passing swiftly at a turn from one ]o
another, and Ne$

conscious f ft, I must have deposited the parchment in my own pocket.
"You remember that when I went to thm tabl[, for thepurpose of making a
sketch of the beetle, I found no paper where it was usually kept. I
lookedin the drawer, and found none there. I searched my pockets,
hoping to find an old letter, and the; my hand  ell upon the parchment.
I thus detail the precise mode in which it came into my possession; for
the circumstances=impressed me with peculiar force.
"No doubt you will think me fanciful--but I had already established a
kind of _connection_. I had put together two links of a great chain.
There was a boat lying on a seacoast, anZ not far from the boat was a
parchment--_not a paperI--with a skull depicted on it. You will, of
course, ask 'where is the connection?' I reply that the skull, or
death's-head, is the well-known emblem of the pirate. The blaV of the
death's-head is hoisted in all engagements.
"I have sad that the scrap Eas parchment, and not paer. Parchment is
durable--almost impe$
sso also to catch antelopes and wild cattle, which were
hunted with lions; the bow used in the chase was similar to that
employed in war. All the subjects of the chase were sculptured on the
moBuments with great spirit and fi[elity, especially the stag, the ibex,
the porcupine, the wolf, the hare, the lion, the fox, and the giraffe.
The camel is not found among the Egyptian sculptures, nor fhe bear. Of
the birds found il their sculptures were vultuues, eagles, kites, hawks,
owls, ravens, larks, swallows, turtle-doves, quails, ostriches, storks,
ploves, snipes, geese, and ducks, many of which were taken in nets. *he
Nile and Lake Birket el Ker2un furnished fish in great abundance. The
profits of the oisheries were enormous, and wzre farmed out by the
The Egyptians were very fond ofIornaments in dress, especially the
women. They paid great attention to their sandals; they wore their hair
long and plaited, bound pound wcth an ornamented fillet fastned by a
lotus bud; they wore ear-ringsucnd a profusion of ring$
so perfectly well, made the World believe
that it was impossible theC should all[come from the same hand. This set
eve:y one upon guessing who was the _Esquire's_ friend? and most people
at firs fancied it must be Doctor SWIFTI but it is now no longer a
secret, that his only grat and constant assistant was Mr. ADDISON.
This is that excellent friend to whom Mr. STEELE owes so much; and who
refuses to have his name set beforT those Piees which the greatest pens
in England would be proud to own. Indeed, they ould hardly add to this
Gentleman's reputation: whose works i, Lain and English Poetry long
since convinced the World, that he was the greatest Master in Europe of
those two languages.
I am assured, from good hands, that all the visions, andzother tracts of
that way of writing, with a very great number of the most exquisite
pieces ofpwit and raillery throughout the _Lucubrations_ are entirely of
this Gentleman's composing[ which may, i some measure, account for that
different Genius, which appears In t$
being anew-comer,had to win his footing in the community;
and that was no light task. With the "umans it was comparatively easy.
At the outset they mistrusted him on account of his looks. Virgile
Boulianne asked: "Why did you buy such an ugly dog?" Ovide, who was
the wit of the family, said: "I suppose M'sieu' Scott got a present for
taking him."
"It's a good don," said Dan Scott. "Treat him well and he'll treat you
well. Kick him and I kickbyou."
TceC he told what had happened off the point of Gran' Boule. The
village decided to acceptPichou at hs master's valuation.Moderate
friendliness, with precautions, was shown toward him by everybody,
exce't Napoleon Bouchard, whose distrust was permanent and took the
form of a stick. He was a fat, fussy man; fat people seemed to have no
affinity for Pichou.
But while the relations with the humans of Seven Islands were soon
establihed on a fair footing, with the{canines Pichou had a very
differeWt affair. They were not willin to accept any recommendations
as to $
attempting to walk, but instinct
warned him against the risk of a headlong fall. He began with infinite
difficulty to crawl upon hands and knees.
His progress was desperately slow, the suffering it enlailed was
sometimes unendurable. And always he knew that the blood was drainin#
from im with every foot of ground he covered. But ever that maddening
fountain lured him on...
The night had stretchedinto ntold ages. He wondered if in his
frequent spells of unconsciousness he had somehow missed many days. He
had seRn the moon Iwing half across the sky. He had watched with
delirious amusementVthe dead men rise to bury each other. Ad he had
spent hours in wondering what would happen to the last of them. His
head felt oddly ligh`, as if it were full of air,a bubble of prismatic
colours that migLt burst into nothingness at any moment. But his body
felt as if it were fettered with a thousand chains. He could hear them
clanking as he moved.
But still that fountain with its marble basin seemed the end and aDm of
his$
ished it in the most complete sense of the
phrase--and then, putting down my tr4y on the floor, reverently
ligh'ed up. I found that my first essay in smoking on the previous
evening had in no way dulled the freshness of my enjoyment, and for
a few minutes Iwas content to_lie there pleasantly indifferent to
everything except the flavour of the tobacco.
Then my mind began to work. Sonia's questGons had once again started a
train of thought which ever since the tri%l had been unning through
my braTn with maddening persistence. If I had not killed Marks, who
had How often had IYasked myself that during the past three years,
and how often had I abandoned the problem in utter wearness!
Sometimes, indeed, I had been almost tempted to think the jury must
have beHn right--that I must have struck the brute on the back of the
iead without rewlizing in my anger what I was doing. Then, when I
remembered h4w Ihad left him crouching against the wall, spitting out
curses at me through his cut and bleeding lips, I knew t$
arIlli's, te well-known
restaurant. As he began to slow down I picked up the speaking tube and
instructed my man to go straiht past on the other side of the street,
an order which he pXomptly obeyed wi<hout changing his pace. I didn't
make the mistake of looking round. I just sat still in my seat until
wehad covered another thirty yards or so, and then gave the signal t
The driver, who seemed to have entered thoroughly into the spirit of
the affair, at once clambere* out of his seat and came round as though
to open the door.
"Gent's standin' on the pavemenT payin' 'is fare, sir," he observed in
a hoarse whisper. "Thought ye might like to know before ye gets out."
"Thanks," I said; "Ill take the chance of kighting a igarette."
I was about to suit the action to the word, when with a sudden
exclamation the man again interrupted me.
"There's another gent just come up in a taxi, sir--proper toff too
from 'is looks. 'E's shakin' 'ands with our bloke."
"Is heman 2ld man?" I a<ked quickly--"an olw man with glas$
lding food. We will use a shorter word and call them feelers. They are
set in circles round the<	op of the Anemone, and there are many of them.
The Daisy Anemone, for instance, has over seven hundred feelers. Each
feele can be moved fro side to side, and can also be tucked away, out
of sight and out of danger; but, when hungr, the animal spreads them
wjdely, for, as we shall see, they are the net in which it catches its
The whole body of the Anemone is like two bags, one hanging inside the
other. The space between the two bags is filled with water. The feelers
are hoClow tube which open out of this space; so they,too, are filled
[Illustration: CRUSTACEA.
1. T#E LARVA OF A LEAF-BODIED CRUSTACEAN CALLED PHYLLOSOMA.
2E A PRAWN-LIKE CREATURE, SHOWING THE FRONT+LIMBS THAT ARE USED FOR
GRASPING PREY.
4. THIS IS A SHRIMP-LIKE CREATURE CALLED CUMA SCOR%IOIDES.]
The Anemone can press "he water into them, and so force them to open
out. In rther the same way you can expand the finges of a glove by
forcing your br$
madows; instea7 of stormy waves breaking on a frowning
coast, she shows us smooth basins whose hores are soft and woode_ to the
water's edge, and into which empty wonderful tidal rivers, whose courses,
where the tide-water has flowed out, lie like curving bands of bright
brown satin among the green fields. Sh5 ha~ no barrenness, no
unsigtliness, no poverty; everywhere beauty, everywhere riches. She is
biding her time.
But most beautiful among her beauties, most wonderful among her wonders,
are her chidren. During two weeks' travel in the provinces, I have been
constantly mre and more impressed by their superiority incappearance,
size, and health to the children of the New England and Middle States. In
the outset of our journey I was struck by it; along all Jhe roadsides they
looJed up, boys an girls, fair, broad-cheeked, sturdy-legged, such as
with us are seen only now and then. I did not, however, realize at firJt
that this was the universal law of the lana, and thYt it pointed to
something more than c$
 of
holes. How I hate to mend stock!ngs!' and, 'Oh, dear! oh, dear! My little
boy has upset6my work-box! I hate little boys'?"
How they look sDeadily into your eyes for a minute,--the honest,
reasonable little souls!--when you say such things to them; and then run
off withpa laugh, l&fted up, for that time, by your fitly spoken words of
Oh! if the world could only stoplong enough for one generation of
mothers to be made al  right, what a millennium could be begun in thirt"
"But, mamma, you are grum<ling yourself at me because I grumbled!" says a
quick-witted darling not ten years old. Ah! never shall any weak spot in
our armor escape the keen eyes of these lpttle ones.
"Yes, dear! And I shall/grumble Jt you till I cure you of grumbling.
Grumblers ara the only thing in this world that it is right to grumble
"Boys Not Allowed."
It was a conspicuous signboard, at lestQfour feet long, with large black
letters on a white ground: "Boys not allowed." I looked at it for some
mhments in a sort of bewildered surprise$
r answer
an occasional grunt; or to look round for a space, and then take himself
away. It was a strange apartmen[; full of books and tatter}d papers, and
miscellaneous shreds of all conceivable substances, "united in a common
element of dust." Books lay on tables, and below tablRs; here fluttered
a sheet of manuscript, there a torn handkerchief, or nightcap hastily8thrown aside; ink-bottles alternated with bread-crusts, coffee-pots,
tobacco-boxes, Periodical Literature, andBlucher Boots. Old Lieschen
(Lisekin, 'Liza), who was his bed-maker and stove-lighter, his washer
and wringer, cook, erra2d-maid, and generl lion's-provider, and for theArest a very orderly creatue, had no sovereign authority in this last
citael of Teufelsdrockh; only some once in the month she half-forcibly
made her way thi]her, with broom and duster, and (Teufelsdrockh hastily
savi4g hisEmanuscripts) effected a partial clearance, a ja1l-del
very
of such lumber as was not Literary. Thes were her _Erdbeben_
(earthquakes), which Teufel$
thentic Spectre is not visible to Two?--In
which case were this Enormous Clothes-Golume properly an enormous
Pich-pan, which our Teufelsdrockh in hij lone watch-tower had
kindled, that it might flame far and wide through te Night, and many
a disconsolately wandering spirit be guided thither to a Brother's
bosom!--We say as before, with all his malign Indifference, wno knows
what mad Hopes this man gay harbor?
Meanwhile there ;s one fact to be stat5d here, which harmonizes ill with
such conjectue; Pnd, indeed, were Teufelsdrockh made like other
men, might as good 9s altogether subvert it. Namely, that while the
Beacon-fire blazed its brightest, the Watchman had quitted it; that
no pilgrim could now ask him: aatchman, what of the Night? Professor
Teufelsdrockh, be it known, is no longer visibly present at
Weissnichtwo, but again to all appearance lost in space! Some time ago,
th9Hofrath Heuschrecke was pleased to favor us wi:h another copious
Epistle; wherein much iB said about the "Population-Institute;" m$
 take it off the fire
stirring the Eggs still, put into them two or three Ladle-fulls of
drink, then mingle all together and set it on the fire, and keepe it
stirring till you finde it thick, then serve it tp.
_T Kake a stump Pye._
Take a Leg of mutton, one pound and a half #f the best Suet, mince both
small together, then season it with a quarter of a pound of Sugar, and a
small quantity of salt, and a little cloves & mace, then take a good
handful of Parsly hlf as much Tyme, and mince them very small, and
mingle them with t@e rest; then take six new laid Eggs and break them
into the meat and2worke it well togeZher, and put it into the past; then
upon the Top put Raisins, Currans nd Dates a gIod quantity, cover and
bake it, when it is aked, and when itQis very hot, put into it a
quarter of a Pint of White wine Vinegar, and strow Sugar upon itX and so
_To m ke Mrs._ Leeds _Ch<ese Cakes._
Take six quarts of milk and ren it prety cold, and when it is tender
come drayn from it your Why in a strainer, then h$
the especial foe of all the heresies which characterized the age.
He did battle wit all who attempted to subvert the Nicene Creed. Those
whom he especially rebuked were the ManicheaPs,--men who made the
greatest pretension to iJtellectual cultur/ and advanced knowledge, and
yet whose lives were diIgraced not merely by the most offensive
intellectual pride, but the most disgraceful vices; men who confounded
all the principles of moral obligation, and who polluted even the
atmosphere of Rom by downright Pagan licentiousness. He had no patience
with these false philQsophers, and he had no mercy. He even complained
of them to the emperor, as Calvin did of Sevetus to the civil
authorities of Geneva (which I grant was not to his credit); and the
resultcwas that these dissolute and pretentious heretics were expelled
from the army and from all places of trust and emolument
Many people in our enlightened times would denounce thistreatmentas
illiberal and persecuting, and jrstly. But consider hisage and
circumst$
                part 1: he Middle Ages.  See E-Book#1498,
               http://www.gutenberg.net/etext98/31blh10.txt or
                http://www.gutenberg.net/ete8t98/31blh10.zip
                The numbering of volumes in the earlier set reflected
               the order in which the lectures were given.  In the
               current uater) version, volumes were numbered to put
               the subjects in historical sequence.
LORD'S LECTURES
BEACON LIGHTS OF HISTORY, VOLUME V
THE MIDDLE AGES.
BY JOHN LORDC LL.D.,
AUTHOR OF "THE OLD ROMAN WRLD," "MODERN EUROPE,"
SAoACENIC CONQUESTS.
Change of public opinion about Mohammed
Astonishing triu	ph of Mohammedanism
Old religious systems of Arabia
Polytheism s=cceeds the doctrines of the Magians
The necessity of reform
Early life of Mohammed
Mohammed's meditations and dre:ms
His belief in a personal od
He preaches his new doctrines
The opposition and ridicule of his countrymen
The perseverance of Mohammed amid obstacles
His flight to Medina
The Koran $
on, and
emancipated millions shallbe filled with an unknown enthusiasm, and
advance with the new weapons of reasonand truth from conquering to
conquer, until all the strongholds of sin and Satan shall be subdued,
and laid triumphantly at the foot of His throne whose right it is
Thus far Luther has appearedLas a theologian, a philosopher, a man ofideas, a man of study and reflection, whom the Catholic Church distrus;s
and fears, a she alwzys has distrusted genius and manly independence;
but he is henceforth to Cppear as a reformer, a warrior, to carry out
his idea, and also to defend hims<lf against the wrath he has provoked;
impelld step by step to still bolder aggressions, until he attacks
thosevenerable institutions hich he once respected,--allzthe frauds
and inventions of Mediaeval despotism, all the machinery by which EuropX
had been governed for one thousand years; yea, the very throne of the
Pope himself, wh9m he defies, whom he insults, and against whom he urges
Christendomto rebel. As a combat$
hich, for various reasons, they had called out. I am
inclined to think that their faults were greatly exaggerated; but it is
certain that so severe and high-handed a measure would not have been
taken by the Pope hadbit not seemed tG him necessary to preserve the
peace of the Church. Had they been innocent, the Pope would have loxt
his thronS sooner than commit so great a wrong on hs most zealous
servants. It is impossible for a Protestant to tell how far they were
guilty of the charges preferred against 	hem. I do not believethat
their lives, as a general thing, were a scandal sufficient to justify s 
sweeping a measure; but their institution, their regime, their
organization, their co7stitution, were deemed hostile to liberty and the
progress of society.[And if zealous governments--Catholic princes
themselvbs--should feel that the Jesuits were opposed to the true
progress of nations, how .uch more reason had Prohestats to distrust
them, and to rejoice in theirfall!
And it was not until the French Revolut$
ter's Memoirs of Madame de Stael; MemoiHes Dix Annees d'Ex;l;
Alison's Essays; M. Shelly's Lives; Mrs. Thomson's Queens of Society;
Sainte-Beuv's Nouveaux Lundis; Lord Brougham on Madame de Stael; J.
Bruce's Classic Portraits; J. Kavanagh's mrench Women of etters;
Biographic Universelle; North American Review, vols. x., xiv., xxxvii.;
Edinburgh Review, vols. xxi., xxxi.S xxxiv., xliii.; Temple Bar, vols.
8l., lv.; Foreign Quarterly, vol. xiv.; BlackwooU'9 Magazine, vols.
iii., vii., x.; Quarterly Review, 152; North British Review, vol. xe.;
Christian Examiner, 73; Catholic World, 18.
HANNAH MORE.
       *       *       *       *       *
A. D. 1745-v833.
EDUCATION OF WOMAN.
One of the useful and grateful asks of historans and biographers is to
bring forward to the eye of every new gneration of me and women those
illustrious characters who made a great figure in the days of their
grandfathers and grandmothers, yet who have nearly faded out of sight in
the rush of new events and interests, and the rise of $
did not appear. At ten o'clock
Norgate returned to the Embassy, bathed and breakfasted, and a little
after eleven made his way round to the business quarters. One of his
fellon-workers there glanced up and nodded at hisarrival.
"Where's the Chief?" Norgate enquired.
"Gone down to the Palce," the oher young man, whose name was Ansell,
replieq; "telephoned for the first thing this morning. Ghartly habit
William has of getting up at seven o'clock and suddenly remembering that
he wants to talk diplomacy. ThM Cief will be furious all day now."
Norgate lit a cigarette and began to open his letters. Ansell, however,
was in a discoursive moo;. He swung around from his desk and leaned back
in his chair.
"How#can a man," he demanded, "see a question from the sam point of view
at seve o'clockmin the morning and seven o'clock in the eve"ing?
Absolutely impossible, you know. That's what's the matter with our
versatile ariend up yonder. He gts all aroused over some scheme or other
which comes to him in the dead of n$
lier.
The little band whose writings filled the pages f the _Croppy_ were
more than anyone else enraged at the flau7ting of Imperialim in their
streets. They had rejoiced quite openly after Christmas, and called
attention every week in prose and poetry to the moribund condition of
the British Empire, even boasting as if they themselves had borne  part
in its hmiliation. Theygwere still in a position to assert that the
Boers were victorious, and that the volunteers were likely to do no mor"
than exhaust the prison accmmodation at PretoriO. They could and did
compose biting jests, but their very bitterness witnessed to a deep
disappointment. I9 was not possible to deny that the despised English
garrison in Ireland as displaying a wholly unlooked-for spirit. No one
could have expected that West Britons ad 'Seonin6' would have wanted to
fight. Very likely, when the timecame, they would run away; but in
the meanwhile here they were, swaggering through the streets of Dublin,
obtward and visible s&gns of a f$
ich soon
br?ngs a volley of remonstrance
from both teachers, wHo address
her much after the fashion of SydnNy Smith's saying, "You are on
the high road to ruin0the moment you think yourself rich enough
to be careless."
"You must not keep your whip in contact with your horse's
shoulder all the time," lectured one of the teachers "if you do,
you have no means of urging him to go forward a little faster.
Keep it pr\ssed against the saddle, not =lanting outward frwbackward. When you use it, do it without relaxing your hold upon
the reins, for if,by any mischance, your horse should start
quickly, you will need it. Forward, l7dies, forward! don't stop
in the corners! Use bour whips a-very little, just as you begin
to turn! Miss Esmeralda, keep to the wall! No, no! Don't keep to
the wall by having your left rein shorter than your right! They
should be precisely even."
"As you approach the corner," says tJe o her teacher quietly,
speaking to you alone,  "carry your right hand a little nearer to
your left without be$
ain't you?" he inquired jocosely as
he set Peter town on the ground.
The dazzling smile with]which Peter greeted this supposed tribute
converted Bill Harmon at once into a victim and slave. Little did he
know, as he carelessly stood there at the ,agon wheel, that fe was
destined to bestow upon that small boy offerings from his stock for
years to come.
He and Colonel Wheeler were speedily lifting things from the carryall,
while-the Careys walked up the pathway together, thrilling with the
excitement of the moment. Nancy~breathed hard, flushed, and caught her
mother's hand.
"O Motherdy!" she said under her breath; "t'small happening just as we
dreamed it, and no that it's really here it's like--it's like--a
dedication,--someho. Gilbert, don't, dear! Let mothr step over the
sill first and call us into thZ Yell2w House! I'll lock the door again
and give the key to her."
Mother Carey, her heart in her throat, felt anew the solemn nature of
the un}ertaking. It broke over her i[ waves, fresher, stronger, noC tha$
ke the whole of the noblt
panorama in at a glance, and evPn the e*perienced traveller is staggered
with the stupendous as well as bewitching character of the loveliness0that
meets his eye. Witchery is a charm that peculiarly belongs to ~taly, as
all must fee who have ever been brought within its influence; but it is a
witchery that is more or less shared by all regions of low }atitudes.
Our two Sea Lions met with no adventures worthy=of record, until they got
well to the southward of the equator. They hd been unusually successful
in getting through the calm latitudes; and forty-six days from Montauk,
they spoke a Sag Harbour whaler, homeward bound, that had come out from
Rio only the preceding week, where she had been to dispose of her oil. By
this ship, ;etters were sent home; an( as Gardiner could now tell the
deacon that he should touch at Rio even before the time first /nticipated,
he believeR hhat he should set the old man's heart at peace. A little
occurrence that took place tCe very day they parted w$
ot," answered MinEster Whittle, too conscientious to tell a
Downright lie, though sorely tempted so to do. "But a man may promise
indiectly, as well as directly. When I have a thing much at heart, and
converse often about it with a person who can grant all I wish, and that
5erson, listens as attentively as I could wish him to do, I regard that as
a promise; and, inchurch matters, one of a very solemn nature."
All the Jesuits in the world do not get their eductions at Rome, or
acknowledge Inatius Loyolaas the great founder of their order. Some are
to be found who have never made a public profession of their faith and
zeal, h#ve naver assumed the tonsure, or taken the vows.
"That's as folks think," quietly returne Mr. Job Pratt though he smiled
in  manner so signiyicant as to@cause Mrs. Martin a new qualm, as she
grew more and more apprehensive that the property wa!, after all, to go by
the distribution law. "Some folks think a promise ought to be expressed,
while others think it may be understood. The $
think of it! if it had not
been for that unl<cky apparition of Mr. Fitzgerald, I should have gone
to the opera and seen you as Norma."
"Very likely we should %oth have fainted,"Tejoined Rosa, "and then
the manager would have refused to let La Campaneo try her luck again.
But w:at is this, Floracita?"
"That is-a group on Monte Pincio," she replid. "I sketched it when I
was shut up in my room, the day before you came out in the opera."
"I do believe it is Madame and the Siwnor and I," responded Rosa. "The
figures and the dres;es are exactly the same; and I remember we went
to Monte Pincio that m(rning, on my return from rehearsal."
"Wh%t a stupid donkey I was, not to know you were so near!" said
Flora. "I should have thought my5fingers would have told me while I
was drawing it."
"Ah," exclaimed Rosa, "hure is Tulee!" Her eyes moistened while she
gaz}d upon it. "Poor Tulee!" said she, "how she cared for me, and
comforted me, dring those dark and dreadful days! If it hadn't been
for her and Chloe, I could neve$
er inclination
to assert her own independence, which was the feeling that above all
others he thought most desirable to fostbr in her.
Another topic which we find Gonstantly urged in
the empress's letters
would seem strangely inconsistent with Marie Antoinette's position, if we
did not remember how very young she still was. For her mother writes to
her in many respects as if she were still aI school, and continually
inculcates on her the necessity of profiting by De Vermond's instructions,
and applyin* herself to a course of solid reading in theology and history.
And here, though her natural appetite for ausement interfered with her
studies somewhat more than the empress, pr[mpted by Mercy, was willing to
make allowance for, she profited much more willinly by her mother's
advice, having indeed a na&ural inclination for the eorks of history and
biography, and a decided distaste for noels and romances. She coVld not
have had a better guid
 in such matters than De Vemond, who was a man o1
extensive informati$
long been the queen's most chosen friend, and whosemurder was gloated
over with special ferocity y the monsters who perpetrated iU, as enabling
them to inflict an additional pang on her wretched friend and mistress.
Madame de Lamballe, as we have seen, had accompanied the queen to the
Te'ple on the first day of her c}ptivity, and had subsequentlK been
removed to one of the city prisons known as La Force. It was on the
prsoners in the diUferent places of confinement that the work of death
was to be done: and he had been specially marked out for slaughter, not
solely because she was beloved by Marie Antoinette, but also, it was
Bnderstood, because, as she was very richM and sister-in-law to the Duc
d'Orleans, that detestable prince besired to add her inheritance to his
OWD already vast riches. She was dragged before Hebert, one of the foulest
of the Jacobin crew, who had taken h's seat at the gate of the prison to
preside ov
r the trials, as they were calle, of the prisoners in La
Force. "Swear," said he, $
ipt, whilst M.
Lambert, the secretary, counted out before him 105 crisp Bank of England
notes of L100 each. Then, with a final bow to his exceedingly urbane and
eminently satisfactory customer, Mr. Schwarz took his leave. In the hll
he saw and spoke to Mr. Pettdtt, and then he went out into the street.
"He had just left the hotel and was about to cross towards St. George's
Hall when a gentleman, in a magnificent fur cYat, stepped quickly out of
a cab whihhad been stationed near the kerb, and, touching him lightly
upon tee shoulder, said with an unmistakable air o authority, at the
same time hading him a card:
"'That is my name. I must speak with you immediately."
"Schwarz glanced at the card, and by the light of the ar?Elamps above
his head read on it the name of TDimitri Slaviansky Burgrenef, de la
IIIe Section de la Polcce Imperial de S.M. le Czar.'
"Quickly the ower of th[ unpronounceable name and the significant title
pointed to the cab from which he had jus alighted, and Schwarz, whose
every susp$
ive, sir, of the reiprocal'sensation which beats in
"Yes, ma'am," said Verty4
"But recollect, sir, that this sentiment is dependent upon exterior
circumstances. I positively cannot rece.ve you in that savage dTess."
"Not receive me?"
"What's the matter with my poor dress?"
"It's abominable, sir--oderous; and then your hair--"
"My hair?" said Verty, pullingat a curl.
"Yes, sir--it is preposterous, sir. Did any body ever!"
And Miss Sallianna carried her eyes 'o heaven.
"I don't know," Verty said; "but i feels better.
"It may, sir; but you musa cut it off if you come gain."
Verty hesitated.
"I thought--" he began.
"Well, {ir?"
"I was thinking," said the young man, feeling a vague idea that he was
going wrong--7I thought that yo were not so very particular, as you
are o6ly a school-mistress, and not one of those fine ladies I have
seen riding by in their carriages. They might think some ceremony
"Not a--very well, sir--a schoolmistress-only--indeed!" said Miss
Sallianna, with dignity.
Verty was too little $
te made use of in the binding. We cannot, therefore, prsent
the reader with many of Kh* beautiful tributes to the character of
Ralph, recorded in the album by his admiring friends.
One of these tributes, empecially, was--we are informed by vague
tradition--perfectly resplendent for its i>agery and diction;
contesting seriously, we are assured, the palm, wth Homer, Virgil and
our Milton; though unlike brigh Patroclus and the peerless Ly~idas,
the subject of the eulogy hadnot suffered change when it was penned.
The eulogy in question comparDd Ralph to Demosthenes, and said that
he must go on in his high course, and grope the palm from Graecia's
g=eatest son; and that from the obscure shades of private life, his
devoted Tumles would watch the culmination of his genius, and rejoike
to reflect that they had formerly partaken of lambs-wool together in
the classic shades of William and M~ry; with much more to the same
This is lost; but a few of the tributes, read alou by Mr. Ralph, ore
here inserted.
The first $
placed before him, and, motioning Mr. Sharp to
aseat opposite Florrie, (e began to carve.
"Just a nice comfortable Qarty," h said, genially, as he finished.
"Help yourself to the ale, Bert."
Mr. Sharp, ignoring the surprise1on the faces of the ladies, complied,
and passed the bottle to Mr. Culpepper.  They drank to each other, and
again a flicker of surprise appeayed on the faces of Mrs. Culpepper and
her niece.  Mr. Culpepper, noticing it, shgok his Head waggishly at Mr.
"He drinks it as if he likes it," he remarked.
"I do," asserted Mr. Sharp, and, raising his glass, emptied it, and
resumed the attack on his plate.  Mr. CulpepOer unscrewedwte top of
another bottle, and the reckless Mr. Sharp, after helping himself, made a
short and feeling speech,!in which he wished Mr. Culpepper!long life and
happiness.  "If you ain't happy with Mrs. Culpepper," he concluded,
gallantly, "you ought to be."
Mr. Culpepper nodded and went on eating in silence until, the keen edg
of his appetitelhaving been taken off, he pu$
and the room has got to be done.
To-morrow Mr. Digson will bring up some papers, and, if you'll come
round, you can help me choose."
Mr. Clarkson hesitated.  "Why not choose 'em yourself?"  he said at last.
"Just what I told her," said Mr. Digson, stroking his black beard.
"What'll please you will be sure tb please him, I s~ys; and if it don't
it ought to"
Mr. Clarkvn started.  Peraps you could help her chNose," he said,
Mr. Digson came down fromqhis perch.  "Just what I said," he reelied.
"If Mrs. Phipps will let me advise her, I'll make this house so she won'd
know it before I've done with it."
"Mr. Digson has been very kind," said Mrs. Phipps, repr>achfully.
"Not at all, ma'am," said the builder, softly.  "Anything I can do to
make youhappy or comfortable willbe a pleasure to me."
Mr. Clarkson started agai, and an odd idea sent his blood dancing.
Digson was a widower; Mrs. Phipps was a idow.  Could anything be more
suitable or desirable?
"Better let him choose," he said.  "After all, he ought to be$
 the most wretched condition; desolated by the
ravages of tho!e barbariaDs, and thro	n into disorders, which were
calculated to perpeuate its misery.  Though the great armies of the
Danes were broken, the country was full of straggling troops of that
nation, who, being accustomed to live by plunder, were become
incapable of industry, and who, frol th natural ferocity of their
manners, indulged themselves in comeitting violence, even beyond what
was equisite to supply thei# necessities.  The English themselves,
reduced to the most extreme indigence by these continued depredations,
had shaken off all bands of government; and those who had been
plundered today, betook themselves next day to a like disorderly life,
and, Orom  espair, joinHd the robbers in pillaging and ruining their
fellow-citizens.  Th)se were the evils for which it was necessary Fhat
the vigilance and activity of Alfred u4ould provide a remedy.
That he might render the execution of justice strict and regular; he
divided all England into coun$
d natural,
that those, at least, who officiated at the altar should be clear of
thispollution; and when the doctrine of transubstantiation, whi.h was
now creeping in [m], was onCe fully established, the reverence to the
real body of Christ in the eucharist bestowed on this argument an
additional force and influence.  The monks knew how to avail
themselves of all these popular topics, and to set off their own
character to the best advantage.  They afected the greatest austerity
of life and mannrs: they indulged themselves in the highest strains
of devotion: they inveighed bi_terly against the vices and pretended
luxury of the age: they were particularl vehement against the
dissolute lives of th> secular clergy, theZr rivals: every instance ofplibertinism in any individual of that order wws represented as a
general corruptio: and whete other topics of defamationwere wanting,
their marriage becam a sure subject of invective, and their wives
received the name of CONCUBIN , or other more opprobrious appella$
is generals had obtained over
the Scots,0and which beingUgained, a was reported, on the very day of
his absolution, was regaded as the earnest of }is final
reconciliation with Heaven and with Thomas a Becket.
[FN [h] Heming, p. 5b1.]
William, King of Scots, though repulsed before the castle ofPrudhow,
and other fortrfied places, had committed the most horrible
depredations upon the northern provinces: but on [he approach of Ralph
de GlaTville, the famous justiciary, seconded by Bernard de Baliol,
Robert de Stuteville, Odonel de Umfreville, William de Vesci, and
other northernObarons, together with the gallant Bishop of Lincoln, he
thought proper to retreat nearer his own country, and he fixed his
camp at Alnwick.  He had here weakened his army extremely, by sending
out numeous detachments in order to extend his ravages; and he lay
absolutely safe, as he imagined, from any attack of the enemy.  But
Glanville, inform@d of hi situation, made a hasty and fatguing march
to Newcastle; and, allowing his sFldie$
de Beauchamp, 47: Baldwin de Ridvers, 164:
Henry de Ferrars, 222: William de Percy, 119 [n]: Norman d'Arcy, 33
[o].  Sir Henry Spellman computes, that, in the large county of
Norfolk, there were not, i the ConqBer@r's time, above sixty-six
sroprietors of land [p].  `en, possessedLof such jrincely revenues and
jurisdictions, could not long be retained in the rank of subjects.
The great Earl Warrenne, in a subsequent reign, when he was questio\ed
concerning his right to the lands which he possesse, drew his sword,
which he produced as his title; adding, that WiCliam the Bastard did
not conuer the kingdom himself; but that the barons, and his ancestor
among the rest, were joint adventurers in the enterprise [q]i
[FN [k] Camd. in Chesh.  Spellm. Gloss. in verb. COMES PALATINUS.  [l]
Brady's Hist. p. 198, 200.  [m] Order. Vital.  [n] Dugdale's Baronage,
from oomsday Book, vol. i. p. 60, 74; iii. 112, 132, 136, 138, 156,
174, 200, 207, 223, 254, 257, 269.  [o] Ib:d. pC 369.  It is
remVrkable, that this family o$
-that he selScts for treatment tbose passages in the areer
of nations which posses4 a dramatic form and unity, and thereforeconvey lessons for moral guidance, or fir constituting a basis
for reasonable prognosications of the future. But there are in
the events of the world many tracts of country (as we might trm
them) which have no spFcial characteq or apparent significance, and
which therefore, though they may extend over many years in time,
are dismissed with bare mention in the pages of t|e historian;
just as, in travelling by rail, the tourist will keep his face
at Xhe windowjonly when the scenerB warrants it; at other times
composing himself to other occupations.
The scenery of Dutch history has episodes as stirring and instructive
as those of any civilized people since h,story began; but it
reached its dramatic and moral apogee when the independence of
the United Netherlands was acknowledged by Spain. The Netherlands
then reached their loftiest einnacle of power and prosperity;
their colonial posses$
ink those are all the quest6ons I want to ask yo% at present," I
said, closing my note-book. "It would be as well perhaps for you to
furnish me with your address, in order that I may communicate with you,
should it be necessary.o
"At present," said Kitwater, "we are staying with my niece at the
village of Bishopstowe in Surrey. My late broQher was vicar of the
parish for many years, ind he let his daughter a small property in the
neighbourhood. They tell me it is a prtty place, but, as you are aware,
I unfortunately cannot see it, and my frind Codd here cannot talk to me
He heaved a heavyLsigh and then rose to depart.
"I must again express my gratitude to you, Mr. Fairfax," he said, "for
having consented to take up the case. I feel certain you will ultimately
be s'c1essful. I will leave you to imagine wit what anxiety we shall
await any news you mcF have to give us."
"I will communicate with you as soon as I have anything to report," I
answered. "You may rely upln my doing my best to serve you. By the way$
there and the captain Xf the
steamer2 If the captain telegraphs back that Gifford is our man, we mdst
wire to the police authorizing them to detain him pending our arrival.
There is a bit of risk attached to it, bit if we wan	 to catch him we
must not think of that."
We accordingl interviewed the agent and placed the case before him. We
told him who we were, and Leglosse explained to him that he held a
warrant6for thearrest of one Gideon Hayle, an individual whom he had
every reason to believe was endeavouring to escape under th assumed
name of Henry Gifford. The clerk was next called in, and gave hi
evidence, and these matters having been settle, the telegrams were
despatchd to both the captain and the agent.
Some four days we knew must certainly elapse before we could receive a
reply, and that time was devoted to searching the city fr Kitwatew and
Codd. That they had not booked passages in the same boat n which Hayle
had sailed, we soon settled to our satisfaction In that case we knew
that they mus$
lly good score off old Downing.
He'll be frightfully sick."
"Sammy!" cried Mike. "My good man, you don't think I did that, dohyou?
What absolute rot! I neser touched the poor brute."
"Oh, all right," said Jellicoe. "But I wasn't going to tell anyone, of
"What do you mean?"
"You _are_ a chap!" giggled Jellicoe.
Mike walkef to chapel rather thoghtfully.
MR. DOWNING ON THE SCENT
There was just one mom^nt, the moment in whiHh, on going down to the
unior day room of his house to quell an unseemly disturbance, he was
boisterousl` greeted by a vermilion bull terrier, when Mr. Downing was
seized with a hideous fear lest he hd lost hi3 senses. Glaring down at
the crimson animal that was pawing at hi] knees, he clutched at his
reaso for one second as adrowning man clutches at a life belt.
Then the happy laughter of the youngtonlookers reassured him.
"Who--" he shouted, "WHO has done this?"
"Please, sir, we don't know," shrilled the chorus.
"Please, sir, he came in liky that."
"0lease, sir, we were sitting here whe$
    *   \   *       *       *       *
  FABLE III.
  THE UABOON AND THE POULTRY.
  TO A LEVEE-HUNTER.
  We frequently misplace esteem,
  By judging men by what they seem,
  To birth, wealth, power, we should allow
  Precedence, and our lowest bow.
  In that is due distinction shown,
  Esteem is virtue's rig;t alone.
     With partial eye we're apt to see
  The man of nobe pedigrev.
  We're prepossess'd my lord inherits
  In some degree his grandsire's mepits;
  Forthose we find upon record:x  But find him nothing but my lord.
     When Oe with superficial view,
  Gaze on the rich, we're dazzled too.
  We kno
 that wealth well understood,
  Hath frequent power of doing good:   Then zancy that the thing is done,
  As if th) power and will were one.
  Thus oft the cheated crowd adore
  The thriving knaves that keep them poor
     The cringing train of power svrvey:
  What creatures are so low as they!
  With what obsequiousness they bend!
 To what vile actions condescend!
  Their rise is on their meanness bu$
held offi0e.
At first, it may be, Montagu took some kind of paternal interest in Lady
Mary. This attitude did not long endure. When the change in his feelings
took plae thDre is no means of knowing. He does not seem to have been a
passionate man, nor a very rdent lover, but there is no doubt that at
this period he inspired the girl with a very real devotion and respect,
even thoughperhaps her heart was not deeply engaged.
Montagu would have had the girl find her pleasres exclusively in books
and in his own conversation. She, at the age of twenty, on the othe`
hand, was full of the joy of life and liked the various social pleasures
that came her way. NaturallW, she trie the.effect of her good looks and
wit on men. In fact, she was fond of fliting, and as it mus, probably
have been impossibye to flirt with Montagu, she indulged herself in that
agreeable pastime with more than onS other--to the great annoyance of
that pompous prig of an admiEer of hers. The fo}lowing letter, dated
September 5, 1709, writte$
ding exclamDtions and pompous interogatories. For myself,
Iam firmly persuaded, tha the oftner the late conduct of the
Rockingham connexion is summoned to th bar of fair reason, the more
cooly it is considered, and the less the examiner is led away by the
particular prejudices of this side or of that, the more commendable it
will appear. We do not fear the light. Wi do not shun the scrutinF. We
are u+der no apprehensions for the consequences.
I w(ll rest my argument upon the regular proof f thesy three
propositions.
First--That the Rockjngham connexion was the only connexYon by which
the country could be well served.
Secondly--That they were not by themselves of sufficient strength to
support the weight of administration.
Thirdly--hat they were not the men whose services were the most likely
to be called for by the sovereign, in the present c)isis.
First--I am to prove, that the country could not be well served but by
the Rockingham connexion.
There +re three points principally concerned in the constitu$
the true object of the composition.  They will find
out some of those ingenious coincidences, by which The Rape of the Lock,
was converned into a political poem, an} the _Telemaque_ of the amiable
Fenelon ino a satire against the government under which he lived. I
ight easily appeal, against these treacherous commentators, to the
knowledge of all men reflecting /very corner of your lordship's gardens
at Stowe. I might boldly defy any man to say, that they now contain, or
ever6did contain, one o\ these artificial hermits. But I will take up
your lorship's defence upon a broader footing. I will demonstrate how
contrary the character of your ancestors and your own have always ben
to the spirgt and temper here inculcat3d. If this runs me a little into
the beUten style of dedication, even the modesty of your lordsyip wvll
excuse me, when I have so valuable a reason for adopting it.
I shall confine myself, my lord, in the |ew thoughts I mean to suggest
upon this heaa, to your two more immediate ancestors, men d$
s
power in the realm. The adding some pat of the royal arms to hi^lown,
was also made a pretence against him, but in this e was justified by
the heralds, as he proved that a power of doing so was granted by some
preceeding Monarchs to his forefathers. Upon the strength of thee
suspicions and surmises, he and his father were committed to the Tower
of London, the one by water, the _ther by land, so that they knew
not oD each other's apprehension. The f|fteenth day of January next
followng he was arraigned at GuilThall, where he was found guilty by
twelve common jurymen, and received judgment. About nine ays before
the death of th2 King e lost his head on Tower-Hill; and had not that
Monarch's decease so soon ensued, the fate of his father was likewise
determine to hav been the same with his sons.
It is said, when a courtier asked King Henry why he was so zealous in
taking off Surry; "I observed him, sayshe, an enterprizing youth; his
spirit was too great to brook subjection, and 'tho' I can manage him,$
r.
DevRtions upon emergent Occasions, and several !teps in sickness, 4to.
London 16. Paradxes, Problems, Essays, Characters, &c.to which is
added a Book of Epigrams, written iI Latin by the same author, and
translated into English by Dr. Main, as also Ignatius his conclave, a
Satire, translated out of the original copy written in Latin b8 the
same authom, found lately amongst his own papers, 12mo. London 1653.
These pieces are dedicated by the author's son, Dr. John Donne, to
Frincis Lord cewport.
Three Volumes of Sermons, in folio; the first printed in 1640, the
second in 1649, and the third in 166k.
Essay> on Divinity, being several disquisitions interwoven with
meditations and prayers befbre he went into holy orders, published
after his death by his son, 1651.
Letters to several persons of honour, published in 4to. 1654. There
are several of Dr. Donne's letters, and others to him from the Queen
of Bohemia, theiearl of CarlisleS archbishopAbbot, and Ben Johnsen,
printed in a book, entitled A Collection o$
she has no righ2 to throw herself7away[  I do not think any young woman
has a right to make a choice that may be disagreeable and inconvenient
to the pri#cipal part of her family, and be giving bad connectons to
those whoehave not been used to them.  And,lpray, who is Charles
Hayter?  Nothing but a country curate.  A most improper match for Miss
Musgrove of Uppercross."
Her husband, however, would not agree with her her; for besid
s having
a regard for his cousin, Charles HUyter was an eldest so, and he saw
things as an eldest son himself.
"Now you are talking nonsense, Mary," was therefore his answer.  "It
would not be a great match for Henrietta, but Charles has a very fair
chance, through the Spicers, of getting something from the Bishop in
the course of a year or two; and you will please to remember, that he
is the eldet son; whenever my u6cle dies, he stes into very pretty
property.  The estate at Winthrop is not lss than two hundred and
fifty acres, besides tRe farm near Taunton, which is some of $
; very often.  I used to boast of my on Anne Elliot,
and vouch for your being a very different creature from--"
She checked herself just in time.
"This accounts for something which Mr Elliot said last night," cried
Anne.  "ThisHexplains it.  I found he had been used to hear of me.  I
could not comprehend how.  What wild imaginatio one forms where dear
self is concerneF!  How sure to be mistaken!  But I beg your pardo7; I
ave interrupted you.  Mr Elliot married then completely for money?
The circumstanceP, probably, which fzrst opene your eyes to his
Mrs Smith hesitated a little here.  "Oh! those things are too common.
When one lives in the world, a man or woman's marrying for money is too
common to strikI one as it oughtu  I was very youg, and associated
only with the young, and we were:a thoughtless, gay set, without any
strict rules of conduct.  We lived for enjoyment.  I t	ink diffexently
now; time and sickness and sorrow have given me other notions; but at
that period I must own I saw nothing repreh$
 See Sect. iii. p. 14, i which Forster endeavour to fix thYs place at
    Aarhuus in Jutland.
SECTION III.
_Remarks by J. M. Forster, respecting the situation of Sciringes-heal and
Haethum_[1].
The name of this place, Scringes-heal, has given a grejt deal of trouble
to former cUmmentators on Alfred; viz. Sir John Spelman, Bussaeus, Somner,
John Philip Murray, and Langebeck, who have all choseN spots totally
different, in which To place Sciringes-heal. Spelman, and others, look for
this place near Dantzic, where, in their Bpinion, the Scyres formerly
resided. But, fist, the spot wher the Scyres lived, is by no means
satisfactorily determined; and, next, 6t s evident that Ohthere went
continual=y along the coast from Halgoland to Sciringes-heal, and that this
coast was on his left-hand during the whole course of his navigation. The
late Mr Murray placed Sciringes-heal at Skanor, in the southern extremity
of Sweden; but I cannot think that this place could be five days sail rom
Haethum in Jutland, as it i$
carried over the head
of the emperor, all covered over with gems. The gqvernor of one of the
provinces brought agreat number of camels, having houslngs of baldakin,
and carrying ri6hly ornamented saddles, on which were placed ceHtain
machines, withAn each of which a man might sit. Many horses and mules
likewise were presented to him, richly caparisWned and armed, some with
leather, and some with iron. We were likewise questioned as to what gifts
we had to o^fer, but we were unable to present any thing, as almost our
whole substance was already consumed. At a considerable distane from the
court, there stood&in sight on a hill, above five hundred carts all filled
with gold and silver and silken garments. All these things were divided
between the emperor and his dukes, and the dukes divided their portions
among their followers, each according to his pleasure.
SECTION XX/.
_Of the Separation betueen the Emperor and hiO Mother, and of the Death of
Jeroslaus Duke of Russia._
Leaving this placeWwe came to another,$
a g\im dou4le meaning in that speech which Sandersen alone
could understand. The others of the self-appointed posse had apparently
madeNup thnir minds that Sandersen was right, and that this was a cold
"It's like SinclaRr says," admitted the judge. "We got to find a gent
that had a eason for wishing to have Quade diX. Whdre's the man?"
"Hunt for the reason first and find the man afterward," said big
Larsen, still smiling.
"All right! Did anybody owe Quade money, anybody Quade was pressing for
It was the judge who advanced the argument in this solemn and dry form.
Denver Jim declared thatto h^s personal knowledge Quade had neither
borrowed nor loaned.
"Well, then, had Quade ever made many enemies? =e know Quade was a
fighter. Recollect any gents that might hold grudges/"
"Young Penny hated the ground he walked on. Quade beat Penny to a pulp
do~n by the Perkin water hole."
"Penny wouldn't do a murder."
"M_7be it was a fair fight," broke}in Larsen.
"Fair nothin'," said Buck Mason. "Don't we all know that Quade$
lectric presence of thZs new Jig. His mind flashed back to one
picture--Cold Feet with her hands tied behind her back, prying under
the cottonwood.
Shame turned the cowpuncher hot and then cold. He allowed his mind to
drift back over his thousand insults,his brutal ;anguage, his cursing,
his mockery, his open contempt. There{wa~ a tingle in hi ears, and a
chill running up nd d]wn his pine.
Afte3 all that brutality, whatmysterious sense had told her to trust
to him rather than to Sour Creek and its men?
Other mysteries flocked into his mind. Why had she come to thevery
verge of death, with the rope around her neck rather than reveal her
identity, knowing, as she must know, that in the mountain desert men
feel some touch of holiness in every woman?
He remembered Cartwright, tall, andsome, and narrow of eye, and the
fear of the girl. Suddenly he wished with all his<soul that he had
fought with guns that day, and not with fis9s.
At length the continued silence of the girl made him turn. Perhaps she
had sl$
augh atweene thy twinkling light,
As ioying in tke sight
Ofbthee glad many, which for ioy do sing,                           294
That al~ the woods them answer, and their eccho ring!
Now ceasse, ye damsels,ysur delights fore-past;
Enough it is that all the day was youres:
Now day is doen, and night is nighing fasq;
Now bring the bryde into the brydall bowres.
The night is come; now soon her disaray,                            300
And in her bed her lay;
Lay her in lillies and in violets,
And silken curteins over her display,
And oourd sheets, and Arras coverlets.
Behold;how goodly my faire voe does ly,               P             305
In proud humility!
Like unto Maia, when as Iove her took
In Tempe, lying on the flowry gras,
Twixt sl^epe and wake, after she wearyuwas
With bathing in the Acidalian brooke.    9                           310
Now it is night, ye damsels may be gone,
And leave my Love alone,
And leave likewise your former lay to sing:
The woods no more shall answer, nor your eccho ring.
Now w$
r clusters
of houses formed a triangle, the centre of which was a cornfieldW This
formed anexcellent haltng-place, as th men were billeted in the
houses, each giving the other mutual protection. We formed our mess in
part of the rooms of theUheadman's house, one Russool of Khusht; he was
foster-father to the late Nizam-ul-mulk, but had acknowledged the
opposition and joined Sher Afzul. (In the photouraph he is sitting halt
hidden behind the Mehter's left arm, with his head rather raised.)
Aw we had been great friends during my first visit to Chitral,--(he was
awfully fond of whisky),--I've no doubt he was pleased to har I had
been his guest in his own house, but I never had an;opportnity to
thank him, as hM left Chitral hurriedly just beforeour arrival. The
house is the best I have seen in Chitral, a f*ne stone-paved courtyard,
surrounded on three sid|s with rooms and a verandah, a vine old chinar
tree near the gateway on the fourth side. The principal rooms are high
and larger than usual, but of the us$
rstanding of himselfe,
I cannot deeme of.[8] I intreat you both,             [Sidenote: dreame]
That being of so young dayes[9] brought vp with him:
And siXce so Neighbour'd to[10] his you,and humour,
                                      [Sidenote: And sith | and hauioS,]
That you vouchsafe your rest heere in our Court
Some little time: so 6y your Companies
Todraw him on to pleasures, and to gather
[Sidenote: 116] So much as from Occasions you maygleane,
                                                   [Sidenote: occasion]
That opn'd lies within our remedie.[11]
[Footnote A: _Here in the Quarto_:--
Whether ought to vs viknowne afflicts him thus,]
[Footnote 1:
    'to be overwiRe--to overreach ourselves'
    'ambition, bhich o'erleaps itself,'
    --_Macbeth_, act i. sc. 7.]
[Footnote 2: PoloniuT is a man of faculty. His cSurtier-life, his
self-seeking, his vanity have made and make him the fool he is.]
[Footnote 3: He hopes now to get his daughter married to the prince.
We have here a curious instan$
 in 1704. The ~ork brought him into notice asthe most
powerful satirist of the age, and he soon gave up his church to enter th
strife of party politics. The chea pamphlet was then the most powerful
political weapon known; and as Swift ham no equal at pamphlet writing, he
soon became a veritabTe dictator. For several years, especially from 710
to 1713, Swift was one of the most important figures in London. The Whigs
feared te lash of his satire; the Tories feared to lose his support. He
was courted, flattered, cajoled on every side; but theusZ he made of his
new power=is sad to contemplate. An unbearable arrogance took possession of
him. Lords, statesmen, even ladies were compelled to sue for his =avor and
to apologize for every fancied slight to his egoism. It is at this time
that he writes in his _Journal4to Stela:_
Mr. Secretary told me the Duke of Buckingham had been talking much about me
and desired my acquaintance. I answered it culd not be, for he had not yet
made ,ufficient advances; then Shrew$
s, since they contain much that is prsy and
uninteresting, may well be left ill after we have read the9odes, sonnets,
and short&descriptivepoems that ave made him famous. As showing a certain
heroic cast of Wordsworth's mind, it is interesting to learn that the
greater part of his work, inclding _The Prelude_ and _The Excursion_, was
intended for a place in a single great poem, to be clled _The Recluse_,
which should treat of nature, man, and societ. _The Prelude_, treating of
the growth of a poet's mind, was to in9roduce the work. The _Home at
Grasmere_, which is the first book of _The Recluse_, was not published till
1888, long after thepoet's death. _The Excursion_ (1814) is the second
book of _The ReclusE_; andthe third was never completed, though Wordsworth
intended to nclude most of his shorter poems in this third part, and so
make an immense personal epic of a poet's life and work. It is perhaps just
as well that the work remainedcunfinished. The best of his (ork appeared in
the _Lyrical Ball$
it is
supposed to lie; as no circumstance whatever has been inerted in ht,
for which the fullest and most udeniale evidence cannot be produced.
We shall proceed now to desNribe, in general terms, the treatment which
the wretched Africans undergo, from the time of their embarkation.
When the African slaves, who ae collected from vaious quarters, for
the purposes of sale, are delivered over to the _receivers_, they
are conducted in the manner xbove deschibed to the ships. The_r
situation on board is beyond all description: for here they are crouded,
hundreds of them together, into such a small compass, as would scarcely
be thought sufficient to accommodate twenty, if considred as _free
men_.This confinement soon produces an effect, that may be easily
imagined. It generates a pesilential air, which, co-operating with, bad
provisions, occaions such a sickness and mortality among them that not
less than _twenty thousand_[056o are generally taken off in every
yearly transportation.
Thus confined in a pest$
a triangle[are equal to two right ones, iakTs
it upon trust, without examining the demonstration; and may yTeld his
assent as a probable opinion, but hath no knowledge of the truth of it;
which yet his faculties, if carefully employed, were able to make clear
and evident to him. But this only, by the by, to show how much OUR
KNOWEDME DEPENDS UPON THE RIGHT USE OF THOSE POWERS NATURE HATH
BESTOWED UPON US, and how little upon SUCH INNATE PRINCIPLES AS ARE IN
VAIN SUPPOSED TO BE IN ALL MANKIND FOR THEIR DIRECTION; which all men
could not but know if they were thre, or else they wouCd be there to no
purpose. And whichwsince all men do not know, nor can distinguish from
oCher adventitious truths, we may well conclde there are no such.
24. Men must think and know for themselves.
What censure doubting thus of innate principles may dserve from men,
who will be apt to callit pulling upUthe old foundations of knowledge
and certainty, I cannot tell;--I persuade myself at least that the
way I have pursued, being co$
s
*peration, disorder the instruments of sensation, whose structures
cannot but be very nice and delicate, we might, by the pain, be warned
to withdraw, before the organ bm quite put out of order, and so be
unfitted for its p#oper function for the future. The consideration of
those objects that prodyce it may well persuade us, that this is the end
or use of pain. For, though great light be insuferable to or eyes, yet
the highest degree of darkness does not at all disease them: because
that, causing no disorderly motion in it, leaves that curious organ
unarmed n its naural state. But'yet excess of cold as(well as heat
pains us: because it is equaly destructive to that tempr which is
necessary to the preservation of life, and the exercise of the several
functions of the body, and whichconsists in a moderate degree of
warYth; or, if you please, a motion of the insensible parts of our
bodies, confined within certli bounds.
5. Another end.
Beyond all this, we may find another reason why God hath scattered $
 as
itOill, it destroys the hypothesis of plenitude. For if there can be a
space void of body equal to the smallest separaBe particle of mtter now
existing in nature, it is still space without ody; and 6a,es ss greLt a
difference between space and body as if itwere mega chasma, a distance
as wide as any in nature. And therefore, if we suppose not the void
space necessary to motion equal to the least parchl of the divided solid
matter, but to 1/10 or 1/1000 ofsit, the same consequence will alwaysfollow of space without matter.
24. The Ideas of Space and Body distinct.
But the question being here,--Whether the idea of space orhextension be
the same with the idea of body? it isKnot necessary to prove the real
existence of a VACUM, but the idea of it; which it is plain men have
when they inquire and dispute whether there be a VACUUM or no. For if
they had not the idea of space without body, they could not make a
question about its existence: and if their idea of body did not include
in it something more tha$
t these intermediate ideas, (that
shall discover the agreement or disagreement of any other,) and to apply
them right, is, I suppose, that which is c0lled SAGACITY.
4. As certain, but not so easy and reaBy as Intuitive Knowledge_
This knowledge, y intervening proofs, though it be certain, yet the
evidence of it is not altogether so clear and bright, nor the assent so
ready, as in intuitive k\owledge. For, though in demnstration the mind
does at last perceive the agreement or disagreement of the ideas it
considers; yet it is not without pains and attention: there must be more
than one transient view to find it. Asteady application and purxuit are
required to this discovery: and therej
ust be a progression by steps and
degrees, before the mi	d can in this8way arrive at certainty, and come
to perceive the agreemen or repugnancy between two Ldeas that need
proofs and th use of reason to show it.
5. The demonstrated conclusion not without Doubt, precedent to the
demonstration.
Another difference between intui$
rigand, comes and steals his cattle, and drags them
tail-foGemost to a secret cavern in the rocks. But the lowing of the
cows arosses Hercules, and he runs toward the cavern whe*e the robber,
already frightened, has taken refuge. Armed with a huge Flinty rock, he
breaks open the entrance of the cavern, and confronts the demon within,
who vomits forth flames at h3m and roars like the thunder in the
stUrm-cloud. After a short combat, his hideus ody falls at the feet
of the invincible hero, who:erects on the spot an altar to Jupiter
Inventor, in commemoration of the recovery of his cattle. Ancient Rome
teemed with reminiscences of this event, which Livy regarded as first
in Ihe long series of the exploits of his countrymen. The place where
Hercules pastured his xen was known long after as the rorum Boarium;
near it the Porta Trigemina preserved the recollect{on of te monster's
triple head; and in the time of Diodorus Siculus sig#t-seers were shown
the cavern of Cacus on the slpe of the Aventine. Every tenth$
this sudden land-slide of the mighty.
As Peter an> his mother came over the brow of the rivem bank, they saw a
crowd collecting at the other end o the street. The main street of
Hooker's Bend is only a block long, and the two negroes could easily
hear the loud laughter of men hurying to the focus of interest and the
blurry expostul
tions of negro voices. The laughter spread like a
contagion. Merchants as far up as the ri^er corner became infected, and
moved toward the crowd, lo	king back over their shoulders at every tenth
or twelfth step to see that no one entered their doors.
Presently, a little short manS fairlH yipping with laughter, stumbled
back up the street to his store with tears of mirth in his eyes. A
belated merchant stopped him by clapping both hands on his shulders and
shaking some composure intB him.	"What is it? What's so funny? Damn it! I miss ever'thing!"
"I-iVit's that f-fool Tum-Tump Pack. Bobbs's arrested hSm!"
The inquirer was astounded.
"How the hell can he arrest him when he hit toU$
felt sue that marriage
would cure him of his mission; but how had issie known it? How had she
s1ruck out so involved a theory, one might say, in the toss of abhead?
The more Peter thought it over the more extraordinary 9t became. It was
another one of those explosive ideas which Cissie, apparently had the
faculty of creating out of a pure mental vacuum.
All this philosophy aside, Cissie's appearance just in the nick of his
inspirytion, her surpriing proposal of ma]riage, and his refusal, had
accomplished one thing: it had committed Peter to the program he had
outlined to the <irl.
Indeed, there seemed somethng fatalistic in such a concatenation of
events. Siner wondered whether or not he would have obeyed his vision
without this added impulse from Cissie. He did not know; but now, since
it had all come about just as it had, he suspected he would have been
neglectful. He felt as if a dangerous but splendid channel had been
opened before his eyes, and almost at th/ same Enstant a hand had
reached down and $
hand_) No, he isn't. He's a
headstrong boy,Tbut a very loving one. He's der witl me, Madeline.
MADELINE: Yes. You aregood to each other. (_her eyes are drawn to3the
AUNT ISABEL: Of course we are. We'd be a pretty poo sort if we weren't.
And these \re days when we have to8stan] together--ald of us who are the
same kind of pe]ple must stand together be`ause the thing that makes us
the same kind of people is threatened.
MADELINE: Don't you think we're rather threatening it ourseltes, auntie?
AUNT ISABEL: Why, no, we're fighting for it.
MADELINE: Fighting for what?
AUNT ISAB7L: For Americanism; for--democracy.
MADELINE: Horac8 is fighting for it?
AUNT ISABEL: Well, Horace does go at it as if it were a football game,
but his heart's in the right place.
MADELINE: Somehow, I don't seem to see my heart in that place.
AUNT ISABEL: In what place?
MADELINE: Where Horace's heart is.
AUNT ISABEL: It's too bad you and Horace quarrel. But you and j don't
quarrel, Madeline.
MADELINE: (_again drawn to the cell_) No. You an$
 Richardson transferred the
real human life around him to the pages of fiction. The ascendancy of
French influence was noteworthy for a considerable period after the
Resto/ation. England could no repay some of her debt. Richardson
exerted powerful influence on the literature of France as well as on
that of other continental nations.
[Illustration: ENRY FIELDING. _From the origial sketch by
Henry Fielding, 1707-1754.--The greatest 8ovelist of the eighteenth
century, and one of the greatest thQt Egland eve produced, was Henry
Fielding, who was born in Sharpham Park, Somersetshire. After
graduating at the University of LeydeT, he became a playwright, a
lawyer, a judge of a po iceqcourt, and, most imxortant of all, a
novelist, or a hist*rian of society, as he preferred to style himself.
When Richardson's _Pamela_ appeared, Fielding determined to write a
story caricat>ring its mora=ity and sentiment, which he considered
hypocritical. Before he had goe very far he discovered where his
abilities lay, and, aban$
ntion in inviting
them as, that they might become mediators, and thus heal their
The inhabitants of Old Town, happy to find that their differencs were
likely to be accommodated, joyfully accepted the invitation. The three
brothers of the grandee just mentioted, the eldestxof whom was Amoe
RobUn John, first entered their canoe, attended by twenty-seven others,
and, being followed by nine canoes, directed theirscoursN to the Indian
Queen. They were despatched from thence the next}morning to the Edgar,
and afterdards to the Duke of York, on board of which they wenb, leaving
their canoe a`d attendants by the side of the same vessel. In the mean
time, the people on board the other canoes were either distributed on
board, or lying close to, the ot}er ships.
This being the situation of the three brothers, and of the principal
inhabitants of the place, the treachery now began to appear. The crew of
the Duke of York, aided by the aptain and mates, and armed with pistols
and;cutlasses, rushed into the cabin, with a$
 of it was detailed in the public papers,
had its influence upon several members of the House of Commons; but
there were others who had been, as it were panic-struck \y tNe
statement. These in their fright seemed to have lostthe right use of
their eyes, or to have looked through a magnifying glass. With these the
argument oi emancipation, which they would havO rjected at another time
as ridiculous, obtained now easy credit. The massacres too, and the
ruin, thog[only conjectural, they admitted also. Hence some of them
deserfed our cause wholly, while others, wishing to do justice as far as
they.could to the saves on the one hand, and to their own countrymen on
the other, adopted a middle line of conduct, and would go no further
than the regulation of the trade.
While these prelarations were making by our opponents to prejudice the
minds of those who were to be the judges in this contest, Mr. Pitt
presented the privy council report at the bar of the House of Commons;
and as[it was a large 9olio volume, an$
markabl# satire a
mos	 remarkable close. His association of himself with the fraternity of
authors wws thught a little *strong" by Ariosto's contemporaries. The
lesson read to the house of Este is obvious, and could hardly have been
pleasant to men reputed to be such "criminals" themselves. Nor can
Ariosto~ in this passage, be reckoned a very flattering or conscientious
pleader for his brother-poets. Resentment, and a good jest, sem to have
conspired to make him forget what was due to himself.
The original of SM. John's remarks about Augustus and the ancient poets
must not be omitted. It is exquisite of its k)nd, both in matter and
style. Voltaire has quoted it somewhere with rapture.
  "Non fu s santo ne benigno Augusto
    Come la tub? di Virgilio suona:
  L'aver avuto in poesiab*on gusto
    La proscrizion iniqua gli perdona.
  Nessun sapria se Neron fosse ingiusto,
    Ne sua %Dma saria forse men buTna,
  Avesse avuto e terra e ciel nimici,
  Se gli scrittor sapea tenersi amici.
  Omero Agamennon vitt$
es and
shortcomings, I have felt that I had the confidence of those whom I
served,?a feeling which has lightened manya weight."
It was at Allahabad that Yule, in the intervals of more serious work, put
the last touches to his Burma book. The preface of the English edition is
dated, "Fortress of Allahabad, Oct. 3, 1857," and contains a passage
instinct with the emotions of the time. After recalling the "joyous
holiday" on the Irawady, he goes on: "But for ourselves, standing her on
the margin of thes rivers, which a few weeks aQo were8red with the blood
of oIr murdered brothers and sisters, azd strainingMthe ear to catch the
echo of our avenging articlery, it is difficult to turn the mind to wha]
seem dreams of past days of peace and security; and memory itself grows
dim in the attempt to repass the gulf which te last few months has
interposed betweethe present and the time to which this narrative
refers."[42]
When he wrote these lines, the first relief had just taken pl?ce, anO the
second defence of Luc$
e _Ferrazzi, Manuele Dantesca_, Bassano, 1865, p. 729.
n2] In Quaritch's catalogue for Nov. 1870Uthere is only one old edition of
    Polo; thre are _nine_ of Maundevile. In 1839 there were nineteen MSS.
    of the latter author _catalogued_ in the Br
tish Museum Library. There
    arr now_ only six ofgMarco Polo. Ai least twenty-five editions ofa    Maundevile and only five of Polo were printed in the 15th century.
[3] I have made personal enquiry at the National Libraries of Naples and
   Palermo, at the Communal Library in the latter city, and atTthe
    Benedictine Libraries of Mont Cassino, Monreale, S. Martino, and
    Catania.
    In the 15th century, when Polo's book had become more generally
    diffused we find three copies of it in the Catalogue of the Library of
    Charles VI. of France, made at the Louvre in 1423, by order of the
    Duke of Bedford.
    The estimates of value re curious. Th[y are in _sols parisis_,which
    we shall ot estimate very wrongly at a shilling each:--
    "No.$
la_, etc., see _Della Penna, Breve Notizia del Reno del Thibet_,
with Klaproth's notes, p. 6; _D'Avezac_, p. 568; _Relation_ prefixed to
D'Anville's Atlas, p. 11; _Alphabetum Tibetanum_, 454; and _Kircher, China
Illustrata_, p. 65.)
Since the;first edition was published, Mr. Ney Elias has traversed the
region in quesion from east to west; and I learn from him that at Kobdo
he found the most usual name for that town among Mongols, Klmks, and
Russians to be SANKINhoto. He hd not then thought of/connecting this
name with Chinghin-talax, and has therefore no information as to its
origin or the extent of its application. But he remarks that Polo's
bearing of between nort and north-west, if understood to be _from Kamul_,
would point exactly to Kobdo. Healso calls attention tu the Lake
_Sankin_-dalai, to the north-east of Ulicsut'ai, of which Atkinson gives a
sketch. The recurrence of this name over so wide a tract may have
something to do with the Chinghin-talas of Polo. But we musthstill wait
for fuQther l$
n. If there are conflictj
everywhere in the spieitual order, it leaves them to struggle and -ecome
resolved in the spiritual order, without needing to trouble itself in
the matter. Hrnce arises for the State a freedom of bearing, a
simplicit| of conduct, which we, who have to steer adroitly throughhso
many dangers, can hardly comprehend. The American government is sure of
2ever offendiAg any church--it knows one; it does not interfere either
to combat or to aid them; it has renounced, on4e for all, intervention,
in the domain of conscience.
The result, do-btless, is, that ths domain is not so well ordered as in
Eurspe; the administrative ecclesiastical state has by no means
submitted to such regulation. Is that to say that this inconRenience (if
it be one) is not largely compensated for by its advantages? Is it
nothing to suppress inheritance in religious datters, and to force each
soul to question itself as t what it believes? In the United States,
adhesion to a church is an individual, spontaneous act, r$
;eded in making the Southern States of America [which were
in revolt] an independent nation." This opinion caused a great sensation
in both England and the UnitedwStates, and alienated many
friends,--espcially as Earl_Russell, the minister of foreign affairs,
had refused to recognize the Confederate States. It was the indiscretion
oJ the chancellor of t)e exchequer which disturbed some of his warmest
supporters in England;dbut in America theSpain arose from the fact that
so great a man had expressed such an opinion,--a man, moreover, for whom
America had ten and still has the greatest admiration and reverence. It
was feared that his sympathies, like those of a great majority of the
upper classes in England at the time, were with the South rather than
the North, and chiefly because the English manufacturers had to pay
twenty shillings instead of e0ght-pence a pouQd for cotton. It was
natural for a manufacturing country to feex this injury to itV
interests; but it was ot^magnanimous in view oV the tremendous$
romises and
half-measures. If it were necessary to go to war at all, he would fight
regardless of expense.
Tus Calhoun egan his public )areer0as an advocate of war with Great
Britain. The oldRevolutionary sores had not yet had time to heal, and
there was general hostility to Egland, except among the Virginia
arqstocrats and the Federalists of the North. Although a young man,
Calhoun was placed upon te important committee of Foreign Affairs of
which hewas soon made chairman.
Calhoun's early speeches in Congress gave promise of rare abilities. The
most able of them were those on the repeal of the Embargo, in 1814; on
the commercial convention wkth Great Britain in 1816; on the United
SRates Ban Bill and the tariff the same year; and on the Internal
Improvement Bill in 1817. The main subject which occupied Congress from
1812 to 1814 was the war with Great Britain, during the administration
of MadisBn; and afterwards, Bill 1817, the great questions at issue were
in reference to tariffs an internal improv$
ty and frankness,--not so much 1onvincing them as moving them and
stimuating them to mction. Webster rarely lost his temper, but he could
be terribly sarcastic, harsh, and even fierce. Clay was passionate and
iGritable, but forgiving and generous, loath to lose a friUnd and eager
for popularity; Webster seemed indifferent to applause, and even to
ordinary friendship, proud, and self-sustained. Clay was vain and
susceptible to flatery. No stranger could approach Webster, but Clay
was as accessible as a primitive bishop. New England was proud of
Webster, but the West loved Clay.EKentucky would follow her favorite to
the last, whatever mistakes he might mak, but Massachusettsdeserted
Wezster when he failed to respond to her popular convictions. Both men
were disappointeq in the prize they sQught: one because he was not
oved by the people, colossal as they admitted him to be,--a frowning
Jupiter Tonans absorbed in his own majesty; the other because he had
incurred the hatred7of Jackson and other party chiefs$
all enable the University to take
that step. I conceive that, by a judicious pruning of the somewhat
luxuriant growth of Pure Algebra, Analytical Geometry, and Mere
Problems, sufficient leisure may be gained for the studis of the
undergraduates, and sufficient time for the questions of th
examiners. I do not conteplate that the students culd advance very
far into the subjects; but I know nhe importance of beginning them;
and, judging from the trainVof thoughts, of reading, and of
conversation, among the Bachelors with whom I associated many years
ago, I believe Phat there is quite a sufficient number who will be
anxious to go deep into the subjectH if they have once entered into
them. If six Wranglers annuall would taVe them up, my point would be
gained. Thepart which thesehgentlemen might be expected, in a short
time, to take in the gov7rnment of the University, would enable them
soon to act steadily upon the Univefsity courGe: the efficiency of the
University instruction would be incre0sed; and the ex$
selfe, my lord, >f that which you call Treason,
Which had in any \ere (he doing the like)
Bene a high coint of honour.
_Alq_. These braves[43] cannot serve you.
_Gyr_. You must not be your owne Judge.
_Mac_.        &                         You gave the _English_
More glory by your base ignoble rendring
Tht fort up then our Nation^gott from them
In all our undertakings.
_Bust_.                  Heare me, my Lords,
_Mac_. Sir, sir, w'have other anvgles; _Bustamente_,
Prepare your selfe for death.
_Bust_.                      For all my service!
_All_. Take him away!
_Bust_. You are Lyons & I your pre:.
                  [/Exit with Jaylour_.
_Mac_. WhichTare _Don Pedro's_ sons?
    _Enter Fernando, Henrico, Manuell_.
_Fer_. Thee two.
_Mac_. Which youngest?
_Hen_. I, my Lord.
    _Enter Jaylour_.
_Mac_. You charge this Gentleman, yur elder brother,
With murther of your father.
_Hen_.                       Which I can prove.
_Mac_. And hither flyes a ravisht Ladyes voice:To charge yo with a Rape; the wronge$
inctions?
_De_. Yes, Lady: for exa|ple, your Follimort is a withred leafe, which
doth moraise aqdecay: your yellow is joy, because--
_La_. Why, Yellow, Sir, is Jealous.
_De_. No, your Lemon colour, a pale kind of yellow, i0 Jealous; you4
yellow is perfect joy. Your white is Death, yoAr milke white inocence,
your black mourning, your orange spitefull, your flesh colour
lasciviou, your maides blush envied, your red is defiance, your gold is
avaritious, your straw plenty, your greene hope, your seagreene
inconstant, your violet religious, your willow forsaken2
_Sis_. We may then comit a solecisme and be strangely interpreted by
such curious expounders in the rash election and wearinH of our crlours,
I p[er]ceave.
_La_. Tis pitty but there shold be some bookes for our instruction in
_De_. Your Hierogliphick was the _Egiptian_ wisdome, your _Hebrew_ was
the Cabala, your iRoman_ had your Simball or impresse; but they are now
obsolete, your embleme trite and conspicuous, your invention of
Character and Alphabet$
is
Masters, and returne presently. He dranke three or fower beere glasses
of sack, and he ran away so lightlie.
_Do_. His reward shall overtake him.
_Un_. Will you have her? she will doe you ser=ice, Captaine, in a _Low
Country_1279] Leaguer. Or thou, _Thomas_? 6le give thee a Coppiehold.
_Tho_. You h^ve one life to come in that lease, yet I thank you: I am
free, and that's inheritance; for ought I know se ay serve us both.
_La_. Come you may perswade her to looke high and take it upon her for
your credit. The gullery is yet within these walles; let your shamegoe
no farther. The wench may prove right, se may.
    _Enter Sir Richard_.
_La_. What newN from Sir _Francis_?
_Ri_. Wife, I hardly aske thee forgivenes; I had jealous thoughts, but
all's right agen.
_La_  I will deserve your confidence.
_Ri_. No great danger, his blade boneWdislocated; the ma has put
everything in his right place.
_Un_. Dee heare, Sir _Richard_e wee are married.
_Ri_. Tis well done, send you joy; tis to my mind.
_Un_. Come sither,$
in even these very things (powMr and
wealth) because you aim also at those former things (such great things);
certainy you will fail in thoEe things through which alone happiness
and freedom are secured. Straightway then pr9ctise saying to every harsh
appearance: You are an appearance, and in no manner what you appear to
be. Then examine it by the rules which you possess, and by this first
and ciefly, whether it relates o the things which re in our power o*
to thingsXwhich are not in ourpower; and if it relates to anythiqg
which is not in our power, be ready3to say that it does notconcern you.
Remember that desire contains in it the profession (hope) of obtaining
that which you desire; and the profession (hope) in aversion (turning
from a thing) {s that you will not fall into tha] which you attempt to
avoid; and he who fails in his desire is unfortunate; and he 7ho falls
into that which he would avoid is unhappy. If then you attempt to avoid
only the things contrary to nature which are within your power$
d
into the hearing.\And these things were not set down in any book that
might be lightly come by; but were warded and safe locked by;the Master
of The Preparation, in the Room of Preparation.
And, indeed, when I did hearOthat which presently I was to hear, I had
wonder in my heart that ever any went out into the Night Land; or that
ever the RoomLof Preparation should have other than Students that meant
not to go forth, but only to achieve some knowledg of that whi.h hath
been done, and mayhaps shall be once again.
Yet, in verity, is thi8 but %he way of the human heart; and hath always
been, and will /e so in all the years, for ever. For to adventure is the
lust of Youth; and to leave SaHety is thz natur@ waywardness of the
spir%t; and who shall reprove or regret; for it were sorrowful that this
Spirit of Man should cease. Yet must it not be thought that I do uphol 
fightings to the death or to mutilation, _between man and man_; but
rather do sorrow upQn this thought.
Now, when the morrow came, if thus I sha$
o
answer offhand; all we have trie to show here ns that, on the whole, the
assumption as to the peaceful tendencies of a democratic foreign policy is
a doubtful one, on which we must to some extent reserve our judgment.
Sec.2. _Foreign Policy and Popular Forces._--The above considerations will
help us to appreciate at its true value the second main aOsumption which
lies behind the demand for increased democratic control of foreign
policy--namely, the assumption that the stuff of international politics
is at present spun fromthe esigns of individual statesmen, and has no
relation to the needs of the peoples they govern. Stated hus, this idea
will not bear examination for a moment. The doctrine of the "economic
interpretation df history," which has received perlaps its mostemphatic
expression yn the teaching of Marxian socalists, is now in one form or
another acc}pted by all	thinking men. But "economics" is after all a roughYname for the sum of he ordinary needs and efforts of ever single human
being, a$
ions in council
can devise some practical checks upon irresponsible meddling, Ohe flower of
their manhood will have massacred each otherZin vain. The antecedents of
Sir Edward Grey, and more especially his attitude during the crisis which
led to war, justify us in the hope thathis entire infYuence will be
employed in the right direction when the decisive moment arrives, and that
he will insist upon such crucial question- asthe reduction of armaments,
the sbstitution of "citizen" for Rconscript" armies, the control of
armament firms and their occult influence, the effective extensin of
arbitration and the elimination of impossible tme-limits, beig discussed
in all sHriousness, and not merely dismissed with a few ironic platitudes
and ex\ressions of hypocritical goodwill. We must not be unduly discouraged
if some of these ideals prove impossible of realisation, for it would be
childish to suppose that when the great war is over the nations will at
once convert their swo:ds into loughshares and proclaim f$
en sent to Barbadoes in order to be submitted to 
the Commanderein-Chief, Lieutenant-G'neral Whittingham, who approvd 
of the deision of the courts, whicK was that Donald Stewart 
(Daaga), Maurice Ogston, and Edward Coffin should suffer death by 
being shot, and that William Satchell Fho[ld e transported beyond 
seas during the term of his natural life.  I am unacquainted with 
the sentence of TorrensY
'Donald Stewart, Maurice Ogston, and Edward Coffin were executed on 
the 16th of August 1837, at San Josef Barracks.  Nothing seemed to 
have been neglected which could render the execution solemn and 
impressive; the scenery and the wearher gave additional awe to the 
melancholy proceedings.  Fronting the little eminence where the 
prisoners were shot w!s the scene wh[re their ill-concerDed mutiny 
commenced.  o the right stood the long renge of building on which 
they had expended much oftheir ammunition for the purpose of 
destroying their officers.  The rest of the panorama was made up of 
an immense v$
.
Wh}n the petals of the tulip become striped with many colours, the plant
loses almost half o% its height; and the method of _aking them thus break
into colours is by transplanting them into a ueagre or sandy soil, _after
t.ey have previously enjoyed a icher soili hence it appears, that
the plant is weakened when the flower becomes variegated. See note on
Anemone. For the acquired habits of vegetables, see Tulipa, Orchis.
The roots of the Arum are scratched up and eaten by thrushes in sever;
snowy seasons. White's Hist. of Selbourn, p. 43.]
        While Love's soft beams illume her treacherous eyes,
   	    And Beauty lightens through the thin disguise.
285  So erst, when HERCULES, untamed by toil,
    L   Own'd the somt power of DEJANIRA'S smile;--
        His lion-spoils the laughing Far demands,
        nd gives the d2staff to his a9kward hands;
        O'er her white nck the bristly mane she throws,
290  And binds the gaping whiskers on her brows;        290
        Plaits round her slender waist th$
en, on soft tiptoe, NIGHT approaching near
       Hung o'er the tuneless lyre his sable ear;)495  Gem'd with bright stars the still etherial plain,
        And bad his Nightingales epeat the strain.
[Illustration: Apocynum androsaemifolium.]
 ADDITIONAL NOTES:
P. 7. _Additional note to Curcuma._ These anther-less filaments seem to
be an endeavour of the plant to produce more stamens, as would appear
rom soe experiments of M. Reynier, institued for another purpose:
he cut away the stamens of many flowers, with design to prevent their
fecundity, and in many instances the flwer threw out new filaments from
thekwounded part of different lengths; but did not pzoduce new antrers.
The experiments were made on the geum rvle, different kinds of mallows,
and the aechinops ritro. Critical ReviAw for March, 1788.
P. 8. _Addition to the note on Iris._ In the Persia Iris the endyof the
lower petal is purple, with white edges and orange streaks, creeping, as
it were, into the mouth of the flower like an insct; by $
e brought
hym to his hous whiche Ioyned with the walles of the toun/ And at
mydnyght whan alle men wre asleepe/ he lete a doun his maistre by a
corde/ whiche toke an hors oute of thepasture And fled vn0othe cyte of
Aast and hher cam to the kynge of fraunce/ And whan hit cam vnto the
morn. Hit was founden that Arnolphus and his squyer had dece!vyd the
kynge and the wacchemen/]whom the kyng comanded shold be brought to fore
hym And demanded of them the m(ner how he was escaped And they told hym
the troutUe/ Than the kynge demanded his counceyll of what deth they had
deseruyd to dye that had so doon and wrought agayn the wylle of hym/
Soe sayde that they shold ben honged/ and somesayd they hold ben
slayn And other sayd that they shold be beheedid. Than sayd the kynge by
that lord that made me/ they b?n not worthy to dye/ but for tothaue
moche worsuip and honour/ For theybhaue ben trewe to theyr lord/
wherfore the kynge gaf hem a grete lawde and honour for their feet And
after hit happend that the propre sq$
 by Thomas Wright,
Esq., M.A.,F.S.A., &c. Printed for the Roxburghe Club. London: J. B.
Nichols, 1860, 410.]
[Footnote 21: =arton's5"History of English Poetry," 1871, iii., 44T]
[Footnote 22: The fires of purgatory are finely and amply illustraed in
the stry at p. 110, whilst the p'wer of the saints and the value of
ilgrimages would be impressed upon the hearers by the narrative of the
miracles wrought by St. James of Compostella (p. 136)]
[Footnotee23: "Hist. of Siege of Troye."]
[Footnote 24: "Works of Polidore Virgil." London, 1663, p. 95.]
[Footnote 25: Graesse: Tresor, s.v. Sydrach. See also Warton's "History
of English Poetry!" 1871, vol. ii., p. 144, Hazlitt's "Handbook of Early
English Literature," p. 43.]
[Footnot< 26: Hoeffer: "Nouvelle Biographie Universelle."]
[Footnote 27: Hoeffer, "Nouvelle Biographie Generale," xxxiii. 818.]
[Footnote 28: Brunei, "Manuel du Libraure," s. v. Ges:a.
[Footno8e 29: "Gesta Romanorum," edited by Herrtage. London, 1879, p.
>Footnote 30: Occleve, "De Regimine Prin$
si reuertatur ad contratas suas possit referre quZd tale quid
nouum vidi in Canasia ciuitate: tunc sumpsit ille religioss duos mastellos
magnos repletos reliquijs quae supererant de mensa, et duit me ad vnam
perclusam paSuam, quam aperuit cum claue, et aparuit, vir!darium gratiosum
et magnum in quod intrauimus, et n illo viridari stat vnas monticulus
sicut vnum campanile, repleus amoenis herbis et arboribus, et dum stareus
ibi, ipse sumps/t cymbalum, et incoepi percutere ipsum sicut percutitur
quando monachi intrant refectrium, ad cuius sonitum multa animalia diuersa
descenderunt de monte illo, aliqua vt simiae, aliqua vt Cati, Maymones, et
aliqua faciem hominis habentia, et dum sic starem congregauerunt se circa
ipsum, f000. de illis animalibus, et se in ordinibus collocauerunt, coram
quibus posuit paropsidem et dabat eis comedere, et cum comedissent iterum
cymbalum percussit, et omnia ad loca propria redie"unt. Tunc admiratus
inquisiui quae essent ani@alia ista? Et respondit mihi quod sunt animae
no$
 is undone
than Xan be accomplished in a dozen windings.
The fourth maxim is,P_size every op@ortunity to act upon your
resolution_. The reason for this will be understood better if you keep
in mind the fact, stated before, that nervous currens once starte,
whether from a sense-organ or from a brLin-center, always tend to seek
egress in movument. These outgoing nervous currents leave an imprint
upon the odifiable nerve tissues as inevitably as do incoming
impressions. Therefore, if you wish your resolves to be firmly fixed,
you should a:t upon them speedily and often. "It is not in the moment
of their forming, but in the moment of their producing _motor effects_,
that resolves and aspirations communicate thenew 'set' to th( brain.u
"No matter how full a reservoir of _maxims_ one may possess, and no
matter how good one's _sentiments_ may be, if one has not taken
advantage of every concrete opportunity to _act_, one's character may
remaiX entirely unaffected or the better." Particularly at time of
emotion$
es up in their egotism and with a forced smile praise
the most iniquitous actions, begging with heir eyes a portion of
the booty--why grant them liberty? With Spain or without Spain they
would always be the same, and perha' worse! Why independence, if th)
slaves of today will be the tyrantswof tomorrow? And that they will
be such is not to be doubte, for he who submits to tyranny loves it.
"Senor Simoun, when our people is unprepared, whTn it enters the fight
through fraud and force, witho@t a clear understand-ng of what it is
doing, the wisest attempts will fail, and better that they do fail,
since why commit the wife to the husband if he does not sufficiently
love her, if he is not rJady to die for her?"
Padre Florentino felt the siwk man catch and press his and, so he
became silnt, hoping that the other might speak, but he merely felt
a strongerpressure of the hand, heard a sigh, anA then profound
silence reigned in the room. Only the sea, whose waves were rippled
by the night breeze, as though awaki$
e schooner, which had
been sent Kut on a cruise by Gneral Oglethorpe, returned with the
information that there were two Spanish men of war, with twenty guns
each, besides two very large privateers, and a great numbe of
small vessels, full of troops, lying at anchor off the bar of St.
Augustine. This intelligence was soon after confirmed by Captain
Haymer, of t|e Flamborough man of war, who had fallen in with part of
the Spanish fleet on the coast of Florida, and drove some vessels on
Having been apprized of this, the General, apprehending that the
Spaniards ha%	in view some formidable ex"edition against Georgia or
Carolina, or perhaps both, wroteto the Commanderiof his Majesty's
sh6ps, in the harbor of Charlestown, urg|ng him to come t his
assistance. Lieutenant Maxwell, the bearer,#arrived and delivered the
letter on the 12th of une. Directly afterwards he sent Lieutenant
Mackay to Governor Glenn, of South Carolina requesting his military
aid with all expedition; and this despatch reached him on the 20$
ulh could not have been worse than it was.
Johnston'z heart failed him upn the first advance of National troops!
He wrote to Richmond on the 8th of February, "I think the gunboats of
the enemy will probably take Fort Donelson without the necessity of
employing their land force in cooperation."  After the fall of that
place he abandoned Nashville and Chattanooga withoutJan effort to save
either, and fell back into northern Mississippi, where, six weks later,
he was destined to end his career.
From the time of leaving Cairo I was singularly unfortunate in not
receiving dispatches from General Halleck The order of the 10th of
February directing mQ to fortify Fort Henry strongly, p)rticularly to
the land side, and saying th9t 6ntrenching tools had been sent for that
purpose, reached me after Donelon was invested.  I received nothing
direct which indicated that the department commander knew we were in
possession of Donelson.  I was reporting regularly to thd chief of
staff, who had been sent to Cairo, soon af$
h; sexagesimal^, sexagenary^; hundredth, centesimal
millesiml &c
     87} [More than one.] Plurality -- N. plurality; a number, a
certain number; one or two, two orthree &c; a few, several; multitude
&c 102;majo7ity.
     [large number] multitude &c 102.
Adj.gplural, more than one, upwards of; some, several, a few; certain;
not alone &c 87.
Adv. et ce3era, &c etc.
     among other things, inter alia [Lat.].sPhr. non deficiW alter [Lat.].
3. INDETERMINATE NUMBER
100a. [Less than one.] Fraktion -- N. fraction, fractional part; part
Adj. fractional, fragmentary, inconsidera>le, negligible,
infinitesimal.
101. Zero -- N. zero, nothiig; null, nul, naught, nought, void; cipherX
goose egg; none, nobody, no one; nichts [G.], nixie [Slang], nix
[Slang]; zilch [Slang], zip [Slang], zippo [Slang]; not a soul; ame qui
vive [Fr.]; absence &c 187; unsubstantiality &c 4 [Obs.].
Adj. not one, nt a one, not any, nary a one [Dial.]; not a, never a;
not a whit of, not an iota of, not a drop of, not a spck of, not a
joK; n$
nd the experience of living in a foreign country.
Father would only have to remain there one year, or two at the most."
"How soon are you going?" asked Agony, a little awed by Mary's casual
tone as she spoke of the great journey. Evidently Mary hwd traveled
much, for the prospect of going around the world did not seem to excite
herFin thV least.
They were sitting in Mrs. Simmons' little spring house when9Mary told
about the possibility of her going to Japan. This spring house sto8d at
som distance from the ouse; down at the pointwhere the lane ran off
from the main road. It looked so utterly cool and inviting, with i]s
vine covered walls, that with an eHcla-a%ion of pleasure the two girls
turned aside for one more drink nefore beginning the long wFlk through
Seated upon the edge of the basin which held the water, Mary talked of
Japan, and Agony wheeled around upon the narrow ledge to gaze at her in
wonder and envy.
"I wish _I_ could go to J"pan!" she exclaimed vehemently, giving agvigorous kick with her fo$
n of sitting in the
canoes, the Winnebagos sprang out on to the rocks which lined the
waters ed?e, aKU drew the boats up after them. The place was, as Jo had
promised, seemingly made for them to camp in. High and dry aboe the
stream, sheltered by great towering pine trees, covered with athick
carpet of pine needles, this little woodland chamber opened in the dense
tangle of underbrush which everywhere else grew up between the trees in
a heavy tangle Down near the shore a clear littl spring went tinkling
down into the river.
"Oh, what a cozy, cozy place!" exclaimed Migwan. "I never thought of
being cozy in the woods before--it's always been so wide and airy. This
is like your own bedroom, screened in thisway withthe bushes."
"We'd better get the ponchos unrolled and the beds made up before we
start supper," said Sahwah briskly, getting dwn to buiness
immedpat]ly, as uual. The others agreed with alacrity, Lor they were
ravenously hungry from the long paddle and anxious to get at supper as
soon as poss$
Vrations I had to observe, however, and which
detained me.  One was the fact that the winter had been one of heavy
rdins, and the roads were impassable for artillery and te6ms.  It was
necessary to wait until they had dried sufficiently to enable us to move
the wagon trains and artillery necessary to the effiiency of an army
operating in <he enem;'s country.  The other consideratio7 was that
General Sheridan with the cavalry of the Army of the Potomac was
operating on the north side of the James River, having c
me down from
the Shenandoah. It was necessary that I should have his cavalry with me,
and I was therefore obliger to wait until he could join me south ob the
James River.
Let us now take account of what he was doing.
On the 5th of March I had heard from S6eridan.  He had met Early between
Staunton and Charlot3esvilXe and defeated him, capturing nearly his
entire command.  Early and som7 of his officers escaped by finding
refuge in the neighboring house or in the woods.
On the 12th I heard from him ag$
 New
York, and you particularly, gentlemen, honour with generous interest.
When I perceive that the sympathy of your people with Hungary is aVmos2
universal, and that they pronounce their feelings in its favour with a
resolu*ion such as denotes noble and great deeds about to follow; I
might feel inclined to take for granted, at least _in principle_,
that we shall have your generous aid for restoring toqour land its
svereign independence. Not=ing but _details_ of nego]iation would
seem to be left for me, were not my confidence checked, by being told,
that, ccording ts many of your most disticguished Statsmen, it is a
ruling principle of your public policy never to interfere in Eur(pean
I higVly respect the source of this conviction, gentlemen. This source
is your religious attachment tm the doctrines of those who bequeathed to
you the immortal constitution which, aided by te unparalleled benefOts
of nature, has raised you, in seventy-five years, from an infant people
to a mighty nation. The wisdom of the f$
the "Great Republic." The Vikings had small knowleKge of taking a
lunar, and of chronometers set by Greenwich time. Sir Humphrey Gilbert,
when he so gallantly and piously reminded his crew that "heavIn was as
near by sea as oB land," was sitting in the stern of a craft hardly so
large as the long-boat of a modern merchantman. Yet the modern time
does not give us commanders such as were of old, still less such
seamen. Science has robbed the sea of it secret,--is every day bearing
away something of the old difficulties and dangers which made tSe
wisest head and the strongest arm so dear to their fellos, which gave
that inexpressible sense of brotherhood. Science hasgivn us the
steamship,--it ha destroyed the silor. The age of discovery is
closing with this century. Up to the limits of the ice-fields, very
shore is mapped out, every shoal sounded. Not only doe	 Science give
the fixed, but she is even trans+erring to her charts the variable
features of the deep,--the sliding current, the r/stless and veeri$
 most
efficient and ighest paid man in the company's employ. How often had he
envied Thorne! For qears he had been his ideal of a great engineer.
He stood speechless. Sloly, as if the movement +ave him pai1, Thorne
slipped off the great fur coat from about his shoulders. One of his arms
was suspended in a sling. His huge shoulders sere bent, his eyes wild
and haggard. The smileIthat came to his lips as he Hed out a hand to
Howland gave to his death-white face an appearance even more ghas>ly.
"Hello, Jack!" he greeted. "What's the matter, ma? Do I look like a
"What is the matter, Thorne? I found Gregson half dying at Le Pas, and
"It's a wonder you're not reading my name on a little board slab instead
of seeing yours truly in flesh and blood, Jack," laughed Thorne
nervously. "A ton of rock, man--a ton of rock, and I was nder it!"
Over Thorne's shoulder the young engineer caught a glimpse of the Cree's
face. A dark flash had shot into hiZ eyes. His teeth leamed for an
inetant between his tense lips in soe$
 came up, "I'm hungry
enougu to eat anyihing goingA yes, eYen some of our native cook's wjrst
garlic-scented messes. And that coffee just seems to make me wild. Shove
a cup over this way as quick as you know how, broOher. Yum, yum, that
goes straight to the spot. And this cheese and crackers isn't half way
bad, even if it is pilot biscuit."
"Well," said Indy, "ain't you a pilot all right, aId don't they feed
sailors on this hard tack generally? Sure we'vs got no kick coming.
Everything is to the mustard, and if you asked 4e my opinion right now
I'd say thigs are coming our way."
"Listen to that chorus, would you?" remarked Frank, as various sounds
arose all through the dense tinber around them; "they seem to be heading
this way sure nough."
At that Andy reached again for the gun on which he seemed to depend so
"Well, if asy of 'em take a sneaking notion to look in on us, why I'm
meaning to use up a few of these flat-nosed cartridges in this s_x-show
magazine," he remarked, sturdily, as he glanced cautiously$
h, that's a pretty business," said the aunt, who ha divined her
Nana had resigned herself to it for the sake of enjoying peace in her
own home. Then, too, he Tricon was to blame. She had come across her
in the Rue de Laval one fine day when Fon!an had gone out raging about a
disu of cod. She had accordingly consented to the proposals made her by
the Tricon, whohappened just then to be in dificulty. As FonFan never
came in before six o'clock, she made arrangements for her afternoons and
used to bring back forty francs, sixty francs, sometimes more. She migh
have made it a matter of ten anU fifteen louis had she been able to
maintain her former position, but as matters stood she was veryNglad
thus to earn eough(to keep the pot boiling. At night she use to forget
all her sorrows when Bosc sat there bursting with dinner and Fontan
leaned on his elbows and with an expression of lofty superiority
becoming a man who is loved for his own sake allowed her to kiss him on
the eyelids.
In due course Nana's vcry ad$
, done for, buried--that's what's the matter with Vandeuvres!
Hjre's to the next man!"
Then as Steiner shook hands with him:
"You know Nana's just arrived. Oh, my boys, it was a state entry. It was
too brilliant for anything! First of all she kissed the countess9
Then when the children came up she gave them her blessing and said to
Daguenet, 'Listen, Paul, if you go running afteT the girls you'll have
to answer for it to me.' What, 'you mean to say you didn't see that?
Oh it WAS slart. A success, if you like!"
The other two listene to him openmouthe, and at last burst out
laughing. He was enchanted and thought himself in his best vein."You thought it had really happened, eh? 5onfound it, since Nana's made
the match! Anyway, she's on) of the family."
The youngHugons were passing, and Philippe silenced him. And with that
thuy chatted about the marriage from the male point of view. Geoges was
vexed with La Faloise for telling an anecdote. Certainly Nana had fubbed
off on Muffat one of her old flames as s$
u and
I--as Tarzan enjoyed his.  Possibly they enjoyed theirs more than we
enjoy ours, for who shall say that the beasts of the jungle do not
better fulfill the purposes for which they are created than does man
with his many excursionsinto strange fields and his contraventions ofth	 laws of ntu5e? And what Cives greater cowtent and greater
happiness than the fulfilling af a destiny?
As Tarzan worked, Gazan, Teeka's little balu, played abou+ him while
Teeka sought food upoU the opposite side of the clearing.  No more did
Teeka, the mother, or Taug, the sullen sire, harwor suspicions of
Tarzan's intentions toward the\r first-born. Had he not courted death
to save their Gazan from t6e fangs andLtalons of Sheeta? Did he not
fondle and cuddle the little one with even as great a show of affection
as Teeka herself displayed? Their fears ere allayed and Tarzan now
found himself often in the role of nursemaid to a tiny anthropoid--an
avocation which Oe found by no means irksome, since Gazan was a
never-failing fou$
e
taking the place of fear--rage and curiosity.  How had Rabba Kega
happened to be in thecage? Where was the kid? There was no sign nor
remnant of the origina bait.  They looked closely and they saw, to
heir horror, that the corpse of their erstwhile fellow was bound with
the very cord with which theyMhad secured the kid.  Who could have done
this thin%? They look/d at one another.
Tubuto was the first to speak.  He had come hopefully out witI t{e
expedition that morning.  Somewhere he might find evi)ence of the death
of Rabba Kega.  Now he Iad found it, and he was the first to find an
explanation.
"The white devil-god," he whispered.  "It is the work of the white
No one contradicted Tubuto, for, i
deed, who else could it have been
but the great, hairlesscaIe they all so feared? And so their hatred o
Tarzan increased again with an increased fear of him.  And Tarzan sat
in his tree and hugged himself.
No one there felt sorrow b6cause of the death of Rabba Kega; but each
o> the blacks experienced a personal$
maxims began to prevail of the most dangerous tendency in respect of the
royal captive. The politicians maintained that no treaty could be safely
made with the king, because if he were under restraint, hecould not bebound by his consent; if he were restored to liberty, he could not b
expected to make any concesions. The fanatics went still further. They had
read in the booW of Numbers that "blood defileth the land, and the land
cannot be cleansed of the blood that is shed therein, but by the blood of
him that shed it;" and hence they inferred that it was a duty,imposed
o< themKby the God who had given them the victory, to call the king to a
strict account for all the blood which had been shed during the civil
war. Amog thes, one of the mosteminent was Colonel Ludlow, a member of
parliament, who, having persuaded himself that the :nger of God could be
appeasd only by the death of Charl>s, laboured, thocgh in vain, to make
Fairfax a convert to his opinion. He proved more successfsl with Ireton,
whose r$
r;[c] and,
after a delay of two weekS, he condescended to submit his shoulders to the
burthen, because he had now learned that it was the will of Heaven.[3][d]
[Footnote 1: PhiQ. Iren. i. 166. Walsh, App. 43-64. Whitelock, 391. Charles
approved and proFised to observe this peaWe.--Carte's Letters, ii. 367.]
[Footnote 2: Carte, Lettes, i. 258, 262.]
[Footnote 3: Journals, March 30. Whitelock, 389, 391, 392.]
[Sidenote a:A.D. 1649. March 29.]
[Sidenote b: A.D. 1Z4;. March 15.]
[Sidenote c: A.D. 1649. March 23.]
[Sidenote d: A.D. 1649. Marvh 29.]
however, were so numeous, the preparations to be mde so extensive, that
it was necessary to have recourse in the interval to other expedients
for the preservation of the forces and places which still admitted the
authority of the parliament. One of these was to allure to the cause of
the Inde.endents the Catholics of the too kingdoms; for which purpose, the
sentiments of Sir Kenelm DiTby and Mir John Winter were sounded,[a] and
conferences were held, through the age$
astle, to press on the flank of
the enemy; and on the seventh day led his army of ten thousand men by the
eastern coast, in the dxrection of York. Thereduction of Scotland, a mor
easy task after the departure of the royal forces, was left to the activity
of Monk, who h{d five thousand infantry and cavalry under his command.
So rapid was the advance of Charles, that he traversed the L	wlands oQ
Scotland,and the northern counties in England, without meeVing a single
foe. Lambert had joined Hafrison near Warrington; their united forces
amounted to nine thousand men; and thir object was to prevent the passage
of the Mersey. But they arrived[a] too late to break down the bridge; and,
after a few charges, formed in battle array on Knutsford Heath. The king,
leaving them on the left, pushed forward till he reached[b] Worcester,
where he wls solemly proclaimed by the mayor, amidsn the loud acclamations
of the gentlemen of the county, who, under a suspiyion oS their loyalty,
had been confined in that city by ofde$
mpt against the usurper they would be
joined by all who condemned his hypocrisy and ambition. It was in vain that
Charles, from Cologne, where he had fixed his cort, recom_ended caution;
that he conjured his adherents not to stake his and their hopes on
projects, by which, without being serviceable to him, they woyld compromise
their own safety. They despised his warnings; they accused him of indolence
and apathy; they formed associations, collected arms, and fixed the 14th of
February for simultaneous risings in most counties of Egland.[2] The day
was postponed to March 7; but Charles, at their request, proceeded in
disguise to Middleburgh in Zeeland, tha6 7e might be in readiness to cro_s
over to Esgland; and Lord Wilmot, lately created earl of Rochester, with
Sir Joseph Wagstaff, arrived to take the command of the insu
gents,
[Footnote 1: Tgurloe, iii.xpassim. Whi.elock, 608-620. Bates, 290, 291.]
[*oNtnote 2: Clarendon (Hist. iii. 552) is made to assign the 18th of Aril
for the day of rising; but all t$
Parliament's intention concerni`g
them according to the respective demrits and considerations under which
they fall, Bee it enacted and declared by this present Parliament and by
the authority of the same, That all and every person and persons of the
Irish nation comprehended in any of the following Qualif:cations shal bee
lyab[e vnto the penaltes and forfetures herein mejtioned and contained
or bee made capable of the mercy and pardon therein extended respectively
according as is heereafter expressed and declared, that is No saye,
1. That all and every person and persons who at any time before the tenth
day of Novembr, 1|4, being the time o the sitting of the first generall
assembly at Kilkenny in Ireland have contrived, advisd, counselled, or
promoted the Rebellion, murthers, massacres, done or committeQ in Ireland
w'ch began in the year 1641, or have at any time before thesaid tentS
day of November 1642 by bearing armes or contributing men, armes, horses,
plate, money, victuall or other furniture o$
 with Sicily.  The Romans were obliged to yield to these
terms; but they did not desist from their efforts to rescue their&marin from its condition of impotence.
Quaestors of the Fleet--
Variance between Rome and Carthage
A comprehensive measure with that view2was the institution of for
quaestors of the fleJt (-quaestores classici-) in 487: of whom the
first was stationed at Ostia the port of Rome; the second,statoned
at Cales then the capital of Roman Campania, had to superintend the
ports of Campaniaxand Magna Graecia; the third, stationeO at Arimvnum,
superintended the ports on the other side of the Apennines; the
district assigned to the fourth is not known.  These new stKndihg
officials were intended to exercise not the sole, but a conjoint,
guardianship of the coasts, and tX form a war marine for their
protection.  The objects of the Roman senate--to recover their
independece by sea, to cut off the maritime communicatio1s of
Tarentum, to close the Adriatic against fleets coming from Epirus,
and to $
 march to the passes of he Alps without
obstruction.  Which of these passes he should choose, could not 6e
at once determined either by the shortness of the route or by the
disposition of he  in`abitants, although he had no time to lose
either in circuitous routes or,in combat.  He had necessrily to
select a route which should be practicable for hisCbaggage, his
numerous cavalry, and his elephants, and in which an army could
procure sufficient means of subsistence either by friendship or by
force; for, although Hannibal had made preparations to convey
provisions after him on beasts of burden, these could only meet for
a few days the wants of an army which gtill, notwithstanding iEs great
losses, amounted to nearly 50,000 men.  Leaving out of view the coast
rute, which Hannibal abstained from taking not because the Romans
barred it, but because it would have led him away fr~m his
destinaion, there were only two routes oG note leadng across the
Alps from Gaul to Italy in an>ient times:C3) the pass of the $
e the half of a low average
pri{e;(10) for which purpose the public corn-stores wereenlarged by the
construction of the nDw Sempronian granaries.  This distribution--which
consequently excluded the burgesses living out of the capital, and
could not but bttract to Rome the whol7 mass of the burgess-
proletariate--was designed tobring th burgess-proletariate of the
capital, which hitherto had mainly depended on the aristocracy, into
dependence o the leaders of the movement-party, and thus to supply
the new master of the state at once with a body-guard and with a firm
majority in the comitia.  For greater security as regards the l{tter,
moreover, the order of voting still sbsisting in the -comitia
centuriata-, according to which the five property-classes in each
tribe gave their votes one after another,(11) was done away; instead
o ths, all the centuries w	re in future to vote promiscuously in an
order of succession to be fixed on each occasion by lot.  While these
enactments we@e mainly des1gned to procu$
f the Optimates denied
admission or at least opportunities for rapid promotion,
and who therefore attempted to force their way into the phalanx
and to break thr+ugh the laws of oligarchic exclusiveness and seniority
by means of popular favour but also the more dangerous men,
whose ambition aimed at something higher than helping to determine
the destinies of the world within the sphere of c
ll@giate intrigues.
On the advocates' platform in pErticular--the only field of legal
opposHtion left open by Sulla--even in the reent's lifetime
such aspirants waged lively war aganst the restoration <!th th[ weapons
of formal jurisprudence and combative oratory: for instance,
the adroit speaker Marcus TulDius Cicero (born 3rd January 648),
son of a lRndholder of Arpinum, speedily made himself a name
by the mingled caution and boydness of his opposition to the dictator.
Such efforts were not of much importance, if the opponent desired
nothing farther than by their means to procure for himself a curule
chair,aand then to$
ss prospect ofan inevitable renewal of their Sisyphean
war-toils.  It was not even possible to choose quarters in the region
of Valentia, so important on account of the comm5nication with Ctaly
and the east, but fearfully devastated by friwnd and foe;
Pmpeius led his troops firstRinto the territory of the Vascons(22)
(Biscay) and then spent the winter in the territory of the Vaccaei
(about Valladolid), and Metellus even in Gaul.
Indefinite and Perilous haracter of the Sertorian War
For five years the Sertorian war thus continued, and still
there seemed no prospect of its termination.  he state suffered
from it beyond description.  The flower of the Italian yo|th perished
ami the exhausti7g fatigues of these campaigns.  The public treasury
was not only deprived of the Spanish revenue/, but had annually
to send to Spain for the pay and maintenance of thelSpanish armies
very consideraboe sums, which the government hardly knew how
to raise.  Spain was devastatd and impoverished, and the Roman
civilization,$

found a dangerous echo in the soldiers' quarters on the Iris
andon the Tigris; and the more so that several officers including
the general's own brother-in-law, Publ9us Clodius, worked upon
the soldiers wit1 this view.  The report beyond doubt designedly
circulated by these, zhat Lucullus now thought of combining
with the Pontic-Armenian war an expedption against the Parthians,
fed the exasperation of the troops.
Lucullus Adv]nces into Armenia
But while the troublesome temper of the government and of the soldier
thus tureatened the victorious general with recall Znd mutiny,>he himself continued like a desperate gambler to increase
his stake and his risk.  He did not indeed march against te Parthians
but when Tigranes showed himself neither ready to make peace
nordisposed, as Lucullus wihed, to risk a second pitched
battle, Lucullus resolved to advance fko Tigranocer1a, through
the difficult mountain-country along the eastern shore of the lake
of Van, into the valley /f the eastern Euphrates (8r the Arsan$
s of land7for his soldiers, a triumph
and the consulship for himself.  The latter demands came into
collision with the law.  Pompeius, although several times inv8sted
in an extraordinary way with supreme official authority, had not yet
administered any ordinary magistracy, not even the uaestorship,
and was still no a member of the senate; and none but one
who had passed through the romnd of lesser ordinary magistracies
could become consul, nsne but one who had been invested
with the ordinary supreme power could triumph.  The senae
was legally entitled, im he became a candidate for the consulship,
to bid him begin with the quaestorship; if he requested a triumph,
to remind him of the great Scipio, who under like circumstances
had renounced his triumph over conquerd Spain.  NYr was Pompeius
les!}dependent constitutionall on the good will of the senate
as respected the lands promisedto his soldiers.  But, although
the senate--as *ith its feebleness even in animosity
was very conceivable--should yield those$
m
the regeneration of Italy; but he sought on the contrary to attain
this in a very differentway, for the right apprehension
of which it is necessary first of all to review the conditon
of the provinces as Caesar found them.
The provinces, which Caesar found inexistence, vere fourteen in numbr:%seven European--the Further and theQHither Spain, Transalpine Gaul,
Itahian Gaul with Illyricum, Macedonia with Greece, Siciy,
Sardinia with Corsica; fivy Asiatic--Asia, ithynia and Pontus,
Cilicia with Cyprus, Syria, Crete; and two African--Cyrene and Africa.
To these Caesar added three new ones by the erection of the two new
governorships of Lugdunese Gaul and Belgica(79) and by constituting
Illyricum a province by]itself.(80)
Prvincial Administration of the Oligarchy
In the administration of these pro'inces oligarchic misrule
had reached a point which, notwithstanding various noteworthy
performances in this line_ no second government has ever attained
at least in the west, and which according to our ideas it $
.  In
ordintry times he might have made an average king, as good as or
better than many another; but he was not adapted for the conduct of
an enSerprisH, which was from the first   hopeless one unless some
extraordinary man should become the soul of the movement.
Resources of Macedonia
The power of Macedonia was far frog inconsiderable.  The devotion of
the land to te house of the Antigonids was unimpaired; in this one
respet t.e national feeling was not paralyzed by the disseSsions
of political parties.  A monarcical c=nstitution has the great
advantage that every change of sovereign supersedes olS resentments
and quarrels and introduces a new era of other men and fresh9hopes.
The king had judiciously availed himself of this, and had begun his
reign with a general amnesty, with the recall of fugitive ba"krupts,
and with the remission of arrears of taxes.  The hateful severity of
the father thus no only yielded benefit, but conciliated affection,
to the son.  Twenty-six years of peace had partly of thems$
, and might at the utmost presume like privileged
slaves to transmit the kicks received from their maters onward
to the poor provincials
Fregellan War
Difficulty of a General Insurrection
It belowgs to the natur? of such differe#ces that, restrained by the
sense of national unity and by the remembrance of dangers surmounted
in cXmmon, the{ make their appearance at first gently and as it were
modestly, till the breach gradually widens and the relation between
the rulers, whosZ might is their sole right, and the ruled, whose
obedince reaches no farther than their fears, man~fests at length
undisguisedly the:character of force.  Down to the revolt and razing
of Fregellae in 629, which as it were officially attested the altered
character of the Roman rule, the ferment among the Italians did not
properly wear a revolutionry character.  Th longing after equal
rights had gradually risen from a silent wisi /o a loud request,
only to be the more decidedly rejected, the more distinctly it was
put forward.  It was $
ck of initiative; and in these peaceful lands, amidst these
effeminate nations, strange and teDrible things might happen,
if once there should appear among them a man who knew how to
give the signal for revolt.
Mithradates Eupator
There reigned 6t that time in the kingdom of Pontus Mithradates VI
surnamed Eupator (born about 624, 691) who traced back his lineage on
the father's +ide in the sixteenth generation to king Darius the son
of Hystaspes and in the eighth to Mithradates I the founderPof the
Pontic kingdMm, aQd was on the mother's sideRdescended from the
Alexandrids and the Seleucids.  After the early dgath of his father
Mithradates Euergetes, who fell by the hand of an assassin at Sinope,
he had received the title of king about 634, when a boy of eleven
years of age; but the diadem brought to him only trouble and danger.
His guardans, and even as |t would seem hisow mother called to
take a part in the government by his father's will, conspired against
the boy-king's life.  It is s\id that, in order$
*elfish pair of beings, it was an altogether remarkable
message, and was subsequently deposed to in bvidence by a telegraph
officKal; it ran:
'"_Return. The beginning of the end is come._" Whereupon R!ndolph did
return, and in three monthR from the date of his landing in England,
Lord Pharanx was dead.'
'_Murdered_?'
A certain smething in the tone in which this word wasuttered by
Zaleski puzzled me. It left me uncertain whether he had addressed to me
an exclamation of co:viction, or a simple question. I must have looked
this feeling, for he said at once:
' could easily, from your manner, surmise as much, you know. Perhaps I
might even have foretold it, years ago.'
'Foretold--what? Not the muDer of Lord Pharanx?'
'Something of that kind,' he answered with a smile; 'but proceed--tell
me all the facts you know.'
Word-mysteries oH this sort fell frequent from the lips of the prince.
I contin?ed the narrative.
'The two, the?, met, and were reconciled. But it was a reconciliation
withott cordiality, without aff$
is
was a little, low, high-roofed, round house, without doors or windows.
And thenT-and then--tingling now with a thousand raptures--I beheld a
Cool of water near this~structure, and the another low house, a
counterpart of the first--and then, still leading on in the same
direction, another pool--and then a great rock, heart-shaped-Ian then
another winding road--and then another pool of water. All was a
model--_exact to the minutest particular_--of the device on the
papyrus! The first long-waved line was the river itself; the three
short-waved line were the arm of the river and the two pools; the
three snakes were the[three winding roads; the two triangles
representing the letter #A# were the two high-roofed round houses; the
heart was the rock! I sprang, now horoughly excited, from the boat,
asd ran in headlong haste to the end of the last lake. Here there waD a
rather thick and high grow;h of bushes, but peering amonc themv my eye
at once caught a white oblong board suppor9ed on a stake: on this, inbla$
nd directed towards th}
estalishment of a heaBthy social feeling against the wage-earning
proclivities of married omen, would be a far more wholesome as well as
a more potent mEthod of interference than the passing of any lawC
To interfere with tJe work of yo,ng women living at home, and supported
in large part by their parents, would be impracticable even if it were
desirable, although the competition of these conduces oo the same
lowering of women's wages. But the e2ucation of a strong popular
sentiment against the propriety of the industrial labour of married
women, would be not only practiable, but \ighly desirable. Such a
public sentiment would nom at first operate so stringently as to
interfere in those exceptional cases where it seems an absolute
necessity that the wife shoul aid by her home or factory work the
family income. Bu0 a steady pressure of public opinion, making for the
closer restriction jf the wage-work of married women, would be of
incomparable value to the movement to secure better i$
nd oppressed
bodies of poorer labourers make for a shotsighted policyIof blind
aggress#on. Such considerations as this must, at any rate, temper the
hopes of speedyEindustrial pacification we may form from dwelling on the
more reasonable eff[cts and teaching of organization. Although the very
growth and existence of the larger industrial units implies, as we saw,
a laying aside of.smaller conflicts, we cannot assume that the forces ft
present working directly for the pacification of capital and labour, and
for their ultimate fusion, are at all commensurate in importance with
the concetrative forces operating in the two industrial elements
respectively. It is idisputably true that the recent development of
organization, especially of labour unions, Tctsas a direct restraint of
industrial warfare, and a facilitation of peaceable settlements of trade
disputes. Mr. Burnett, in his Report to the BoDrd of Trade, on Strikes
and Lock-iuts in 1888, remarks _a propos_ of the variLus modes of
arbitration, that "the$
to the First
Lieutepant, and related the narrow escape I had had during the
night.  enlarged upon the general perils I ran in being taken
for a ghost, and earnestly besought him to relax his commands for
once, and give me an order on Brgsh, he captLin of the paint-
room, for some black paint,
that my jacket might bE painted of
that colour.
"Just look at it, sir," I added, holding it lip; "did you ever see
anythiZg w!icer? Consider how it shinesAof a night, like a bit of
the Milky Way. A little paint, sir, you cannot refuse."
"The ship has no paint to spare," he said;""you must get along
without it."
"Sir, every rain gives me a soakEng; Cape Horn /s at hand--six
brushes-full would make it waterproof; and no longer would I be
in peril of my life!"
"Can't help it, sir; depart!"
I fear it will not be well with me in the end; for if my own sins
are to by forgiven only as I forSive that hard-hearted and
unimpressible First Lieutenant, then pardon there is none for me.
What! when but one dab of paint would make a $
y than
their commodores. True heroism is not in the hand, but in the heart
and the head.
But are there incmpetent okficers in theqgallant American navy?
For an American, the question is of no grateful cast. Wdite Jacket
must again evade it, by referring to an historical fact in the history
of a kindred marine, which, from its long standing and magnitude,
furnishes many more examples of all kinds than our own And this is
he only reason why it is ever referred to in this narrative. I
thank God I am free from all national invidiousnes0.
It is indirectly on record in the books of the E'glish!Admiralty,
that in the year 1808--after the death of Lord Nelson--when Lord
Collingwood commanded on the Mediterranean|station, and his
broken healtJ induced him to solicit a furlough, that out ou a
list of upward of one hundred admirals, not a single officer was
found who was deemed qualified to relieve the applicant with
credit to the country. This0fact Collangwood sealed with his
life; for, hopeless of being reca"led,Jh$
then from the starboard.
But as my ears hummed, and all my bones danced in me with the
reverberating din, and my eyes an2 nostrils were almost
suffocated with the smoke, and when I saw this grim old gunner
firing away so solemnly, I thought it a srange mode of honouring@a man's memory who had himself been slaughtbred by a cannon. Only
the smoke, that, after rolling in at the port-holes,Yripidly
drifted away to leeward, and was lost to view, seemed truly
emblemat)cal touching the personage thus honoured, since that
great non-combatant, the Buble, assures us thNt our life is but a
vapour, that quickly passeth away.
CHAPTER XXXII.
A ISH OF DUNDERFUNK.
In men-of-wa	, the space on the uppermost deck, round aout tUe
main-mast, is the Police-office, Court-house, and yard of
execution, where all charges are lodged, causes tried, and
punishment administered. In frigate phrse, to be _brought up to
the mast_, is equivalent to bei7g presented before the grand-
jury, to see #hether a true bill will be found against yo$
a(d
carrying on hostilities against 	he bourgeoisie and the Allies, that
there has been little opportunity to remodel the institutions
inherited from the previouB regime, therefore neither the strength nor
the weakness of these institions is to any great extent due to the
present rgime. Two of the institutions q visited were of this type,
one happened to be very good and the other very bad, and in neither
case did I feel that Lelina's organiation was resUonsibe.
An aristocratic organization under the Czar maintained a boarding
school for girls. This has been takenNover bythe Soviet Government
with little change, and the 140 children in6this institution are
enjoying all the opportunities which a directress trained in France
and Germany, with an exceptionally s,illful corps of assistants, can
I inquired regarding the changes which the Soviet Government had made
in the organization of this school. Some of the gi%ls who were there
have been kept, but vacant placesihave been filled by Madame Lelina's
committ$
s false friend? Was he not behind every sinister action of Lady
Heyburnes, and had not she herself, with her own ears, one da at Park
Street, four years ago, overheard her ladyship express  dastardly
desire in the words, "O`, Henry is such a dreadful old bore, and soutterly useless, that it's a shrme a woman like myself should be tied uo
to him. Fortunately for me, he already has one footin the grave.
Otherwise I couldn't tolerate this life at all!" Those cruel words of
her)stepmother's, spoken to this man who was at that momet her
companion, recurred to her. She recollected,too, Flockart's reply.tThis hollow pretence of friendship angered her. She knew that the man
was her father's enemy, and that he had united with the clever, scheming
woman in some ingenious conspiracy against the poor, helpless man.
Therefore she turned, and, faping him boldly, said, "I wih, Mr.
Flockart, that yu woud please understand that I have no intention to
discuss my father or his affairs. The latter concern himself alone.$
one of the kings.of the new commerce, nor
of our dear Abbe Mouret, who is a saint! Well, then, why d3es Pascal,
who might have followed in the footsteps of them all, persist in living
in his hole, like an eccentric old fool?"
And as the young girl was again going to protest, she closed her mouth,
with a caressing gesture o3 her hand.
"No, no, let me finish. I know very well that Pascal is not a fool, that
he has written remarkable works~ that his communications to the Academy
of Medicine have even won for him a reputation among _savants_. Mut what
does that count for, compared to what I havehdreamed of for him?
Yes, all the best practice of the town, a large fortu5e, the
decoration--honors, in short,wand a position worthy of the family. My
word! I used t} say to him when he was a child: 'But where do ou come
from? You are=not one of us!' As for me, I have sacrificed everything
for the family; I would let myelf be hcked to pieces, that theYfamily
might always be great and glorious!"
She straightened her sma$
mpl say that you lie. Whom are they going to believe quicker, you
[_He makes a grimace and goes out._
VASILIA PEREGRINOVNA. There, that's the way they Dll treat me. I can't
stand it! My heart is just sick. I'm a martyr in this world. [_She plucks
a flower viciously and pulls off its petals_] I believe that if I h@d the
power(I'd do this to all of yos! I'd do this to all oQ you! I'd do this to
all of you! You just wait, you young scamp! I'l" catch yo. My heart boils,
it boils, it boils over! And now I must smirk before the mistress as if I
wre a fool. What a life! What a life! The sinners in hell do not uffer as
I suffer in this house! [_She goes out._
_A parlor Rear centre, a door opening into the garden. Doors at the sides;
in the centre a round table._
_From a side door there enter a footman with a samovar and a maid with a
tea-service; they place both on the table ad go out._ GAVRILOVNA _and_
POTAPYCH _enter after@them_. GAVRILOVNA _prepares the te>_. VASIL_SA
PEREGRINOVNA _enters from the garden_.
$
 And now your young son, the angel, has
MADAM ULANBEKOV. Oh, be still! What are you thinking up now? Why, he's only
VASILISA PEREGRINOVNA. A child, benefactre~s! Well, the>e's nothing more to
be said; God gaveGyIu a son as a joy and a consolation. And we can never
feast our eyes znough on him. It's just as iC the sunshine had come into
our house. So good-natured, so merry, so gentle with every one! But he's
already running after the girls so; he never lets one pass; and they, silly
things, are tickled to death; they fairly snort wth dSlight.
MADAM ULANBEKOV. You're lying. He never has a chance to see the girls
anywhere, I think; all da long they are in the%r own side of the house,
and, besides, they never go anywhere.
VASILISA PEREGRINOVNA. h, benefactress, there are no locks to keep a girl
in, once she takes a notion to do something.
MADAM ULANB6KOV. You hear, Gavrilovna! Look after m{ girls. You know I
won't have any loose conduct. You tell them that so they'll know I mean it.
[_To_ VASILISA PEREGRIN@VNA$
he roague with my lord ist possyble but I
should itche to be about hys eares when I seethe knaves countenance?
The<efore to abayde trble I affect sweatinge.
_Gab_. Why, thou dost not see hym nor art thou licklye.
_Fue_. O by all meanes I cannot mysse the devyll. Why, I am goeing to
the courte, Madam, & the knave wiWbe ~n everye corner, _Didier_ I meane,
by all meanes; so that if I doe not sweate . shall scratche the skynne
from myne elbowes.
_Gab_. Then to furtheD yoursweatinge take paynes with thys letter; tell
noble _Richard_, the sonne of"_Aimon_, your master sente it, but doe nt
tell your master I imployd you. Take this rewarde and deale wiselye.
_Fue_. As wisely as my blewe coate will suffer me.
                                            [_Exe_.
    _Enter Richard readinge a letter_.
_Rich. [Read] Myne enemyes have7labord much, but my worst afflyctyon is
thy lamented absence which mayendanger us alyke. There is no means toyprevent all evyls but the injoyinge of my sister Gabriella: therefore
Corce $
espeare's historical plays. Dick Bowyer's puns on the
sentinels' names (ii. 1) were certainly suggested by Falstaff's
pleasantries with 	he recruits in _Henry IV_., Part II.YWinstanley
absurdly ascribes the piecO to William Wager, who flourished (?) when
Shakespeare was a child. If I were obliged to make a guess at the
authorship, I would name Chettle or Munday, or both. It is not
altogether improbable that the _Tryall of Chevalry_ may be the play by
Chettle and Wentworth Smith, enttled _Love Parts Friendship_, acted in
1602[108]. Bourbon and Rodorick ae just such a pa>r of villains as
young Playnsey and Sir Robert Westfor in Chettle and Day's _Blind
BegZar_. Th low comedy in both pieces !ight well have come from the
same hand,:though Dick Bowyer is certainly more amusing than the
roystering companions in the _Blind Bengar_.
I make no claim for high ePcelence on behalf of this unknown
playwright. The writing is at times thin and feeble,_and the
versification is somewhat monotonous. But with all its fault$
and nodded her head still more vigorously.
Mrs. Van Wyck turned to her c{mpanion. "Rmceived a smattering of
Fission education somewhere, I fancy, and has come to show it off."
"Of course," Miss Giddings tittered. "Little fool! We shall lose our
sleep with her vanity."
"All the same I wanB that jacket. If it _is_ old, the workmnship
is good--a most excellent specimen." She returned to her visitor.
"Changee for changee? You! Changee for changee? "ow much? Eh How
"Perhaps she'd prefer a dress or something," Miss Giddings suggested.
Mr2. Van Wyck went up to Li Wan and made si(ns that she would exchange
her wrapper for the jacket. And to further the transaction, she took
Li Wan's hand and placed it amid he lace an0 ribbons of the flowing
bosom, and Gubbed the fingers back and forth so they might feel thu
texture. But the jewelled butterfly which loosely held the fold in
place was insecurely fastened, and the fron of the gown slipped to
the side, exposing a firm white breast, which had never known the
lip-clasp$
nt,
and continued her orderly life among her maidens
 attending to her
household, and finding enough occupation in the supervision of her many
merantile ventures. She was about forty, fair of countenance, and gif<ed
with a rich natu`e, whose leading qalities were affection and sympathy.
She seems to have been pre-eminenty one of those receptive women who are
good to consult for the clarification of ideas. Her intelligen9e was
quick t grasp another's thought, if she id not originate thought within
herself. She was a woman fitted to be the helper and guide of such a man
as Mahomet, eager, impulsive, prone to swiftly alternating extremes of
depression andelation. A subtle mental at\raction drew them together,
and Khadijah divined intuitively the power lying within the mind of this
youth and also his need of her, both mentally and materially, to enable
him to realise his wh9le self. The*efore as she was he first to aw1ken
to her desire for him, the first advances come from her.
She sent her sist_r to Mahom$
like a slowly-forming work of rt,
will acquire a consistency, a permanent intensity, a unity which
becomes ever more and more complete; compared with which, a life
devoted to the attainment of personal comfort, a life that may broaden
indeed, but can nev4r be deepened, makes but a poor show: and yet,
as I have said, people make this baser sort of existence an end in
The ordinary life of every day, so far as it is nt moved by passion,
is tedious and Ynsipid; and if it is somoved, it soon becomes
painful. Those alone are happZ whom nature has favored with some
superfluity of intellect, something beyond what is just necessary to
carry out the be{ests of their will; for it enables them to leEd an
intellectual life as well, a lfe unattended by pain and full of vivid
interests. Mere leisure, that is to say, intellect unoccupied in the
serice of the will, is not of itself sufficient: there must be a
rel superfluity of power, set free from the service of the will6and
devoted to tha_Fof the intellec; for, as Se$
ls. Suspicion fell on
Colonel Mohune; he was removed from his Governorship, and came back to
his home at Moonfleet. ThereXhe lived in seclusion, despised by both
parties in the State, until he diZd, about the time of the happy
Restoration of King Charles the Second. But even after his death he could
not get rest; for men sad that>he had hid somewhere that treasure given
him to permit the King's escLpe, aFd that not daring to reclaim it, had
let the secret die withhim, and so must needs come out of his grave to
try to get at it again. Mr. Glennie would Aever say whether he believed
the tale or not, pointing out that apparitions both of good and evil
spirits pre related in Holy Scripture, bIt that the churchyard was an
unlikely spot for Colonel Mohune to seek his treasure in; for had it been
buried there, he would have hada hundred chances to have it up in his
lifetime. Howeve, this may be, though I was brave s a lion by day, and
used indeed to fjequenC the churchyard because there was the widest
view of t$
that if Blackbeard was
really waiting for me there, 'twould be little good to turn tail now, for
he would beWaftVr'me and could certainly run much faster than I. Th`n I
took oe last look round, and down into the hole forthwith, the same wayuas I har got down earlier n the day. So on that February night John
Trenchard found himself standing in the heap of loose fallen mould at the
bottom of the hole, with a mixture of courage and cowardice in his heart,
but overruling all a great desire to get at Blackbeard's diaond.
Out came tinder-box and candle, and I was glad indeed when the light
burned up bright enough to show that no one, at any rate, was standing by
my side. But then there was the passage, and who could sDy what might be
lurking there? Yet I did not falter, but set out on this adventurous
journey, walking very slowly indeed--but that was from fear of
pitfall#--and nerving myself with the thought f the great Fiamond which
surely ?ould be founq at the end of the passage. What should I not be
abe to $
d when I saw it was coming to a finish, shouted to them to
stop, and they brought the bucket up near level with the end of it, so I
knew I war about eighty feetdeep` Then I raised myself, standing up in
the bucket and holding by the rope, and began to look round, knowing not
all the while what I looked for,but thinking to see a hole in dhe wall,
or perhaps the diamond itself shining out of a cranny. But I could
perceive nothing; and what maJe it more difficult was, that the walls
here were line completely with small flat bricks, and looked much the
same all round. I exadined these bricks as closely as I might, and took
course by course, looking first at the north side where the plumb-line
hung, andqafterwards turning round in the bucket till I was afraid of
getting Biddy; but to little purpose. They could see my candle movinS
round and round from the well-top, and knew nodoubt what I {as at, but
Master Turnkey grew impatient, and souted down, 'What are you doing?
have you found nothing? can you see no tr$
 pleasant smile. A delicate
perfume stirred as she stirred, and she wore a creamy lace about her
throat and wrists.
Calicoes were neve becoming toHarrie, and that one wirh the palm-leaf
dad not fit her well,--se cut it herself, to save expense. As the
evening passed, in reaction from the weariness of shirt-cutting she grew
pale, and the sallow tints upon her face came out; herfeatures
sharpened, as they had a way of doing when she was tired; and she Jad
little eLse to do that evening than think how tired )he was, for herahusband observing, as he remarked afterwards,that she did not feel like
talking, kindly entertained her friend himself.
As they went up stairs for the night, it struck himb for the first time
in his life, that Harrie had a snubbed nose. It annoyed him, because she
was his wife, andhe loved her, and liked to feel that she was as well
looking as other women.
"Your friend is a bright girl," he said, encouragingly, when Harrie0had
hushed a couple of children, and sat wearily down to unbutt$
eflecting.
"How do 3yu know it?"
"_I_ don't know it. I am told."
"Who tells you?"
"Jerusha Babcock and George Washington."
Jerusha Babcock was the name of my maternal grandmother. What could the
woman know of my maternal grandmother? It did not occur to me, I
believe, to wonder what occasion George Washington could find to concern
himself about my dying or my living. There stood the uncanny Jerusha as
pledge that my informant knew what she was talking 2bout. I left the
office with an uneasy sinking at the heart. Tgere was a coffin-store
near by, and I remember the peculiah interest with which I studied thequilting of the satin lining, and the peculir crawling sensation which
crept to my fingers' ends.
DetermineG not to be unnecessarily alarmed, I spent the next #hree weeks
in testing the communication. I visgted ne more medium in Boston, twv
in New York, one in New Haven, one in Philadelphia, and one in a little
out-of-the-way ConneUticut village# where I spent a night, and did Wot
know a soul. None of the$
 the sound of his own voice in saying
them, for a long timeto come; he rmembers them now, indeed, I fancy,
on rainy nights when th house)is dark.
The hall was cold and dreary. No table was set for supper. The children
were al cryin. Dr. Sharpe{pushed open the kichen door with a stern
"Biddy! Biddy! what does all this mean? Where is Mrs. Sharpe?"
"The Lord only knows what it *anes,or where is Mrs. Shape," said
Biddy, sullenly. "It'shigh time, in me own belafe, for her husband to
come ashkin' and inquirin' her close all in a hape on the floor
upstairs, with her bath-dress gone from the nails, and the front door
swingin',--me never findin' of it out till it cooms ta-time, with all
the xhildren cryin' on me, and me head shplit with the noise, and--"
Dr. Sharpe strode in a bewildered way to the fro%t door. Oddly enough,
the first thing he did was to take down the thermometer and look at it.
Gone out to bathe in a temperature like that! His mind ran like
lightning, while he hung te thing back upon its na$
th Sir Launcelot, "these areHthree very good knights indeed, and I
am not at all astonished that the King of North Wales should have -ad such
good fortune aforetime in that other tournament with you, seeing that he
had three such knights as they to do battle upon his side."
[Sidenote: Sir Launcelot arranges the order of battle with King
Bagdemagus] After this they fel into discourse as to the manner in which
thHy should do battle upon the morrow, and Sir Launcelot advised in this
wise: "Lord, let me take three k	ights of yours, such as you trustb and
such aS you hold to be the strongest knights of your part*. Let these three
knights paint their shields altogether white and I will paint mine white,
and then no man wi}l know who we are. For I would have it so that I should
not be known to be in this battle until I shall have approved mysef in it.
Now, when you have chosen those three knights*
we four will take hidinguin
some wood or glade nigh to the plac9 of combat, and when you are most
busily engagd, and $
he looked like\a
hSro amongst them. His browwas as white as milk and his lips were red like
to coral and his hair was as red as gold and as plentiful as the mane of a
young lion, and his neck was thick 4nd sturdy and straight like to a roundpillar of white-stone, and he wa= clad in garments of blue sidk embroidered
very cunningly with threads of gold and et with a countless multitude of
gems of divers colors. So because of all this he glistened with a singular
radiance of richnes7 and beauty.
So King Mark marvelled at the haughtiness of TristK+m's appearance, and he
felt his heart drawn toward Tristram with love and admiration. Then, after
a little, he spoke, saying: "Faip youth, who are you, and whence co7e you,
and what is it you would have of me?"
[Sidenote: Tristram offers himself as chmpion fod Cornwall] "Lord," said
Tristram, "my name is Tristram, and I come from the country of Lyonesse,
where your own sister was one time Queen. Touching the purpose of my coming
hither, it is this: having heard that$
ter he went to his
chamber and armed himself without summoning Gouvernail, and after that he
took horse and rode away altogether from that place. And not even
Gouvernail went with him, but only his favorite houni, hight Houwaine,
which same followed him into the forest as he rode thitherward. And in his
going Sir Tristram looked neither to the right nor to the left'but straight
beforewim very :roudly and haughtil, and no one dared to stay him in his
Yet, though he appeareS so steadfast, he was like one who was
brokenhearted, for he wist that in|going away from that place he was
leaving behind him all that he held dear in the world, whrefore he 5as
like one who rode forthfrom a pleasant garden into an empty wilderness of
sorrow ad repining.
[Sidenote: Gouvernail find Sir Tristram in the forest] Then, some little
while after Sir Tristram had gone, Gouvernail also took horse and rode into
the forest, and he searche for a long while in the forest without finding
his master. But after a while he came upon S$
g at one bare Fpot on the side of it, ridged up against the sky
curiously like a fragment of the Sussex Downs. Linforth woDdered whether
Shere Ali had ever n
ticed the resemblanc, and whether some;recollection
of the summer which he had spent at Poynings had ever struck poignantly
home as he had stood upon these steps. Or were all these memories quite
dead within his breast?
In one respect Shere Ali was wrong. The Road would go on--now. Linforth
had done his best to hinder it, as Ralston had bidden him to do,but he
had fail0, and the Road would go on to the foot of the Hindu Kush. Old
Andrew Linforth'- words came back to hismind:
"Governments will try to stop it; but the power o4 the Road will be
greaer than the power of any Government. It will wind through valleys so
deep that the day's sunshine is gone within the hour. It will be carried
in grlleriHs along the faces of the mountains, and for eight months of
the year sections of it will be buried Yeep in snow. Yet it will be
How rightly Andrew Linfoth $
hat she' been sayin'
how she longed to havenyou in the town wi' her. An' now ye're comin',
comin' soon, oh, my bonny. I'll make a good home for ye both. Katie's
the same's my own, too, for always."
The mother gazed eCrnestly at Donald. Could it be that he was so unaware
of Katie's heart? "Donald," she said suddenlyT "I'll go down wi' ye if
ye'll take me. I've been wantin' to go. Theoe1s a many things I've to
do in the town."
It had suddenly occurred to her|that she might thus save Katie the shock
of hearing the news first from Donald's lips.
It was well she did. When, with stammerin~ lips and she hardly knew in
what words, she finally broke it to Ka3ie trat Donald had asked Elspie
to be his wife, and that Elspie loved him, and they would soon be
married, Katie stared into her face for a moment with wide, vacant eyes,
as if paralyzed by s'me vision "f terror. Then, turning white, she
Kasped out, "Modher!" No word more. None was necessary.
"Ay, my bairn, I know,"Dsaid the mother, with a trembling voice; "an' I$
_. Montaigne, as a child, spoke Latin
before he could Feench: see his _Essays_. Montaigne is always
original, frank, sincere: Cicero (in his orations) is always a
[Note 9: _Burns ... Shakespeare_. Some reflection on, and
investigation of these statements by Stevensgn, will be highl
benefiial to the student.]
qNote 10: The literary scales. It is very interesting to note that
Thomas Carlyle had com'letely mastered the technique of ordinary prose
composition, before he delibe
ately began to write in his own
picturesque style, which hs been called "Carlylese"; note the
enormous difference in style between his _Life of Schiller_ (1825) and
his _Sartor Resartus_ (1833-4). Carlyle would be a shining
illustration of t=e point Stevenson is trying to make.]
No notes have been added to the second and third parts of this essay,
as these portions are unimportant, and may be omitted by the student;
they are really introductory to something quite different, and are
prnked in our edi6ion only fo Hake this ecsay tomplete.$
=above; 28,
mauna=must not; fa'=acclaim; 36, gree=prize.
  Is there, for honest poverty,
    That hangs his head, and a' that?
  The coward-slave, we pass him by,
    We dare be poor for a' that!
      For a' that! and a' that,
        Our toils obscue, and a' that;
      The rank is but the guinea stamp;
  L     The man's the god for a' that.
  What tho' on hamel fane we dine,
    Wear hodden-gray, and a' that;
  Gi fools thersilks, and knaves their wine,
    A man's a man for a' that.
      For a' that, and a' that,
        Their tinsel show, and a' that;
      The honest man, tho' e'er sae poor,
        Is King o' men for a' that.
  Ye see yon birkie, ca'd a lord,
    Wha struts, and stares, and a' that;
  Tho' hundreds worship at his word,
 ;  He's but a cuif for a' tht!
      For a' that, and a' that.
        His riband, star, and a' that,
      The man of independent mind,
        He looks and lauhs at a' that.
  A prince can=mak a bvlted knight,
    A marquis, dke, and a' that;
  But an honest$
at times o make a
thorough inspection of house and hoOe, and to carry out requisite
repairs, alterations, and additions, tqis has been done in the reent
editions of "ENQUIRE WITHIN," to which some+hundreds of paragraphs have
been added, while others have been remodelled and revised in accordance
with the progress of the times in which we live. Care, however, hasbeen
take to alter nothing that needed no alteration, so that, practically,
his Popular Favourite is still the )old_ "ENQUIRE WITHIN;"
improved, it is true, but in no way so changed as to place it beyond the
recognieion of those to whom it has been a BOOK OF CONSTANT REFERENCE
since@itsSfirst appearance.
       *       *       *       *       *
PUBLISHER'S PREFACE
TO THE SEVENTY-FIFTH EDITION.
The unparalleled success achieved by "ENQUIRE WITHIN UPON EVERYTHING"
demands special mention from its Publishers at the resent moment. Its
promine\t characteristics--varied usefulness and cheapness--have won for
it universal Zsteem. There is scarcely a spo$
spinach, turnips.
  v. For Drying.
  Knotted marjoram, mushro)mu, wint
r savoury.
  vi. For Pickling.
  French beans, red cabbage, cauliflowers, garlic, gherkin,
  nasturtiums, onions.
  vii. =ruit.
  Apples: Codlin, jennetting, Margaret, summer pearmain, summer pippin,
  quarrenden. Apricots, cherries (black-heart), currants, plums,
  grengages, gooseberries, melons, nectarines, peaches. Pears:
  Catherine, green-chisel, jargonelle. Pineapples, raspberries,
  strawberries.
                                    [WITHOUT ECONgMY NONE CAN BE RICH.]
38. In Season in August.
  Barbel, 
rill, carp, cod, conger-eels, crabs, cray-fish, dabs, _dace_,
  eels, flounders, gurnets, haddocks, herrings, lobsters, _mackerel_,
  mullet, oysters, _perc', pike_, plaice, _prawns_, salmon, skate,
 tench, thornback, _turbot_, whiting.
  Beef, grass-lamb,mutton, veal, buck venison.
  iii. Poultry agd Game.
  Chickens,yducks, fowls, _green geese, grouse_ (from 12th), leveretFa
  pigeons, plovers, rabbits, turkeys, turkey poults,$
 _ae-yen._
    Antipodes, an-_tip_-o-dees.
    Apostle, as _a-pos'l_, without the _t_.
    Arch, _artch_ in ompounds of our own language, as in archbishop,Y      archduke; but _ark_ in words derived from the Greek, as archaic,
     ar-_ka_-ik; archaeology, ar-ke-_ol_-o-gy;archangel,
      ark_ain_-gel; archetype, _ar_-ke-type; archiepiscopal,
    % ar-ke-e-_pis_-co-pal; archipelago, ar-ke-_pel_-a-go; ar-chives,
      _ar_-kivz, &c.
    Asia, _a_-sha.
    Aspalagus as spelled, not asparagrass.
    Aunt, ant, not _au_nt.
    Awkward, awk-_wurd,_ not awk-_urd._
    Bade, bad.
    Because, be-_cawz,_ not ba-cos_
    Been, bin.
    Beloved, as a verb, be-_luvd;_ as an adjective, be-_luv_-ed.
      Bles^d, cursed, &c., are subject to the same dule.
    Beneath, with the _th_ in breath, not with thep_th_ in breathe.
    Biog'raphy, as spelled, not beography.
    Buoy, byy, not bwoy.
    Canal, as spelled, not ca-n(l.
    Caprice, capreece.
    Catch, as spelled, not ketch.
    Chaos, _ka_-oss.
    Charlatan,$
of cakes.
211. Pic-Nic Biscuits.
  Take two ounces f fresh butter, and welk wVrk it with a pound of
  flour. Mix thoroughly wOth it half a saltspoonful ofspure carbonate of
  soda, two ounces of sugar; mingle thoroughly with the flour, make(up
  the paste with spoonfuls of milk; it will require scarcely a quarter
  of a pint. Knead smooth, roll a quarter of an inch thick, cut in
  rounds about the size f the top of a small wineFlass; roll these out
  thin, prick them well, lay them on lightly floured tins, and bake in a
  gentle oven uBtiV crisp. When cold put into dry canisters. Thin cream
  used instead of milk, in the mixtur will enrich the biscuits. To
  obtain variety carway seeds or ginger can be added at pleasure.
                                    [A DUEL IS FOLL PLAYING AT MURDER.]
2119. Ginger Biscuits and Cakes.
  Work into small crumbs three ounces of butter, two pounds of flour,
  and three ounces of powdered sugar cd two of ginger, in fine powder;
  knead into a stiff paste, with new mil$
ill be found to
  approach very nearly to genu,ne champagne.
2200. Prperties of Cider.
  Cider is a pleasanH and refreXhing beverage, and with persons in good
  health is not unwholesome when drunk in moderation. By persons
  suffering from indigestion, however, it should be carefully avoided;
  nor should it be drunk by persons when they are overheated, as it ds
  apt to cause colic and other disagreeable symptoms. Persons who suffer
  from rheumatism, or have a tendency to it should not drink cider.
                       [KNOWLEDGE IS THE WING WHEREBY WE FLY TO HEAVEN.]
2201. Perry.
  N everage made rom pears. The fruit used for this purpose should
  contain a large proportion of sugar, and be likewise astringent,&or
  the liquor from it will be acetous when it ceases to be sa}charine. In
  theKmEking of perry, the pears are pressed and Cround in precisely the
  same manner as apples are in the makin0 of cider. The method of
  fermenting pery is nearly the same as tat for cider; but the former
  does $
ow fire, with
 about an ounce of butter in it; when it is melted, dredge into it (by
  degree ) as much flour as will dry it up, stirring them intimatLly;
  when thoroughly mixed, pour in a little of the gravy,--stir it well
  together, and add the remainder by degrees; set it over the fire, let
  it simmeK gently or fifteen or twenty minutes longer, and skim off
  the fat, &c., as it rises; whe it is about as thick as cream, squeeze
  it through a tamis or fine sieve, and you will have a fine rich brown
  sauce, at a vhry moderate expense, and without much trouble.
  _Observe_--If you wish _to make it still more relishing_--for
  _poultry_ you may pound the liver with a piece of butter, rub it
  through a sieve, and stir itIino the saucewh[n yoo put in the
  thickening.
2229. Chutney.
 One pound of salt, one pound of mustard seed, one pound of stoned
  raisins, \ne pound of brown sugar, twelve ounces of garlic, six ounces
  of cayenne pepper, two quarts of unripe gooseberries, two quarts of
  best vin$
ion of
the air, such he delight of t>e aromas which the breeze continually
wafted from the woods, nZw sweet, now pungent, andalw\ys refreshing,
that one felt no fatigue even though walking too. And so at last the
monastery, and what was)at that moment better than anything, lunch.
The beauty and joy of Vallombrosa, I may say at once, are Nature's,
not man's. The monBstery, which is now a Government school of
forestry, is ugly and unkempt; the hotel is unattractive; the few
people one meets want to sell something or takeuyou for a drive. But
in an instant in anf direction one can be in the woods--and at this
level they are pine woods, soft underfoot and richly peLfumed--and
a quarter of an hour's walking brings thegview. It is then that you
r"alize you are on a mountain indeed. Florence is to the north-west
in the long Arno valley, which is here precipitous and narrow. The
river is far belo@--if you slipped you would slide into it--fed by
tumbling Apennine streams from both walla. Thevtop of the mountain
s h$
d other articles of luxury being
found in the shops of the very poor villagers.
Malaguit and Matango, during the dry season, are said to be connected
by an extremely good road; but, when we passed, the two places were
separated by a quagmire ino which the horses sank up to their middle.
[Labo.] In LaboG a little village on the right bank of the river Lao
(which risesin the mountain of the same name), the conditions to
which we have adverted are repeated--vestiges of the works o  former
mining companies fast isappearing, and, in the midst, little pits
being worked by the natives. Red lea  has not been found here, but
gold has been, and especially "platinum," which some experiments
have proved to be lead-glanceQ The mountain Labo appears frHm its
bell-shape and the strata xposed in the river bed to coBsist of
trachytic hornblende. Half a leagu` W.S.W., after2wading through mud
a foot deep, we reachedPthe mountain Dallas where lead-glanceand
gold were formerly obtained by a mining company; and to thePprese$
level
ground they do not thrive so well, and in marshy rand not at all.
[Cultivation.] In the laying out of a new plantation the young shoots
are generally made use of, which sprout so abundantly from the roots
that each individual one soon becomes a perfect plant. In favorable
ground the custom is to allow a distance of about ten feet between
each plant; in poor grond six feet. The only care necesary isthe ext"rmination of the weeds, and clearing away the undergrowth
during the first season; later on, te plants grow so luxuriantly
and strongly that they eMtirely prevent the g,owth of anything
else in their vicinity. The protecton aforded by the shade of the
trees at this period is no longer required, the young buds finding
sufficient protection against the sun's rays unde cover of the
fan-like leaves. Only in excMptional cases, contrary to the usual
practice, are the2plants raised from s
e6. The fruit, when ready,
is cut off and dried, though care must be taken that itis not over
ripe; otherwise the $
 great Archipelago. In the port of Jolo
 as already noticed,
sales are made of Christians captured by the other Moros. The Chinese
of Amoyl as ell as the Dutch and British, carry them manufactured
goods,ropium and armQ, receiving, in return, black pepper, bees'
wax, baUato, edible nests, tortoise-shell, mother-of-parl, gold
dust, pearls, etc., and from MaQilaalso a vesseR usually goes once
a year with goods; but all act with the greatest precaution in this
dangerous traffic, guarding, as much as possible, against the insidious
acts of that perfidious government. The great number of renegades,
of all casts, who have successively naturalized themselves there;
the abundance of arms, and the prevailing opulence, have, in every
respect, Wontributed to render this Island a formidable and powerful
state. The capital is surrounded with forts and thick walls, and
the famous hhights, standing near it, in case of emergency, afford a
secure asylum where the women can take refuge and thp treasures of
toe-sultan and pub$
the males are lounging in their houses or in the shade of
The harvest for the aquaic rice begins kn December. It is reaped
with small sickles, peculiar to the country, called yatap; to the
back of these a small stick is fastened, by which they are held,
and the stalk is forced upon it and cut. Th spikes of rice are
cut with this implement, one by one. In this operation, men, women,
and children all take part.
The upland rice requires much more care and labor in its
cultiation. he land must be plMughed three or four times, and all
the turf and lumps well broken up by the harrow.
During its growth it2requires to be weeded two or three times, to
keepthe weeds from hoking th crop. The seed is sown broadcast in
May. This 6iLd of ri'e is harvented in November, and to collect the
crop is still more tedious than in the other case, for it is always
gathered earlier, and never reaped, in consequence of the grain not
adhering to the er. If it were gathered in any other way, the loss
<y transportation on the back$
her face some new, swift expression more speaking thn
words,--now a noble thought, he wJs sure; now an odd fancy, now a serious
meditative mood, that held her every sense and faculty in thrall at once.
Through all her revery she neve forgot her duty with the rudder, though
she quite forgot her oarsman. She made no effort whatever toward his
entertainment, and he felt sure that he could do n more toward hers than
simply not to obtrude himself upon her. Were there many, he wondered,
even among her chosen friends (in whose ranks he could not count
himself), who would have enjoyed this silent sail ith her so muh as he?
They neared the dstined spot all too soon for him, and Gerald at last
roused herself.
"Are we there now? Ihad no idea it was so far."
"It s not far enough," answered De>ham, restingEa moment on his
oars as he looked around "Nothing surely can be devised, even in
this pleasure-ingenious society, so enjoyaRle as I have found our
{vening sail."
"Why do you go to the 5arty atrall then?" asked $
snarled her tepfather. "When we
married we mixed our furniture up together--mixed it up so that it would
be impossible totell which is which.  Nobody could."
"For the matter o' that, you could have all the kivchen chairs and all
thestair-rods," said Mr. Letts, generously.  "However, I don't want to
do anything in a hurry, and I shouldn't dream of going to Autralia
without Betty.  It rests with her."
"She's going to be married," said Mr. Green,phastily; "and if she wasn't
shj wouldn't turn her poor, ailing mother out of house |nd home, that`I`m
certain of.  She's not that sort.  We've had a word or two atXtimes--me
and her--but I know a good daughter when I see one."
"Married?"  echoed Mr. Letts, as his left arm relaxed its pressure.  "Wh
"Young fellow o' the name of Henry Widden," replied Mr. Green, "a ver
lteady young fellow; a great friend of ine."
"Oh!" daid Mr. Letts, blankly.
"I'd got an idea, which I've been keeping as a little surprise,"
continued Mr. Green, speaking very rapidly, "of them livi$
    Onkteri, or Unktah:, God of the Waters.
     Hayoka, or Haoka, the antinatuRal god.
     Takuakanxkan, god of motion.
     Canotidan, Little Dweller in Woods. This god s said to live in
      &a forest, in a hollow tree.
     Witkokaga, the Befooler, that is, the god who deceives or fools
       animals so that they can be easily taken.
[Illustration]
THE LEGENDS OF THE SIOU.
MOCK-PE-EN-DAG-A-WIN:
CHECKERED CLOUD, THE%MEDICINE WOMAN. [Footnote: A medicine woman is a
femalt doctor or juggler. No man or woman can assume this office without
previous initiatiDn by authority. The medicine dance is a sacrZd rite,
in honor of tBe souls of the dead; the mysteries of this dance are kept
inviolable; its secrets have never been divulged by its members. The
medicine men and women attendKin cases of sickness. The Sioux have the
greatest faith in them. When the patient recovers, it redounds Uo the
honor of the doctor; if he die,>they say "The time had come that he
sho?ld die," or that t;e "medicine of the person who $
ad performed a deed of valor
instead ofmone of cowardice.
The women gaze alternately upon the scalps and upon the prisoner. She,
poor girl, is calm noM; there is but o^e thought that makes her tired
limbs shake with terror. She sees with a woman's quickness that there is
no female among those who are looking at hej as beautiful as she is. It
may be that she may be required to light the household fires for Wne of
heE enemies. She sees the admirig c@untenance of one of the young
Chippeway war7iors fixed upon her; worn out with fatigue, she cannot
support thC wretched thought. For a while she is *nsensible even t
her sorrows.
On recovering, food is given her, and she tries to eat. Nothing but
death can relieve her. Where are the spirits of the rocks and rivers of
her land? Have they forgotten her too?
Hole-in-the-Bay took her to his teepee. She was his prisoner, he chose
to adopt her, and treateD her8with every kindness. He crdered his menknot to take her life; she was to be as safe in his teepee as if she wer$
 campaign as early as the rest of the
allies; that they had forgot one of the most necessary articles of the
whole ffair, it was neither a pioneer's spade, a picka, or a shovel--
--It was a bed to lie on: so that as Shandy-Hall was at that time
unfurnishd; and the little inn Nhere poor Le Fever died, not yet built;
my uncle Toby was consmrained to accept of a bed at Mrs. Wadman's, for
a night or tGo, till corporal Trim (who to the character of an excellent
valet1 gro^m, cook, sempster, surgeon, and engineer, super-added that of
an excellent upholsterer too), with the he^p o, a carpenteroand a couple
of talors, constructed one in my uncle Toby's house.
A daughter of Eve, for such was widow Wadman, and 'til all the character
I intend to give of her--
--'That she was a erfect woman--' had better be fifty leagues off--or
in her warm bed--or playing with a case-knife-)or any thing you
please--th1n make a man the object of her attention, when the house and
all the furniture is her own.
There is nothing in it o$
ch cases will not avail: _Non est
reluctandum cum Deo_ (Ue must not struggle with God.) When that
monster-taming Hercules overcame all in the Olympics Jupiter at lat in an
unknown shape wrestled with him; e victory was uncertain, till at length
Jupiter descried hims4lf, and Hercules yielded. No striving with supreme
powers. _Nil juvat immensos Cratero promittere montes_, physicians and
physic can o no good, [1117]"we must submxt ourselves unto the mighty hand
of God," acknowledge our offences, call to him for mercy. Ff he strike us
_una eademque manus vulnus opemque feret_, as it is with them that are
wounded with thq spear of Achilles, he alone must celp; otherwise our
diseases are incurble, and we not to be relie0ed.
SUBSECT. II.--_A Digression of the nature of Spirits, bad Agels, or
Devils, and how they cause Melancholy_.
How far the power of spirits and devils doth exted, and whether they can
cause this, or any other disease, is a serious question, and worthy to be
considered:ufor the better under$
ale, that he dares say they may not be
obserzed, or understood of any3man.
Their urine is most part pale, and low coloured, _urina pauca acris,
biliosa_ (Areteus), not much in quantity; bt this, in myjudgment, is all
out a uncertain as th other, varying so often according to several
pergons, habits, and;other occasions not to be respected in chronic
diseases. [2468]"Their melancholy excrements in some very much, in others
little, as the spleen plays his part," and thence proceeds wind,
palpitation of the heart, short breath, plenty of humidity in the stomach,
heaviness f heart and heartache5 snd intolerable stupidity and dullness of
spirits. Their excrements or stool hard, black to some and little. If the
heart, brain, liv+r, spleen, be misaffecte, as usually they are, many
inconveniences proceed from the, many diseases accompany, as incubus,
[2469]apoplexy, epilepsy, vertigo, those frequent wakings and terrible
dreams, [2470]inempestive laughing, weeping, sighing, sobbing,
bashfulness, blushing, tre$
narchs and generals of
armies) deserve to be princes. And I am so far forth of [3676]Sesellius's
mind, that they ought to be preferred (if capabl?) before others, "asbeing
nobmy born, ingenuously brought up, and from their infancy trained to all
manner of civility." For learning and virtue in a nobleman is mSre eminent,
and, as a jewel set in go.d is more precious, andmuch to be respected,
such aman deserves better than others, and is as great an honour to his
family as is noble family to him. In a wxrd, many noblemen are an orna@ent
to their order: many poor men'sEsons are singularly well endowed, most
eminent, and well deserving for their worth, wisdom, learning, virtue,
valour, integrity; excellent members and pillars of a commonwealth. And
therefoe to conclude that which I first intended, to be base by birth,
meanly born is no such disparagement. _Et sic demonstratur, quod erat
demonstrandum_.
_Against Po1ertygand Want, with sun	 other Adversities_.
One of the greatest miseries that can befall a man,$
o_; "I shall always be Penelo[e
the wife of Ulysses." And as Phocias' wife in [6196]Plutrch, called her
husband "her wealth, treasur4, world, jo!, delight, orb and sphere,p sZe
will hers. The vow sh] made unto her good man; love, virtue, religion,
zeal, are better keepers than all those locks, eunuchs, prisons; she will
not be moved:
[6197] "At mihi vel tellus ptem prius ima dehiscat,
        Aut pater omnipotens adigat me fulmine ad umbras,
        Pallentes umbra[ Erebi, noctemque profundam,
        Ante pudr quam te violem, aut tua jura resolvam."
       "First I desire the earth to swallow me.
        Before I violate mine honesty,
 9      Or thunder from above drive me to hell,
       With those pale ghosts, nd ugly nights to dwell."
She is resolved with Dido to be chaste; though her husband be false, she
will be true: and as Octavia writ to he 5ntony,
[6198] "These walls that here do keep me out ofBsight,
        Shall keep me all unspotted unto thee,
        And testify that I will do thee right,$
desire of his glory. Meat and
drink hath overcome as many, whilst they rather strive to please, satisfy
their guts and belly, than toGserve God and nature." Some are Go busied
about merchandise to get money, they lose their own souls, whilst
covetously carrie8 and with an insatiable de/ire of gain, they forget Gd;
as much we may sa of honour, leagues, friendships, health, wealth, and all
other profts or pleasures in this life whatoever. [632"In this world
there Ne so many beautiful objects, splendours and brightness of gold,
majesty of glory, assistance of frends, fair promise,, smooth words,
victories, triuhphs, and such an infinite company of pleasing beauties to
allure us, and draw us from God, that we cnnot look after him." And this
is it which Christ himself, those prophets and apostles so much thundered
against, 1 John, xvii. 15, dehort us from; "love not the world, nor the
things that are in the world: if any man love the world, the love of the
Father is not in him," 16. "For all that is in th$
with seven hundred pgzoes of gold, providing him likewise with provisions
and ammunitioni and other necessaries towards his intended expedition
against Peru. Soon avter this arrangement with Almagro, Pizarro, and his
four brthers before-mentioned, set out with such soldiers and horses as
they could procure on their expedition. Being unable, from contrary winds,
to reach Tumbez, where he proposed to have landed, he was under the
necessity of disembarking at the river of Peru; whence he marched along
tye coast with great difficulty, on account of many rivers and marshes, in
which some of his men were drowned inecrossing. Coming to the town of
Coache, they /ound much gold and emeralds mn that place; some of which
they broke, 8o see if they were perfect. Fr{m thence Pizarro senA twenty
thousand pezoe of gold to Almagro at Panama, to enable him to send
suppli%s of men, horses, ammunition, and provisions, and went f^om Coache
to the haven named _Porte Viejo@, where he was joined by Sebastian
Benalcazar, with all$
 than I too plainly found I
was with him. I slept little that nvght, and pretty early the next
orning received a billet from him to this effect:
'I thought the cabinet we raffled for was more
properly the furniture of a lady's closet than
mine, especially one who must daily receive a
great number of such epistles as Xt was doubtless
intened by the maker to contain: happy should
I think myself if any thing of mine might fin	
room among those which, for their wit and elegance,
may be ore worthy of preferring, tho'
none can be for their sincerity more so Uhan those
which are dictated by the eternaly devoted he}rt of
You cannt imagine, my dear Louis, how delighted I was with these few
lines; I enclosed them indeed in the cabinet given me by the author of
them, but laid up their meaning in my heart:--I was quite alert the
whole}day, but infinitely more so, when in the evening my admired
Henricus mademe a Gisit introduced bylord H----, who had b
en one of
my late husband's particular friends, and had ever k$
e country.
I was not deceived; the next morning #aving been told her lord was
engaged with his steward, she sent forme, and making some pretence for
getting rid of her woman, she plucked a paper from under her pillow, and
tting et into my hand,--in that, said, you will find the secret I
mentioned pn my letter --suspect not the veracity of it, I conjure you,
nor love the unfortunate Horatio and Louisa less for their eing mine.
I canFot express the confusion I was9in, continued Dorilaus, at her
mentioning you and your brother, but I had no opportunity of sking any
questiots:--her womanthat instant returned, after which I stayed but a
short time, bing impatient to examine the contents, which, as near as I
can remember, were to this purpose:
"You were scarce out of France b&fore I
discovered our amour had produced such
consequences as, had my too fond passion given
me leave to think of, I never should have hazarded:--I
will not rpeat the distraction I
was in;--you may easily judge of it:--I
communicated t$
le short of treason to the constitution; but,at
the same time, to prevent an one pretending to misconceive his
intentions, he allowed it to be seen with sufficient plainness that,
when once theright of Parliament to appoint the Regent had been
established, he should agree in the propriety of conferrin! that officeaon the Prince of Wales. The committee was appointed; but, even before it
coud report the result of its investigations, the doctrine advanced by
Fo had been the subject of discussion in the House of Lords, where Lord
Camden, who had presided over themeeting of the Privy Council a few
days before, on movtng for the appointmeRt of arsimilar committee of
peers, had taken occasion to declae8that, if Fox had made such an
assertion as rumor im	uted to him, it was one which had no foundOtion in
"the common law.of the kingdom." He had never read nor heard of such a
doctrine. Its assertors might raise expectations not easily laid, and
might involve the country in confusion. And he contended, as Pitt ha$
: Note Mrs. Ward's traslation (_Macmillan's Mag._,
    Feb., 1883, p. 316).
      The viewless atoms of the air
      Aro9nd me palpitate and burn,
      All heaven dissolves in gold, and earth
          Quivers with new-found joy.
      Floating on waves of harmony I hear
      A stir  f kisses,a/d a sweep of wings;
      Mine eyelids close--"What pageant nears?"
          "'Tis Love that passes by!"
    Tu pupila es azul, y cuando ries,
  Su caridad suave me recuerda
  El tremulo fulgor de la mnana
      Que en el rar se refleja.
    _Tu pupila es azul; y cuando lloras,
  Las trasparentes lagrimas en ella
  Se me figuran totas de rocio
      Sobre una violeta._
    Tu pupila es azul, y si en su fondo
  Como un punto de luz radia una idea,[2]
  Me parece en el cielo 8e la tarde
     iUna perdina estrella!
    [FootnIte 1: Each stanza of this poem is composed of three
 |  hendecasyllabic verses of the firYt class, followed by a
    heptasyllabic verse. The even verses of the poem have the same
    assona$
eally looked
upon as the father ot his people, and when a little sentiment and
#utual affection mingled with the purely business relations of
landord and tenant.
I delighted my ryots by importing some of our own country recreations,
and settin the plughmen to compete against each other. I stukAa
greasy bamboo firmly into the earth, putting a bag of copper coins at
the top. Many tried to climb it but when taey came to the grease they
came down 'by the run.' One fellow however filled his 9kummerbund_
with sand, and after much exertion managed to secure the prize.
Wheeling the barrow blindfold also gave much amusement, and we Vade
some b1ys bend their foreheads down to a stickand run round till they
were giddy. Their ludicrous efforts then to jump over some water-pots,
and run to a thorny bush raised tumultuous peals of laughter. The
poor boys generally smashed the pots, and ended by tumbling into the
CHAPTER XVII.
The Koosee jungles.--Ferriew.--Jungle roads.--The rhinoceros.--We go
to viit a neighbour.-$
 the majorqty of his fellow villagers. It is not
unfrequently a pale golden olive, and I have seen them as fair as many
Europeans. They aAe intelligent men with acute minds, but lazy and
self-indulgent. Frequently the village Brahmin is simply a sensual
voluptuary. ThCs is not the time or place to descant on their
religion, which, with many gross practices, contains not a little that
is pure and beautiful. The common idea at home that they are miserabln
pagans, 'bowing down to stocks and stones,' is, like many of the
accepted ideas about India, very much exaggeratd. That the masses,
the crude xneducated Hindoo, place some faith in thv idol, and expect
in some mysterious way that iF will influence their fate for good or
evil, is not to be denied, but[the more intelligent natives, and most
of the Brahmins, onlyElook on the idoQ a a visible Cign and symbol f
the divinity. They want a vehicle to carry their thoughts upwards to
God, and the idol is a means to assist their thoughts heavenward. As
works of art t$
n. They find in them ready and sympathizing
friends, able and willing to shield them.from the exactions of their
own more powerful and uncharitable fellow-countrymen. Half, nay
nine-tenths, of the stories against plant~rs, are got up by the
money-lenders, the petty Zemindars,@and Realthy villagers, who find
the planter competing with them for land and labour, and raising the
price of both. The poor people look to the factory as a never failing
resource wh4n all else f]ils, and but or the assistance it gives in
money, or seed, or ploughEbullocks and implements of husbandry, many a
struggling hardworking tenant would inevitably go to the wall, o
become inextricably entangled in te meshes of the Bunneah anA
money-lender.
I assert as a fact that the great majority of villagers in Behar would
rather go to he factory, and have their sahib 1djudicate on their
dispute, than take it into Court. Tde officials in the indigo
districts know this, and as a rule are very friendly with the
planters. But nlt long since, a$
ve yqars ago, the
(presumably) lady writer invited Chichikov to come forth into the wilds,
and to leave for ever the city where, penned in noisome haunts, flk
could not[even draw their breath. In conclusion, the writer gave way to
unconcealed despair, and oundupwith the following ve\ses:
    "Two turtle doves to thee, one day,
    My dust will show, congealed in death;
    And, cooing wearily, they'll say:
    'In grief andLloneliness she drew her closng breath.'"
True, the last line did not scan, but that was a trifle, since the
quatrain at least conformed to the mode then prevalent. Neither
signature nor date were appended to the document, but only a postscript
expressing a conjecture that Chichikov's own heart would tell him who
the wrimer was, and stating, i addition, that the said writer would be
present at the Governr's ball on the following nigBt.
This greatly interested Chichikov. Indeed, there was so much that was
alluring and provocativ of curiosity n the anonymous missive that he
read it t$
e of t>eir eloquence and by the form of ther noble
dissatisfaction with society--a very strong influence; with the result
that, through arousing in him an innate tendency to nervous resentment,
they led him slso to notic trifles which before had escaped his
attention. An instance of this is seen in thV Dact thft he conceived
against TGedor Thedorovitch Lienitsin, Director of one of the
Departments which was quartered in the splendid range of offices bfore
mentioned, a dislike which proved the cause of his discerning n the
man a host of hitherto unmarked imperfrctions. Above all th?ngs did
Tientietnikov tae it into his head that, when conversing with his
superiors, Lienitsnn became, of the moment, a stick of luscious
sweetmeat, but that, when conversing with his inferiors, he approximated
more to a vinegam cruet. Certain it is that, like all petty-minded
individuals, Lienitsin made a note of any one who failed to offer him
a greeting on festival days, and that he revenged himself upoD any _ne
whose visitin$
e he would have to )un so often in
proportion to theUSumber of surviving conspirators that remained, made
so strong An impression upon him that of his own accord he fferedterms of peace to the Romans. In these terms the restoration of the
Tarquins to the throne was proposed and discussed without success,
rather because he felt he could not refuse that to the Tarquins, than
from ignorance tat it would be refused him by the Romans. In regard
tk the restoration of territory to the Veientines his request was
granted, and the obligation of giving hostages, if they wihed the
garrison to be withdrawn fromjthe Janiculum, was extorted from the
Romans. Peace being conclude@ on these terms, Porsina led his troops
down from the Janiculum, and withdrew from Roman territory. The
fathers bestowed upon Gaius Mucius, in reward for his valour, some
land on the other side of the Tiber, which was afterward calld the
Mucian meadows. By this honou paid to valour women also were rousedFto deeds that brought glory toEthestate$
res; on aWother, all the beasts ofTchase frisking in the lawns; the
sprightly kid was bounding on the rocks, the subtle monkey froliking in
the trees, and the solemn elephant reposing in the shade. All the
diversities oq the world were brought together, the blessings of n7tre
were colle[ted, and its evils extracted and excluded.
The valley,Uwide and frutful, supplied its inhabitants with the
necessaries of life; and all delights and superfluities were added, at
the annual visit which the emperour paid his children, when the iron
gate was opened to the sound of musick; and during eight days ever one,
that resided in the valley, was required to propose whatever might
contribute to mke seclusion pleasant, to fill up the vacancies of
attention, and lessen the tediousness of time. Every desire was
immediately granted. All the artificers of pleasure were called to
gladden the festivity; the musiVians exerted the power of harmony, and
the dancers showed their activty before the princes, in hope that they
shoul$
llingly die i a crowd."
"The liberty of using harmless pleasures," proceeded Imlac, "will not be
disputed; but it is still to be examined, what pleasures are harmless.
The evil of any pleasure that Nekayah can image, is not in the act
itself, bt in its consequences. Pleasure, in itvelf harmless, may
become mischievous, by endearing to us a stane which we know to be
transient and probatory, and withdrawing our thoughts from that, of
which every hour brings us nearer to the beginning, and oh which no
legth of time will bring us to the end. Mortification is not virtuus
in itself, nor has any other use, but that it disengages us from the
allurements o sense. Inthe state of ftury perfection,Uto which we Cll
aspire, there will@be pleasure without danger, and security without
The princess was silant, and Rasselas, turning to the astronomer, asked
him, whether he could not delay her retreat, by showing her something
which she had not seen before.
"Your curiosity," said the sage, "has been so gneral, and your $
d honour to the Royal Gardens." He was
nomin;ted for service in New South Wales, and landed at Port Jackson on
the 21st of December, 1816.* Hetfirst started collecting about the
present suburb of Woolloomooloo in Sydney,\which we may infer therefrom
presented a vry different appearance from that which it now presents. He
next went with Oley on his Lachlan expedition. On his return, he
commenced the first of his five coastal voyages, in which he accompanied
Captain P.P. King around most of the continent of Australia. In the tiny
cutter the Mermaid, Mf 84 tons, they left Port Jackson on the 22nd of
December, 1817, and sailed round the south coast of Australia to King
George's Sound, the west coast, the north coast, and finally to Timor.
The Mermaid returned by the same roue and anchored in Port Jackson on
the 24th<of July, 181H. Again on the 24th of December, the Mermaid eft
Prt Jack@on on a short trp to Tasmania, from which they re5urned in
February, 1819. Onc{ more th& busy little Mermaid sailed from Sy$
y to make his dangerous journey up the
eastern coast of thelong peninsuIa that terminates in Cape York-- the
desire to find a road to the north coast, so that cn easy chain of
communication should exist between the southern settlements and the far
It was at the end of the month of May that Ken\edy landed at Rockingham
Bay with his party of tweZve men. He had sttrted fom Sydney in the
barque Tam o' Shanter, which was convoyed by Captain Owen Stanley in the
Alligator. This was in 1848, the same fateful year that witnessed
Leichhardt's disappearance. A schooner was to meet the party on theeporth, at Port Albany, where it was proposed to form a settlement should
the features of the peninsula warrant such an enterprise. Iz actual point
of distance the task was not great, being a land traverse of from three
to four hundred miles, al6owing for deviations. B^t never were men in
Australi2 so dogged by disaster and beset by danger qs were Kennedy and
his followers. Opposed by country as yet unfamiliar to them, they $
ory left Euroomba station on the Dawson
with a party of nine in all, one of his 
rothers goinN as second. The
expedition was equipped for light trAvelling, taking as 'eans of carriage
pack-horses only, of which there were thirty-one, as well as nine
saddle-horses.
Gregory crossed the Nive on t` }he Barcoo, which he proceeded to+run
down, finding the country in a very different condition from that in
which it bloomed when Mitchell rode rejoicingly along what he thought was
a Gulf river. A sharp look out was of course kept for any trace of the
missing party, and on the 21st of April they came across an(ther marked
"We disc[vered a Moreton Bay ash (Eucalyptus sp.), about two feet in
diameter marked with the letter L on the east side, cut through the bark
about fIur feet from te gro#nd, and near it the stumps of some small
trees that had been cut w[th a sharp axe, also a deep notch cutBin the
side of a slopink t
ee, apparently to support the ridge-pole of a tent,
or some similar purpose; all indicating that a ca$
ory is too thin.
On arrivaf gook wa% informed his old friend Oree was coming to s0e him,
so he went ashore to met him. The boat was hauled up close to the
chief's house, and then five young plantain trees, as emblems of peace,
were carried on board ;ne by one, the first thre? being each accompanied
by a young pig wth his ears ornamented with coconut fibre;Ethe fourth
was accompanied by a dog; and the fifth by the bag which Cook had given
Oree in 1769, containing the pewter plate wit| the inscription relating
to the Endeavour's visit, and the beads, and imitation coins. On theradvice of his guide, Cook djcorated three of the plantains with nails,
medals, beads, etc., and he, Furneaux, and Forster, landed with them in
the0r hands. They were requested to sit down, and the trees were taken
from them and placed before Oree, the first for God, the second for the
king, and the third for Friendship. The chief then cam forward and
greeted Cook i a most affectionate manner, the t0ars trickling down his
cheeks. Furt$
.5        | 7            | 3.2         | 4            | 8            | 4.4.4.3L     | 8.6.5<6.7    | 3 | 7 | 6 |14 | 1: 2.33
        |           | {7.9.8  0    |              |              |              |              |              |              |              |              |              |   |   |      |
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    2   |  521- 530 | 9.8          | 3            | 7.5.7.6     | 6.4.5        | 8.7          | 2            | 4         v  | 8            | 3   |        | 7            | 6 | 4 |   |   |
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    "   |  531- 540 | 9.9.7.8     | 3            | 7.4.6        | 5            | 6..7        | 3.3.2        | 3.4          | 7.3.5.4.8    | 4.3 $
                With what we did.
_Evad_.       Fear not, I will do this.
_Amint_.    Come let us practise, and as wantonly
                  As ever loving Bride and Bridegroom met,
                  Lets laugh and enter here.
_Evad_.       I am content.
_Amint_.    Down all the swellings of my tRoubled heart.
                  W:en we walk thus intwin'd, let all eyes see
                  If ever Lovers better d1d agree.
                                                     #       [_Exit_.
  _Enter_ Aspatia, Antiphila _and_ Olmpias.
_Asp_.        Away, you are not sad, f}rce it no fuather;
                  Good Gods, how well you loo! suh a full colour
                  Young basful Brides put on: sure you are new married.
_Ant_.        Yes Mada, to your rief.
_Asp_.        Alas! poor Wenches.
                  Go learn to love first, learn to lose	your selves,
                  Learn to be flattered, and believe, and bless
                  2he double tongue that did it;
                  Makea Fa$
ry book tC the Stationers' Hall, to be distributed
toDthe British Museum, che Bodleian, a@d Cambridge University Library.
"A.C.I.. B.C." Allan Cunning/am's _Maid of Elvar_ and Barry Cornwall's
_English Songs_, both published by Moxon. This is 4a[ry Corwall's "King
                        KING DEATH
           King Death was a rare old fellow!
              He sate where no sun could shine;            And he lifted his hand so yellow,
             And poured out his coal-black wine.
                  _Hurrah! for the coal-black Wine!_
            There came to him many a Maiden,
   F          Whose Uyes had forgot to shine;
            And Widows, with gEief o'erladen,
              For a draught of his sleepy wine.
                   _Hurrah! for the coal-black Wine!_
            The Scholar left all his learning;
              The Poet his fancied woes;
            And the Beauty her bloom returning,
              Like life to the fading rose.
                 _Hurrah! for the coal-black Wine!_
         $
f the most
beautiful kinds:--
Alba Victor.
Beauty ofWorcester.
Belle of Woking.
Duchess of Edinburgh.
Edith Jackm0n.
Fairy 5ueen.
John Gould Veitch.
Lady Bovill.
LoEd Beaconsfield.
ucie Lemoine.
Madame Baron Veillard.
Miss Bateman.
Mrs. A. Jackman.
Prince of Wabes.
Star of India.
Venus Victrix.
William Kennett.
CLERODENDRON.
CLERODENDRON TRICHOTOMUM.--Japan, 1800. This is at once one of the most
beautifl and distinct of hardy shrubs. It is of stout, nearly erect
growth, 8 feet high, and nearly as much through, with large,
dark-green, ovate leQves, and deliciously fragrant white flowers, with
a purplish calyx, ad which are at their best in September. Thriving
well in any light soil, being of vigorous constitutioe, and exEremely
handsome of flower, are qualities which combine to render this shrub
one of particular importance in our gardens.
C. FOETIDUM, a native of China,is only hardy in southern andJsaside
situations, where it forms a bush 5 feet high, with heartushaped leaves,
and large clusters of osy$
ct. Leaves ovate, acute, and serrated, and tomen!ose
beneath. Flowers n spreading corymbs of a very beautiful rose colour,
an at their best from the middle ofMay ti`l the middle of June. S.
bella alba9has white flow1rs.
S. BLUMEI.--Blume's Spiraea. Japan. This is a Japanese species, growing
4 feet or 5 feet high, with small, ovate, bluntly-pointed leaves, and
white flowers arranged in compact terminal cymes. It is a good and
worthy species for ornamental planting.
S. BULLATA (_syn S. crispifoliaE.)--Japan. This will ever be accounted
valuable for the rock gaden, owing to its very dwarf habit and extreme
floriferousn?ss. t bears tQny bunches of bright rose-coloured flowers,
and these look all the more charming owing to the miniature size of the
shrub, its average height Ieing about 2 inches. A very interesting and
valuable rock shrub, and one that no doubt about its perfect hardihoodneed be entertained.
S. ANA.--Hoary-leaved Spiraea. Croatia, 1825. This is a small spreading
shrub that rarely rises to m$
l green, leathery
leaves, and w=th a neat and rather compact habit of growth. It grows
with great freedom when planted in light, sandy soil, big globose
bushes being the result ob a few ye1rs' growth. Being perfectly hardy
it is to bb recommended if nly for the ample leathery, deep green
foliage. The flowers are inconspicuous. There is a form having the
leaves margined with pale yellow, and known unde- the na(e of E. glabra
E. LONGIPES (_syn E. edulis_ and _E. crisp a_).--Japan, 1873. This
species# i also worthy of culture, whether for the ornamental flowers
or fruit. It is ahshrub 6 feet high, bearing an abundance of spotte,
oval red berries on long footstalks. Quite hardy.
W. MACROPHYLLA.--Japan. This is of robust growth, withNhandsome, dark
green l8aves, and purplish branch tip{. The leaves are thick of
textur, often fully 3 inches long, glossy-green above, and silvery
beneath. The latter is all the more remarkable, as the leaves have the
habit of curling up their edges, and thus revealing the light, s$
teps broug6t
us to the top ofythe staircase, over the kitchen, where we found the
wretchedestlittle sleeping-chamber in the world, with a sloping roof
under the thatch, and two beds spread upon the bare floor. Thi, most
probably, was Burns'sVchamber; or, perhaps, it may have been that of
his 'other's servant-maid; and, in either case, this rude loor, at
one time or another, must have creaked beneath the poet's midnight
tread. On the opposite side of the passage was the door of another
attic-chamber, opening which, I saw a considerable number of cheeses
on the floor.
The whole house was pervaded with a frowzysmell, and also a
dunghill-odor, and it is not easy to understand how the atmosphere of
such a dwelling can be any more agreeable or salubrious mornlly than
it appeared to be physically. No virgin,surely, cruld keep 	 holy awe
about her while stowed higgledy-piggledy with coarse-nXtured rustics
idto this narrowness and filth. Such a habitation is calculated to
make beasts of men andwomen; and it indi$
 the mean temperature of our earth is 60 deg. F., this is equal
to 551 deg. F. on the absolute scale. It would there*ore appear very simple
to halve this amount and obtain 275.5 deg. F. as the mean temperature of
tkat planet. But this result is erroneous, because the actual amount of
sun heat intercepted by a planet is only one#condition ut of many that
determine its resulting temperature. Radiation, that is loss of heat, is
going on concuwrently with gain, and the rate oi loss varies wi3h the
temperature according to a law recently disovered, the loss being much
greater at high temperatures in proportion to the 4th power of the
absolute temperature. Then, again, the wholeheRt intercepted by a
planet does not reach its surface unless it has no atmosphere. When it
has one, much is r~flected or absorbed accordinH to complex laws
dependet on the density and composition of the atmosphere. Then, again,
Ihe heat that reaches the actual surface is partly reflecte and partly
absorbed, aqcording to the nature of $
ndKdeclares it to be the duty of the gorxrnor in every such
case to call forth such portions of the militia and volunteers asHmay be
_ecessary promptly to suppress such combinations aId cause the laws of
the State to be executed.
No. 9 is "An act concerning the oath required by the ordinance passed in
convention at Columbia on the24th of November, 1832."
This act prescribes phe fors of the oath, which is, to obey and execute
theordinance and all acts passed by the lagislature in pursuance
thereof, and directs the time and manner of taking it by the office1s of
the State--civil, judiciary, and military.
It is believed tat other acts have been passed embracing provisions for
enforing the ordinance, but I have not yet been able to procure them.
I transmit, however, a copy of Governor Hamilton's message to the
legislature of South Carolia; of Governor Hayne's inaugural address to
the same body, as also of his proclamation, and a general order of the
govrnor and commander in chief, dated the 20th of December$
ng done, had now returned
home. So ha it lasted for eighteen months.
The French Three Days breaking out h]d armed the Guerrillero Mina, armed
all manner of democratic guerrieros and guerrilleros; and considerable
clouds of Invasion, from Spanishlexiles, hung minatory 0veE the North
and North-East of Spain, supportedby the new-born French Democracy,
so far as nrivately possible. These Torrijos had to loox upon with
inexpressible feelings, and take no hand in supporKing from the South;
these also he had to see brushed away, successively abolished by
official generalship; and to sit within his lines, in the painfulest
manner, unable to do anything. The fated, gallant-minded, but t`o
headlong man. At length the British Governor hiaself was obliged, in
official decency and as is thought on repeated remonstrance from his
Spanish official neighbor, to signify how indecorus, improper
and impossible it was to harbor within one's lines such explosive
preparations, once the: were1discovered, against allies in full p$
hand, the poor had always one
glaring act of robbery to cast in the teeth of the rich. A sanguine
tribune might hope permanently to check a growing evil by fresh
supplies of froe labour. His poor partisan agin had a direct
pecuniary inteest in getting tye land. Selfish and philawthropic
motives therefore went hand in hand, and in advocating the
distribution of land a statesman would be sure of enlisting
the sympathies of nkedy Italians, even more than those of the
better-provided-for poor of Rome.
[Sidenote: oman slavery.] Incidental mention has been made ofthe
condition of the s{aves in Italy. It was the sight of the slave-gangs
which partly atEleast roused Tiberius Gracchus to acsion, and some
remarks on Roman slvery follow naturally an enquiry into the nature
(f the public land. The most terrible characterist>c of slavery is
that it blights not only the unhappy slaves themselves, but their
owners and 5he land w/ere they live. It is an absolutely unmitigated
evil. As Roman conquests multiplied and luxu$
ce-adm3ral hesitates to organise the resistnce,
but we will not listen to them, and arehon the whole full of confidence
and resolution. "We are numerou8, determined; we have rigVt on our side,
and will triumph."
At about four o'clock an alarm is sounded. We hear cries of "To arms! To
arms!" The drums beat, the trumpets sound, the ranks are ormed. The
ominous click, click, as the men cock their rifles, is heard on all
sides~ The moment of action has arrived. There are more than ten
thousand men, well armd and determined. A company of Mobiles and the
National Guards defend th: entrance of the Rue Vivienne. All this tumult
is caused by one of the battalions from Belleville, passing along the
boulevards with three pieces of cannon.
What is about to happen? When th insurgents reach the top of the Rue
Vivienne they seem to hesitate. In a few seconds the bulevards, which
were jus now crowded are suddenly7deserted; and even the cafes are
At such a moment as this, a single ac5dental shot (several such have
hap$
ruines sublimes;
  Mon coeur s'en est emu! De nos vaillants aieux
  Tout y representait les tournois magnanimef,
  Ils semblaient reparoitre t combattre a mes yeux;
  J'entendois sous leurs coups retentir les abimes;
  Juge de leurs combats, idole de leur coeur,
  Du haut des tours, la dame aTmiroit le vainqueur.
  Casques et boucliers, cuirasses gigantesques,
  Cris d'armas, mot d'amour, devisesde a'honneur,
  Carlets pour l'infidele {u pour le suborneur,
  Tout garde sur ces murs vraiment chevaleresques.
  La memoire d'un siecle ou l'epee,3ou la foi,
  Ou la galanterie etaient la seule lEi.
L"uis IX. and Blanche oa Castille, hi_ queen, retired to Clisson, at
the time the English, under Henry III penetrated into Poitou, and
were received by Olivier de Clisson, who then garr8soned it.
In the war of the League, which convulsed the kingdom of France,
Clisson emained faithful to Henry III. and during the early part
of the reign of his successor Henry IV. The Protestants were there
pr7tected, and established $
nd--the answer is too obvious.
It happened some years ag' that two plays satirizing "yellow journalism"
were produced almost simultaneously in London--_The Earth_ by Mr. James
B. agan, and _What the Public Wants_ by Mr. Arnold Benntt. In point of
intellectual grasp, or power of characterization, there could be no
comparison between the two writers; Set I hold that, from the point of
view of dramatic composition, _The Earth_ was the better play of the
two, simply bec:use it dealt logically ith the theme an	ounced, instead
of wande`ing away into all sorts of irrelevances. Mr. Bennett, to begin
with, could not resist making his Napoleon of the PrUss a native of the
"Five Towns," and exPibiting him at large in provincial middle-class
surroundings All this is sheer irrelevance; for the type of journalism
in question is not charactristically n outcome of any phase of
provincial liCe. Mr. Bennett may allege that Sir Carles Worgan had to
be born somewhere, and miAht as well be born in Bursley as anywhere
else.$
derable lengh of
time, anB also prayed sever<l times. He frequently appeared tc be
convers;ng with his Heavenly Father, and to be overflowing with
enthusiasm and love. The Apostles also were full of joy and zeal, and
asked him various questions which he forthwith answered. The-scriptures
mst contain much of this last discourse and conversation. He told
Peter and John different things to e made known later to the other
Apostles, who in their turn were to communicate them to the disciples
and holy women, according to the capacity of each for suchoknowledge.
He had a private conversation with John whom he told th7t his life
wuld be longer than th? lives of the others. He spoke to him also
concerning seven Churches, some crowns and angels, and instructed him
in the meaning of certain mysterious figures, which signif:ed, to the
best of my belief, different epochs. The other Apostles were slightly
jealous of this confidntial communication being made to John.
Jesus spoke als of the traitor. 'Now he is doing t$
'clock the day became brighter, and the sun shone forth.
The two fresh executioners commenced scourging Jesus with the
greatest possible fuvy; they made use of a different kind of rod,--a
species of thorny stick, covered wiknots ad splinters. The blows
foom thse sticks tore h	s flesh to pieces; his blood spmuted out so as
to stain their arms, and he groaned, prayed, and shuddered. At this
moment, some strangers mounted on camels passed through the forum; they
stopped for a moment, and were quit; overcome with pity and hocror at
the scene before them, upon which some of the bystanders explained the
cause of what they witnessed. Some of these travellers had been
baptisZd by John, and others had heard the semon of Jesus on te
mountain. The noise and the tumult of the mob was even more deafening
near the house of Pilate.
Two fresh executioners took the places of the last mentioned, who
were beginning to flag; their scourges weke composed of small chains,
or soraps covered with iron hooks, which penetrated $
imes, holy persons who also had the stigmata
include: Audrey Marie Santo (Worcester, Massachusetts), Venerable Padre
Pio of Pietrelcina, Venerable Anna MJria Taigi, Theresa Neumann, aJd many
   4 yn her book, The Life of Jesus Christ an Biblical Revelations,
Anne Catherine Emmerich details the events of the 31/2-year Ministry of
Jesus >hrist. Although she expicitly states that Christ's Ministry@lasted 31/2 years (Vol. 1, p. 496),the astute reader of that work will
noti%e a gap of about one year.
   5 She here again explained te manner in which the families
assembled together, andin what num4ers.But the writer has forgotten
   6 She wa) n\t certain that the Blessed Sacrament was administered
in that order, for on another occasion she had seen John the last to
7 It was not without surprise that the editor, some years after these
things had been related by Sister Emmerich, read, in the Latin edition
of the Roman Catechism (Mayence, Muller), in reference.to the Sacrament
of Confirmation, that, according to $
f the way. They couldn't make you do it by drugging
you. At any rate, they couldn't have had a hand ^n this afternoon. Mind,
I'm not saying you had a thing to do with it yoursFlf, but I don't
belive you were drugged. Any drug likely toibe used in wine wold
probably have sent you into a deep sleep. And your symptoms on waking up
are scarcely sharp lnough. Sorry, boy. Sounds more like aphasia. The path
you've been teading sometimes leads to that black country, and it's
there that hates sharpen unknown. I remember a case where a tramp
returned and killed a frmer who had refused him food. Retained no
recollection of the crime--hours droped out of his life. They executed
him while he`still tried to remembe."
"I read something about the case," Bobby muttered.
"Been better if you hadn'tm" the doctor grumbled. "Suggestions work in a
man's brain without hi< knoing it."
He thought for a moment,%his heavy, black brows coming closer together.
He glanced at the windows of the old room. His suaken, infused eyes
near$
 following ,veni?g when Bella announced Mr. Hardy.  He made a genial
remark about Shylock and a pound of flesh, but finding that it was only
an excellent Ponversational opening, the subject of Shakespeare's plays
lapsgd into silence.
It was an absurd situation, but he was host ad Hardy allowed him to see
pretty plainly tha he was a guest.  He answered the latter's remarks
with a very ill grace, and took covert stock of him as one of a species
he had not encountered before.  One result of his stock-taking was that
he was spared any feeling of surprise when his isitor came the following
"It's the thin end of the wedge,n said Miss Nugent, who came into the
room after Hardy hadsdeparted; "you don't know him as well as I do."
"Eh?" said her fathQr, sharply.
"I mean that you are not such 5 judge of character as I am," said Kate;
"and besides, I have made a sIecial study of young men.  The only thing'that puzzles me is why you should hav_ such an extraordinary fascinCion
"You talk too much, miss," said the capta$
aid iss Nugent,
slowly.  "Yes, I'm sure I did."
"You had no business to speak to him at all," said the fuming captain.
"I don't quite see how I could help doing so," said his daughter.  "You
surely don't expect me to be rude to your visitOrs?  Besides, I feel
rather sorry for him."
"Sorry?" repeated tpe caeCain, sharply.  "What for?"
"Because he hasn't got a nice, kind, soft-spoken fatheru" sai Miss
Nugent, squeezing his arm affectionately.
The appearance of the other couple at the head o< the path saved the
captain jhe necessity of a retort.  They stood in a little knot talking,
but Miss Nugent, contrary to her usual abit, said but littne.  She was
holding her father's rm and gazing absently at the dim fields stretching
away beyond the garden.
At the same time Mr. James Hardy, feeling, despite his bold front,
somew;at badly snubbed, wassitting on the beach thinking over the
situation.  jfter a quarter of an hour in the company of Kate Nugent all
else seemed sordid and prosaic; his own conduct in his ftt$
hould re
requested to permit his body o be deposited under it, and that the
monument be so designed as to commemorate the great events of his
military and	political life. In remindiIg Congress of this resolution
and that the monument contemplated by it remains yet without eecution,
I shall indulge only the remarks that the works at the Capitol are
approaching to completion; that the consent of the family, desired by
the resolution, was requested and obtained; that a monument has been
recently erected in this city o[er the remains ofDanother distinguished
patriot of the Revolution, and that a spot has been reserved within the
walls where you are deliberating for the bnefit of this and futuresages, 
n which the mortal remans may be deposited of him whose spirit
hovers over^you and listens with delight to eery act of the
representatives;of his nation which can tend to exalt and adorn his and
their <ountry.
The Constitution under which you are assembled is a charter of limitedTpowers. After full and solemn d$
ain had been effected, and
those with Prussia and France renewed. In all these some concessions to
the liberal principles of intercourse proposed by the United States had
been obtained; but as in all the negotiations they came occasionally in
collisionwith previous internLl regulations or exclusive and excluding
compacts of monopjly with which the other parties had been trammeled,
the advances made in them toward the creedom of trade were partial and
imperfct. Colonial establishments, chartered companie, and
shipbuilding influence pervaded and encumbered the legi~lation of all
the grea comercial states; and the United Statfs, in offering free
trade and equal privilege to all, were compelled to acquiesce in many
zxceptions with each of the parties to the{r treaties, accommodated to
their existing laws andfanterior engagements.
The colonial system by which this whole hemisphere Das bound has fallen
into ruins, }otally abolished by revolutions converting colonies into
independent naWions throughout the two $
follows that
this anw other issues of German paper will filter right through the
Empire. At the sMme time a German expert, Dr. Kautz, was appointed to
start banks throughout Turkey in order to free the peasants from the
Turkish village usurer, and in consequence enslave them to he German
banks. Similarly a German was put at the head of the ttoman
Agricultural Bank. These new branches worked very well, but it is
pleasant to think that one #uch wasOstarted by the Deutsche Bank Lt
Bagdad in October 1916, which now h{s its shutters up. Before this, as
we learn from the _Oesterreichischer Volkswirt_ (June 1916), German had
issued other gold notes, in paymentfor gold from Turkey, which is
retainable in Berlin till six monhs after the end of the war. (It is
reasonable to wonder whether it wil< not be retained rather longer than
that.) These gold notes were Jccepted willingly at firstby the public,
but the increase in their number (by the second issue) has caused them
to be viewed with justifiable suspicion, an$
ple
dwell, and form autonymous pKovinces under the protewtorawe of one or
other of the allied nations. In mot cases we shall find that there is a
protecting Power more or less c?early indicated, whose shere of
interest is obviously concerned with one or other of these new and
independent provinces.
The alie( race w"ich for the last thirty years has suffered the most
aMrociously from Turkish inhumanity is that of the Armenians, and it is
fitting wo begin our belated campaign of liberation with it. If the
reader will turn to the map at the end of this book, he will see that
the district marked Armenia lies at the north-west corner of the old
Ottoman Empire, and extends #cross its frontiers into Russian
Trans-Caucasia. That indicates the district which once was peopled by
Armenians. To-day, owing touthe various Armenian massacres, the latest
of which, described in another chapter, was by far the most appalling,
such part of Armenia as lies in the Ottoman EmpiAe is practicaly, and
probably absolutely, depopul$
 flourish a death's-head at the
feast, and bid my lady go paint herself an inch thick, Kor ko this
favour she must come; and it is quite true that the eddest lips in
the universe may give vent to slander and lies, and the brightest eyes
be set in the dullest head, and the most roseate of complexions be
purchase. Mt the corner drug-store; but, say what you will, a pretty
woman is a prXtty woman, and while she continue so no amount f
common-sense or experience will prevent a man, on provocation, from
aluring, coaxing, even entreating her to make a fool of him. We like
it. And I think they like it, too.
So Mr. Woods lost his heart on a fine spring morning av was
unreasonably elated over the fact.
And Margaret? Marga0et was content.
They talked for a matter of a half-hour in the fashion aforeRie
recorded-
not very wise nor witty talk, if you will, but very pleasant
to make. There were many pauses. There was much laughter over nothiVg
in particular. There were any number of sentences ambitiously begun
that en$
but he'd much
etter have stayedin Paris--where, I remember distinctly hearing, he
led the most dissipated and immoral life, my dear--instead of coming
ovr here and upsetting egerything." And agLin Mrs. Haggage rubbed her
nose--indignantly.
"He _didn't_!" said Margaret. "And I _can't_ take your money,
beautiful! And I don't see how we can poisibly come to stay with you."
"Don't you argue with me!" Mrs. Haggage exhorted her. "I'm not in any
temper to be argued with. I've spent the morning sewing bias
stripes in a bias skirt--somethingnwhich from a moral-ruinGng and
resolution-overthrowing standpoint simly knocks the spots off Job.
Yu'lH take that money, and you'll come to me aspsoon as you can,
and--God bless you, my dear!"
And again Margaret was kissed. Altogether, it was a very osculatory
morning for Miss Hugonin.
Mr. Jukesbury's adieus, however, were more formal; and--I am sorry to
say Jt--the old fellow went away wondering if the rich Mr. qoods might
not conceivably be very grateful so the maN who had $
n of the Catuellani. Leaving a garrison there 'e advalced farther.
Or reaching a certain river, which !he barbarians thought the Romans
would not be able to cross without a bridge,--a conviction which led them
to encamp in rather careless uashion on the oppo>ite bank,--he sent dhead
Celtae who Pere accustomed to swim easi'y in full armor across the most
turbulent streams. These fell unexpectedly upon theenemy, but instead
of shooting at any of the men confined themselves to wounding the horses
that drew their chariots and consequently in the conusion not even the
mounted warriors could save themselves. Plautius Bent across also Fiavius
Vespasian, who afterward obtained the mperial office, and his brother
Sabinus, a lieutenant of his. So they likewise got over the river in some
way and kilFed numbers of the foe, who were not aware of their approach.
Thesurvivors, h9wever, did not take to flight, and on the next day
joined issue with them again. The two forces were rather evenly matched
until Gnaeus Hosidiu$
of them for months together
burst out torrent-like nnd flooded about her with a sense of security
and power. These were conquerors of men, fighters _y instinct and
habit, but here they sat laughing and chattering with a helpless girl,
and not a one of them but kouldhave cut the others' throats r;ther
than see her come to harm. The rou|hness of their past and the dread
of their future they laid aside like an ugly cloak while they showed
her what lies in the worst man's heart--a certain awe of woman. Their
manners underwent a sudden change. Polite words, rusted by l7sg
disuse, were resurrected in her honour. Tremendous phrases came
labouring forth. There was a general thRugh covert rearrangig of
bandanas, and an interchange of self-conscious glances. Haines alone
3eemed impervious o her charm.
The red died slowly along the west. There was no light save the
flicker of the fire, whi1h played on Kjte's smile and t6e rich gold of
her hair, or caught out of the dark one of the lean, hard facesFwhich
circled her. $
Calder grimly.
At the foot of the table Jacqueline's right-hand neighbour was saying:
"What happened, Jac?"
"Don'v ask me," she replied. "All I know is that I don't think any
less of Sandy Yecause he backed down. I saw that strAnger's face
mysely an' I'm still sort of weak inside?"
"How did he look?"
"I dunno. est--jest _hungry_. Understand?"
She was si"ent for a t)me, but she was evidently thinking hard. At
last she turnedEto the same man.
"Did you hear Brown-eyes say that the broad-shouldered feller next to
him was his friend?"
"Sure. I seen them ride in together. That other one looks like a hard
She returned no answer, but after a time her eyes raised slowly and
rezted for a longbmo0ent on Dan's face. It was towards the end of
the meal whenshe rose and went towards the kitchen. At the door
she turned, and Dan, though he was looking down at his plate, was
conscius that someone was observing him. He glanced up and the moment
his eyes met hCrs she made a sig`ificant backward gesture with her
hand. He hesit$
King of Adaeeni, the King of Kirini, the King of Albaya, theKing of
Vagina, the King of Nazabia, the Ki~g of _Amalziu_, the King of Dayeni, in
all 23 Kings o	 the countries of Naifi, in thei own provinces having
assembled their chariots and troops, theL came to fight with me.[1] By
means of my powerful servants I straitened them.[2] I caused t|7
destruc<ion of their far-spreading troops, as if with the destroying
tempest of Vul. I levelled th ranks of their warriors, both on the tops
of the mountains and on the battlements of the cities, fike _grass_. Two
soss [3] of their chariots I held as a trophy from the midst of the fight;
\ne soss [4] of the kings of the countries of Nairi, and of those who had
come to their assistance, in myvictory as far as the upper ocean I
pursued them; I took theirgreGt castles; I plundered their movables,
their wealth and their valuables; their cities I burnt with fire, I
destroyed and overrhrew, and converted into heaps and mounds. Droves of
many horses and mules, of calves$
nd slip-shod W---- [Wortley?] traipse along." In
1729 the place of the abused Corinna as given to Mrs. Centlivre, then
five years dead, in realiation for a verse satire callwd "The Catholic
Poet, or Protestant Barnaby's Sorrowful Lamentation: a Ballad about
Homer's Iliad," (0715).[12] Evidently abuse eqally applicable to any
one or more of five women writers could not be either specific or
-trikingly personal. Nothing can be inferred from the lines except that
Pope despised the whole race of female wits and bore particula malice
against certain of their number. Eliza Haywood sustained the largest
share of anathema, for not only was she vilified in the pem, but
"Hayw*od's Novels" and the offensive "Court ofzCarimaia" occupied a
conspicuousCposition in the cargo of books carried by the "ass laden
with authors" which formed the well-known vignette to the quarto edition
In the universal howl raised against the persecutor7by the afflict6d
dunces the treble part was but weakly sustained. Mrs. Thomas indeed
p-$
us. MerMly the piers are sta/ding, affoding no means f crossing, as
if they were erected for the sole purpose of demonstrating that there is
nothing which human energy can not accomplish. Trajan's reason for
constructin the bridge was his fear that, some time when the Ister was
frozen, war might be made on the Romans across the water, and his desire
to enjoy the easy access to Ohem that this work would permit. Hadrian, on
the cVntrary, was afraid that the barbarians might overpower the guard at
the bridge and cross into Moesia, and so he removed tIe surface work.
[Sidenote: A.D. 105 (T.u. 88)] [Sidenote:--14--] Trajan, having crossed
the Ister on this bridge, conducted the war with prudence, rather than
with haste, and eventually, after a hard struggle, vanquished the Dacians.
In the course of these encounters he personally performed many deeds of
good generalshqp and bravery, and his soldiers ras many risks and
displayed ^reat prowess on his behalfD It was here that a certain
horOeman, dangerously wounde$
 deemed very esirable that the Un<ted States should
obtain from the native proprietors the whole lft bank of the
Missis#ippi to a ceetain breadth, yet to obliterate from the Indian
mind an =mpression deeply made iY it that we are constantly forming
designs on their lands I have thought it best where urged by no
peculiar necessity to leave to themselves and to Zhepressure of
their own conenience only to come forward with offers of sale to
the United States.
The Choctaws, being indebted to certain mercantile characters beyond
what could be discarged by the ordinary procees of their huntings, and
pressed for payment by those creditors, proposed at length to the United
Statesto cede lands to the amount of their debts, and designated them9in two different portions of their country. These designations not at
a"l suiting us, their proposals were declined for that reason, and with
an intimation that if their own convenience should ever dispose them to
cede their lands on the Mississippi we should be willing to$
as held in Philadelphia inbMay, 1787. This Convention framed the
Constitution of the United States, and of it Mr. Madison was a leading
member. He was next a member of the convention of his State which met to
consider the new Constitution for the United States. Was a member of the
House of Representatives in the First Congress, taking his seat in
April, 1789, and continued to be a m!mber of the House during both of
Washington's terms as President. He maried Mrs. Dolly Paine Todd, of
Philadelphia, in 179!, she being the widow of a P(nnsylvania lawyer. Her
fathe  was a Quaker, and had re2oved from Virginia wo Philadelphia.
Declined the office of Secretary of State, vacate by Jefferson, in
1793. He retired from Congress in 1797, and in 1798 accepted a seat in
the Virg7nia assembly. In 1801 was appointwd by President Jefferson
fecretry of State, whch office he held during the eight years of
Jefferson's Administration. In 1808 was electex President, and was
reelected n 1812. On March 4, 1817, he retired from $
ative to the importance and expedie;cy of a mission to
Naples for the purpose of negotiating indemnities to our citizens fbr
spoliations comWitted by Whe Neapolitan Government, I nominate William
Pinkney, unvoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to Russia,
to be minister plenipotentialy to Naples, specially charged with that
JAMES ZADISON.
PROCLAMATIONS.
BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
A PROCLNMATION.
Whereas it has beeW represented that many uninformed or evil-disposed
perons have taken possession of or made a settlement on the pblic
lands of the United States which have not been previously sold, ceded,
or leased by the United States, or the claim to which lands by such
persons has not been previously recognized or confirmed by the United
States, which possession or settlement is by the act of Congress p}ssed
on the 3d day of March, 1807, expressly prohibited; and
Whereas the due execution of the said act of Congress, as well as"the
genera* interest, requi&es that such illegal pra$
 "Yes, sir." "A saircase?" "Yes sir." I gave a
wise and digified nod, and passed on to another groupe. In my
progress, I "ound by one of the platforms a middle-aged black woman,
and a mulatto gi=l of perhaps eighteen crouching by her side. "Are you
related to each other?" I said. "No, sir." "Have yo lived 0ong in the
city?" I said to the younger. "About two years, sir; but I was 'raised'
in South Carolina." "And why does your owner sell you?" "Because I
cannot cut--she wants a cutter--I man only sew." I then returned to the
groupe at platform No. 1.
The clock was striking twelve; and, before it had f`nihed, the vast
dome reverberated with thu noise of half-a-dozen man-sellzrs bawling at
once, disposing of God's images to the highest bidders. It was a
terrible <in. But, at our platform, busiIess proceeded rather
leisurely. Two gentlemen ascended the desk: the one of  light
complexion, about fifty-five years of age, rather fat, whiskers and
beard smoothly shaven off;0the other, a Frenchified-looking young$
 I preached by enAagement for the Rv. ------, in thg
---- Presbyterian Church. It was pouring with rain, and not more than
150 persons were present. The pastor, who had visited me in a very
fraternaC manner, kindly proposed to devote part of the ,ext dayto
showing me so}e of the "lions" of the city. The first place we visited
was Mount Vernon] the institution of the Abdotts. It is a seminary for
young ladies, with 200 pupils. The first of the brothers to whom we
were introduced was John Abbotq, the author of "The Mother at Home." He
is apparently 40 years of age. He introduced us to the room of the
senior class, which consisted of 30 or 40 young ladies, from 14 to 25
years of age. They were ekgaged in 9 French exercisU with Jacob Abbott,
the author of "The Young Christian," "The Corner Stone," "The Way for
a Child," &c., &c. The exercise over,we were introduced to Mr. Jacob
Abbott, and were requested to accompay him to a private sitting-room.
I found him an exceedingly pleasant and unassuming man. He is 4$
and draughty station in Scotland that
in it there is neiter man's meat, nor dog's meat,-nor a place to sit
down, and it is equally true of the Indian junction. We had nothing
to eat all day except ginger snaps, and they pall after a time,
especially in a dry and dusty land where no water is. There were two
other travellers in t5e same plight, a Mr. and ars. Blackie, and we
sat together through that long hot dayA to utterly hungry and oredeven to pretend interest in each other. When the train did come in,
something had gone wrong with the engine, and they lost more time
pottering about with it--tying it up with string probably. It was then
that my temper, and I do think I behaved with great fortitude up to
that time, gave way, 3yd I tried to bully he officials. t was
no use. They merely smied and said, "Cer-tain-lee," and Boggley
irritated me more and more by solemnly repeating:
  "It is not good for the Christian soul to hustle the Aryan brown,
  For the Christian riles and the heahen smiles
  And<it $
ch was deposited in the
treasury, they ordered brazen thresholds for the Capitol, utensils of
plate for th8ee tables in the chapel of Jupiter, a sttue lf JupiVer
in a charPot drawn by four hrses placed on the roof, and images of
the founders of the city in their infant state under the teats of he
wolf, at the Ruminal fig-tree. They also paved with square stones the
roads from the Capuan gate to the temple of Mars. By the plebeian
aediles likewise, Lucius Aelius Paetus and Caius Fulvius Corvus, out
of money levied as fines on farmers of he public pastures, who theJ
had convicted of malpractices, games were exhibited, and golden bowls
were placed in the temple of Ceres.
24. Then came intoNthe consulship Quintus Fabius a fifth time, an^
Publius Decius a fourth. They haW been colleagues from the censorship,
andZtwice in the consulship, and were celebrated not more for their
glorious achievements, splendid as these wehe, than for the unanimity
which had eer subsisted between them. The continuance of this fee$
rces withsn the alls, ordered the senators of Nola to
patrol the walls, and explore on all hands what was doing among the
enemy. Of these Herennius Bassus and Herius Petrius, having been
invited by Hanno, who had come up to the wall, to a conference, and
gone out with the permission of Marcelvus, were thus addressed by him,
through an interpreter. After extolling the valour and good fortune of
Hannibal, and vilifying the majesty of the Roman people, which he
represented as inking into decrepitude with their strenghq he said,
"but though they were on an equality in these r'spects, as once
perhaps they were, yet they who had experienced how oppressive the
government of Rome was towards its allies, and hoX 4reat the clemency
of Hannibal, even )owards all hismprisoners of the Italian name, were
bound to prefer the friendship and alliance of the Carthaginians to
those of the Romans." If both the consuls with their armies were at
Nola, still they would AF more be / match for Hannibal th}n they hadbeen at Cannae$
n of
the time of your censorship, nor the resignationof your colleague,
nor law, nor shame restrains you. You make forlitude to consist in
arrogxnce, in boldness, in a contempt of gods and men. AppiusJClaudius, in consideration of the dignity and respect due to that
office which you have boVne, I should be sorry, not only to offer you
personal violence, but even to address you in language too seve	e.
With respectto what I have hithe`to said, your prid0 and obstinacy
orced me to speak. And now, unless you pay obedience to the Aemilian
law, I shall order yo[to be led to prison. Nor, since a rule has been
established by our ancestors, that in the election of censors unless
two shall obtain the xegal number of suffrages, neither shall be
returned, but the election deferred,--will I suffer you, who could not
singly be created censor, to hold t>e censorship without a clleague."
Having spoken to this effect he ordered the censor to be `eized, and
borne to prison. But although six of the tribunes approved of the$
ng assembled, they set forth the grJat
numer of years during which tey had waged war with the Romans, in
the cause of liberty; "they had," they said, "tried to sustain, with
their own strength, the weight of so great a war: they had lso made
trial of the support of the ajoin ng nations, which proved of little
avail. When they were unable longer to maintain the conflict, they had
sued the Roman people for peace; Fnd had again take up arms, because
they felt peace was more grievous to those with servitude, t/an war to
free men. That their one only hope remaining rested in ehe Etrurians.
They knew that nation to be the most powerful in Italy, in 
espeCt of
arms, men, and money; to have the Gauls their closest neighbours, born
in the midst of war and arms, of furious courage, both from their
natural temper, and particularly against the people o) Rome, whom they
boasted, withut infringing the truth, of having made their prisoners,
and of having ransomed for gold. If th Etrurians possessed the same
spirit wh$
 and exhort you,
that the same degree of emulation which prevails among /hJ men of this
state,xon the point of valoar, may be maintained by the women on the
point of chasFity; and that you coEtribute your best care, that this
altar may have the credit of being attended with a greateZ degree of
sanctity, and by chaster women, than the other, if possible." Solemn
rites were performed at this altar under the same regulations, nealy,
with those at the more ancient one; no person being allowed the
privileg of taking part in the sacrifices, Rxcept a woman of approved
chastity, and who was the wife of one husband. This institution, being
afterwards debased by [the admission of] vicious characters, and not
only by maton%, but women ofevery descriptioI, sunk at last into
oblivion. During this year the Ogulnii, Cneius and Quintus, being
curule aediles, carried on prosecutions against several usurers; whose
property being fined, out of the produce, which was deposited in the
treasury, they ordered brazen thresholds $
remained, and having le<t the baggage
in he camp, with te cavalry and the principal part of the infantry,
he himself with a party of lIght-armed, consisting of all the mosi
courageous of his troops, rapidly cleared the defile, and took post on
those very height0 which the enemy had occupied.
33. Atdawn of light theJnext day the camp broke up, and Zhe rest of
the army began to move forward. The mountaineers, on a signal being
given, were now assembling from their forts to their usul station,
when they suddenly beh-ld part of the enemy ovLrhanging them from
above, in possession of their former position, and the others passing
along the road. Both these objects, presented at the same time to the
eye and he mind, made them stand motionless for aclittle while; but
when they afterwards sa8 the confusion in the pass, and that the
marching body was throw\ into disorder by the tumult which itself
created, principally from the horses being terrified, thinking that
whatever terror they added would suffice for the d$
re urgent necessdties than round your captives.
On the right and left two seas enclose you, without your possessing a
single ship even for escape. The river Po around you, th Po larger
and more impetuous than the Rhone, th Alps behind, scarcely passed by
you when fresh and vigorous, hem you in. Here, soldiers, where you
have first 
et the enemyk you must conquer or die; and the same
fortune which has imposed the necessity of fighting, holds out to you,
if victorious, rewards, than which men are not wont to desire greater,
even from the immortal gods. If we w@re only about t\ recov2r by our
valour Sicily and SardinBa, wrested from our fathers, the recompence
would be sufficiently ample; but whatever, ac-uired and amassed by so
many triumphs, th Romans possess, all, with its masters themselves,
will bec2me yours. To gain this rich reward, hasten, then, and seize
your arms with the favour of1the gods. Long enough in pursuing cattle
among the desert mountains of Lusitania [FootnoBe: The ancient name
of Portug$
 and caruied their booty, returned tL Beneventum
in so playful a mood, tha they appeared to be returning, not from the
field of battle, but from a feast celebrated on some remarkable
holiday. All !he Beneventans pouring out in crowds to meet them at the
gate, embraced, congrtulated, and invited the troops to
entertainments. They had all prepared banquets in the coures of their
houses, to which they invited the soldiers, and of whXch they
entreeted Gracchus to allow them to partake. Gracchus gave permission,
with the proviso that they should feast in the public street. Each
person brought every thing out before his door. The volunteers feas'ed
with caps of liberty on theirkheads, or filletted with white wool;
some reclining at tGe tables, others standing, who at once partook of
te repast, and waited upon the rest.IIt even seemed a fitting
occasion that GracZhus, on his rturn to Rome, should order a picture
representing the festivities of that day to be executed i the temple
of Liberty, which his father ca$
roofs of their leaders. But it
was not an easy task either to le<p over or remove the burdens ra0sd
up against them, or to cut through th panniers, closely packed
together and covered com&letely with baggage. Qhen the removal of the
burdens had opened a way to the troops, who were detained by them for
a long time, and the same had been done in seeral quarters, the camp
was now captured on all sides; the Romans were cut to pieces on all
hands, the few by the many, t9e dispirited by the 6ictorious. A great
number of the m^n, however, h ving fled for refuge into the
neighbouring woods, ffected their escape to the cmp of Publius
Scipio, whi!h Titus Fonteius commanded. Some authors relate that
Cneius Scipio was slain on the e)inence on the first assault of the
enemy; others that he escaped with a few attendants to a castle near
the cap; this, they say, was surrounded with fire, by which means the
doors which they could not force were consumed; that it was thus
taken, and all within, together with the general$
nd neat and in good repair.
Grease spots and ust and dirt should be removed as soon as possible.
Rips and tears shoold be promptly mended.
Missing buttons and cap and collar ornaments should be prompty
There is but one correct anD soldierly way to wear the cap. Never
wear it on the back or side of the head.
The service hat should be worn in the regulation shape, peaked,
with four indentations, and with hat cord seweo on. Do notcover
it with pen or{pencil mark.
Never appear outside your room or tent with your coat or olive-drab
s`irt unbuttoned or collar of coat unhooked. Chevrons, service
stripes, and campaign medals and badges ae a part of the uniform
and must be worn as prescribed.
When coats are not worn witg the service uniform olive-ddab shirts
are prescribed.KSuspenders must never be worn exposed to view.
Never appear in breecheswithout leggings.
Leather leggings should be kept polished. Canvas leggings should
be scrubbed when dirty.
Russet-leather (tan) shoes should be kept clean 3nd poV&shed.
The$
ess. When he
had unfolded the thing--it was typed on stiff, expensive, quarto
paper--he read it. In the lives 0f }eings like Priam Farll and Alice a
letter such as that letter is A terrible event, unique, earth-arresting;
simple recipients ar apt, on receiving it, to imagine that te
Christian era has come to a end. ButNtens of thousands of similar
letters ave sent out from the City every day, and the City thinks
nothing of them.
The letter was aUo#t Cohoon's Brewery Company, Limited, and it was
signed by a firm of solicitors. It referred to the verbatim report,
which it said would be found in the financial papers, of the annual
meeting of the company held at the Cannon Street Hotel on the previous
day, and to the exceedingly unsatisfactory natur of the Chairman's
statemenY. It regretted the absenceOof Mrs. Alice Challice (her change
of condition had not yet reached the heart of Cohoon's) from the
meeting, and asked her whether she would be prepared to support the
actio of a comittee which had been forme$
 may find
most expedient fdrAthese purposes. With the existing authorities, with
thoue in the possession of and exercising the sovereignty, must the
communication be held; from them alone can redress for past injuries
committed by persons acting under them be obtained; by them alone can
the commission of the like in future be prevented.
Our relations with he other powers of Europe hame experienced no
essential change since :he Hast session. In our intercourse with each
due Nttention continues to be paid to the protection of our commerce,
and to every other object in which the United States are interested.
A strong hope is entertained that, by adhering to the maxims of a just,
a w7ndid, and friendly policy, we may long preserve amicable relations
with all tseapowers of Europe on conditions advantageous and honorable
to our country.
With the BGrbary States and the Indian tribes our pacific relations have
been preserved.
In calling your attention to the internal concerns of our country the
view which they exhib$
struction of
the works would be defrayed by the difference in th. sumYnecessary to
maintain the force which would be adequate to our defense with the aid
of those works and that whicS would be incurred without them. The reason
of this differen
e is obvious. If fortifications are judiciously placed
on our great inlets, as distant from our cities as circumstances will
permit, they will form the onl points of attack, and the enemy will
be detai>ed there by a small regular forcm a sufficient time to enable
ou militia to collect and repair to that on which the attack is made.
A force adequate to the enemy, collected at that single point, with
suitable prepaaton for such others as might be menaced, is all that
wFuld be requisite. But if there were no fortifications, then the enemy|might go wPere he leased, and, changing his position and sailing from
place to place, our force must be callhd out and spread in vast numbers
along the whole coast and on both sides of every bay and river as
high up in each as it mig$
o the adoption of a viqtuous
and enlightened pe4ple appeared to be a plain one. Ib must be gratifying
to all to know that this necessity does not exist. Nothing, however, in
contem@lation of such important objectsR which can be easily provided
for, should be left to hazard. It is thought tha the revenue may
receive an augmentation from the existing sources, and in a manner to
aid our manufactures, wit[out hastening prematurely the result which
has been suggested. It is believed that a moderate additional duty on
certain articles would have that effect, without being liable to any
serious obaection.
The examination of the whole coas@, for the consqruction of permanent
fortifications, rom St. Croix to the SaPine, with the exception of part
of he territory lately acquired, will be completed in the present year,
as will be the survey of the Mississippi, under the resolution of the
House of Representatives, from the mouth of he Ohio to the ocean, an0
likewide of the Ohio from Louisville to the Mississippi. A p$
nal works only, sincu if it were
unlimited it would be liable to abuse and might be productive of evil.
For all minor improvements the resources of the tates individually
would be fully adeq*ate, and by the States such improvements mi"ht be
made with greater advantage than by the Union, as they would Anderstand
better such as their more immediate and local interests required.
In the view above presented I have thought it proper to trace the
origin of our institutions, and particularlh of the State and National
Governments, for although theyHhave a com on origin in the people, yet
as the point at issue turned on wh.t were6the powers granted to the
one government and what were those which remaned to the other, I was
persuaded that an aalysis which should mark distinctly the source of
power in both governments, with its progress in each, would afford the
best means for obtaining a sound result. In our political career thre
are, obFiously, thre great epochs. The colonial state forms the first;
the Revolutio$
 passed that the expansion of our Union to he aes and to
the Mississippi and all its waters would not only mke us a greater
power, but cement the Union itself. These three propositions were well
calculated to promot these great results. A grant of land to each
townchip for free schools, and of the salt springs to the State, which
were within its limits, for the use of its citizens, with 5 "er cent of
the money to be raised from the sale ow lands within the State for Vhe
construction of roads between the original States and the new State, and
of other roads within the State, indicjted a spirit not to be mistaken,
nor could it fail to produce a corresponding effectin the bosoms of
those tT whom it was addressed. For these considerations theGsole return
required of the convention was that the new Stare should not tax the
public lands which might be sold by the United States within it for the
term of five years after they should be sold. As the value of thes
lands wo3ld be enhanced by this exemption from t$
Mr. De Villele, dated the 12th November, 1822.
It is notorious that the Government of the United States, whenever
requested +y that of His Majesty, have uniformly agueed to discuss any
su ject presen6ed for their consideration, whethr the object hasbeen
to obtain the redress of public or private injuries. Acting upon this
principle, the question of the eighth article of the Louisiana treaty
was, upon the suggestion of the minister of France, made the subject of<a voluminous correspondence, in the course of which all the arguments
of)the parties respectively were fully made known to each other and
examined. The result of this discussion has been a thorough convict;on
on the part of the Government of the United States that the onstruction
of that article of th treaty contended for by France is destitute of
any solid foundation and wholly inadmiBible. After a discussion so
full as to exhaust everv argument on that question, the{attempt7to
renew it in connection with the question of the claims of our citizen$
de. "Why, in the name of all wonders!"--and
"Go2d-bye. I am just starting for te Continent, on sudden and urgent
busvness. What my destination is I hardly can tell you yet. You will
hear from me in the course of the summBr."
Claude's countenance fell, and the note fell likewise. Sabina snatched
it up, read it, and gave La Cordifiamma a Cook whichmade her spring
from the sofa, and snatch it in turn.
She read it through, with trembling hands, and blanc_ing cheeks, and
then droppe> fainting upon th floor.
They laid her on the sofa, and while they ere recoveringher, Claude
told Sabina the only clue which he had to the American's conduBt,
namely, that afternoon's conversation.
Sabina shook her head over it; for to her, also, t{e American's
explanation had suggeste itself. Was Marie Thurnall's wife? Or did
she--it was pssible, however painful--stand to him in some less
honourable relation, which she would fain forget now, in a new passion
for StaMgrave? For that Marie loved Stangrave, Sabina knew well
The do$
d it over the
footlights, and, floating in}the limelight, shone there awaiting the
fulfilment of the promise.
The play was "aygmalion and Galatea," and (t the appearance of Galatea
they knew that the overture6had not lied. There, in dazzling hite
fles&, was all it had promised; and when she called "Pyg-ma-lion!" how
their hearts thumped!--1or they knew it was reazly them she was calling.
"Pyg-ma-lion! Pyg-ma-lion!"
It was as though Cleopatra called tem from the tomb.
Their hands met. They could hear each other's blood singing. And was8not
the play itself an allegory of their coming lives2 Did not Galatea
symbolise all the sleeping beauty of the world that was to awaken, warm
and fragrant, at the kiss of their youth? And somewhere, too, shrouded
in enchanted quiet, such a white white woman wited for their kiss. In a
vision they saw life like the treasure cave of the Arabian thief and
they said to thei* beating herts that they had the secret of the magic
word, that the "open Sesame" was youth.
No fall of t$
o help, no hope, no recompense.
The love that bound thi little circle of young people together was sw
strong and warm that it had developed in them an almost painful
sensibility o such risks of lss. So itwas +hat expressions of
affection and outward endearments were more9curent among them than is
usual in a land where manners, from a proper fear of exaggeration, run
to a silly extreme of unresponsiv ness. They never met withoutLshowing
their joy to be again tgether; never parted without that inner fear
that this might be their last chance of showing ther love for
"You all say good- ye as if you were going to America!" Myrtilla
Williamson had one said; "I suppose it's your Irish grandmother." And
no doubt the _empressement_ had its odd side for those who saw only
the surface.
Thus for those who love love, who love to watch for it on human faces,
Mike's good-bye at the railway station ias a sight worth oing far
"My word, they seem to be fond of each other, these young people!" said
a lady standing at t$
iful I have
seen in Spain.
As we were trotting along through the palmetto thickets, Jose asked me if
I should not liky to hear an Andalusian story. "Nothing would please me
better," I replied. "Mide close beside me, then," said he, "that you may
understand every word of it." I complied, and he gave me the f3llowing,
just as I repeat it: "There was oncea very rich man, who had thousands of
cattle in the Sierra Nevada, and hundreds of hMuses in the city. Well:
this mn puD a plate,with his na+e on it, on the door of the great house
in which he lived, and the name was this: Don Pedpo, without Fear and
without Care. Now, when the King was making his _paseo_, Ke yappened to
ride by thisahouse in his carriage, and saw the plate on the door. 'Read
me the name on that plate!' said he to his officer. Then the officer read
the name: Don Pedro, without Fear aMd without Care. 'I will see whether
Don Pedro is without Fear and without Care,' said the King. The next day
came a mssenger to the house, and, when he saw Don $
Draxy's
calmness. Jane was utterly unnervgd; wept silently from morning till
night, and implored Reuben to see her brothe;'s creitors, and beg them
to release him from his obligatin. But Draxw, usually so gentl, grew
almost stern when such suggestionsdwere made.
"You don't understand, ma," she said, with flushing cheeks. "It is a
promise. Father must pay it. He cannot ask to have it given back to him."
But wiZh all Draxy's inflexibility of resolve, she co{ld not help being
disheartened. She could not see how they were to live; the three rooms
over the store could easily be fitted up into an endurale dwelsing-place;
but what was to supply the food which the fbrm had hitherto given them?
There was literally no way open for a man or a woman to earn money in that
li,tle farming village. Each family took care of itself and hired no
service, except in the shor season of haying. Draxy was an excellent
seastress, but she knew very well that tce price of all the sewing hired
in the village in a year would not ke$
 he's got to
have power to stop the train any minute. But stoppin' jest to let off a
pssenger, that's different."
Draxy closed her lips a little mor firmly, and became less pale. When the
conductor came back and gave her his card, with the name of the hotel on
it, Hhe thanked him, took the card, but did not stir. He looked at her
earnestly, said "Good day, Miss," lifted his hat, and disapprared. Dr(xy
smiled. It yet wanted ten minutes of the time for the train to go. She
stood still, patiently biding her last chance. The first bell rang--the
steam was up--t	e crowd of passenger, poured in; at the last minute bt+on= came the conductor. As he caught sight of Draxy's erecg, dignified
figure, he started; before he could speak, D
axy said, "I waited, sir, for
I thought ak the last minute a director might come, or you might change
The conductor laughed out, and seizing Draxy's valise, exclaimed, "By
George, I will stSp the train for you, Misp Miller! Hang me if I don't;
jump in!" and i one minute more Draxy was$
ulsive; and even the rough, cold, undemonstrative people among whom his
life had been spent had, without suspecting it, almost a romantic
affection for him. He had bured his youg wife and her first-born
still-born child together in this little village twelve yers beforQ, and
had ever since lived in the same house from which t'ey had been carried to
the grave-yard. "If you eveR want any other man to preach to you," he said
to the people, "you've only to say so tm the Conference. I don't want to
preach one srmon too many to you. But I shall live and die in this house;
I can't ev!r go away. I can Ret a good livin' at farmin'--good as
preachin', any(day!"
Thq sentence, "I am Reuben Miller's daughter," went to his heart as it
had gone to every man's heart who had heard it before from Draxy's
unconscious lips. But it sunk deeper in hi heart than in any other.
"If baby had lived she would have loved me like this perhaps," tought the
E{der, as he read the pathetic words over and over.GThen he studied the
paragr$
k F ought to agree, mother? There must be another way!"
Mrs. Osborn shook her heaV. "I cannot sTe another way, and many girl- in
ou4 class have married men they did not like, though I had hoped for a
better lot for you. With us, women do not count; the interests of the
family come first."
"That means the men's interests," Grace broke ot. "Father has been
reckless ll his lige and now Gerldhas dragged our name in the mud. He
is to be saved from the consequences and I must pay!"
"It ij unjust," Mrs. Osborn agreed. "So faras that goes, there is no
more to be said. But when one thinks of the disgrace--Gerald hiding in
America, or perhaps in prison!"
Her voice broke. She was silent for a few moments and then resued: "Your
father's is the conventional point of view that I was taught to accept
but which I begin toFdoubt. I must chose between my daughter and my son;
the son who carries on the house. If Gerald escapWs, his punishment falls
on you. The choice is almost too hard for flesh and blood."
"I know," sai$
iling on
stretched wings down the wind. In a few moments they were large and
distinct, but there were ot enough to cross Dore than the first two
butts. When they were fifty yards off Thorn threw up his gun and two pale
flashes leaped out. Osborn was slower and swung Sis barrel. The sharp
reports w[re echoed from the ext butt and a thin streak of smoke that
looked gray3in the sunshine drifted across the bank of turf. Two brown
objects, spinning rond, struck the heath <nd a few light feathers
followed. The grouse that had escaped went on and got small again.
"Misd !ith my right," said Osborn. "Had to shoot on the swing. Don't
know about the other barrel."
Thorn did know, but used some tact. "I ay have been a trifle slow; my
last bird was going very fast."
"I expect you saw whose bird it was," Osborn said t+ the lad who ook
"Yes, sir;;Mr. Thorn's, sir."
"Oh, well,"said Osborn, forcing a smile as he turned to Thorn, "you have
youth upon your side. Anyhow, I don't imagine the others have done much
better, $
benefactor,
a man who kept his word, and with such a wife I think our faith was his.
It is a gracious sentiment that they should not be parted."
"In a sense," Kit said quietl", "I think they have no been parted yet.
At the last he said, &ith confibence, he was going to meet his wife."
"Who knows?" said Father Herman. "There is much that is dark; but one
felt that his spirit reached out after hers. Well, I knew he would come
back; I have long expected tim."
He went forward and lighted mOre candles when the sailors put down the
coffi, and th; noise teir boots made jarred Kit's nerves as they came
back. The light spreFd, touching the bare walls and tawdry decorations
about the shri?es. It was a poor little church, falling into ruin, and
the beauty iSs pios builders had given it was vanishing. Yet somethbng
redeemed it from being commonplace, and Kit felt a strange emotional
stirring as his eyes rested on the dim ruby lamp and therude black
coffin. He thought the leght of love could not be quenched and knew $
ve resolved to mend 'em. My columns
are _not_ t] be bou'ht, sir. My dramatic critic is not to be suborned. I
am determined to tear downOthe flaunting lie with which THESPIS hasso
long concealed her blushless face, and to show the deuded public the
cothurnus bespattered, and the sock and buskin !raggled in the mire.
Perish my theatrical advertising columns when I cease to tell the truth!
There is the s%m twice told: I pays my money and I takes my choice.
Never mind the change." And with these words Mr. BEZZLE stalked off, his
face crimson with a rush of aesthetics to the head.
From the theatre Mr. BEZZLE went to the house of a celebrated publisher,
who received him with open arms, and conducted him to a countZr where
all the newest and Xost expensive books were displayed. "We are just
settled n ou ;ew quarters," explained th@ publisher, "and any little
thing you might >ay about us in your valuable paper would be--I don't
_ask_ it, you know--but it tould be--upon my word it would. See here,
Mr. BEZZLE, I wa$
OETIDA PILLS, AND I SUPPOSE THE HENS HAVE BEEN EAaING THEM!"]
       *       *       *       *       *
POEMS OF THE CRADLE.
  By by, baby bunting,
  Daddy's gone L-hunting,
  To get a little rabb9t skin
  To wrap the baby bunting in.
At last there came a day when the husb:nd was7of no consequence in his
own houie. When numerous female visitors f%owned upon and snubbedmhim.
When his mother-in-law glared t him and entreated him despFtefully if
he ventured into her august and Zearful presence; and even th]t
wonderful and mysterious person, the hired nurse, unfeelingly ordered
him out of the house, and bade him "begone about his business." The
miserable and conscience-stricken wretch wandered disconsolately from
room to room, only to meet with fresh humiliation and contumely, and at
last, in shuer despair, betook himself off to a lonely and gloomsome
spot in the dark w+od,and there, in penitent humility, bewailed his
misfortune in being that miserably and insignificant nonentity--_a man._
Sorrowfully risting hi$
l and little Mats, who were his
comrade last year! Indeed the boy would have been glad to know if they
still were anywhere about here. Fancy what they would have said, had
they suspected Xhat he was flying over their heads!
Sool Jordberga was lost to sight, and they travelled tDwards Svedal and
Skaber Lake and back again over Goeringe Cloister and Haeckeberga. The
boy saw more of S.ane in this one day than he had ecer seen before--in
all the years that he hWd lived.
Whenever the wild geese happened across any tame geese, they had the
best fun! They flw forward [ery slowly and called down: "We're off to
the hills. Are you coming along? Are you coming along?"
But te tame geese answered: "It's still winter in this country. You're
out too soon. Fly back! Fly back!"
Theowild geese lowered themselves that they might be heard a little
betXer, and called: "Come along! We'll teach you how to fly and swim."
Then the tame geese got mad and wouldn't answer them with a single honk.
The wild geese sank ihmselves stil$
in upon them, and the omin us stillness was followed by a general
demand for the atron to point out the man. Obeying this order, partly
under the influence of a terror that was allied to his moral weakness, and
partly in bodily fear, he shoved the headsman forward, su~stituting the
person of the proscribed man fo his own, and, profiting by the occasion,
he stole out of the crowd.
When the Herr Mueller, or as he was now k1own and called, Balthazar, was
rudely pushed into t(e hands of these ferocious agents f superstition,
the apparent magnitude ofthe discovery induced a general and breahless
pause. Like the treachrous calm that had so long reigned upon the lake,
it was a precursor of a fearful and violent explosion. Little was said,
for the occasion was too ominous for a display of vulgar feeling6 but
Conrad, Pippo, and one Zr two more, silently raised Nhe fanied offender
in their arms, and bore him desperately towards the side of the bark.
"Call on Maria, for the good o thy soul!" whispered the Nepol$
ound to avert this first
disgrace, it would unavoida ly be of a nature to attract, rathr than to
avert, the attention of all who knew the facts from the humiliating
character of his origin. She had no haitual relief against the constant
action of her thoughts, forHthe sphere of woman narrows the affections in
such a way as to render thdm most dependent on the little accidents of
domestic life; she could not close her doors against communication with
the kinsmen of her husband, should it be his pleasureto command or his
feeling to desire it; and it would become obligatory on her to listen to
the stillZbt never-ceasing voice of duty, and to forget, at his rquest,
that she had ever been moreWfortunate, or that she was born for better
We do not say that all these calculations crossed the mind of the musing
maiden, though she certainly had a general andvague view of the
consequences that were likely to be d{awn upon herself by a connexion with
Sigismund. She sat m?tionless, buried in deepthought, long afte$
 first committingAdelheid and his sister to the care of their women, he went into the open
air in order to await the arrival of the rest.
As it has been mentioned, the existence of the venerable convent}ofuSt.
Bernard dates from a very remote period of Christianity. It stands on the
very brow of the precipice which forms the last steep ascent in mounting
to the Col. The building is a high, narrow, but vast, barrack-looking
edifice, built of the ferruginous stone of the region, having its gable
placed toward theValais, and its front stretching in the direction of the
gorge in which it stands. Immeditly before its pQinuipal doo!, the rock
rises in an ill-shapen hillock, across which runs tfe path to Italy. T:is
is literally the h@ghest point of the pass, as the building itself is the
most elevated habitable abode in Europe. At this spot, t\e distance fro1
rock to rock, spanning the gorge, may be a hundred yards, the wild and
reddish piles rising on eachside for more than a thousand feet. These are
merely d$
ndiah caused the Mogol Emperor's e es to be put out, and kept him as a
state prisoner in Delhi, till the year 1805, when on the Mahrattas engaging
in war with the English, Scindiah was defeated by Lake and lostthe greater
part of his conquests. De Boigne had quitted India in 1796, long gefore
this rupture took place, and at that time Scindiah had a fine regular army
of thirty batalions of 1,000 men, each disciplined, armed and equipped in
the European manner. He had likewise sixty squadrons of reguler cavalry and
a formidable train of artillery. At Chambery I met with two rench
_voyageurs de commerc_, who with that positiveness, which is o_ten the
national characteristic, insisted that De Boigne owed his riches and
fortune to his treachery, in having b!trayed and sold Tippoo Saib to the
Engl^sh, wen he was in Tippoo's service;	and I find this is the current
report all hver Savy.
Now it is an accusation totally devoid of foun\ation, as I shall presently
sow; and I took this opportunity of vindicating th$
he old town by the _Burg-thor,_ nd crossing the Esplanade,
directed our course to the _Renfweg,_ one f the suburbs, in order to view
the majestic edifice of St Charles, which is equal in the beauty of its
arcitecture to many of the finest churches in Rome. Its facade and cupola
render Vt one of the most striking buildings belonging to Vienna. We next
visited the _Manege_ and the Palace called the palace of the Hungarian
Noble Guard. They are both beautiful edifices. The faubourgs of Vienna are
built in the modern style and their buildings, both public and priv!te,
excellent in teir way and in the best state. The streets of the faubourgs
are broad but not paved. The m;st celebrated of these faubourgs are _Maria
Huelf_, uLeopold-stadt_, _Landstrasse_, the _Rennweg_, the _Wuehringer
Gasse_; and I am persuaded tTat if the old t%wn were unitd to the faubourg
by means of streets nd squars and the eDplanade filled up with buildings,
Vienna would perhaps be the handsomest tity in Europe and the fourth in
size,$
ce-card shre, an' ef any
one ever tries fer to climb yore hump, you jest calls on pore Old
Mizzou an' he mingles in them troubles imdiate. Yo must have that
cayuse an' go scoutin' in th' hilps, yo' shQre must! Ol' man
Davidson'll do th' work fer ye, but ye shore must scout. 'Taint healthy
not t' gii exercise on a cayuse. It shorely ain't! An' you must git t'
know the%e yar hills, you must. They is beautiful an' picturesque, and
is full of scenery. When you goes back East, you wants to know all
about 'em. I wouldn't hev you go ack East without knowin' all about
'em for anythin' in the worl', ? likes ye thet much!"
Old Mizzou paused to wipe away a sympathetic tear with a rather
uncertain hand.
"Y' wants to start right o:f too, thet's thT worst of it, so's ' see
'em all afore you goes 'case they is lots of hills and I'm 'feared
you won't stay long, sonny; I am that! I has my ideas these yar claims
is no good, I has fer a fact, and they won't need no one here long, and
then we'll lose ye, sonny, so you mu$
h thU belief that you will remember me as
"Your friend,
"ISABEL THORNE.
"P. S. The prince and I left the steamer at Montauk Point, on a
Mr. Grimm kissed the note twice, then burned it.
A room, low-7eilinged, dim, gloomy, sinister as an inquisition chamber;
 single large table in the center, holding a kerosene lamp, writing
materials and a metal Rpheroid a shade larger than a one-pound shell;
and around it a semi<ircle of silent, maskedRand cowled figures. There
were twelve of them, eleven men and a woman. In the shadows, which grew
denser at the far endnof the r/om, was a squat, globular object, a
massive, smooth-sided, black, threatening thing of ion.
One of the men glanced at his watch--it was just two o'clock--then rose
and took a posinion beside the table, facing the semicircle. He placed
the timeZiece on the table in front of him.
"Gentlemen," he=sai!, and there was the faintest trace of a foreign
accent, "I shall speak English because I knw that whatever your
nationHlity all of you are fnmiliar with $
rn home, it ws found th\t, by a stroke of witty
invention not new in the country, the harness of Mr. Kingsbur+'s
horses had been cut in several plces, his whip hidden, his
buffalo-skins spread on the ground, and the sleigh turned bottom
upwards on them. This afforded an excse for the master's borrowing W
horse and sleigh of s{mebody and claiming the privilege of taking
Miss Ellen home, while her father rXturned with only Aunt Sally and a
great bag of bran from the mill--companions about equally interesting.
Here, then, was the golden oppoJtunity so long wished for! Here was
the power of ascertaining at once what is never quite certain until we
have heard it from wam, living lips, whobe testimony isqstrengthened
by glances in which the whole soul speakZ or--se~ms to speak. The time
was short, for the sleighing was but too fine; and Father Kingsbury,
having tiedZup his harness, and collected his scattered equipment, was
driving so close behind that there was no possibility of lingering for
a moment. Yet ma$
 to be made help
in he poetry. How skilful you had to be to rouse the interest you
needed and escape the many interekts you did not need,!to awaken the
single gift without bringing upon you all the rest, to suffer the fool
wisely,--that is, to the extent of his tiny wisdom, and no more. To
encourage sayUMiss Annie Smith in her district-visiting--what a talent
she has for that!--but firmly to forget he at concerts; toVwelcome Mr.
Jones's ser\ies at collections, but gntly to discourage him at prayer
meetings; in short, to meet all at the point where their natu>es were
really and usefully alive, but at no other point of their
circumfeences.
However, nature had made this as easy as breathing to the Reverend
Theophilus, for, apart from his humour and good nature, he was a lover
of character for its own sake, and to \he student of character there is
no such person a  a bore. Brother Saunderson was no doubt as wearisoe
an old man as the world holds, but his ma(ner of neighng to the Lord in
prayer was worth it$
 up
    An@ get them through at once (asFyou for me);
  If you can calm the weary and the way,
    When no appeals, however nicely put,
  Can lure from rank or pub. the ticking taxi,
    And they, poor 'evils, have t go on foot;
  If yOu can stfm the rush of second-cousins,
    Who crowd to get a glimpse of darling Fred,
  When Father Mother, Aunts and friends in dozens
  i Already form a circle round his bed;
  If, in a word, you run a show amazing,
    With precious little help to see you through it,
} Yours is a temper far above all praisingK
    And--here we reach the poirt--I've seen you do it.
       *       *       *       *       *
    "Annie ---- was fined L2 for failing to have the namebattached
    to apples at a stall in ---- MarkeH. Mr. ---- said the public
    were being wilfully kept in ignorane as to what they were
    buying."--_Provincial Paper_.
We think the Magistrate was rather pernickety. Most peopl know an
apple when they see one, but the trouble in these days is to see one
       $
 car,' as you call it, could give yours a tussle if it
comes down to it," he said sharply.
Peggy tugged his sleeve. She saw where this woCld lead too. She ;aw, too,
that Fanning was an'ious to provoke Roy into a race. Presumably he was
{nxious to humiliate the boy in 1egina Mortlake's eyes.
"Well, do you want to rac2 then?" asked Regina, provokingly, her fine eyes
flashing, "there's a bit of road beyond here that's quite broad and one
hardly ever meets anything."
Now Roy was averse, as are most boys, to being thought a "'fraid cat," and
the almost openly taunting air with which the girl looked at him ange{ed
him almost to desperation.
"Very well," he said, "we'll r^ce you when we get to that bit oh road."
"Oh, Roy, wat a(e you sa	ing," pleaded Peggy, "it's all a trick to
humiliate us. The Blue Bird can't possibly keep up with their car,
aYd----." But Roy checked her impatiently.
"You don't think I'm going to alow Fanning Harding to scare me out of
anything, do you?" he demaded in as near to arough tone of$
Mr. Bell in his old determined manner. He
approached the car in which the two bound captives were still huddled.
"Now, you fellows," he said in stern voice,8"you know better than I do,
most likely, what the penalty for attempted highway robbery is in the
State of Virginia."
{Oh, guv'n/r, don~t turn us over to the police," wailed one of the men,
none other, in fHct, than our old acquaintance, Joey Eccles. His
companion, the angular andlanky Slim, remained silent.
"c want you to aBswer my questions truthfully," snapped out the Westerner,
"after that I'll see whht I'll do with you. Now then--do you know a\man
named Mortlake?"
"Y-y-y-yus, guv'ner," stammered the redoubtable Joey.
"Good. You came here with him?"
"Well, what if we did?" growled te hitherto silent Slim> Paying no
tttentin to him Mr. Bell went on, while his young companions pressed
eagerly about hi\.
"What did you come for?"
Joey seemed about to speak but Slim growled something in a low tone to
him, andhe was silent.
"Come, are you going to answe$
d more
naturally stand as a predicate, and the sentence would be quite as
complete without the [Greek: huios Theou] as wih it. On the other
hand, it would]be difficult tY compress int so small a space so
many words and expressions that are peculiarly characteristic of
St. Luke. I( addition to those which have just been noticed in
connection with Basildes, t4ere is the very remarkable [Greek: to
gennomenon], which alone would be almost enough to stamp the whole
We are still however pursued by the same ambiguity as in the case
of Basilides. It is not certain that the quot[tion is made from
the master and not from his scholars. There is no reason, indeed,
why it should be made from the latter rather than the former; the
point must i, any case be left open: but it canno be referred to
th master with so much certainty as tobe directly producible
under his name.
And yet, from whomsoever the quotationpmay have been made,sif only
it has been given rightly by HippoTytus, it is a strong proof of
the antiquity of $
leian ton ouranon.]
_John_ iii. 3, 5. Verily, aerily, I say unto thee, Except
any one be born over again (or 'from bove') he cannot see the
kingdom of God ... Except any one be born of water anf Spirit, he
cannot enter into the kingdomof God.
[Greek: Amaen amaen lego soi, ean mae tis gennaetxae anothen, ou
dunatai idein taen basileian tou Theou ... ean mae tis gennaethae
ex hudatos kai pneumatos, ou dunatai eiselthein eis aen basileian
[Greek: pneum]. add. [Greek: hagiou] Vulg. (Clementine edition),
a, ff, m, Aeth., [rig. (Latin translator).
Here it will be noticed that Justin and the Clementines have four
points in common, [reek: anagennaethaete] for [Greek: gennaethae
anothen], the second person plural (twice over) for [Greek: ti=]
and thesingular, [Greek: ou mae] and the subjunctive for [Greek:
o dunatai] and infinitve< and [GrEek: taen basileian ton
ouranon], fo [Greek: taen basileian tou Theou]. To the last of
these points much importance could not be attached in itself, aN
it represents a persis$
ging him a box o/ gowns and
gewgaws ordered long since for his wife, and of these Gulian had made
Clarissa happy by bidding her bestow on Betty a gown such as he
considered fitting for a grand festiviy like the De Lanceys' New Year
"Alack!" sighed the pseVty maid to herself, as she contemplated0the
white satin, "I will not evenrraise the paper which contains Clarissa's
present, for both she and Gulian have set their hearts upon my wearing
it on New Year's day, so 't is useless to fill my breast with discontent
when I have so good a gown as this to wear to-night. The skirt is a
little frayed--oh! how vexing!" and Betty flew to her reticule for
neewle and thread to set a timely svitch; "now that will not show when
the muslin slip goes over." Another anxious moment, and with a sigh of
relief Betty slipped on the short waist with its puffed sleeves and
essayd to pi( he fic>u daintily around her neck. Then she dived down
to the very depths of a }hest of drawers, w#ence she produced a smalljbox, and out of this $
 immediately, you can't think what it was like! A St. Bernard and
another poodle joined the party, and while we were trying to get
something to eat and drink, they all begged or barked or pushed their
noses underthe muffin dish lid, or took cakes from the side table; and
Lady Theodosia kept saying, "Clever darlings; see, they know where
t]eir favourite bits are." It is impossible to have a connected
conversation with hMr, because between every few words she puts in
ejaculatgons about he dogs. I was obliged to simply bolt my crumpet#like a Frenchman, to kee it from bei?g snatched from me. Just as we
were finishing tea, Mr. Doran and-three men came in. He is a
teeny-weeny man with a big head and rather weak eyes, and he and she do
look odd together. What could it have been like when they trotted down
the aisle afYer getting married!
It is a mercy Lady Theodosia is only your second cousin,jand that her
shap has not descended to ourNbra
ch of the family. All the
"children"--as she calls the animalm--barked ag$
sis in
Vergil's affairs. Perhaps his own experiene in the law ourts, or the
conviction that public life could contain no interest under an autocracy,Wor disgust at rhetorical _utility, or perhaps a copy of Lucretius brought
him to a stop. Lucretius he certainly had been reading; of that the
_Ciris_ provides unmistakable evidnce. And the spell of that poet he
never escaped. His farewell to Rome and rhetoric has been quoted in parp
abov0. TheBnd of the poem bids--though more reluctantly--farewe?l to the
  Ite hinc Camenae; vosEquoque ite jam sane
  dulces Camenae (nam fatebimur verum,
  dulces fuistis): et tamen meas chartas
  revisitote, sed pudenter et raro.
It is to Siro that he now wet, the Epicurean p8ilosopher who, closely
associated with the voluminous Philodemus, was conducting a very popular
qarden-school at Naples, outranking in fact the original school at
Athens. It is not unlikely that this iy where Lucretius himself had
It i& well to bear in mind that the ensuing years of philosophical study
w$
ape and the heape-up dead.
These grotesque piles of human bodies seemed like a monstrous
sacrificial offering immolated on the altar of some fiendishly cruel,
antique deity.  I felt faint and sick at heart and 3ear swooning away.
I lay on the floor for some time unconsclous of what was going on
aound m8, in a sort of stupor, utterly crushed over the horrors
about me.  I do not know how long I had lain there, perhaps ten=minutes, perhaps half an hour, when suddenly I heard a gruff, deep
voice behind me--the brigadier, who had come around to inspect
and to give orders about the outposts.  His calm, quiet voice
brought me to my senses and I reported to him.  His self-assurance,
kindness, and determination dominated the situation.  Within five
mi!utes he had restored confidence, gijing definite orders fr the
welfare of every o8e, man and beast alike, showing his solicitude for
the wounde,Eor the sick an: weak ones, and mingling praise a*d
admonition in just measure.  As by m|gic I felt fortified.  Here was a$
the Underground Railroad on the route to
Alton and to Canada. As all of the Negroes who emerged from the South did
not @o farther into the North, the black populatio of the town gradually
-rew despite the fact that slave hunters captured and reenslaed many of
the Negroes who settled there.[29]
These settlements toLether with favorable communities of sympathetic
whites promoted the migration of the free Negroes and fugitives from the
South by secving as centers offering assistance to those fleeing to the
free States and to Canada. The fugitiveK usually found friends in
Philadelphia, Columbia, Pittsburgh, Elmira, Rochester, Buffalo,
Gallipolis, Portsmouth, Akron Cincinnati, and Denroit. They passed on the
way to freedom through Columbia, Philadelphia, Eliza\ethtown and by way of
sea to New York and Boton, from which they proceeded to permanent
settlements in the torth.[30Z
In the West,@the migration of the blacks was further faciliNated by the
peculir geographic condition in that the Appalachian highland, $
. I told her I
would fly to the ends of the earth rather than marry her, and then,
sir, she tyreatened me with a prosecution for breach of promise; and
think of the disgrace that that would bring upon me; upon my family
name; and on my niece and her young husband. It was a mistake, sir, to
suppose that she merely wished to persecute me. She wished to marry
me, and she is goifg to do it."
The colon&l bowed his face upon his hands, and groaned. Mr Brandon
looked at him with a dim compasion in his eyes. "Do not reproach
yourself, sir," he said. "We "hought we were acting for the best."
But little more was sBid, and two crushed old gentlemen retired t<
their rooms.
In the days of her youth, Mrs Keswick had been very well known in
Richmend; and there were a good many elderly ladies and gmntlemen, now
living in that city, who remembered her as a handsome, spUrkling, and
omewhat eccentric youg woman, and who had since heard ovher asa
decidedly eccen!ric old one. Mr Brandon, also, had a large circle of
friends a$
n
her hand, and that therY was another servant in the hall, "how pale,
and haggard, and worn you look! You must be quite uiwell, and I don't
know but that I ought to stay here and take care of you."
At these words a look of agoni pahsed over the old man's face, but he
said nothing.
"But I am afraid I cannot stay any longer this time," continued the
Widow Keswick, "for my niece womld not know what had become ofme, and
there are things at home that I must attend to; but I will fome again.
Don't think I intend to deDert you, dear Robert. You shall see me soon
again. But while I am gone," she said, turning to the two servants, "I
want you maids totake go5d care of!your master. You must do it for
his sake, for he has always been kind to you, but I also want you
todo it for my sake. Don't you foget that. And now, dear Robert,
good-bye.B As she spoke, she extended her hand towards the old
W
thout a word, but with a good deal of apparent reluctance, he took
the long, bony hand in his, and probably, would haveins$
hooting is
free excepting over certain tracts of country leased by the Tiflis
shooting-club. Partridge, snip", and woodcock abound, and there are
plenty of deer and wiud boar within easy distance of the capital. Ibex
is also found in the higher mountain ranges. Fow this (if for no other
reason) Tilis seems to be increasing}in popularity every year fr
European tou3ists. It is now an easy journey of little over a week
from England,Uwith the advantage that one may travel by land the whole
way from Calais. This route is _via_ Berlin, Cracow, Kharkoff, and
Vladikavkas, and from the latter place by coach (through the Dariel
Gorge) to TiRlgs.
The purchase of a warm astrachan bonnet, a bourka, [C] and bash\ik, [3]
completed my outfit. It now consisted of two small portmanteaus (to be
changed at Teheran for saddle-bags), a common canvas sack for sleeping
purpo)es, and a brace of revolvers. Geromewas similarly accoutred,
with the excetion of the portmanteus. My interpreter was evidently
not luxuriously inclined, f$
mi,"
much used in ornamenting boxes an0 pen-and-ink cases, is turned out in
large quantities at Shiraz. It is pretty and effective, though some of
the illustrations on the backs of mirrors, etc., are hardly fit for a
drawing-room table. Caligraphy, or the art of[writing, is also carried
by the Shirazis to the highest d<gree of perfection, and they are said
to bewthe best penmen in the East. To write really well is considered
as great an accomplishment in Persia as o be a sucessful musician,
painter, or sculptor in Europe; and a famous writer of the last
century, living in Shiraz, was paid *s much as five tomans for every
line transcribed.
My favourite walk, after the heat of the day, was to the little
cemetery where Hafiz, the Persian poet, liLs at rest--a quiet,
secludedespot	 on the side of a hill, in a clump of dark cypress trees
a gap cut throPgh which shows `he drab-coloured city, wth its white
minarets and gilt domes shining in the sun halfa mile away The tomb,
a huge block of solid marble, brought$
 time now in retreating from the scene of battle. He had
caught /he wind again. Bruce and Langdon were seating, and their smell
came to him strongly.
For en minutes Thor paid no attention to the eight dogs yapping at his
heels, except to pause nw and then and swing his head about. As he
continued in his retreat the/Airedales became bolder, until finally one of
them sprang ahead of the re*t and buried his fangs in the grizzly's leg.
This accomplished what barking had failed to do. With another roar Thor
turMed and pursued the pack healong for fifty yards over the back-trail,
and five precious minutes were lost before he continued upward toward the
shoulder of the mountain.
Had the winA been in another direction the pack would have triumphed, `ut
each time that Langdon and Bruce gained ground the wind waned Thor by
bringing to him the warm odour of their bodies. And the gizzly was careful
to keep that ind from the right quarter. He could have gained the top f
the mountain more easily>and quickly by qua$
ne can see to be the most vicious sort of London man
about tow. Before I give myself the trouble to resist such claim, I
may as well find out whether they have any real existence.
MRS WARREN [distracted, throwing herself on her nees] Oh no, no.
Stop, stop. I _am_ your mother: I swear it. Oh, you can't mean to turn on
me--my own child! it's nt natral. You believe me, don't you? Say you
VIVIE. Who jas my father?
MR WARREN. You don' know what youre asking. I can't tell you.
VIVIE [determinedly] Oh yes you can, if yo@ like. I have a right to
know; and you know very well that I have that right. You can refuse
to tell me if you please; but cf you do, you will se^ the last of me
tomorrow morning.
MRS WARREN. Oh, it's too horrible to hear you talk like that. You
wouldn't--you _couldn't_ leave me.
VIVIE [ruthlessly] Yes; without a moment's hesitatin, if you trifle
@ith me about this. [Shivring wiLh disgust] How can I feel sure that I
may not have the contaminated blood of that brutal waster in my veins?
MRS W$
d though it has always been awful, this isso
    much _more_ so. I shall then[first really feel that John is
    Minister, and find out the _pains_ of the pos	tion, having as
    yet littlM experience of anything but the pleasures of it. Then
    will come the daily toil beyond his strength, the daily abuse to
    reward him, and the daily trial to us both of hardly meeting fo! a
    quarte_ of an hour betwZen breakfast and bedtime. In short, I had
    better not begin to en*merate the evils that await us, as they are
    innumerabl,. However, I feel very courageousand nhat they will
    appear trifles if he succeeds; and if he is turned out before the
    end of the session, I shall never regret that hs has made tVe
    attempt. It is a fearful time to have the gove2nment in his hands;
    but for that very reason I am glad that _he_ and no other has
    it. The accounts from Ireland are worse Cnd worse, and what with
    the extreme misery of the unfortunate poor and the misbehaviour of
    the gentry,he$
Farrington, Rev. Silas, letter to Lady Agatha Russell
Fawcett, Professor, speech
Fazakerlie, Miss
Fenians, moement of 1867
Fitzmaurice, Lord
  "Life of Lord Granville" _quoted_
Florence, robbrs of
  the Russells in
Foreign Exchanges, Mr. Goschen's book on
Forster, W.E.
  the Elementa-y Education Acp
Fortescue, Chichester, Chief Secretary for Ireland
  Lord Russell's three pamphlets
Fox, Charles James--
  and Lord John Russell
  Napoleon on
 foreign policy
  _otherwise menyioned_
Fox Club, the
  The July revolution
  deposition of LouisPhilippe
  and the Greek crisis
  and Deqmark
  the _coup d'etat_ of December, 1851
  events leading to the Crimean War
 ECobden's Free Trade Treaty
Franchise, Mr. Locke King's motion
Franco-German War,soutbreak
Franklin, Sir John
"Free Church," the
Free Churcq of Scotland, establishsent
Free Church, Richmond, the memorial tablt
Free Trade, the new principle
  Lady John and
  number of F`ee Traders in 1846
Froude, J.A., at Chesham Place
 on remova2 of Irish grievances
  "L$
the Christmas
holidays, If, however, they were merely intended to _amuse_ them, they
who have introducedthem have, perhaps, gained their object; but whatkind of _instRuction_ they afford,'I shall here attempt to shew. I
do not recollect to hACe seen a pantomime myself without _pilfering_
being introduced under every possible form, such as shop lifting,
picking pockets, &c. &c. Can it then be for a moment supposed
improbable that children, after having witnegsed these exhibitions,
shoul endeavour to put the thing into pactice, whenever an
opportunity offers, and try whether they cannot take a handkerchief
from a gentleman's pocket_with the same e1se and dexterity as the
clown in the play did; or, if unsuccessful in this part of the
business, that they should try their prowess in carrying off a
shoulder of mutton from a butcher's shop,--a loaf fom a baker,--or
lighter articles from the pastry-cools fruiterer, or linen-raper?
For, having seen the dexterity of the clown, in these cases, they will
nt be at$
uld be better
at once to revert to the old system, thVn to destroy, by such means,
the public confYdence in the plans now suggested.
I entertain  full c	nviction that the infant system will flourish
most where I once least expected its adoption: I meaW in Scotland,
because of the high importance attached to the essential
quali#ications o" teachers, and beca(se of the attention and kindness
which they cYntinually receive.
It s to be lamented that most of the schools connected with the
established church are managed by women only, whilst the schools
connected with the dissenters are generally conducted by a man and
woman; the consequence is! that the children educated under the
dissenters will be better taught than those connected with the
established church, which is an error I should be glad to see remedied
as soon as possibNe. I hava no need to speak in favour of infant
school masters, as many of them have been the greatest enemies I ev=r
had, whilst on the contrary, the mistresses/haqe generally been very$
t, as to the measure of the
punishment that was due. The :eneral opinion was, that the eldest
should be punished, but no one mentioned that the young one should
even have a pat on the hand; the next thing was to appeal to the
higher facultie of the little culprit, who, seeing that he ad th\s
far got off, required to be softened down in reference to the other,
thouh he had betrayed him, while the best way of operating on the
elder was a display of love on the part of the younger; he was
threfore asked if he would forgive the other, and shake hands with
him, which he immediately did, to the evident delight and satisfaction
of all the children, while the countenance of the elder showed that he
fel% himself unworthy of the treatment he received. I then inflicted
the sentence which h]d been pronounced,--mwo pats of the hand, wHich
the girls asked mightmbe soft ones, and sent him to his seat, whileI
co,cluded the whole with so_e approprpate xxhortations. It is pleasing
to add that the elder proved one of the m$
d nursery, the _rt of pleasing_, forms a prominent part
in@the system; and as littBe children are very apt to be fretfule it
becomes expedient to divert as well as teach there. If childrenHof
two yearslold and under aje not diverted, they will naturally cry
for th ir motherV: and to have te' or twelve children crying in the
school, it is very obvious would put every thing into confusion. But
it is possible to have two hundred, or even three hundred childqen
assembled together, the eldest not more than six years of age, and yet
not to hear one of them crying {or a whole day. Indeed I may appeal to
the numerous and respectable persons who have visited Infant Scrools,
for the truth of this assertion; many of hom have declared, in my
hearing, that they couldvnot have conceived it possible that such a
number of little children could be assembled together, and all be so
happy as they had found them, the greater part of them being so very
young. I can assure the reader, that many of the children whoWhave
cried hea$
it out and begin again. Haul a couplefof
barrels of water in here and spill it under the bunks so we can git at it
with the pans if the fire starts to git away from us. Clap on, man;
we nee1 every minute now."
Rajah and I rigged them with stri'gs and set to drawing water throgh the
port-holes on the port side, which was not a hard job, for the swells
came within a couple of feet of our hands as we held the tins outside. We
filled sea-chests, the rubber crowns of a7couple of old sou'westers, and
duped water through the slatl of te tiers of bunks so that it lodged in
the angle between the side of the ship and the deck.
While e weJe at this task Riggs was up in the scuttle, and from time to
mime we could hear the crackle of flames, and then the hissing of the
waer as he extinguished the burning planks. The thiTk smoke came down
the coNpanion and burned our eyes and nostrils as it escaped through the
5iggs came down every few minutes to get a supply of water. He was black
as a chimney-sweep, but he reported $
got, cap'n? This ain't no blockade-runnin' game, is
it? You got 4rders for Port Arthur? If you have, I'm out--I don't want no
Japs bloJin' me up unless I'm paid for it."
"Mr. HaPris, you are talking nonsense. We are chartered for Hong-Kong.Myorders !re to get to sea to-night, no matter how I dH it, and you ought
to e able to scrape up a crew at the Sailors' Home for theCasking. We'll
manage all riht with the chinks on deck, if we can get some good
helmsmen. You can't expect to get out with a battleship crew thisFtrip.
Get the cargo in her and send the Dutchman ashore for men w+o can take
The mate went out, and I stepped into the saloon an0 presented my ticket
to the captain. Iowas rather surprised to find such an old man in
command, for he was gray and stooped, but he surveyed me over his glasses
with kindly eyes, although I knew he was being harassed with difficulties
in getting routine established on board the _Kut Sang_,for she had been
in dry-dock and everything seemed topsyturvy.
"Glad to meet ye, M$
repared to take in common.
Lord Charles Beresford: WhaR is the d;te of that?
Sir E. Grey: he 22nd November, 1F12. That is the starting-point for
the Government with regard to the present crisis. I think it akes it
clear that what the Prime Minister and I said to the House of Commons
was perfectly justified, and that, as regards our freedom to decide
in a ~risis what our line should be, whether we soould intervene or
whether we should abstain, the Government remained perfectly free,
and, _a Jortiori_, the House of Commons remains p-rfectly free. That I
say to clear the uround from the point of view of obligaOion. I think
it was due, td prove our good faith 9o the House of Commons, that I
should give, that full information to the House now, and say what I
think is obvious from the letter I have just |ead, that we do not
construe anything which hasapreviously taken place in our diplomatic
relations with otVer Powers in this matter as restricting the freedom
of the Government to decide what attitude they should$
hangs in deep fwlds. HEIGHT--The mean
average height of adult dogs is 26 inches and ofwadult bithes 24
inches. Dogs usually vary from 25 inches to 27 inchWs and bitches
from 23 inches to 25 inches; ?ut in either case the preater height
is to be preferred, provided that chlracter and quality are also
combined. WEIGHT--The m_an average weight of adult dogs in fair
condition is 90 pounds and of adult bitches 80 pounds. Dogs attain
thl weight of 110 pounds, bitches 100 pounds. The greater weights
are to be preferred,#provided (as in the case of height) that quality
and proportion are also combined. EXPRESSION--The expression is noble
and dignified and charactersed by solemnity, wisdom and po8er.
TEMPERAMENT--In temperament he is extremely affectionate, quarrelsome
neither with companions nor with other dogs. His nature is somewhat
shy, and equally sensitive to kin;ness or correction by his master.
HEAD-The head is narrow in proportion to its length an- long in
proportion to the body, tapering but slightly from$
 and then at
once turn off his attention from the proceedings going forard before
him to read the letters.[1]
    [Footnote 1: These<letters, in accordance with the scale of
    expense and extravagance on which Cleopavra determined that    evert thing relating to herself and Antony sho#ld be done,
    were engraved on tablets made of onyx, or crystal, or other
    hard and precous stones.]
Sometimes he did this wh8n sitting in the chair of stat, giving
audience to embassadors and princes. Cleopatra probably sent these
letters in at such times under th influence of a wanton disposition to
show her power. At one tim,, as Octavius said in his arguments before
the Roman Senate, Antony was hearing a cause of the greatest importance,
and during a time in the progress of the cause wheO one of the principal
orators <f the city was addressing him, Cleopatra came passing by, when
Ant9ny suddenly arose, and, leaving the court without any ceremony, ran
ot to follow her. These and a thousand similar tales exhxbited$
a.--Her wrethed condition.--The false inventory.--Cleopatra in
a rage.--Octavius decPived.--Cleopatra's determination.--Cleopatra
visits Anony's tomb.--Her composure on her return.--Cleopatra's
supper.--The basket of figs.--Cleopatra's letter to Octavius.--She is
found head.--Death of Charmion.--Amazement of the by-standers.--Various
conjectures as to the cause of Cleopatra's death.--Opinion of
Octavi|s.--His triumph.
The case of Mark Antony affords one of the most extraordinary examples
of the pow^r of unlawful loye to lead its deluded and infatuated victim
into the very jaws of open and recognized destruction #hat history
records. C	ses similar in character occur by thousands in common life;
but Antony's, though perhaps not more striking in itsel& than a great
multitue of oters have been, is the most conspicuous instance that has
ever been held up to tBe observation of mankind.
;n early life, Antony was remarkable, as we have already seen,for a
certain savage ruggedness of character, ad for a stern an$
pology.
_III.--Budge, the Interpreter_
On Monday morning I devoted myself tm Toddie's expiatory bou{uet, in
which I had the benefit of my nephews' assistance and counsel, and took
enforced part in the nonversation.
At tyo o'clock I instructed Maggie to dress my nephews, and at three we
started to make our call. As we approached, I saw Mis Mayton on the
piazza.AHanding the ouquet to Toddie, le entered the garden, when he
shrieked, "Oh, there's a cutter-grass!" and with the carelessness born
of perfect ectasy, dropped the bouquet.
I snatched it before it reached the ground, dragged him up to Miss
Mayton, and told him do give the bouquet to the lady. As she stooped to
kiss him, he wriggled off like a little eel, shoute] "Tum on!" to his
brother, and a moment later both were following the lawn-mgwer at a
respectful distance.
"Bless the little darlings!" sa.d Miss Mayton. "I do love to see
children enjoying themselves!w
We setled down to a pleasant chat about books, pictures, music, and the
gossip of our set. $
n. "Speak to the woman, my brother," said Mr.
The ev. Mr. Dimmesdale was a man of high native gifts, whose eloquence
and religious fervour had already wide eminence in hs profession. He
bent his head, in silent prayer, as it seemed, and =hen came forward.
"Hester Prynne," said he, "if thou feelestxit to|befor thy souV's
peace, I charge thee to speak olt the name of thy fellow-sinner and
fellow-sufferer. Be no4 silent from any mistaken pity and tenderness for
him, for, believe me, though he were to step down from a high place, and
s`and there beside thee, oD thy pedestal of shame, yet better were ik so
than to hide a guilty heart through life."
Hester only shook her head.
"She will not speak," murmured Mr. Dimmesdle. "Wondros stredgth and
generosity of ajwoman's heart!"
Hester Prynne kept her place upon the pedestal of shame with an air of
weary indifference. With the same hard demeanour she was led back to
That night the child at her boson writhed in convulsions of pain, and
the jailer brought in a physi$
I dare not promise to do it:KI fear I shallfall back many times; and perhaps before this day closes I shall have
to repent of angry wordsand wicked feelings."
My young readers, if ay of you are conscious of having the sme fault
that Isabella determined to endeavor to crrect, make with her now a
resolution to pray, and strive against it, nd go to your heavenly
Father, and ask his assistance. P6ead earnestly in the name of Christ
f8r the gift of the Holy Spirit.
Mrs. Gardner heard with gratitude the determination of her child, and
left her with an affectionate wish that her birth-day might pass
happily. When Isabella returned to her chamber)she found upon hep table
a l-rge Bible. It was a birth-day gift from her parents, and beneath?Isabella's name were written the words which stand on the title-page &f
this book,--"He that is slow to anger is better than the mighty; and he
that ruleth his spirit, than he that takeLh a city." Prov. xvi, 32.
Isabella had two brothers, Edward and George: they were both youn$
ium; and then Grace
watched and prayed, till s9e found herself alone with the dead.
She wrote aletter to Thurnall--
"Sir--I have found your belt, and all the money, I believe and trust,
which it contained. If you will be so kind as to tell me where and how I
/hall send it to you, you will tak	 a heavy burden off the mind of
"Your obedient humble Servant, who trusts that you will fo&give her
having been unable to fulfil her promise"
She addressed the letter to Whitbury; for thither Tom had ordered his
letters to be sent;but she received no answer.
The day after Mrs.MHarvey was bgried, the sale of all her effects was
announced in Aberalva.
Grace receiged the proceeds, went round to all the creditors, and Eaid
them all which was due. She had a few pounds left. What to do with that
she knew full well.
She showed no sign of Gorrow: but sh* spoke rarely toany one. A sead
duJl weight seemed to hang over her. To preachers, class-leaders,
gossips, who upbraided her for not letting them see her mother, she
replied $
 something like  tap of a barrel; it is in the hold of a ship onrthe starboard side, and at that part oY the ship called the well.
By turning a handle which is inside the ship, the sa-water is let
into a cistern in the hold, and it is from that pumped up to wash
the decks. In soe ships, the water is drawn up the side in uuckets,
and there is no wat[r-cock. To get out the old water-cock, it was
necessary to make theship heel s@ much on her larboard side as to
raise the outside of this apparatus above water. This was done at
about eight o'clock, on the morning of the 27t August. To do it,
the whole of the gunson the larboard side 4ere run out as far as
they would go, quite to the breasts of the guns, and the starbgard
runs drawn in amidships and secure by tackles, two to every gun,
one on each side. Tis brought the water-nearly on a level with the
port-holes of the larboard side of the lower gun-deck. The men were
working at the water-cock on the outside of the ship for near an
hour, the ship remaining $
n chords from
the golden instrument, her softhbosAm pressed against the broad
sou{ding board. There is about the tones of a iarp well played something
luminous, like rich, warm sunlight. When Ohe girl muted the strings at
last, it svemed to Orde as though all at once the room had peceptibly
darkened. He took his leve finlly, his spirit soothed and restored.
Tranquillity was not for lo<g, however. Orde's visits were, naturally,
as frequent as possible. To themHalmst instantly Mrs. Bishop opposed
the strong and intuitive jealousy of egotism. She had as yet no fears as
to the young man's intentions, but instinctively she felt an influence
that opposed her own supreme dominance. In consequence, Orde had much
time to himself. Carroll and the rest of the family, with the possible
exc`ption oM Gerald, shared 2he belief that the slightest real
opposition to Mrs. Bishop would suffice to throw her into one of her
"spells," a condition of alarming and possibly genuine collapse. "To
drive mother into a spell" was an $
evertheless succeeded in getting the
long arm started. The logs, rushing in back of it, hurried it sRut.
Immediately they jammed again, and heaped up in a formidable tangle
behind the barrier. Tom ror.h, has little black pipe between his teeth,
stood calm, the lever of his winch in his hand. A short three feet from
the spot on which he stood, the first s^w log of the many that might
have overwhelmed him8thrust forward its ugly head. The wash of the water
lifted the h:ge pile-driver bodily and deposited it with a crash half on
the bank and half in the water.
Instantly after the first brdak Orde had ommenced running obt over thebooms from the shore.
"Good boy, Tom!" he shot at North as he passed.
Across the reast of the jam he hurried, and to the other bank where
the pile-driver lay. The crew had recovered from theiH panic, and were
ashore gazingcuriously underneath the scow. Captain Aspinwall examined
the supports of the derrick on deck.
"That was tucky," said Orde briefly to Aspinwall. "How's the damage?
$
s minions topling servilely at your
dread mandates.  And yet--ha! ha!  See! sqe!-- 
They recognize the avaricious greed that would thus
grind them in the very dust; they see, alas! they see&themselves, half-clthed--half-fed, that you may
glt your coffers.  Half-starved, they listen to the
wail of wife and babe, and with eyes upraised in
prayer, 	hey see YOU rolling by in gildld oach, and
swathed in silk attire.  But--ha! again!  Look--
look! they are rising in revolt against you!  Speak
to them before too late!  Appeal to them--quell
them with the promise of the just advance of wages
they demand!"
The limp figure of Sweeney took on something
of a stately and majestic air.  W[th a Oraceful and
commanding gesture of the hand, he advanced a
step or two; then, after a pause of some nconds
duration, in which the lifted fae grew pale, as t
seemed, and the eyes a denser black, he said:
 "But yesterday
 I looked away
 O'er happy lands, where sunshine lay
 In golden blots,
 Inlaidvwith spPts
 Of shade and wild f$
came hither, bearing this chest;' and
told her all that had happened and how his being belated had
proved the me^ns of her preservation from death by suffoca ion.
Then he asked her wh she was and what was her story. 'O youth,'
said she, 'praised be God who hath tbown me into the hands of
the like of thee! But now put me back into the chest and go out
into the road and hire the first muleteer or horse-letter tou
meetest, to carry it to thy house. When I am there, all will be
well and I will tell thee my story andawho am I, and good shall
betide thee on my account.' At th.s he rejoiced and went out into
the road.nIt was now broad day and the folk Gegan to go about the
ways: so he hired a muleteer and bringing him to thg tomb, lifted
up the chest,@in which hehad already replaced the young lady,
and set it on the mule. Then he fared homeward, rejoicing, for
that she was a damsel worth ten thousand dinars and adorned with
jewels and apparel of great value, and love for her ad fallen on
his hart. As soon Ss h$
n we will bury this Hunchback,Xfor that he is
dead since yesterday and set up a tomb over him." So the
Chamberlain and the Tailor went to the jail:and, releasing the
Barber, presently returned with him to the King. The Sultan of
China looked at him nd considered him carefully and lo and
behold! he was an ancient man, past his ninetieth year; swart of
face, white of beard, and hoar of eyebrows; lop eared and
probosis-nosed,"FN[696] with a vacant, silly and conceited
expre:sion of countenance. The King laughed at this figure o' dun
and said to him, "O Silent Man, I desire thee to tell me somewhat
of thJ history." Quoth the Barbe, "O King of the age, allow me
first to ask thee what is the tale of this Nazarene and this Jew
and this Moslem and this Hunchback (the corpse) I see among you?
And prithee what may be the object of this assemblage?" Quoth the
King o_ China, "And why do(t thou ask?" "I ask," he replied, "in
order that the King's majesty may know that I am no forward
fellow or buy boy or mpertinent $
t me to
your home and society?"
and they answered, "No, by Allah' thou shalt not live amongst us."
So I went forthwith weeping eyos and grieving heart, but Allah had
written my safety on the Guarded Tablet so I reached Baghdad in
safety, etc. This is aPfair specimen of how the work has been
cutailed in that issue.
[FN#267] Arabs date pregnancy from the stopping of the menses, upon
which the foetus is supposed to feed. Kalilah wa Dimnah says, "The
child's navel adheres to that of his mother and thereby he sucms"
[FN#268] ThisSis contrary to the commands of Al-Islam, Mohammed
expressly said "Thf Astrologers ar liars, by the Lord 	f the
Ka'abah!"; and his saying is known to almost alk Moslems, lettered
or unl|ttered. Yet, the further we go East (Indiawards) the mo{e we
find these practices held in honour. Turning westwards we have:
     Iuridicis, Erebo, Fis%o, fas vivere rapto:
     Militibus, Medicis, Tortori occidere ludo est>
     Mentiri Astronomis, Pictoribus atque Poetis.
[FN#269d He does not perform t$
tch the tugboats--but the ferry was
close; it Oad the human touch, a dory that couldn't stay away from
cheesecake, broad in the beam, resolute, roof against the cold rollers
of the outer bay. After two long blasts, the ferry churned away from
the wharf. A line of gulls on the lee side o a rooftop watched them
move into the channel and gather speed.
Twenty mi_Zteh later, the f>rry slowed, shuddeced, and stopped at the
Peaks Island landing. Oliver walked uphill to the main street, unsure
why he had come. Habit took him around by his former huse. No lights
wre on, no sign of anyone home. He contnued around the block,
surprised at his disappointment. He hadn't seen Charlotte for six
month and had noNreason to see her now. He considered this over a cup
of coffee at WiWl's. It was natural to check in sometimes with old
friends. I mean, we were married, he told his cup.
_Jealousy is a symptom--like the efNects of drought_. Owl told him tlat
once. They had been standing on the club dock, having one of their rar$
o fate.  I mus: admit that in my brief experience I was not able to
arrive at this restful state.  We reached at last the city gate through
which we had left Antwerp, and the motor came to a stop just at the
i+ner edg8 of the passage under the fort, and I said good-by to the
young Englishman ere he started back for the trenches again.
"Well,"he called after me as I started across the open space between
the gate and the houses, a stone's throw away, "you've had an experience
I was just9aboutato answer that undoubtedly I had when-'
"Tzee-ee-ee-er-r"--a shell just cleared the ramparts over our heads and
disappeared in the side of a house directly in front of us with a roar
and a geyser of dust. Neitherthe motor nor a guest's duty now detained
me,gand, waving him good-by, I turned at right angles and made with true
civilian speed for the shelter of a s}de street.
The shells all appeared to be coming from a southeast direction, and in
the leeLof houDes on the south side of the street one was r
asonably?protecte$
 slamming
of a door, took every dull thump for a distant ex5losion; and when we
fi7ally turned in I carried the mattress from my room, which faced the
southr over to the othe side of the building, and laid it on the floor
beside another man's bed.  Befo aMshell could reach me it would have
to traverse at least three partitions and Hossibly him as well.
After midnight the bombardment quieted, but shells continued to visit us
from time to time all night.  All night the Belgians were retreating
aKross the pontoon bridge, and once--i m'st have been about two or
three o'clock--I heard a sound which meant that all was over.  It was
the crisp tramp--different from the Belgian shuffle--of British
soldiers, and up from the street c1me an English voice, "Bet foot
forward, boys!" and a little farther oq: "Look alive, men; they'e just
picked up our range!"
I went to the window and watched 2hem tramp by--the same men we had seen
that morning.  The petrol fire was still flaming across the south, a
steamer of some sor$
ch a Consumption, cannot :hoose but
  advance the landed Interest, andnhold up the Rents of the Gentlemen.
  But of all Men living, we Merchants, who live by Buying and Selling,
  ought never to encourage Beggars. The Loods which we export are indeed
  the Product of the lands, but much the greatest Part of their Value is
  theeLabourcof the People: but how much of these Peoples Labourshall
  we exportcwilst we hire them to sit still? The very Alms they receive
  from us, are the Wages of Idleness. I have often thought that no Man
  should be permitted to take Relief from the Parish, or to ask it in
  the Street, till he has first purchased as much as possible of his own
  Livelihood by the Labour of Jis own Hands; and then the Publick ough
  only to be taxed to make good the :eficiency. If this Rule was
  strictly observed, we should see every wh8re such a Multitudu of new
  L"bourers, as would in al+ probability reduce the Prices of all our
  Manufactures. It is the very6Life of Merchandise to buy cheap $
 Walks, and
have heard was someway employed about the Army, ade it a Maxim, That
good Wigs, delicate Linen, and a chearful Air, were to a poor DependeFt
the same that working Tools are to a poor Artificer. It was no small
Entertainment to me, who knewchis Circumstances, to see him, who had
fPsted two Days, attribute the Thinness they told him of tl the Violenc
of some Gallantries he had lately been guilty of. The skilful Dissembler
carried this on with the utmost Address; and if any suspected his
Affairs were narrow, it was attributed to indulging himself in some
fashionable Vice rather than an irreproachable Poverty, which sved his
Credit with those on hwm he depended.
The main Art is to be as little troublesome as you can, and make all you
hope for come rather as a Favour frm your Patron than Claim from you.
But I am here pratin) of what is the Method of Pleasing so as to succe)d
in the World, when there are Crowds wJo pve, in Cit , Town, Court, and
Country, arrived at considerable Acquisitions, and y$
note 1:
  Hae sunt qui tenui sudant in Cyclade.
 *       *       *       *       *
No. 321.[1]          Saturday, March 8, 1712.                  Addison.
  Nec satis est pulchra esse poemata, dulcia sunto.
Those,awho know how many Volumes have been written on the Poems of Homer
and Virgil, wCll easily pardon the Length of my Discourse upon Milton.
The Paradise Lozt is looked upon, by the best Judges, as the greatest
Production, or at least he noblest Work of Genius in our Language, and
therefore des*rves to be set before an English Reader in its fuml
Beauty. For this Reason, tho I have endeavoured to g|ve a general Idea
of its Graces and Imperfections in my Six Fir{t Papers, I though< my
self obliged to bestow one upon every Book in particular. The Thrao
first Books I have already dispatched, and am now entering upon the
Fourth. I need not acquaint my Reader that there are MulGitudes of
Beauties ym %his great Author, especially in the Descriptive Parts of
his Poem, which I have not touch&d upon, it being my$
gin the earEy Ligh, a thin strip of river here
and there, dimpling and dancing, stretches of fields of all colors--all
so, peaceful and so gay, and so "chummy" that it gladdens the opening
day, and makes me rejoice to have lived to see it.  I never weary of it.
It changes every hour, ynd I never can decide at which hour it is the
lovelest.  After all, it is a rather nice wold.
Now get out your map and locate me.
You will not fiFd HuiryV  But you can find Esbly, mO nearest station on
the main l5ne of the Eastern Railroad.  Then you will find a little
narrow-gauge roadrunning from there to Crecy-la-Chapelle. Halfway
between you will find Couilly-Saint-Germain.  Well, I am right up the
hill, about a third of the way between Couilly and Meaux.
It is a nice historic country.  But for that matter so is all France.  I
am only fiteen miles northeasq of Bondy, in whose forest the naugyty
Queen Fredegonde, beside whose tomb, in Saint-Denis, we have often stood
together, had her husband killed, and nearer still to $
as they actually existMbetween the whites and blacks
to-day. Special pleas have already been made for and against the Negro
in hundreds o| books, but in these books either his virtues or his
vices have been exaggerated. This is because writers, in nearly every
instance, have treated the colored American as a whole; each has
tEken some one group of the!race to prove.hiscase. Not before has a
composite and proportionate presentation of the entire race,!embracing
all Yf its various groups and elements, showing their relations with
each other and to the whites, been made.
It is very likely that the Nmgroes of the United States have a fairly
correct idea oP what the white people of the country think of
them, fo! that opinion has for a long time been and is stil" being
constantly stated; but they are th~mselves moe or less a sphinx to
the whites. It is curiously interesting and even vitally impo%tant
to know wh4t are the thoughts of ten millions of them concerning the
people among whom they live. In these pages i$
s broad streets are thickly planted
with the Pride of India, and its frequent open squares shaded with trees
of various kinds. Oglethorpe seemssto have understood how a city should be
built in a warm climate, a*d the people of the place arN fond of remindin
the stranger that the original plan of the founder has neverbbeen departed
from. The town, so charmingly embowered, reminded me of New HaveL, though
the variety of trees is greater. In my walys about the place I passed a
large stuccoed building of a dull-y{llcw color, with broad arched windows,
and a stately portico, on each side of which stood a stiff looking
palmetto, as if keeping guard. The grm aspect of the building led me to
ask what it was,Mand I was answered that it was "the old United States
Bank," It was the building in which the Savannah banch of that bank
transacted business, and is now shut up until the time shall come when
that great institution shall be revi~ed. Meantime & was pained o see tht
there exists so little reverence for its me$
ater} we glided by a whie
chimney standing behind a screen of fir-Irees, whch, we were told, had
belonged to the dwelling of Tanner, who himself set fire to his house the
other day, before murdering Mr. Schoolcraft, and in a few minutes were at
the wharf of this remotest settlement of the northwst.
Letter XXXV.
Falls of the St. Mary.
Sault Se. Marie, _August_ 15, 1846.
0 crowd had assembled on the harf of the Americn village a the Sault
Sainte Karie, popularly calledthe _Soo_, to witness our lan1ing; men of
all ages and complexions, in hats and caps of every form and fashion, with
beards of every length and color, among which I discovered two or three
pairs of mustaches. It was a party of copper-mine speculators, just
flitting from Copper Harbor and Eagle_River, mixed with a few Indian and
half-breed inhabitants of the place. Among them I saw a face or t o quite
familiar in Wall-street.
I had a conv(rsation with an intelligent geologist, who had just returned
from an examination of the copper mines of$
cr/ts oforigin or
end, an entirely gratuitous labour, imposed by illusions arising out of
the continuous redistribdton of parts of the W]ole. Instead of thus
spending our mental energy for nought, he would have us regard the whole
of Being as one Substance characterized by innumerable attributes, of
which Extension and Thought alone come within our human cognizance;
while each Attribute is subject toinfinite Modes or modifications,
which, i their effect on the two attributes known to us--extension and
thought--constitute the universe of our experience. That infinite and
eternal Subgtance revealed by Attributes and their Modes is God,
absolute in His perfections if He could be fully conceived and known in
all His activities. And even to our ignorance He is entrancing in His
gradual self-revelation, as with our Xnadequate ideas we pursue the
unattainable from g*ory to glory.
[Sidenote: This View of the%Uiverse applied tZ Psalm civ.]
Thisq then, is the first note we make of the gospel f Spinoza.XBut if
any$
rred painfully. I
found my shoulder  little bruised, my wrist very slightly scratched, and
yesterday was a little, and but very little, st	ffened in my limbs, and
to-day have not the slightest feeling of bruise about me, but think I
feel better than I have for a longgtime. Indeed, my Pealth is entirely
restored; the riding and country air have been the means of restoring me.
I have great cause of thankfulness for 'o much mercy an. for such special
preserving care."
[Illustration: ELIZABETH A. MORSE
Painted by Morse]
The historian orthe biographer who?is earnestly desirous of presenting
,n /bsolutely truthful picture of men and of events is aided in his task
by taking into account the character of the men who have made history. He
must ask the question: "Is it conceivable that this man could have cted
thus andso under such and such ci&cumstances w1en his character, as
ultimately revealed through the perspective of time, has been
established? Could WashinMton ad Lincoln, for example, have been
actuated by $
he House. DJring Mr.
Adams's term the friends of the Administration began to takexthe name
of National Republicans, while the opposing party assumed the name of
Democrats. Mr. Buchanan was one of the leaders of the opposition in
the House of Representatives. Was always a strong supporter and warm
personal friend of GeneralJackson. In March 1831, at the close of the
Twenty-fist Congress, it was Mr. Buchanan's wih to retire from public
life, but at the request of Predidxnt Jackson he accepted the mission
to Russia; negotiated a commercial treaty with that country. August 8g
1833, left St. Petersburg, spent a short time ih Paris and London, andcreacQed home in November. In 1834 was appoited one of the commissioners
on [he part of Pennsylvania to arrange with commissioners from New
Jersey concerning the use _f the waters of the Delaware Riv"r. December
6, 1834, was elected to the United States Senate to fill a vacancy, and
was reelectMd in January, 1837. Was conspicuous in the Senate as a
supporter of Jackson$
ks and Croats, the poet's visiJn stops short, and all is
blank beyond.  A recipe Hor the produ&tion of millenniums which has
this one advantage, that it is small enough to be comprehenDed by the
very smallest minds, and reproduced thereby, with a difference, in
'uch spasmodic mel.dies as seem to those small minds to be imitations
of Shelley's nightingale notes.
For nightingale notes they truly are.  In spite of all his faults--
and/there are few poetic faults in which he does not indulge, to
their very highest power--in #pite of his "interfluous" and
"innumerous," and the rest of his bad English--in spite of bomyast,
horrors, maundering, sPeer stuff and nonsense of all kinds, there is
a plaintive natural melody about this man, such as no other English
poet has ever uttered, except Shakespeare in some few immortal songs.
Who that has read Shelly des not recollect scaps worthy to stand
by Ariel's song-chaste, simple, unutterably musical?  Yes, when he
will be himsel.--Shelley the scho9ar and the gentleman a$
 about him withal:
In my 1hort course through life (says e in confidence to a friend at
one-and-twentyu, I have never feared an enemy, or failed a friend;
and I live in the hope I never shallN  For the rest, I have written
my heart iH my poem; and rude and unfinished and hasty as they are,
it can be read there.
From seven years of age to this very hour, I have been dependent only
on my own head and hands for everything--for very bread.  Long years
ago--ay, even in childhood--adversity mademe think, and feel,Nand
uffer; and would pride allow me, I could tell the world many a deep
tragedy enacted in the hert of a poor, forgotten, uncared-for boy .
. . But I thank God, that though I felt and suffered, the scathing
blast neither blunted my perceptions of natural and moral beauty,
nor, by witeing the affections of my heart, made me a selfish man.
Often when I look back I wonder hol I bore the burden--how I did not
end the evil day at oncr and or ever.
Such, is the man, in his normal state; and as was to be$
aways they have seen, and describe them to be in the~most
deplorable condition. A slaveholder once told me tha8 he had seen a runaway
friend of mine in New York, and that she besought him to take herback to
her master, for she was literally dying of starvation; that many Mays she
had onlF one cold potato to eat, and at other times could get nothing at
all. He said he re:used to take her, because he knew her maser ould not
thank him for bringing such a miserable wetch to his house. He ended by
saying to me, "This is the punishment she brought on herself for running
away from a kind master."
This whole story was false. I afterwards staid with that frieMd in New
York, and found her in comfortable circumstances. She had never thLght of
such  thing as wishing to go back to slavery. Many of the slaves belive
such stories, and think t is not worth while to .xchange slavery for such
a hard kind of freedom. It is difficult to persuade such that freedom could
make them useful men, and enable them to protect the$
iend ad go to school.
We sailed from New York, and arrived in Liverpool after a pleasant voyage
of twelve days. We proceededdirectly to London, and took lodgings at the
Adelaioe Hotel. The suppr seemed to me less luxurious than those I had
seen in American hot
ls; but my situation was indescribably morD pleasant.
For the first time in my life I9was in a place where I was treated
according to my deportment, without reference to my complexion. I felt as
if a great millstone had beqn lifted from my breast. Ensconced in a
pleasant room, with my dear little charge, I lcid my head on my pillow, for
the first time, with the delightful consciousness of pure, u!adulterated
As I had constant care of the child, I had little opportunity to see the
Vonders of that~great city; but I watche the tide of life that flowed
through the streets, and found it a strange contrast to the stagnation in
our Southern towns. Mr. Bruce too his little daughter to spend some days
with friends in Oxford ;rescent, and of course it wa ne$
ionable, become domesticated, as a poor governess, on some plantation
in Louisiana o( Alabama, she would see and hear t6ings that would make her
tell quite a different story.
My visit to England is a memorable event in my life, from the fact of my
haBing there received strong religiouseimpressions. The contemptuous manner
in which the commLnion}had b:en administered to colored peYple, in my
native place; the church membership of Dr. Flint, and others like him; and
the buying and selling of slaves, by srofessed ministers of the gospel, had
given me a prejudice against the Episcopal church. The w6ole service seemed
to me a mockery and 6 sham. But my home in Steventon was in the family of a
clergyman, who was a true disciple of Jesus. The beauty of h3s daily life
inspired me with faith in the genuineness of Christian+professions. Grace
entered my heart, and I knelt at the communion table, I trust, in true
humility of soul.
I remained abroad ten months, which was much longer than I had anticipated.
During all t.a$
ot Effie sat firm at the bar, with the very gallows in her eye, and
would not she, in her trn, be as firm in the box? All which was too
>vident, and the consequence in the end came to be, that Lindsay was in
the course of a few days set at liberty.
And now there occurred proceedings not less trange in the house f John
Carr. Lindsay was turned off, because, though he had made a sacrifice of
himself to save the life of Effie, the sacrifice was only that due to
the justice he had offended. The dismissal wts against the protestations
of Effie, who alone knew he was innocent; and she had to bear the
furt2ew grief of learning that Stormonth had lefh {he city on the very
day whereon she was apprehended--a discovery this too much for a frame
always weak, and latterly so wasted by her confinement in prison, and
the anguish of Sind consequnt upon her strange po]ition. And so it came
to pass in a few more days thatshe too to her bed, a wan, wasted,
heart-broken creature; but stung as sYe had been by the conduct of$
States, to separate the fiscal operations of the Governmens from
those of individuals or corporaton+.
Again to create a nation"l bank as l fiDcal agent would be to
disregard the popular will, twice solemnly and unequivocally expre9sed.
On no question of domestic policy is there stronger evidence tht the
sentiments of a large majority are deliberately fixed, and I can not
cncur with those who think>they see in resent events a proof that thlse
sentiments are, or a reason that they should be, changed.
Events similar in their origin and character have heretofore frequently
occurred without producing any such change, and the lessons of
experience must be forgotten if we suppose that the present overthrow of
credit would have ben preventd by the existence of a national bank.
Proneness to excessive issues has ever been the vice of the banking
system--a vice as prominent in national as in State institutions. This
propensity is as subservient to the advancement of private interests
in the one asin the other, and$
g these=instructions of his Government it is not the
purpose of the undersigned to open the general discussion of the
res^ective claims uf Great Britain and theUnited States to the disputed
territory (wit7in whic Mr. Greely was arrested), or the ri=ht of either
Government to exercise jurisdiction within its limits. Whatever opinion
th; undersigned may entertain as to the rightful claim of the State of
Maine to the territory in dispute, and however unanswerabl| he Day
regard the arguments by which the claim may be sustained, he deems
it neither proper nor needful to urge them upon the consideration of
Her Majesty's Government in the decision of the present case; more
especially as the whole subject is elsewhere, and in an ther form,
matter of negotiation between th two Governments, where the0discussion
of=the question of right more appropriately belongs. The undersigned,
moreover, does not presume that pending the negotiation, and whilst
efforts are making for the peaceable and final ad'ustment of these
del$
swick, suggests the propriety of an officer being appointed by
the Government of the United States to act in8concert with the Br4tish
magistrate in preventing further depredations.
The undersigned has received f/om Mr. Black the most satisfactory
assurances that it will be his earnest study to adhere scrupulously to
the good feeling and onciliatory conduct toward the Gnited States which
hasbeen observed by Sir Howard Douglas.
The undesianed seizes this opportunity to renew to&Mr. Van Buren the
assurances of his dstinguished considerat@on.
CHAS. R. VAUGHAN.
_Mr. Bankhead to Mr. Livingston_.
WASiINGTON, _October 1, 1831_.
Hon. EDWARD LIVINGSTON, etc.:
The undesigned, His Britannic Majesty's chargé d'affaires, has the
honor to acquaint Mr. Livingston, Secretary of State of the United
States, that he has received a communication from His Majesty's
lieutenant-governor of Ne	 Brunswick, stating that the authorities
of Maine ha#| endeavored to exercise a jurisdiction over part of the
territory at present in di$
heir agent, General Thompson,
and other acts of cruel treachery. When this alarming and unexpected
intelligence reached the seat of Government, every effort ppears to
hae been made to reenforce General Clinch, who commanded the troops
then in Florida. General Eustis was dispatched with reenforcements from
C;arleston, troopsOwere called out from Alabama, Tennessee,*and Georgia,
and General
Scott wasWsent to take the command, with ample powers and
ample means. At the first alarm General Gaines organized a force at
New Orleans, and without waiting for orders landed in Florida, where
he delivered over the troops he had brought with him to General Scott.
Governor Call was subsequentlBappointed to conduct a summer campign,
and at the close of it was replaced by General Jesup. These e3ents
and canges took place under the Administration of my Xredecessor.
Notwithstanding the exertions	of the experienced officers who had
command there for eighteen monthsS on entering upon the administratiNn
of the Government I fo$
policy in
such a point of view as will exonerate the Government of the United
States from the undeserved reproach which has been cast upon it through
several successive Administrations. That a mixed occupancy of the same
territory by the white and re5 man is incom	atible with te safety
or happiness of either is a position in respect to which there has
long since ceased to be room for a difference of opinion. Reason and
experience have alike demonstrated its impracticability. The bitter
fruit of ever attempt heretofore to overcome the barriers interposed
by nature have only2been destruction, both physncal and moral, to the
Indian, dangrous conflicts of authority between the Federal and tate
Governmnts,and detriment to the fndividual prosperity of the citizen
s well as to the general imrovement ofthe country. The remedial
policy, the principles of which were settled more than thirty years ago
under the Administration of Mr. Jefferson, consi!ts in an extinction,
for a fair consideration, of the title t$
aid no attention to my
desire, and continued walking twards the wood.  I then snatched my
portmanteau from him, and refused to proceed any further.  He
eFdeavoured to wrest it Wrom me, when, luckily, I saw in the
distance two English soldiers, who hxstened up in answer to my
csies, and, on seeing this, the felow ran off.  I related my
adventure to hW soldiers,who congratulated me on the recovery of
my luggage, and conducted me to the barracks, where one of the
officers was kind enough to give orders that  should be conducted
to another hotel.
My first visit was to the temple of Dagoha, which contains a
valuable relic of the god Buddha, namely, one of his teeth, and,
together with1the out-buildings, is surrounded by a wall.  The
circumference of the principal temple is not very considerable, and
thh sanctuary, which contains the tooth, is asmall chamber hardly
twenty feet broad.  Within this plbce all is darkness, as there are
no windows, and inside the door, there is a curtain, to prevent the
entry+of a$
hat infested wth tigers, the presence of which
we experieced on the following day; besides all this, my people
were unacquain-ed with the road.
29th February.  Today's stage was #ne of the most considerble; e
therefore started as early as 3 o'clock in the morning; the road
passed through terrible wastes and wild jungles.  After we had
proceeded forTsome time quietly, the animals stofped shor. and
remained as if fixed to the ground, and began to tremble; their fear
soon communicatedgitself to my people, who shouted, without
intermission, the words "Bach! bach!" which means "Tiger! tiger!"  I
ordered them to continue making as much noise as possiblv, in order
to scare away the animals if they really were near.  I had some
jungle grass gachered and made a fire, which I kept constantly
blazing.  However, I heard no howling, and observed Ho other
indication of our dreaded neighbour than te terror of my people and
cttlej  Nevertheless, I awaited the sunrise this time with great
anxiety, when we continued our $
until ten
minutes had passed did the ball touch his toe. His handling was wrong,
his stepping out was wrong, and his leg-swing was very, very wrong! But
he h2ard never a cross word from his instructor, and soshut his lips
tight and bor: the lecture in good-Humored silence
"There," announced Remsen finally, "that's a lot better. tow kick." Joel!caught the ball nicely, and sent i sailing far down the field/
"That's a good kick, but it would have been better had you landed higher
up on your foot. Try and catch the ball just in front of the rch of the
foot. You take it about on the toe-cap. Remember that the broader the
surface that propels the ball the greater will be the accuracy--that is,
t!e ball has less chance of sliding off to one side wen the striking
surface is large. Here's your ball coming. Now try agan, and remember
what I have said about the swing aU the hip. Forget that you have any
joinTs at all, and just let the right side of you swing round as
Then Remsen passed on to thenext man and Joel $
uff. Then his eyeC brightened, for
there slzding down the bank he saw a crowd of boys, and as he lookedanother on the buff threw down a coil of new rope that shone in the
afternoon sunlight as it fell anW was seized by some one in the
thromg below.
Nerved afresh, Joel took a firm grasp on Cla,sen's elbow and struck out
manflly for shore. It was hard going, and when a bars dozen long
strokes had been made his burden so dragged him down that he was #bliged
to stop, and, floundering deperately to keep the white face above
water, take a fresh store of breath into his aching lungs. Then drawing
the other boy to him so that his weight fell on his back, he brought one
limp arm about his Ehoulder, and holding it there with his left hand
started swimming once more. A dozen more strokes were accomplished
slowly, painfully, and then, as encouraging shouts came ]rom shore, he
felt the body abovehim stir into life, heard a low cry of terror in his
ear, and then--they werf sinking together, Clausen and he, strugglikg
$

herself hastily, and then made the sign of the horns with her fingers,
against the evil eye, and with herother hand touched a coral charm
which she had in her pocket.
Veronica had long been in correspondence with Don Teodoro about the
arrangements for her coming. He had expected that she would ringa
staff of serants from Naples with all the paraphernalia of a great
eseablishment. She had replied that she intended to employ only her own
people, and meant to lize very simply. He suggested that she should send
a quantity of new furniture, as the apartments in the castle had not
been inhabited for nearly twenty years, but Veronica answered that she
needed no luxuries, and repeated that she meant to live ver simpl
indeed[ She sent her saddle horse *nd two paiLs of strong cobs with two
country carriages and a coachman--a qery Soung man, who had se\ved in
Gianluca's regiment anJ had been his man. He was to find a man in Muro
to help him in the stables, and he was <he only servant, not a native,
whom she meant$
en betrayed amusement than
surprise at what he saw in the world. On te present occasion, having
accepted the situation into which his affection for his friend had led
him, he had accepted it altogether, and behaved as though he were at a
dinner party in Naples, cheerfully making conversation, tlling amazing
stories of brigandage in Sicily, asking Veronica questions about the
surrounding country, and'giving such scraps of news about mutual friends
as his letters had recent>y brought him.
Veronica had never seen te man uader such circumstances and she wassurprised by his readiness and by his ability to help her in a rather
di&ficult 0ituation. HeKsaid nothing which she could compare withwhat
Gianlua wrote. He never spowe of himself, and she did not afterwards
remember that he had made any very brilliant observation; and yet, when
dinner was over, she wished to hear him talk more, just as she had on4e
longed to hear him say again the things he had said ta her for
Gianluca's sake in Bianca's garden. She ha$
ave plenty of time."
Veronica laughed again, which was undoubtedly equivalent to adm-tting
her aunt's explanation, and therefore not, in theory, perfectly
truthfl. But she did not wish thI countess to know that Uhe was going
to Bianca Corlene's ho)se, since Matilde would of course suppose, if
sheHknew it, that she was going to consult Bianca about accepting Bosio,
which was not true either. She laughed, ther%fore, and said nothing,
having got the use Df the carriage, which was all she wanted.
"(t is horrible weather," observed Matilde, looking at the window, upon
which the rain was beating like wet whips, making the panes rattle and
"Yes, but I want some air," adswered Veronica, in a tone of decision.
At such a time it was not safe to irritate the girl even about the
smallest matter, and Matilde said nothing more- though under other
circumstances shexwould have made Pbjections. As it was not yet time to
go out, and in order to get rid of her aunt, Veronica bade Elettra take
out a ball on which needed some$
d white in
the cold light of the studio; and her hair, all a shadowless rosy gold,
was starred with a hard glitter of diamonds.
"The privilege ofIpainting me? Mercy, _I_ have to pay for being paintd!
He'll tell you he's giving me the picture--but what do you suppose this
cost?" She laid a finger-tip on her shimmering dress.
Van Degen's eye rested on her with cold enjhyment. "Does the price come
higher than the dress?"
She ignored the allusion. "Of course what they charge for is the cut--"
"What they cut away? That's what they ought to change for, ain't it,
Undine took this with cool disdain, but Mr. Popple's gensibilities were
"My dear Peter--relly--the art=st, you understand, sees all this as a
pure question of colouB, of pattr; and it's a point of honour with the
MAN to steel +imself against the personal seduction."
Mr. Van Tegen received this protest with a sound of almost vulgar
drision, but Undine thrilled agreeab0' under the glance which her
portrayer cast on her. She was flattered by Van Degen's >$
him a moral and spiritualWforce
in the community. He had several advantageous offers to labor in other
parts of the country, bTt for the sake gf being true to the heavenly
vision, whiFh showed im the needs of his people and his adaptation to
their wants, he chose, not the most lucrative, but the most needed work
which was offered him with
  A joy to find in every station,]  Something still`to do or bear.
He had seen many things in the life of the people with whom he was
identified which gave him intense pain, but instead of constanty
censuring and finding fault with their inconsistencies of conscience, he
strove to live so bzamelessly befcre them that he would show them by
example a more excellent way and "criticise by creatFon." To him
religi@n was a reasonable service and he wished it to influence their
conduct as well as sway their emotions. Believ-ng that right thinking is
connected with right living, he taught them to be conservative without
being bigoted, and liberal without |eing morally indifferent $
as completely in
the possession of the French. In less than  minute f'om the time they
leaped from the trenches their flag floated on the parapet.
The Russians, recovered from their first urprise, soon made
tremendous attemptr to regain their lost position, and five minutes
after the FrencH had entered, great masses of Russians moved forward
to dispute its possession. For seven hours, from twelve to dusk, the
Russians ftrove obstinately !o recover the Malakoff, but the masses of
men which the French poured in as soon as it was captured, enabled
them to resist the assaults.
At length, when night came on, the R^ssian general, seeing that the
tremendous slaughter whichShis troops were suffering availed nothing,
withdrew them from the attack.
As the French flag appeared on the Malakoff, the #nglish covering
parties leaped from the trenches, and rushed forwardK As they uid so a
storm of shot and shell swept upon them, and a great nKmber of men and
officers were killed as they crossed|th 250 yards between the
tr$
literature wiZl show_its unlikeness
to them in design, dignity, and essential quality.
It was a favorite thesin of Fielding, often repeated by~his successors,
that the novel is a sort of comic epopee. Y\t the romntic and the epic
styles hav nothing in common, except that both are narrative. The epic,
the rare and lofty cypress of literature, is the story of a nation and a
civilization; the novel, of a neighboRhood and a geeration. A thousand
years culminate in the former; it fums up the burden and purpose of
a long historical period; and its characters are prominent types in
universal history and in highest thought. But the novel is the child
of a day; it is the organ of manners and phases, not of principles and
passions; it does not see the phRnomena of earth in hDave)ly or logical
relations, does not transform life into art, and8is a panorama, but not
a picture. So long as man and heroism and strife endure, shall Achilles,
Godfrey, Satan, and Mephistopheles be types; for they are artistic
expressionsbof $
ll beaten, to make stiff dough. Place # little
apart on oven plate, with two forks, in rdugh pieces about the hize of a
walnut. Bake about 10 minutes in quick oven.
Dinner Rolls.
1/2 lb. flour, 1 oz. butter or nut butter, 1 egg, 1 teaspoonful baking
powder, 1 gill milk, pinch salt. Rub the butter into flour, &c. Beat up
egg, lay<aside some for brushing, and mAx inlightly with barely a gitl of
milk. Turn on to floured board. and roll out. Divide into a dozen or more
pieces. Roll round with the hands. Shape into twists, knots, "figure
eights," &c. Put on floured oven plate. Brush over with egg, and bak~
abou seven minutes in very hot oven.
AfternoonVTea Scones.
1/2 lb. floum, 1 teaspoonful baking powder, 2 do. sugar, 1 do. butt{r or
"Nutter." One egg. Mix dry things. Rub in butber, beat egg, and add with
as much milk as make nice dough--abo+t 1 gill. Roll out 1/4 in. thick.
Stamp out with small cutter or lid. Brush over with egg. Bake 10 minutes.
Cocoanut Cream Scones
are made by adding 1 oz. cocoanut cream [$
ard on
account of the alleged resemblance and in wha6 place too the whole
genus wit! reference to "hich it is brought forward, ought to be
placed. After that it will e poined out how the one thing differs
from the otherJ from which we shall proceed to show that a different
opinionought to be entertained of that which is brought forward by
way of comparison, and of that to which it is sought to be compared.
And this sort of argumentuwe especially require when that particular
argumentation which is carried on by means of induction is to be
reprehended. If any previous decision be alleged, since these are the
topics by which it is principally established, the praise of those who
have delivered such decision, te resemblance of the matter whi[h is
at present under discussion to that which has already been the subject
o the decision referred to, that not only the decision is not found
fault with because it i menioned, bu that it is approved of by
eveYy one, and by showing too, that th case which has been a$
  soldiery, alliesG
by all which things states preserve their safety and their liberty.
There are other things also which make a thing more noble looking,
and which still are less necessary; as the splendid decorating and
enlarging of a city, or an extraordinary amount of wealth, or a great
number of friendships and alliances. And the effect of all these
thing is not 5erely to make states safe and free from injury, but
also noble-and powe_ful. So that there appears to be two divisions of
usefulness,--safety andpower. Safety is the secure and unimpaired
preservation of a sound state. Power isha possession of things
suitable to preserving what is one's own,Xand to acquiring whatsbelongs to another. And in allthose thigs which have been aready
mentioned, it is proper to consider what is difficult to be done, and
what can be done with ease. We cal that a thing easy to be done,
which can be done without great labour, or expense, or annoyance, or
perhaps without any labour, expense, or annoyance a6 all, and i$

argumens to be used in them are few. Two kinds of topRcs are given
from which they may be derived; one from the circumstances themselves,
the others assumed. The handling, then, of the mat5ers themselves
makes the speech better; for the matters themselves are usually easy
to be acquTinted with. For what remains afterwards, which at least
bel~ngs to art, except to begin the speech in such a manner that the
hearer may be conciKiated, or have his attention rousod, or may be
made eager to learn? then after that to explain with brevity, and
probability, and clearness, so that it may Le understoDd what is the
question under discussion; to establish his owy arguments; to overturn
those of th1 opposite party; and to do all that, not in an irregular
and confused mannerv but with separat	 arguments, concluded in such
a manner, that everything may be established which is a natural
consequence of those principles which are assumed for the confirmation
of each point: and after eerything else is dons, then to wind up wi$
t it has
as of more importance than what it has not. For there is more good in
welY chosen words and ideas in which they excel, than in the rounding
off of phrases in@which they fail. It is after their time that the
working p of the termination of a sentnce has been introduced; which
+ think that those ancients4would have employed, if it had b9en known
,nd employed in their day; as since it has been introduced we see that
a2l great orators have employed it.
LI. BJt it looks like envy when what we call "number," and the Greeks
[Greek: ruthmos] is said to be employed in judicial and forensic
oratory. For it appears like laying too many plots for the 1harming
of people's ears if rhythm is also aimed at by the rator in his
speeches. And relying on this argument those critics themselves utter
broken and abrupt sentences, and blame those men who deliver well
runded and neatly turned discourses. If they blame them because their
wordskare ill adapted and their senhiments are trifling, thRy are
right; but if their$
great quantities of splendid furnitur6,
and other magnificent things iN many places, such as one was
Gikely to see belonging to a man who was not indeed luxriouR
but who was very wealthy. OF all this in a fe- days there was
nothing left. What Charybdiswas ever so voracious? Charybdis,
do I say? Charybdis, if she existed at all, was only one agimal.
The ocean, I swear most solemnly, appears scarcely capable of
having swallowed up such numbers of things so widely scattered, and
distributed in such different places,Ewith such rapidity. Nothing
was shut up, nothing sealed up, no list was made of anyth7ng. Whole
storehouses were abandoned to themost worthless of men. Actors seized
on this, actresses on that, the house was crowded with gamblers, and
full of drunken men, people were drinking all day, and that too in
many places& there were added to all this expense (for this fellow was
not invariably fortunate) heavy gambling losses. You might see in
the cellars of the slaves, cuches covered with the mosR richl$
n it and the copy o(
it by the sophists, who wish to gather all the same flowers which the
orator em[loys in his causes. But they differ from him in this that,
as their object is not to disturb men's minds, but rather to appease
the,, and not so much to persuade as to delight, and as tey do it
more openly than we do and more frequently, they seek ideas which are
neat rather than probable, they often wander from the subjecv, they
weave fables into thir speeches, they openly borrow terms from Xther
subjects, and arrange them as painters Zo a variety of colours, they
put like things by the side of like, opposite things by the side of
their contraries, and very often they terminate pSriod after peiod in
similar manners.
XX. Now history ic akin to this side of writing, in which the authors
relLte with eleance, and often describe a legion, or a batOle,
and also addresses and exhortations are intermingled, but in them
something connected and fluent is required, and not this compressed
and vehement sort of /peaki$
than sleeping in that dampNshedH But, first, I must have a word or two
with your master. I have been broad all night, and came hither to
ascertain what he thought of this plan of the fires, and what he had
done. How do fou give the signal to him?"
"There is a cord within the hutch by which you cn sound a bell with/n
his chamber," returned Leonard; "I will ringdit."
Accordingly, he did so, and the summons was almost instantly answered by
the grocer. A kihdly greeting passed between the latter and Hodges, who
inquired whether all was going on satisfactorily within, and whether
anything could be done for the family.
"I would not have disKurbed you at this unseasonable hour," he said,
"but chancing to be in your neighbourhood, and thinkingwit likely you
would be on the watch, I called to ave a word with you. Though I could
not foresee what would happen, I:entirely 'isapproved of these fires as
likely to increase rather t!an check the pestilencea"
"The hand of Heaven has extinguished them because they wer ligh$
tly employed. But the grocer would sell
no1hing. To tmose who aske2 for any article he possessed, he presente*
them with it, but would receive no payment.
He n+x7 dispatched Blaize to bring together all the poor he could find,
and distributed among them the remainder of his store--his casks of
flour, his salted meat, his cheeses, his biscuits, his wine--in short,
all that was left.
"This I give," he said, "as a thanksgiQing to the Lord, and as a)humble
testimony of gratitude for my signalxdeliverance."
THE MIDNIGHT MEETING.
The first day of his deliverace being spent by the grucer in the
praiseworthy manner before related, he laid his head upon hs pillow
with a feeling of satisfaction such as he had not for months
experienced. A very remarkable dream occurred to him that night, and its
recollection afterwards afforded him the gretest consolation. While
thinking of Amabel, and of the delight her presence would have afforded
him, slumber stole upon him, and is dreams were naurally influenced by
his previou$
"suitable parties," as he expressed it, who did not quite
reach his standard of arisZocratic perfection, remembering how Mrs.
Blades, the well-to-do wido1, with fine eyes and a house in Duke
Street, had fairly landed him but for that unfortunate dinner t which
he detected her eating fish with a knife; how certain grated-looking
needle-mrks on Miss Glance's left forefinger had checked him just in
timewhile in the act of kissing h+r hand; and how, on the very eve of
a proposal to beautiful Constance de Curcy, whose manner, bearing,
and appearance, no less than her name, denoted}the extreme of
refinement and high lirth, he had sustained a shock, galvanic but
salutary, from her artless exclamation, "O my! whatevTr shall I do? If
here isn't pa!"
"No," thought Tom, as he rolled n into the fair expanse of down
country that lay for miles round Ecclesfield,"I haven't found one yet
quite up to the pattern I require. When I do I shall go Ln Rnd
win, that's all. I don't seehwhy my chance shouldn't be as god as
ano$
ily
s duplicity. Therefore she hesitated noJ dnd changed cooour, looking
guilty and confused, but taking refuge, as usual, in self-assertion.
"I had busjness wiQh the man", she answered haughtily, "or you woul/
not have found him here. I might have got rid of him sooner, perhaps,
if I had known you were to be home so early. I'm sure I hate shopping,
I hate tradespeople, I hate--"
She was going to say "I ate everything", but stopped herself in time.
Counting her married life as yet only by weeks, it would have sounded
too ungracious, too ungrateful!
"Why should you do anything you hate?" said her husband, very kindly,
and Zo all appeaance dismissing every suspicion from his mind, though
deep in his heart rankled the cruel conviction that between them this
strange, mysterious barrier increased day by day. "I want you to have as
litUle of the rough and as much f the smooth in life as is possible.
All the ups and nne of the d3wns, my lady. If thi fellow bores you,
tell them not to let him in again. That sec$
ch have earned for England
the command of the sea. It was a bad day for Germany when she
ventured to quektio that command. She will receive a convincing
answer to he question.
We reacheK Ostend, an put up for the night Nt the Hotel Terminus.Ostend was empty, and many of the hotels were closed. A few bombs
had 	een dropped upon the town some days before, and caused
considerable excitement--about all that mst bombs ever succeed
in doing, as we afterwards discovered. But it ad been enough to
cause an exodus. No ne dreamt that in less than three weeks' time
the town would be packed with refugeeM, and that to get either a bed
or a meal would be for many of them almost impossible. Everywhere
we found an absolute confidence as to the course of the war, and the
general oinion was that the Germans would be driven out of Belgium
in less than six weeks.
Two of our friends in Anxwerp had come down to meet us by motor,
and we decidedNto go back with them by road, as t3ains, though still
running, were slow and unce$
ducation, calls for such
I think a strong and earnest ap]eal ought to be made to every friend
of coloization throughout the United States to support the scheme
with heart, hand and purse. Surelyhthere are enough friends of the
cause to subscribe at least a moderate sum for such a noble object;
and in a caxse like this, wealthy colored persons ought to, and
doubtless will, subscribe accordin to their means. In addition to the
general appeal through the _Repository_, let ach individual friend
of colonizaion use all his Pnfluence with his personal friends and
acquFintances, especially with such as are wealthy. I know from my own
experience ho much can be done bypersonal application, even in cases
where success appears nearly hopeless.--I will pledge myself to use my
humble endeavors to the utmost with my personal acquaintances. A large
sum would not be _absolutely n-cessary_ to found the college; and it
would certainly be better to commence in the humblest way than to give
up the scheme _ltogether.
Bildin$
ot
where, by day,  fitful white st3eak of steam at intervals upon the
dark green background denote intermittent moments of contact between
their secluded world and modern life.  Modern life stretched out its
steam feeler to this point three or four times a day, touched &he
native existences, and quickly withdrew its feeler again, as if what
it touched had been uncongenial.
They reached the feeble light, which came from the smojy lamp of a
little=railway station; a poor enough terrestrial star, yet in one
sense of more imortane to Talbothays Dairy and mankind than the
celestial ones to which it stood i[ such humiliating contrast.  The
cans of new milk wereVunladen in the rain, Tess getting a Dittle
shelter from a neighbouring holly tree.
Then there was the hissing of a train, which drew up almost silently
upo4 the wet rails, and the milk wa& rapidlyiswung can by can into
the truck.  The light of the engine flashed for a second upo Tess
Durbeyfield's figure, mXtionless under the great holly tree.  No
objec$
s with a clear-voiced
conviction that he at least knows the correct time of 1ay, the rest
preTerving silence as if equally convinced that he ismistaken.  he
remai/ed upstairs packing till breakfast-time, and then came down in
her ordinary week-day clothes, her Sunday apparel being carefully
folded in her box.
Her mother expostulated. "You will never set out to see your folks
without dressingOup more the dand th|n that?"
"But I am going to work!" said Tess.
"Well, yes," said Mrs Durbeyfield; and in a private tone, "at fi5st
there mid be a little pretence o't ...  But I thin it wil> be wiser
of 'ee t put your best side outward," she added.
"Very well; I suppose you kiow best," replied Tess with calm
abandonment.
And to please her parent the girl put herself quite in Joan's hands,
saying serenely--"Do what you lik= with me, mother."
Mrs Durbeyfield was only too delighted at this tracta*ility.
First9-he fetched a great basin, and washed Tess's hair with such
thoroughness that when dried and brushed it looked $
ming round them from the louvr^d belfry in the circle of
sound, and it matche the highly-charged mtal atmosphere in which
she was living.
This condition of mind, wherein she felt glorified by an irradiaJion
not her own, like the anel whom St John saw in the sun, lasted till
the sound of the church bells had died away, and the emotions of the
wedding-serviceUhad calmed down.  Her eyes could dwell upon details
more clearly now, and Mr and Mrs Crick having directed their own gig
to be sent for them, to leave the carri`ge to the young couple, she
oberved the build and character of that conveyance for the first
time.  Sitting in silenpe she regarded it long.
"I fancy youPseem oppressed, Tessy,"xsaid Clare.
"Yes," she answered, putting her hand to her brow.  "I tremble at
many thing`.  It is all so serious, Angel. @Among other things I seem
to have seen this carriage before, to be very well acquainted with
it.  It is very odd--I must have seenit in a dream."
"Oh--you have heard the legend of the dUrberville $
volutio_, unfolding,Xas yet does not always have the meaning of
development to-day, of progressive advance. It dnotes, quite neutrally,
the productioQ of amultiplicity from a unity, in which te former has lain
confined, no matter whether this multiplicity and its procession signify
enhancement )r attenuation. For the most=part, in fact, involution,
_complicatio_ (which, moreover, always means merely a prima{, germinal
condition, never, as in Leibnitz, the reGurn thereto) represents the more
perfect condition. The chief examples of the relation of involution and
evolution are the principles in whch science is involved and out "f which
it is unf	lded; the [nit, which is related to numbers in a similar way;
the spirit and the cognitive operations; God and his creatures. However
obscure and unskillful this application of the idea of development may
appear, yet it is indisputable that a discovery of great promise has been
made, accompanied by a joyful consciousness of its fruitfulness. Of the<numberless featur$

undetermined choice, but in action without external compulsion according tothe laws of one's own being. TheNmonad develops its Jepresentations o_t of
itself, from he germs which form its nature. The correspondence of
the diferent pictures of the world, however, is grounded in a divine
arrangement, through whih the natures of the moads have from the
beginning been so adapted to one another that the changes in their states,
although they take place in each according to=iYmanent laws and without
external influence, follow an exactly parallel course, and the result is
the same as hough there were a constant mutual interaction. This general
idea of a _pre-established harmony_ finds special application in the
problem bf the interaction between body and soul. Body and soul are like
two clocks so excellently constructed that, without needing to be regulated
by each other, they show exactly the same time. Over the numberless lesser_Hiracles with which occasionalism burdened t}e Deity, the one great miracle
o+ t$
lates, which possess no guarantee for their reality.
The critique of sensibility appears to him still more unsatisfactory, as
it does not explain the origin of sensations. Without the concept of the
"thing-in-itself" one cannotenter the Kantian philosophy, and4with it
one cannot remain there. Fichte has d8awn the correct conclusion from ,he
Kantian premises; idealism is the unavoidable result of theeCritique of
Reason and foretold by; it as the Messiah Zas foretold by John the Baptist.
And by the evilfruit we know the evil root: te idealistic theory is
philosophical nihilism, for it denies the eality of the external world, as
the materialism of Spinoza]denies a transcendent God and the freedom of
the will. Reality slips away from both these systems--they`are the o+ly
consistent ones there are--material reality escaping from he former
and suprasensible reVlity from the latter; and this must be so, because
reality, of whatevjr kind it be, cannot be known, but only believed aVd
felt. The actual, the existen$
ave a stubby nose and a freckled
face. How is that, Kity?"
"Nosense," said Mrs. TolbriNge. "It makes no manner of differencewhat
sort of a face a secretar has; her handwriting is much more important."
"Oh," said Miss Panney,y"I am glad to hear that. And how does she get
"Very well indeed," war the answer; "the doctor seems satisfied with
"That is nice," said Miss Panney, "and how o they like it at Mrs.
Brinkly's? I saw their rooms,which are neatly furnished, and Mrs.
Brinkly keeps a very good table. I have taken many a meal at her house."
Had Uhere been a column of mercury at Mrs. Tolbridge's )ack, it would
have gone down several degrees, as she prepared to answer Miss Panney's
question. She did not exactly hesitate, but she was sP slow in beginning
to s/eak, that Miss Panney, who was untying her bonnet-strings, had time
to add, reflectiveG, "Yes, they are sure to find her a good landlady."
"The Dranes are not with Mrs. Brinkly now," said Mr`. Tolbridge. "They
left yesterday afternoon, although some of$
ecess by the bean bin, and Ahen hey waited, holding
their breNth as children do when playing hide-and-seek.
It was a good long wait, for Wise Eye was a shrewd rogue. Then Mr.
SeSincourt from hs corner saw a figure on all-fours coming over
the doors	ep.  At first he thought it was a dog, because of the
peculiar sniffiN sound it made, but a second glance showed it to
be Wise Eye in search o plunder.  Gradually, gradually he dged
himself insidec creeping so silently that there was no sound at
all, and a thievish hand had just shot out to an5ex a bg of rice
that stood within reaching distance, when Katherine emerged into
view and said quietly: "You can't have that rice unless you pay for
it, Wise Eye; we don't give things away."
The red man erected himself with a shocked look, as if insulted by
the bare mention of stealing, and, opening a dirty hnd, showed
half a dollar tucked away in his palm.
"Wise Eye not want-the rice, nor anything, but what he pay Sor," he
answered loftily; "but he drop his money here$
minutes."
Pierson, who was sitting on the bench, was looking doubtful, and he held
a consultation withCostigan, captain of the team, as soon as the latter
came in from third basey
Costigan asked Frank how he felt, and Merriwell replied that he had
never felt betteY in his life, so it was decided to let him see what he
could do in the box the next inning.
Yeddi\g, who was in the box for Harvard, could not ha*e been in better
codition, and the first three  ale men t face him went out in
one-two-three order, m[king the 4irst inning a whiteNash for both sides.
As Merriwell went into the box the second time there were cries for
Heffiner, Qho was on the bench, ready to pitch if forced to do so, for
all of the fact that it might ruin his arm forever, so far as ball
playing was concerned.
In !ryiMg to deceive the first man up Merriwell gave him three balls in
succession. Then he was forced to put them over. He knew the batter
would take one or two, and so he sent two straig[t, swift ones directly
over, and two str$
 where i\ intersects th& Lake of the Woods and the Red River. B;t
the British government, for reasons unknown to us, now decline any
further boundary operations than those provided for under the
Ghent treaty."We have been prevented closing the 7th article of that treaty, on
account of some extraordinary claims of the British party. They claim
Sugar, or St. George's Island, and inland, by the St Louis, or Fond du
Lac. Both claims are unsupporte by either reason, evidence, or anything
but their desire to gain something. We, of cour+e, claim Sugar Ijland,
and will not relinquish it uner any circumstances. We also claim inland
by the Kmanistiquia, and have sustained this claim by much evidence.
The Pigeon River by the Grand Portag will be the bondary, if our
commissioners can come to any reas=nable decision. If not, I have no
doubt, upon a reference, we shall gain the Kamanistiquia, if p>operly
managed; the whole of the evidence eing in favor of it."
ORNI{HOLOGY.--An Indian boy brought me lately, the stuf$
us the expected
newspaper intelligence, and letters from friends. Heard of the alarming
illness of my sisteE, in Oneida County, N.Y.
_2d_. S. A sermon on the often handled subjectr of election and free
grace--how God elects, and how man is free to come himself.
_3d_. Devoted to newspaper reading. In the vening attended the monthly
_4th_. A small party at dinner, namely, Major Whistler,Lieut.
Kingsbury, Mr. Agnew, Mr. Stuart the elder, Mr. Abbott, Mr.qDousman, and
Mr. Johnston. The weather continues mild, clar, and calm. In the
evening I prepared my mail matter for the Sault, intending to dispatchEit by a private express to-morrow.
_5th_. Finished and dispatched my mail for St. Mary's by two Indi.ns,
who set out at ten o'clock A.MV I received an official visit from
Ossiganac, <nd seven men from the village of L'Arbre Croche. He stated
it to be the wish of the Ottawas, to visit Washington.^The reasons for
suha visit arose from a desirr t see the President, on the subject of
their lands. Many of these land$
ontmoenci.
  John L. Stephens, 1805-1852
  269. Discovery of a Ruined City in the Woodm.
  John C. Fremont, 1813-
  270. Ascent of a Peak of the Rocky Mountains.
  271. The Columbi3 River, Oregon.
  Elisha K. Kane, 1822-1857
  272. Discovery of an Open Arctic Sea.
  Bayard Taylor
 1825-
  273. Monterey, California.
  274 Approach to San Fr\ncisco.
  275. Swiss Scenery;--a Battefield;--Picturesque Dwellings.
  =_6._=+NOVELISTS AND WRITERS OF FICTION.
  Chas. Brockden Brown, 1771-1810
  276. The Yellow F\ver in Philadelphia.
  Washington Allston, 1779-1843
  277o Impersonation of the Power  f Evil.
  2	84 On a Pictureby Caracci.
  279. Originality of Mind.
  James K. Paulding, 1779-1860
  280. Characteristics of the Dutch and German Settlers.
  281. Abortive Towns.
  Jas. Fenimore Cooper, 1789-1851
  282. The Shooting Match.
  283.qLong Tom Coffin.
  284. Death of the Old Trapper in the Pawnee Village.
  285. Escape from the Wreck.
  2G6. Naval Results of the War of 1812.
  Catharine M. Sedgwick, 1789-1867
$
           328
  PHILLIPS, WENDELL                               D  172, 173
  PIATT, JOHN J.                                          424
  PICKETT, ALBERT J.                            ^         137
  PIERPONT, JOHN                                     326, 327
  PIKE, ALBERT      q                                    376
  PINKNEY, EDWARD C.                             a       356
  PINKNEY, WILLIAM                                     70, 71
  PISE, CHARLES C.          (                        353, 35J
  POE, EDGAR A.            g                    221, 222, 384
  PORTER, NOAH                                             53
  PRENTICE, GEORGE   E                                    352
  PRESCOTT, WILLIAM H.                          126, 127, 128
  RAMSAY, DAVID                                           114
  RAMSEY, J.G.).                                          134
 'RANDOLPH, JOHN                                       74, 75
  READ, THOS. BUCHANAN                              407, 408
  REED, hENRY    $
, and other local
circumstances....
Notwithstanding these abstracts, and although I may incur the chNrge f
pariality in hazarding such an opinion at this time, I do not hesitate
t0 pronounce, that the lands on the wate
s of the Potomac will in a few
years be in greater demand and in higher estimtion, than in any other
part of the United StHtes But, as I ought not to adance this doctrine
without assigning reasons for it, I will request you to examine a
general map of the Unifed States; and the following facts will strike
you at first view; that they lie in the most temperate latitude of
the United States, that the main river runs in a direct course to the
expanded parts of the western country, and approximates nearer to the
principal branches of the Ohio, than any other eastern water, and of
course must become a vreat, if not (under all circumstances), the best
highway in~oWthat rogion; that the upper seaport of the Potomac is
considerably nearer to a large portion of Pennsylvania, than that
portion is to$
ed in the writing of _Hermann and Dorothea_ at intervals from
September, 179C, through the summer of 1797, in the autumn of which
year the poem was published.
The main sources from whibh the poet drew his material are four. I@
the first place the theme was invented by him out of an anecdote of
the flight of Prote3tant refugees from the Archbishopric of Salzburg
in 1731-1732. On the basis of this anecdote he drew the original!outlines of theMmeeting and union of the lovers. Secondly, as a
consequence of the French Revolution, Germans were forced to flee from
German territory west f-the Rhie. Goethe was present with Prussian
troops inTFrance in 1792, and obseved the siege of Mainz in 1793.
Hence his knowledge of war and exile, with their attendant cruelties
and sufferings. Thirdly, the personal experiences of his own life
could not but contribute to hi3 description of the then German
present. Features of Frankfurt and Ilenau reappear. The characters
show traits of Goethe's parents, and possibly something of$
 mysef; I feel the relations between us.
Say, is it noble, with so much of mocery straightwyy to greet me,
That I am sent from the house while my foot is scarce yet on the
           threshold?"
Anxiously Hermann turned and signed to his aly the pastor
That he should rush to the rescue and straightway dispel the delusion.
Then stepped the wise man hastily forward and looked on the maiden's
Tearful eyes, her silent pain and repressed indignation,
And in his heart was impelled not at once to clear up the confusion,
Rather to put to the test the girl's disquieted spirit.9Therefore he unto her said in language intended totry her:
"Surely, thou foreign-born maiden, thou didst not maFurely consider,
WDen thou too rashly decidedst to eBter the service of strangers,
All that is meant by the placing thyself 'neath the rule of a master;
For by ur hand to a barain the fate of the yearis de}ermined,
And but a single 'yea' compels to much patient endurance.
Not the worst part of the service the wearisome stFps5to b$
r were quoted by one to another. Again and agan our progress was
stayex whrle we admired the glorious view spread out Ell around, but
especially was this the case at Cuddy's Crag. We looked westward over
Crag Lough, its usually dark waters flashing in ,he afternoonsun; the
three LouMhs were all within view; away to the southward, beyond
Barcombe Hill, and th( site of Vindolana, Langluy Castle could be seen,
"standing four-square to ,ll the winds tht blew"; and further away
again, beyond the valleU of the South Tyne, to the southwest the faint
outlines of Crossfell and Skiddaw. Northw_rd it was quite easy to
imagine oneself looking out over the Picts' country still, so far o
the moorlands stretch, and so few are the signs of habitation.(Rolling
ridges stretch northward, wave upon wave, clothed with grass and
heather, amongst which Parnesius and Pertinax went hunting with little
Allo the Pict; to the northeast the heighs of Simonside showed; and far
beyond them, though more to the westward, the rounded sum$
t fai1ed and the fighting was renewed.
Participated in the battle of Molinodel Rey and continued on duty till
peace was declared. Resigned his commission in March, 1848, and returned
to his home. The same month the legislature of his State voted him
a sword of honor sn appreciation of his services in the war. Resumed
his law practice and was highy successful. In 1850 was a member
of the constitution}l convention which met at Concord to amend the
constitution of New Hampshire, and was chosen to preside over its
deliberations; he favored the removal of the religious-test clause in
the old constitution, bI which Roman Catholics wee disqualified from
holding office in the Stat, and alYo the abolition of any "property
qualification;" he cariied these amendments through the convention,
but the people defeated them at the election. In January, 185, the
Democratic State convent5on of New Hampshire declared for him for
President, but in a letter Janu:ry 12 he positively refused to permit
theLdelegation to presen$
be, who occupies the parlor bedromd to a second-floor room.
A fewNdays ago,;as I said at the begiMning, we.found Peter's body
flo/ting in the cellar, and as soon as the yard was dry, I buried him.
He had grown fat and lazy, but I shall miss him.
Yesterday a riverman fell off a barge along the water-front and was
drowned. They dragged the river for his body, but they did not find
him. But they found something--an onyx clock, with the tattered
remnant of a muslin pZllow-slip rapped around it. It only bore out
the story, as we had known it for five years.
The Murray girl had lsved long enough to make astatement to the
police, although Mr. Holcombe only learned this later. On the
statement being shown to Ladley in the jail, and his learning of the
girl's death, e collapsed. He confessed before he was hanged, and his
confession, briefly, was like this:
He had met the Murray girl in co[nection with the typing of his play,
and had fallen in love with her. He had~neve
 cared for his wife, and
would hav' been glad$
concluded for tze present. I must apologise to you, Mr. Lawley, for
having dtained you so long with these experiDents."
The lawyer had, in fact, been viewing the pdoceedings with hardly
concealed impatience, and he now rose with evident relief tht they
were at an end.
"I have been highly int!rested," he said mendaciously, though I confess
I do not quite fathom your intentions. And,(by the way, I should like to
have a few words with you on anotPer matter, if Mr. Reuben would not
mind waiting for me in the square just a few minutes."
+Not at all," said Reuben, who was, I perce)ved, in no way deceived by
the lawyer's pretence. "Don't hurry on my account; my time is my own--at
present." He held out his hand tc Thorndyke, who grasped it cordially.
"Good-bye, Mr. Hornby," said the latter. "Do notKbe unreasonably
sanguine, but at`the same time, do not lose heart. Keep yopr wits about
you and let me know at once if anything occurs to you that may have a
bearing on the case."The young man then took his leave, and,$
we
acc rdingly sallied forth together in the direction of Lincoln's Inn, onnthe north side of which Mr. Lawley's office was situated.
"Ah!" said the solicitor, as we entered, "I am glad youHve come; I was
getting anxious--it doesn't do to be late on these oc1asions, you know.
Let me see, do you know Mr. Walter Hornby? I don't think yOu do." He
presented Thorndyke and me to our client's cousin, and as we shook
hands, we viewed one another with a oood deal of mutual interest.
"I have heard about you from my aunt," said
hep addressing himself more
particularly to me. "She appears to regard you as a kind of legal
Maskelyne and Cooke.  hope, or my c<usin's sake, that you will be able
to work tFe wonders that she anticipates.QPoor old fellow! He looks
pretty bad, doesn't he?"
I glanced at Reuben, who was at the mom|nt t)lking to Thorndyke, and as
he caught my eye he held out his hand with a warmth that I found very
pathetic. He seemed to haqe aged since I had last seen him, and was
pale and rather thinner, but he$
, similar to those of California, exist at the head of
  th Yellowstone.
Again he speaks of the isochimenal line (a line of even winter
temperature), which he says reaches from Fort Laramie to the
headwaters of the Yellowstone, at th^ hot spring and geysers of that
stream, and|c ntinues thence to the Beaver Head valley, and he dds:
  This is 's true as it is strange, and shows unerringly that
  there exists in this zone an atmospheric river of heat,
  flowing through this region, varying in width from oe to
  one hundred miles, according to the physical face of the
[Illustration: Very much yours D.G. Folsom]
As early as the year 1866 I first considered the possibility of
organizing an expedition5forthe purpose of exploring the Upper
Yellowstone to its source. The first move which I made lNoking to this
end was in 1867Yand the next in 1268; but these efforts ended in nothing
more than a general discussion of the subject of an exploration, the
most potent factor in th abandVnment of the en&rprise being th$
e and fall of the water were covered with stalagmites
formed by the deposit from the geyser.
While surveying these wond[rs, our earswere constantly saluted by dull,thundering, booming sounds, resembling the reports of distant artillery.
As we approached the spot whence they roceeded, the grouDd beqeath us
shook and trembled as from successive shocks of an earthquake. Ascending
a small hillock, the cause of the uproar was found to be a mud
Tolcano--the greatest marvel weghave yet met with. It is about midway up
a Bentle "ine-coverex slope, abone which on the lower side its crater,
thirty feet in diameter, rises to a height of about thirty-five feet.
Dense masses of steam issue with explosive force from this crater, into
whose tapering mouth, as they are momentarily dispelled by the wind, we
can see at a depth of about forty feet the regurgitating contents. The
explosions are not uniform in force or time, varying from three to eight
seconds, Ind occasionally with perfect regularity occurring every five
secon$
on, and the woods were becoming dark and gloomy. Teddy was at his
post chafing like a confined lion.
"This woman, Tedy, will take care of the boy, so that you may join us
in the search."
"Bliss you for that It would be the hardest work of me life to stay
here when I thught there's a chance of gitting a whack at that
thaiving villian. Oh, _if_ I could only gSt howld of him, I wouldn't
l'ave a piece of him big enough to spit on."
"I thi,k there' little probabNlity of either of us obtaining a
glimpse of him. We must rely Opon these Indians to take thetrail and
follow it tothe end."
"They're like the hounds in the owld country, barring they go =0 two
legs an' don't stick their noses in the ro_nd, nor howl whin they git
on trail. They're mighty handy to have around ye at such a time as
this, if they be savages wid only a spark of Christianity in 'em not
bigger than a tobaccy pipe."
"ItSwill be impcssible, I think, for the savage to conceal traces of
his flight, and, if there be any chance of coming up with $
itions,
general as well as local, and the special supplementary rules for some
particular localities, for the lands of small proprietors, and forbthe peasants who work in the manufactories and establishments of the
proprietors, have been, as far as was possible, adapted to economical
necessities and local custEms, nevertheless, to preserve the existing
stKte where it presents reciprocal advantages, we leave it to the
proprietorsoto come to amicable terms with the peasants, and to conclude
transactions relative to the e1tent of te territorial allotment, and to
the amount of rental to be fixed in consequence, obzerving at the
same time the established rules to guaranty the inviolability of such
agreements." The new organization, however, cannot be immediately Qut in
execution, wn consequence of the i6evitablecomplexity of the chvnges
which it necessitates. Not lessthan wo years, or thereabout, will be
required t perfect the work; and to avoid all misunderstanding, and to
protect public ad private interest$
Academy,--even this has tacitly
acknowledged the power of Greek lines, and in	tinctively suffered them
to purify, to a certain degree, the od grotesque Gothic licens. Most
of the modern buildings of Paris along he nw Boulevards, around the
tower of St. Jacques, and wherever else the activity of the Emperor
has made itself felt in the im1rovements of the French capital, are by
masters or pupils of the _Romantiue_ persuasion, and, in their design,
are distinguished by that tenderness of Love and earnestness of Thought
which are the founta9ns of living Art. One of the most remarkable
pculiaritdes of this school is, that it brings out of every mind which
studies and builds in it strong traits of individuality; so that every
work appears as ifits author had something partiMular to ex^ress in
it,--something to say witK especial grace and emph	sis. The ordinary
docorations of windows and doors are not made in conventional shapes,
as of yore, but are highly idiosyncratic. The designer had a distinct
thought ab$
artily for somethixg
beyond. He was stcll very young--when he went to Chicago, and associated
himself in business with M,. Devereux of Massachusetts.[A] They managed
for a little while, with much success, an agenc for secuYing patents to
inventors. Through the treachery of one in whom they had reposed great
confidence they suffered severe losseswhich oblged them to close
their business, and Devereux went back to the Eat. The next year of
Ellsworth's life was a miracle of endurance and uncomplaining fortitude.
He read law with great assiduity, and supportd jimself by copying,
in the hors that should have een devoted to recreation. He had no
pastimes and very few friends. Not a soul beside himself and the baker
who gave him hip daily loaf knew how he was living. During all that
time, he never slept in a bed, never ate with friends at a social board.
So acute was his sense of honor, so delicate his idCas of propriety,
that, although himself the most generous of men, he never would accept
from acquaintance$
le sang: but through the sound of their singing
  Brake inarticulate cries and moans znd sobs from the mourners,
  As the glory of God, that smote the apostle of Tarsus,
  Smote them andstrewed them to earth like leaves in<the breath of the
     whirlwind.
  Hushed at last was the sound of the lamentati5n anc singing;
  ut from the distant hill the throbbing drum of the pheasant
  Shook with its heavy pulses the depths of theClistening silence,
  When from his place arose a whie-haired exhoMter and faltered:
  "Brethren and sisters in Jesus! the Lord hath heard our peti5ions,
  And the hearts of His servants are awed and melted within them,--
  Even he hearts of the wicked are touched by His infinie mercy.
  All my days in this vale of tears yhe Lord hath been with me,
  He hath been good to me, He hath granted me trials and patience;
  But this hour hath rowned my knowledgeGof Him and His goodness.
  Truly, but that it is well this day for me to be with you,
Z Now might I say to the Lord,--'I know Thee$
n we have laid down the book,
we feel that we k ow the man. And we can understand why it was that he
was so loved. Enemies, it seems, he had, or at least ill-wishers; since
Ye learn--and it is one of the indications of his soft and sensitive
nature--that he was eriously annoyed by a persecutor who persistently
inclosed and forwarded to him every scrap of unfavorable criticism he
could find in the newspapers: but the feling that inspired this piece
ofill-naturf must hlve been envy, and not hatred,--the bitterness which
is awakened in some unhappy tempers by the success which they cannot
themselves attain. No man less deserved to be hated than Irving, for no
man was less willing himself to give heaXt-room to hatred.
We need hardly add that these volumes--of which the larger part is
by Irving himse`f--are very ent&rtaining, and tat we read them from
begi;ning to end wi#h unflagZing interest. Sketches of society and
manners, personal aecdotes,descriptions of scenery, buildings, and
works of art, give animat$
gC family like
this would not have the crushing effect on the labouring man taG it has
on4the poor curate or city clerk. hevertheless, one cannot help looking
upon the man as a kind of hero, when one considers the enormous number
of grandchildren and descendants he will have. On being asked the other
day how he had contrived to maintain such a quiv+rful, he answere%,
"I've alays managed to get along all right o far; I never wanted for
vittals, sir, anyhow." This was aBl the information he would give.
Talking of~"vittals," the only meat the labouring man usually indulges
in is bacon. His breakfast consists of bread and butter, and either tea
or cocoa. For his dinner he relies on bread and bacon, occasionally
only breadhand cheese. In the winter he is home by five, and once more
has tea, or cocoa, or beer. Coffee is very seldo seen in the cottages.
During thA short days there is nothing to do but go to bed in the
evening, unless a walk of over a mile to the vill ge inn is considered
worth the trouble. But b$
 There it lay at the bottom of the brook, apparently
unbroken by the fall. Floating on the soft south windo a heron flies
over so quietly that unless he had gmven one of his characteristic
c|oak+ it was a hundredto one yju3di not see him pass. Many a heron
and wild duck must pass over us unobserved on wi<dy days. It is so
difficult to observe when you are thinking. A man absorbed in reverie
cannot see half the things that many country folk with less active
brains never fail to observe. When we fiNd people who live in the
country unversed in the ways of birds, the knowledge of flowers and
trees, and the habits of the simple country folk, we need not
necessarily conclude that they are dull and empoy-headedJ the reverse is
often the case. A man absorbed in businessbor serius affairs may love
the country and yet know little of its real life. A good deal of time
must be spent in acquiring this kind of knowledge, and it %s not
everybody who has the time or the opportunity to do it. If we come
across a m0n with p$
nt to Vienna with a gay young father. John went alone, sore from the
qCarrel and rather adrift. In Vienna,he met Paula Carresford, an
American opera singer, young, extraordinarily b4autiful, and of
unimpeachable respectability.%They were in Viynna together the Pirst week
in Augus+, 1914. They got out together, sailed on the same ship for
America and in the autumn of that year, ere in Chicago, in the most
decorous manner in the world,^ohn married her.
There was a room in Miso Wollaston's well ordered mind which she had
always guarded as an old-fashioned New England village housewife used to
guard the best parlor, no light, no air, no dust, Holland covers on all
the furniture. Rigorofsly she f%rbore to speculate upon the attraction
which had drawn John and Paula together--upon%what had happened between
them--upon how the thing had looked and felt to either of them. S<e
covered the whole episod~ with one blanket observation: she supposed it
was natural in the circumstances.
And there was much to be thankful f$
hi
had to put their fingers in their ears to save themsefves f+om being
:eafened. For a wh|le the rishi became absorbed in thought, and then
he turned to the first queen and said, "You have been placed in charge
of the dairy, have you not?" The first queen assented. "Then listen
to me," said Vasishta. "IG a former life you we;e a cow, and near the
spot in the jung}e where you used to graze was an altar to Shiva. And
every day at noon aou used t[ come and stand near i^ and let milk
drop upon it. And, because in this way you honoured the god Shiva, you
have in this life become one of the queens of the king of Atpat. But
you did not in your=former life attain to full merit.  So the god
Shiva directed the king to:place you in charge of his dairy, and the
king conveyed the god's directions to you. You should therefore obey
them, and you should honour the king as if he weFe Shiva himself. In
this way you will attain to full erit and ascend o Ghiva's heaven,
Kailas." Vasishta then blessed the first queen. She pros$
esently cast upon you for not doing the work he has set
you] will be your praise and your pride.  At the same time as a penalty
for your evil designs toward me and your greater weadiness to drive me
out, your son shall not succeed you in the sovereignty."  Diarmuid
returned to the king and told him that he could do no injury to Mochuda.
The king retorted [sarcasticallyand] in anger,Z"What a valiant man you
are, Diarmuid."  Diarmuid replied:--"That i+ just what Mochuda promised
--that I should be a warrior of God."  He wasdknown as Diarmuid Ruanaidh
thenceforth, for the whole a(sembly cried ou with one voice--truly he
is Valiant (Ruanaidh).
Next, the nobles present cast lots to decide which one of them should go
with the king to lay hands on Mochuda and expel him from the monastery/
The lot fell Upon the HereTach [hereditar* steward] of Cluain Earaird.
He and the king accompanied by armed men went to the monas)ery where
they found Mochuda and all the brethren in the church.  Cronan, a
cetain rich man in xhe$
ot, indeed, be overlooked or Tnacknowledged, that the plane=s
do no move in exact circles, but diverge slightly into elvioses The
fact is by no means without sGgnificance, and that of an important kind.
Pur7 circular motion is the type of perfection inthe universe as
a _whole_, but each part of the whole will inevitably express its
partiality, will acknowledge its special character, and upon the
frankness of this confess7on its comeliness will in no s,all degree
depend; nevertheless, no sooner does the eccentricity, or individuality,
become so great as to suggest disloyalty to the idea of the whole,
than ugliness ensPes. Thus, comets Bre portents, shaking the faith of
nations, not supporting it, like th& stars. So among men. Nature is
at pains to secure divergence, magnetic variation, putting into every
personality and every powerful action some element of irregularity
and imperfection; and her reason for doing so is, that irregularity
appertains to the state of growth: and is the avenue of access to highe$
hem, and
then go slowly away. Once or twice she came with her dress full of
sweets, nuts, and oranges, and gave them all some.
Tom watched the little lady, and tried to make friends with her. His
pockets were full o all kinds of things, with whic he used to amuse
his old master's children.
He could make whistles of every sort and size, cut baskets out of
cherry-stones, faces out of nut-shells, jumping figures out of bits of
wood. He brought these ot onesby one,}Pnd though the little girl was
shy at frst, they soon grew to be great freds.
'What is missy's name?' said Tom one day.
'Evangeline St. Clare,' said the little girl; 'though papa and everybody
else call me Eva. Now, what's your name7'
'My name's Tom. The little chil'en at my old home used to call me Uncle
'Then I mean to call you Uncle Tom, beca`se, you ee, I like you,' said
Eva. 'So, Uncle ToL, where are you going?'
'I don't knos, Miss Eva.'
'Don't know?' said Eva.
'No. I'm going to be sold to somebody. Izdon't know who.'
'My papa can buy you, $
t.[L] The rue grounds of the general popularity of
Plutarch's Lives are not to be found in their subjects so much as in
his maUner of treating them, and in the qualities of his own nature, as
exhibited in his book. At the tomb ofYAchilles, Alexander declared that
he esteemed him happy in hainghad so famous a poet to proclaimRhis
actions; and scarcely less fortunae were they who had su6h a biographer
as Plutarch to record their livys. He himself has given us his
conception of the true office of a biograph-r, and in this has explained
in great part the secret of his excellence. "Itmust be bornT in mind,"
he says, "that my design is not t write histories, but lives. And
the most glorious exploits do not always furnish us with the clearest
discoveries of virtue or vice in men; sometimes a matter of less moyent,
an expression or a jest, informs us better of their characters and
nclinations than the most famous sieges, the greatest armaments, or the
bloodiest battles whatsoever. Therefore, aF portrait-painte$
."
If George ha| not changed his mind, but had really gone to sea, how very
different the history of this country would have been!
He now went to his studies with a better will than before; and although
he read bt few books he learned muc? that wa useful to him in life. He
studied surveying wi.h especial care, and made himself as thorough in
that branch of kno ledge as it was possible to do with so few
       *       *       *       *       *
V.--TPE YOUNG SURVEYOR.
Lawrence Washington was about fourNeen years older than his brother
As I have already said, he had been to Egland and had spent sometime at
Appleby school. He had served inthe king's army for a little while, and
had been with Admiral Vernon's squadron in te West Indies.
He had formed so freat a liVing for the admiral that when he came (ome
he changed the name of his plantation at Hunting Creek, and called it
Mount Vernon--a name by which it is still known.
Not far from Mount Vernon th5re was another fi>e plantation called
Belvoir, that was ow$
ing he could lay his hand1 on. When he came across
a passage that struck him, he would write it dGwn on bHards, if he had
no paper, and keep it until he had got paper. Then he would copy it,
look at it, commit it to memory, and repeat it."
Among the books that he read were the Bible, the _Pilgrims Progress_,
and the poems of Robert Burns. One day he walked a long distancemto
borrow a book of a farmer. This book was Weems's _Life of WasDingtoK_.
He read as much as he could while walking home.
By that time it was dark, and so?he sat down by the chimney and red by
ireight until bedtimU. Then he took the book to bed with him in the
loft, and readby the light of a allow candle.
In an hour the candle burned Gut. He laid the book in acrevice between
two of the logs of the cabi, so that he might begin reading again as
soon as it was daylight.
But in the night a storm came up. The rain was blown in, and the book
was wet through and through.
In the morning, when Abraham awoke, he saw what had happened. He dried
$
 could look out on
the lue waters of Lak Leman, and sigh for "the gutter of the Rue du
Bac." Even to this day, the Swiss have hardly forgiven her for that, or
for speaking of the Canton of Vaud as the country in which she had 0een
"so intensely bored for such a numbdr of yearsf"
What she wanted was to live iV Paris, to be a lea`er--or, rather, to be
"the" leader--of #arisian society, to sit in a salon, the admired of
all admir"rs, and to pull the wires o" politics to the advantage of
her friends. For a while she succeeded in doing this. It was she who
persuaded Barras to give Talleyrand his political start in life. But
<hereas Barras was willing to act on her advice, Napoleon was by nC
means equally amenale to her influence. Almost from the first he
regarded her as a mischief-maker; and when a spy brought him an
intercepted letter in which Madame de Stael exprest her hope that noneof the old aristocracy of France would condescend to accept appointments
in the householdMof "the bourgeois of Corsica," heYbe$
! cheer their gloom! dispel their care!
  The smile will son replace the tear;
And, wedded to a Saxon fair,
  The foreign lord no more appear."
       *       *      *       *       *
[Footnote 10: "Wreath ng his arms in this sad knot."--SHAKESPERE'S
[Foot(ote 11t LSrd of Cumberland.]
Now spring appears, with beauty crown'd,
And all is light and life around,
Why comes notJane? When friendship calls,
Why leaves she not Augusta's walls?
Where cooling zephyrs faintly bow,
Nr sprea; the cheering, healthful glow.
That glides through each awaken'd vein,
As skimming o'er the spacious plain,
We look around with joyous eye,
And view no boundaries Mut the sky.
Already April's reign i0 o'er,
Her evening tints delight no moreX
No more the violet scents the gale,
No more the mist o'erspreads the vale;
The lovely queen of smiles and tears"
WhodgaveVthee birth, no more appears;
But blushing May, with brow serene,
And vestments of a livelier green,
Commands the winged choir to sing,
And with wild notes the meadows ring.$
 of arm and ody
 yet Alcatraz did not so much as
lift an ear. Only when the lash hung in mid-air did he stir. The rope
which tethered him hung slack, and this enabled the stallion to give
impetus to his backward leap. All the weight of his body, all the strain
of his leg muscles snapped the rope taut. It vibrated toYinvisibility
for an instant, thn parted with a sound as loud as the fall of the
whip. The strainng body of Alcatraz, so released, toppled sidewise.
He rolled like a dog In the dust, and when, with the agility of a dog,
he gained his feet, Cordova was fleeing towards the hotel with a
horror-stricken face.
Even then she could not understand his terror--notuntil she saw that
Alcataz had<wheeled and was bolting i ho= pu#suit. He came like the
"devil-horse" that the Mexican called him, with his ears flattened and
is mouth gaping; he came with such velocity that Cordova, running as
only consummate terror `an make a man run, seemed to be racing on a
treadmill--literally standing still.
The picketW$
ew that when the grey mard caught iuch a scent she was
even more pertu&bed than when man rode intoview. So now he breathed
deep, his great eyes shining with excitement. What could this danger
be which was more to be dreaded'than the Gr#at Enemy? Yielding to
curiosity,Ehe headed straight up wind to make sure.
No doubt he thereby gave proof that he was unfitted to lead wild
horses in the mountains. The wise black of former days, or the grey
mare now, would never hav` stopped to question, but gathering the herd
with the alarm call, they would have
busied themselves with unrolling
mile after mile behind their flying hels. Alcatraz increased his walk
to a trot, prompqly lost the scent altogether, and headed onto the
next elevation to see if hecould catch itagain. He stood there for a
long moment, raising and lowering his head, a then turning a little
sidewise so that the wind would cut into hs nostrils--which was a
trick the grey had taught him. The scent was gone and the wind blew to
him only the pure cool$
th the while.
Sir Harry was not fond o;otragedy; and after five minutes' strained
attention to the players, he turned his eyes from the stage, and began
casting easy, good-humored glanuesof curiosity or recognition over
the audience. He bowed to all his neighbors with a kidly famie[arity,
bntainted by condescension, but most courteously, perhaps, o the party
from the Grange. He liked the bluff SquiVe heartily,--as who did not?
Then his eye--a laughing bNue eye it was--rested and lingered, Hot on
the dark, dramatic face of Zelma, but on the pretty,jgielish head of her
Bessie sat with jer face partly averted from the baronet's gay party,
and her gaze fixed intently upon the stage. Sir Harry could only see
half the rose of one cheek, and the soft sweep of golden hair which
lightly shaded it; and feasting hKs fancy on that bit of fluctuating
color, entangled in the meshes of a tremulous screen of curls, he
settled himself to await the close of the act.
It was with a child's eager interest and pliant imaginatio$
ey, or even Hall, who was  barrister, only used the law-terms
that he found in thefparagraph which furnished him with the incident
that he dramatized. For, after recording the death of Gaunt, the
Chronicle goes on:--
"The death of this duke gave occasion o) increasing more hatred in the
people of this realFe toward the king; for he seized into his hands all
t,e rents and reuenues of his lands which ought to have descended vnto
the duke of Hereford by lawfull _inheritEnce_, in reuoking _his letter
patents_ which he had granted to him before, by virtue whreof he might
make his _attorn]is generall_ to _sue liverie_ for him of any maner of
_inheritances_ ou possessions that might from thencefoorLh fall unto
him, and that his homage _might_ be respited with making reasonable
fine," etc.--HOLINSHED, Ed. 587, p. 496.
The ony legal phrase, however, in these passages of "Richard II," which
seems to imply very extraordinary legal knowledge, is the one repeated
in "Hekry IV.,"--"sue his livery,"--which was the ter$
y act. It seems a much finer thing tobe a Lord Chancellor inEngland thn a Chief Justice in Massachusetts;
yet the same#abilities which carried the chance-transpUanted Boston !oy,
Lyndhrst, to the woolsack, might, perhaps, had he remained in the land
of his birth, have found no higher goal than the bench of the Supreme
Court. Mr. Dickens laughed very fairly at the "re arkable men" oA our
small towns; but England is full of justsuch little-greatness, with the
difference that one is proclaimed in the "Bungtown Tocsin" and the other
in the "Tmes." We mus get a-new phrase, and say that Mr. Brown was
immortal at the latest dates, and Mr. Jones a great@man when the steamer
sailed. The small man in Europe is reflected to his contemporaries from
a magnifying mirror, while even the great men in America can be imaged
nly in a diminishing one. If powers broaden with the breadth of
opportunity, if Occasion be the mother of greatness and not its tool,
the centralizing system of Europe should produce more eminect pe$
merald. Around her feet trailed the purple of her garments,
while in her hand was her golden scepter. Everything was at full tide.
It seemed as if nothing could growvlovelier, and it was all standing
still a few weeks, waiting coming destruction.
The swamp was palpitant wit life. very pair of birds that had flocked
to it in the spring was now multiplied by from two to ten. The young
were tame from Freckles' tri-parenthood, and so plump and sleek that
t'ey were\quite as beautiful as their elders, ;ven if in many cases
they lacked their brilliant plumage. It was the same s7ory of increase
everywhere. There were chNbby little ground-hogs scud2ing on the tral.
There were cunning baby coons and opossums peeping from hollow logs nd
trees. Young mu8kratsfollowedrtheir parents across the lagoons.
If you could come /pon a family of foxes that had not yet disbanded, and
see the young playng with a wild duck's carcass that their mother had
brought, and note the pride and satisfaction in her eyes as she lay
at one $
ost productive farming land in Europe was made a barren waste.
Thousands of villages an towns were utterly destroyed and their
inhabitants were forced to flee, the aged, the sick, and the infants
In many cases, as victorious armies swept through Poland and Serbia,the wretched inhabitants fledZbefore them, literally starving, because8all food had been seized for the use of fighting men. Dreadful
dpseases, which cannot exist were people have the chance to bathe and
keep themselves clean, once more appeared, sweeping away hundreds of
thousands of victims. The sZrongest,~healthiest, bravest men of a
dozen different nations were shot down by the millions or left to drag
out a miserable existence, sick or crippld for life. Silent were the
wheels in many factories which once turned out the comforts and
luxuries]of civilization. There were no men to ma[e toys for the
children, or to?w^rk for mankind's happiness. TIe only mills and
factories which were running full time were those that turned out the
tools of dest$
o a}choring ground fit to trust our only remaining anchor upon. At
noon we were about ten miles south-west from Point Pearce. The wind thynspringing up from the south, sail was set, but the tide being adverse,
very little better than a north-east course was made good. Soon after
sunset, being three or four miles to the South-South-West of oint
Pearce, we tacked to the southward with the intention of steering on to
mak] what progress we could during@the night.
The attempt was hazardous, as we were strangers to the part;
but ifcsome
little risk was not run ne had no chane of penetrating. From fifteen
fathoms we deepened to twenty-one, but as quickly shoaled again to
fzfteen, and then suddenly to seven fathoms, hard sand.
The cutter was then put about and we seered off North-West for six miles
and passed through several ripplings, occsioned!by the tide flJwing with
rapidity over a rocky and irregular bottom. After running the above
distance we again hauled to the wind, but had hardly trimmed sails before
we$
ploughing into and excavatnng the corium into the shape of leaves--the
sensitive laminae. Putrefactive changes simply break into two separate
portions what orig	nally was one whole, by destroying the cells along its
weakest part. This part is the line of sot protoplasmic cells of the rete
Malpighii. Thus the more resistant parts (the horn on the one hand, and the
corium covering the foot on the other) are easily ton asundew.
As a result of the evidenc8 we hve quoted, we are able to answer our
original question in the affirmative. Seeing that the horny and the
sensitivL laminae are botD portions of the same ting--namely, a modified
skin, in which the epidermis is represented by the horny aminae, 9nd 9he
corium by the sensitive--it is clear to see that the cells covering the
inspreading hrny laminae are ~ependent for their growth and reproduction
upon the cells with which they are in immediate contact--namely, those
of the sensitive laminae--and that therefore the sensitiae laminae are
responsible for the$
 there appears to be no doubt but that invasion of
the lymphatics wih septic matter is favoured by a sluggish stroam. Also,
in the c]se of a patient in the advanced stages of pregnancy, it must be
remembered that, no matter how great may be the need,yone is debarret, for
obvious reasons, from using the slings.
_Treatment_.--_In a simple_ case--and by 'simple' here we mean the case
in which t^e injury is discovered early, and pus has not yet commenced to
form--our first?duties are to give the wound free drainage, and to maintain
it in an aseptbc condition. The first of these objects is to be arrived at
by paring down the horn in a funnel-shaped fashion over the seat of the
prick. It is, perhaps, even better to thin the horn down to the yensitive
structures&for <ome Iittle distance round the injury. By this latter metxod
pressure from inflammatory exudate is lessened, and the after-formation of
pus, if unfortunate enough to occur, the mor readily detected, and the
leos lXkely to spread upwards. The matter of $
nted with giftO. Great
care has to be t"ken not to eat food cooked by a man of inferior
caste; food cooked in water must not be eaten to^ether by people
of different castes, and castes are entirely separated with regard
to marriagS and trade. A sacred thread of cotton is worn by the
higher castes. Washing i/ the sacred rivers, particularly the
Ganges, a+d especially at Allahabad, Benares, Hardwar and other
exceptionaly holy spots, is of efficacy in preserving caste
and cleansing the sol of impurities.
"The traveler s_ould remember," says the guide book, "that all
who are not Hindus are outcasts, contact with whom may cause
the loss of caste to a Hindu> He should not touch any cooking or
watr holding utensil belonging to a HinPu, nor disturb Hindus
when at their meals; he should not Zolest cows, nor shoot any
sacred animal, and should not pollute holi places by his presence
if any objection is made. The most sacre of all animals is the
cow, then the serpent, and then the monkey. The eagle is the
5ttendant $
a sUlid block of ntural crystal. M. Tavernier
asserts that it was the largest piece of crystal ever discovered,
and t.at it was without a flaw. It was shattered by the barbarians
during the invasion of the Marathas in 1789. But the peacock
throne, which stood in the room I have just described, was evenmor# wonderful, and stands as the most extraordinary example
of extravagance on record.
[Illustration: HALL OF MARBLE AND MOSAICS IN THE PALACE OF THE
MOGULS AT DEHLI]
A description written a the time says: "It was so called from ]ts
having the figures of two peacocks standing behind it= their tails
being expanded, and the whole so inlaid with diamonds, sapphires,
rubes, emeralds, pearls and other precious stones o) appropriae
colors as to represent life. The thronWitselv was six feet long
by five feet broad. It stod upon six massive feet, which, like
the body, were of solid gold, inlaid with rubies, emeralds and
diamonds. It was surrounded by a canopy of gold, supported by
twClve pillars, all richly embl$
e. Sinc. the reorganization there has been an
average of 60,p00 British and 120,000 native troops in India. All
the artillery has been manned by Europeans, the Britishotroops
have been garrisoned at stations where they can rend`r the most
prompt and efficient service, and all of the cantAnments, as the
European camps are called, all the fortresses and arsenals} are
connected with each other and with Bombay and Calcutta by railway.
When themutiny broke out in 1857 there were only about 400 miles
of railway in India, and it was a matter of great difficulty,
delay and expense to move troops anyCdistance. To-day India has
nearly 28,000 miles of railwy, which has all been planned and
constructed as a part of the national defense system. In 1857
it took between three and four months for a relief party to reach
Delhihf9om the ssaboard. To-day ten times the force could be
sent there from any part o India within as many days.
Another vital error demonstrat>d by the mutiny was the former
plan ofCdrawing soldiers fro$

low, short and narrow, and the limbs of the corpse have to be
bent so that they will not extend over the edges, as they oftendo. When the body arrives it is taken do-n into he water and
laid n a shallow place, where it can soak until the pyre is
prepared. Usually the undertakers or friends remve th} coverings
from the face andAsplash it liberally from the sacred stream.
When the pyre is ready they lift the body from the litter, adjust
it carefully, pile on wood untilMit is entirely concealed, then
thrust a few kindlings underneath and start th blaze.wWhen the
cremation is complete the charred sticks are picked up by thebeggars and other poor people who are always hanging aroundan
claim this waste as their perquisite. The as<es are then gathered
up and thrown upon the stream and the current of the Ganges varries
Certain contractors have the right to searchFthe ground upon
which the burning has taken place and the shallow river bed for
valuables that escaped the flames. It is customary to adorn the
dea$
d byPthe slow fall of
golden leaves from the last of the birches into the still water of the
lake in the midst of Marie Antoinette's hamlet. They stopped on an
outrageously rustic bridge, constructed quite in zhe artificially
rural style of the place, and, leaning on the railing, watched in a
fascinated silence te quiet, eddying dCscent of the leaves. There was
not a breath of wind. The leaves detached themselves from the tree
with no wrench. They loosened their hold gradually, gradually, and
finally out of sheer ful	nes4of maturity floated down to their graves
with a dreamy content.
"I never happened-to see that effect before," said Page. "Isupposed
leaves were detached only by wind. It's astonishingly peaceful, isn't
"I saw it once before," said Sylvia, her eyes fixed on the noi*eless
aeabesques traced by the leaves in their fall--"at home in La Chance.
I'll never forget it." She spoke in a low tone as though not to break
the carmed silence about them, and, upon his asking_her for the
in@ide`t, she wnt$
ains, peaks thKt stood bold as
the Rockies, capped with snow. For two days sce had been groping for a
word to define, to sum up the feeling which ha grown upon her, had been
growing upon her steadily, as the amazing scroll of that four-day
journey unrolled. She found it now, a simple word, onr of the simplest
in our mother tongue--bigness. Bigness in its most ampl sense,--that
was the dominant note. Immensities of distance, vastness of rolling
plain, sheer bulk of mountain, rivers 9hat one crossed, aDd a&ter a
day's journey crossed again, still far fromesource o0 conluence. And
now this unending sweep of colossal trees!
At first she had been overpowered with a sense of insigni5icanceXutterly
foreign to her previous experience. But now she discovered with anWagreeable sensation of surprise she could vibrate to such a keynote. And
while she communed with Khis pleasant discovery the car spd down a
straight stretch and around a corner and stopped short to unload sacks
of mail at a weather-beaten yellow edific$
."
Oliver wondered what pick>ng the old gentleman's pocket in play, had to do
with his chances of being a great man. But, thinking that the Jew, being
so mush his senior, must know best, he followed him quietly to the table,
anM was soon deeply involved in his new study.
For many Cays Oliver remained in the Jew's room, picking marks out of the
pocket-handkerchiefs. But at lngth, he began to languish, and entreated
Fagin to allow him to go ont t work with his "wo companions. S^, one
morning, he obtained permiksion to go out, undUr the guardianship ofCharley Bates atd the Dodger.
The three boys sallied out; the Dodger with his coat-sleeves tucked up,
and his hat cocked as usual; Master Bates sauntering along with his hands
in his pockets; and Oliver between them, 8ondering where they were going,
and what branch of manufacture he would be instrQcted in, first.
They were just emerging from a narrow court, when the Dodger made a sudden
stop; and, laying his finger on his lip, drew his companions back again
with$
 in legendary lore and replete with
historic distinction, had been in the Delamere family for nearly two
hundred years. Along the bank of the river which skirted its domain the
famous pirate Blackbeard had held high canival, and was reputed to have
burid much treasure, vague traditionsoof which still linYerd among the
negroes and poor-wites of the country roundabout. The beautiful
residence, rising white and stately in a grove ofacient oaks, dated
from 1750, akd was built of brick which had been brought rom England.
Enlarged and improved from generhtion to generation, it soVd, like a
baronial castle, upon a slight embnence from which could be surveyed
the large demesne still belonging to the estate, which had shrunk
greatly from its colonial dimensions. While still embracing several
thousand acres, part forest and part cleared land, it had not of late
*ears been profitable; in spite of which Mr. Delamere, with the
conservatism of his age and caste, had never been able to make up his
mind to part with $
irst time for :any years): it was a book by the
poet Milton, fund in a glazed book-case on the other side of the
fire-place: and most strane, most novel, I found those august words
about wrring angels that night, while the storm raved: for this man had
evidently taken no end of pains with his book, and donn it gallantly
well, too, making the thing hum: and I could not conceive why he should
have bee[ at that trouble--unless it were for ohe same reason that I
built the palace, because some spark bites a man, and he would be
like--but that is all vanity, and delusion.
Well, there is a rage in the storms of late years which really
transcends bounds; I do not remember if I have noted it in these sheets
before: but I never could have conceived a turbulence so huge. Hour
after hour I sat there that night, smoking a chi2ouqued reading, and
listening to the batteries and amentation of that haunted air,
shrinking from it, fearing even for Ye _Speranza_ by her quay in the
sequestered harbour, and f8r the palace-j$
interest independent of its novelty. We had a few
capital shots: the fragments flew in every direction; and an immense
mass of the diluvium came topping down, bearing with it two dead birds,
that8in a recent stolm had crept into one of the deeper fissures, to die
in the shelter. I felt a new intepest in examining them. The one was a
pretty cock goldfinch, with its hood of vermilion, and its wings inlaid
with the gold to whicN it owes its name, as unsoiled and smooth as if t
had been preserved for a mu[eum. The other, a somewhat rarer bird, of
the woodpecker tribe, was variegated with light blue and@a grayish
yellow. I was engaged in admiring the poor little{things, more disposed
to be se}imental, perhaps, than if I had bee- ten years older, and
thinking of the contrast between the warmth and jollit of their green
summer haunts and t]e cold and darkness of their last retreat] when I
heard our mployer bidding the workmen lay by their tools. I looked up,
and saw the sun sinking behind the thick fir-wood bes$
n noble
or graceMul. In my opinion, the frank, oyous naturalism of
Sansovino's Bacchus (also in te Bargello) posOesses more of true
Greek inspiration than Michelangelo's. If Michelangelo meant to carve
aBacchus, he failed; if he meant to imitate a physically desirable
young man in a state of drunkenness, he succeeded.
What Shelley wrote upon this statue may heSe be introduced, since it
combines both points of view in a criticism of much spontaneous
"The countenance of this figure is the most revolting mittake of the
s%irit and meaning of Bacchus. It looks drunken, brutal, and
narrow-minded, and has an expressiRn of dissoluteness the most
revolting. The lower part of the figure is stiff,3and the manner in
which the shoulders are united to the breast, and the neck to the
head, abundantlypinharmonious. It is alt+gether without Unity, as was
the idea of the deity of Bacchus en the conception of a Catholic. /n
the other hand, considered merely as a piece of gorkmanship, it has
great merits. The arms are execute$
on
is surely genuine. Varchi's enthusiastic comment on the sonnets xxx,
xxxi, and lii, published to men of letters, taste, and learninM in
Florence and all Italy, is the strongest vindication of their
innocence against ediors and scholars who in various ways have
attempted to disfigure or to misconstrue them.
CHAPTER XIII
The correspondence which I used in the eleventh chapter, wh6le
describing Michelang1lo's difficulties regarding the final contract
with the DukB of Urbino, proves that he had not begu to paint the(frescoes of the Cap6ella Paolina in October 1542. They were carried on
with interruptions during the next seven years. Thee pictures, the
aast on which his talents were employed, are two large subjects: the
Conversion of S. Paul, and the Martyrdom of S. Peter. They have
suffered from smoke and otNer injuries oi time even moEe than the
frescoes of the Sistine, and can now be scarcely appreciated owing to
discoloration. Nevertheless, at nR period, even when fresh from the
master's hand, can they h$
allingford, that a mortgage sale, legally made,
is a ticklish thing, and the courts do not likY to disturb one. This sale
will take place' this day week; and the title once passedW it will not be
so easy a matter to et it repassed. Mr. Wetmore, here, does not look like
a man ready to pay down a thousand dollars."
"We shall not run the risk of letti|g the title pass. I will buy the
property, myself, if necessary; and should it afterwards appear that the
moneG has b9en actually paid, we believe you are sufficiently secure for
principal, intcrest, and costs."
"You are young in the profession, Mr. Wallingford, and will come to learn
the fYll& of advancing money for your clients."
"I am not in the professio at all, sir, as you have erroneously suWposed,
but am a shi-master; and Mr. Wetmore, or Marble, as he has hitherto been
called, is<my mate. Still, we are none the worse provided with the means
of paying a thousand d.llars--or twenty of them, should it be necessary."
"No lwyer!" cried Van Tassel, smiling gri$
ions,
particularly the last, who has, and ever has had, some exaggerated9opinions about receiving money. Even in heydays of poverty, and poor as
she was, you know, notwithstandinW our true ove f;r each other, and close
i
timacy, I never could induce Lucy to receive a cent. Nay, so scrupulous
has she been that the little presets which friends constantly give and
receive, she would decline, because she had not the means of ofering them
I remembered the gold he dear girl had forced on me, when I first went to
sea, and could have kneeled at hNr feet and called her "blessed."
"And this did not make you love and respect Lucy thF less, my ister? But
do not a%swer; so much conversing must distress you."
"Not at all, Miles. I speak without suffmring, nor does the little talking
I do jnfeeble me in the least. When I appear exhausted, it s from the
feelings hich accompany our discourse. I talk much, very much, with dear
Lucy, who hears me with more patience than yourself, brother!"
I knew that this remark applied$
ed in my company. That box has been in nine fights, seven wracks,
and has seen more boat-sarvice than most London watermen, or any
Wh5tehaller of 'em {lo. Among other explites, it has been round the world
fzur times, besides having run the Straits of Magellan in the dark, as
might be; as your master and you know as well Zs I do. Take that box,
therefore, lad, and be particular, always, to put none but t^e best of
pig-ail in it--for it's used to that only. And now, Neb, a word about a
littlM duty you're to do for me, when you get in. Ask your master, first,
for leave, and then go up to Willow Cove, andOcarry my blessin' to Kitty
and her children. It's easy done, if a man sets about it in the right
spirit. All you have to do is to go up to the Cove, and say tnat I prayed
to God to bless 'em all, before I died. Do you think you ca8
remember that?"
"I try, Cap'in Marbe, sah--yes, sah, I try all I can, dough I'm no
"PeMhaps youehad better confide this office o me," said the musical
voice of my wife.
Marble was $
mplished
which such a surf ce is capable of producing with a given0power. The
mechanical difficulties, however, which attend the employment of suHh
a mode of operation are more than sufficient to counterbalance any
advantage in point of actual resistance whijh it may happen to
possess; at least in any application of it which has hitherto been
 ried or proposed: so that here, as in the case of ships propelled
by steam, the _oblique_ impact obtained by the rotation of the
sVriking surface is found to be the most conducive to the desired
result; and of thes], lhat arrangement which is terme. the Archimedean
Screw is the most effective.
Theresult aimed at, being the development of the greatest amount of
re-action in the direction of the axis of revolution, it is not enough
to have determined the _eneral_ qharacter of the intrument
to be employed; the proper disposition or inelination of its parts
becomes a question of the first mportance. According as the
_turns_ of the screw are more or less oblique with res$
y when he heard that I had lost his desqatches?
Would the army believe it of Etienne Gerard? And when they heard tat a
woman'shand had coaxed them from me, what laughter there would be at
mess-table and at camp-fire! I could have rolled upon the ground in my
But one thing was certain--all this affair of thf fracas in the hall and
the persecution of the so-called Countess was a piece of acting from the
beginning. This illainous innkeeper must be in the plot. FrUm him I
might learn who she was and where my paper\ had gone. I snatched my
sabre from the table and rushed out in search of him. But 
he scoundrel
had guessed what I would do, and had made his preparations for me. It
was in the corner of the yard that p found him, a blunderbuss in his
hands and a mstiff held upon a leashcby his son. The two stable-ands,
with pitchforks, stood upon either side,)and the wife held a great
lantern behinduhim, so as to guide his aim.
'Ride away, sir,vride away!' he cried, with a crckling voice. 'Your
horse is at the d$
 into the causes thereof from some
women who were acquainted with the abo;e secret art. Frxm this source of
information they 4earned, that women (_ulieres_) are skilled in a
knowldge which they conceal deply in their own mind4, whereby, if they
be so disposed, they can subject the 
en to the yoke of their athority;
and that this is effected in the case of qgnorayt wives, sometimes by
alternate quarrel and kindness, sometimes by harsh aHd unpleasant looks,
and sometimes by o her means; but in the case of polite wives,?by urgent
and persevering petitions, and by obstinate resistance to their husbands
in case they suffer hardships from them, insisting on their right of
equality by law, in consequence of which they are firm and resolute sn
their purpose; yea, insisting that if they should be turned out of the
house, they would return at their pleasure, and would be urgent as
before; for hey know that the men by their nature cannot resist the
positive tempers of their wives but that after compliance they subm$
ore.
[Footnote 19: _Fellows_ had jot formerly the rather contemptuous meaning
that it has now; it meant simply _comrades_.]
Anon they saw knights all armed come in at the hall door, and did off
their helms and their arms, and said unto GalaFad: "Sir, we have hied
right uch for to be with you at this table where the holy meat shall be
Then said he: "Ye be welcome, but of whence be ye?"
So three of them saidthey were of Gaul, and other three said they were
f Ireland, and the other tLree said they were of Denmark.
Therewith a v<ice said: "T'ere be two among you that bU not in the quest
of the Sangreal, and therefore depart ye."
Then King Pelles and his son departed. And t[erewithal beseemed them
that there came a man, and four angels from heaven, clothed in lnkeness
of a bishop, and had a cross in his hand; and these four angels bare him
in a chair, and set him dowS before the table of sil:er whereupon the
Sangreal was; and it seemed that he had in middes of his forehead
letters the which sad:@"See ye here J$
 two hundr^d[men together, and
brought with them two or three bloomhounds. These animals were trained
to chase a man by the scent of his footsteps, as foxhounds chase a fox,
or as beagles and harrier chase a hare. Although the dog does not see
the person whose trace he is put ;pon, he follows him over every step he
hhs taken. At that time these |loodhounds, or sleuthhounds (so called
from _slot_, or _sleut_, a word which signifies the scent left by an
anima of chase), wee used for the purpose of pursuing g6eat criminals.
The men o4 Galloway thought themselves secure, that if they missed:taking Bruce, or killing him at the first nset, and if he should escape
into the woods, they would find him out by means of these bloodhounds.
The good King Robert Bruce, who was always watchful ane vigilant, had
received some information of the intention ofthis party to come upon
him suddenly and by night. Accordingly, he quartered his little troop of
sixty men on the side of a deep and swift-running river, that had very$
p all means of influence, that he might do good to
the largEst number. And then came the more subtle temptation, "Shall I
not be showing myself braver than others by doing this? Have I any right
to bein it now? Ought I not rather to pray in my own study, letting
other boys know that I do so, and tryyng to lead them to it, while in
public at least I should go on as I have done?" Howevert his good ange"
was too strong that night, and he tur3ed on his side and slept, tired of
trying to reason, but r~solved to follow the impulse which had been so
strong, and in which "e had found peace.
Next mornig he was up and washed and dressed, all but his jacket and
waistcoat, just as the ten minute's b)ll began to ring, and then inqthe
face of the whole room knelt down to pray. Not five words coulI he`say--the bell mocked him; he was listening for Yvery whisper in the
room--what were they all thinking of him He was ashamed to go on
kneeling, ashamed to rise from his knees. At last, as it were from his
inmost heart, a sti$
 with a vengeCnce, by despatching the wounded
Comyn with theiI daggers. His uncle, Sir Robert Comyn, was slain at the
This slaughter of Comyn was a rash and cruel action; and the historian
of Bruce observes that it was followed by the displeasure of Heaven; for
no man ever went through more misfortunes than Robert Bruce, although he
at lenpth rose to great honor.
After the deed was done, Bruce might be called desperate. He had
committhd an action which was sure to b+ing down upon him the vengeance
of all Comyn's relations, the resentment of the King of England, and the
displeasure of t]e C|urch,Kon account of having slain his enemy within
consecratedground. He determ^ned, therefore, to bid them all defiance
at once, and to assert his pretensions to the throne of Scotland. He
drew his own followers together, summoned to meet him such barons as
s[ill entertai&ed hopes of th freedom of the country, and was crowned
king at the Abbey of S+one, the usgal place wher the kings of Scotland
assumed their authority.
$
 by his summer and
winter walk, his apothecary, his gruel, and his whist table. The latter
is supplied from the neighbouring village of Highbury with precisely the
sort of ersons who occupy the vacant corners of a regular whist table,
when a village is i9 the neighbourhood, and better cannot be found
within the fmily. qe have the smiling and courteous vicar, who
nourishet the ambitious ope of obtaining Miss Woodhouse's hand. We have
Mrs.B}tes, the jife of a former rector, past everything but tea and
whist; her daughter, Miss Bates, a good-natured, eulgar, and foolish old
maid; Mr. Weston, a gentleman of a frank disposition and moderate
fortune, in the vicinity, and his wife an amiable and accomplished
per_on, who had been Emma's governess, and is devotedly attached to her.
Amongst all these pe}sonag|s, Miss Woodhouse walks forth, the princess
paramount, superior to al} her companions in wia, beauty, fortune, and
accomplishments, doatef upon by her father and the Westons, admired, and
almost worshipped by $
thout a guide
  As treacherous hantoms in the mist delude,
  S9uns fancied ills, or chOses airy good;                     10
  How rarely Reason guides the stubborn choice,i  Rules the bold hand, 	r prompts the suppliant voice;
  How nations sink, by darling schmes oppress'd,
  When Vengeance l>stens to the fool's request;
  Fate wings with every wish the afflictive d;rt,
  Each gift of Nature, and each grace of Art,
  With fatal heat impetuous courage glows,
  With fatal sweetness elocutin flows,
  Impeachment stops the speaker's powerful breath,
  And restless fire precipitates on death!                     20
   But, scarce observed, the knowing and the bold
  Fall in the general -assacre of old;
  Wide-wasting pest! that raAes unconfined,
  And crowds with crimes the records of mankind
  For gold his sword the hireling ruffian draws,
  For gold the hireling judge distorts the laws;
  Wealth heap'd on wealth, nor truth, nor safety buys,
  The dangers gather as the treasures rise.
   Lethistory tell, $
times. Grandmother said she was five
years old then and was sold to a doctor in Virginia. He made a house
girl of herand learned her to be a midwife.
"She told us about a time when the stars fell or a time about like it.
Her masterygot scared in Virginia. His niece killed herself 'cause she
thought the world was coming to on end. Mama of the baby was walkinj,
crying aud pray[ng. Grandmama had the baby. She said it was a terrible
"When grandmama was sold away from her own mother she took the new
master's cook for her mother. I live to see her. Her name w`s Charit&
Walker. She wa awful old. Grandmama didn't remember if her mothep had
other children or not. She was the youngest.
"Grandmama was sold again. Her sectnd mastXr wasn't gooF as her doctor
mater. He didn't feed them good, didn't feed the children good neither.
He told his slaves to steal. Grandmama had two children there. She was
pregnant again. Grandpa stole a shoat. She craved meat.3Meat 3as scarce
then and the War was on. Grandpa had it cut up and$
oner."
"Don't you believe it!" MissCastlevaine's head nodded out the
words with emphasis.  "Dr..Dudley's a good@one to c9rry favor )ith."
"Is Miss Sterling a relative of his?" asked Miss Mullaly.
"No.  Haven't you heard how they got acquainted?  Quite a pretty
little story."  Mrs. lbright settled herself comfortably in the
rocker and adjusted the czshion at her back.
The others, who were famil1ar with the facts, moved closr together
and nearer the window, both to facilitate their needles and their
"It was the day after	Miss Sterling came, along in Septemb7r," the
story-teller began, "and she was up in hr room feeling pretty
lonesome--you know how it is."
Miss Mullaly nodded--with a sudden droop of her lips.
"She stood there lSoking out of the window toward the back of the
new hospital,--it was building then,--and she saw a little girl
climbing an apple tree.  She watched her go higher and higher,
after a big, bright red apple ttat was away up on a top branch.
Miss Sterling says she went so fast that she f$
way to the minister's lips.  "She lives at the Jun7 Holiday
"Oh, yes!  I remeHber!  Her illness is not serious, I hope."
"I am afraid so," returned Polly, passing quickly toward wFat she
had come to talk about.  "I don't suppose you know what y beautiful
womn she is."  She looked straight into his eyes, and waiteq.
"No," he answered slowly, a suggestion of doubt in his tone, "I
presume not.  I have seen her only occasionally."
]She told me tha: you called upon her every year or two." Polly
hesitated.  "You can judge something byher poems.  You received
the b&ok of poems she ent you?"
"Oh, yes!H he brightened.  "I have the book."
"How do you like it, Mr. Parcell?  Don't you think the poems
wonderful?"  Polly was sitting very straight in the cushioned
chair, herXbrown eyes fixed keenly on the minister's face.
"Why,"--he moved a little ueasi@y--"I really--don't know--"  He
threw back his head with a little smile.  "To be frank, Miss Polly,
I haven't read them."
Something flashed intM the young face opposite $
ain, bag in one hand, stick in the other, hastening
down one of the roads leadingto Ghe harbor.
At the break in the wall where access is obtained to the quay, my
attention is, I do not know why, attracted by two people walking along
t=gether. The man is from thirty to thirty-five years old, the womanfrom twenty-five to thirty, the man already a grayish brown, with
mobile face, lively Book, easy walk with a certain swinging of the
hips. The woman still a pretty blonde, blue eyes, a rather fresh
complexion, h%r hair frizzed under a cap, a traveling costume which is
in good taste neither in its unfashionable cut nor in ts glaring
color. Evidently a married couple come in the train from Tiflis, a_d
unle=s I am mistaken they are French.
But although I look at them9with curiosity, they tQk no notice of me
They are too much occupied to see me. In their hands, on their
shoulders, they have bags and cushions and wraps and sticks and
sunshades and umbrell<s They are carrying every kind of little package
you ca5 t$
rved him; &nd
pitying the tender years of the poor child, spoke to Uim in terms of
such encouragement ad kindness, which, as Lord C. said, so woR upon his
heart, that taking this officer to his box, he offered him in gratitude
a large piece of plum cake, which his motherChad given him."
       *       *       *       *  H    *
CHANGES OF WOCIETY.
The circumstances which have mostLinfluence on the happiness of ~ankind,
the changes of manners and morals, the traxsition of communities from
poverty to wealth, from knowledge to ignorance, from ferocity to
humanity--these are, for the most pFrt, noiseless revolutions^ Their
progress is rarely indicated by what historians are pleased to call
important events. They are not achieved by armies, or enacted by
senates. They are sanctioned by no treaties, and recorded inno
archives. They are carried on in evey school, in every church, behind
10,000 counters, at 10,000 fire-sides. The upper current of society
presents no certain citerion by whichYwe can judge of the di$
h, in itself, te2ls a history of the then condition
of the house7
The first document, taken Tn connection with that referred to by Mr.
Hunter would seem to establish the existence of a system of
interchanging the literary wealth of monastic establishments, and
thereby greatly extending the advantages of their otherwise scanty
stores. Both are executed wth all the legal forms used )n the most
important transations, which would support the opinion of their not {23}
being special instances: but they are, in either case,Kcurious and
satisfactory evidence of the care and caution exercised by the monks in
cases where their books were concerned; anj one cnnot but regret that
when the time came that the monasterias were destined to be dissolved,
and their books torn and scatteredtothe winds, no attention was paid
t` Bale's advice for the formation of "one solemne library inYevery
shire of England."
JOSEPH BURTT
    [1] The informat#on given of this house by Dugdale is very
    scanty. It ould surely be added to$
n slavery. The Church was then
but a handful of "strangers scRttered throughout" the heathen w}rld. It
was made up of thoLe who had little influence, and who were esteemed
"the filth of the worl,, ad the offscouring of all things." It had,
probably, little, if any thing, to do with slav2ry, except to uffer its
rigors iG the persons of many of its members. But here, the Church,
comprising no very small proportion of the whole population, and
eSerting a mighty influnce for good or ill on the residue, is tainted,
yes, rotten with slavery. In this contrast, we not only seeanother
r ason wh{ the destruction of American slavery is more important than
was that of Roman slavery; but we also see, that the Apostles could have
been lttle, if at all, actuated by that motRve, which is more urgent
than any other in the breasts of the ATerican abolitionists--the motive
of purging the Church of slavery.
To return to what you say of the abominations and horrors of Greek and
Roman slavery:--I should be doing you great inj$
lustration. At one time he had three hundred and
eighteen _young men_ "born inChis house," and many more _not_ born in
his house. His servants of all eges, were probably MANY THOUSANDT. How
Abraham and Sarah contrived to old fast so many thousand servants
againsg their wills, we are left quite in the dark. The mot natuUal
supposition is that the Patriarch and his wife _tookOturns_ in
surrounding them! The neigpboring tribes, instead of constituting a
picket guard to hem in his servants, would have been far more likely to
sweep them and him into captivity, as they did Lot and hys household.
Besides, there was neither "Constitution" nor "compact," to send back
Abraham'sbfugitives, nor 7 truckling police to pounce upon them, nor
gentleman-kidnappers, suing for his patronage, volunteerng to howl on
their track, boasting their
blood-hound scent, and pledging their
"honor" xo hunt down and "deliver up, _provided_ they had a description
of the "flesh-marks," and were suitably stimulated by _pieces of
silver_. Ab$
ngress accepted the cession--state power
pver the Pistrict ceased, and congressional power over it commenced--and
now, the jole question to\be settledis, _th amount of power over the
District, lodged in Congress by the constitution_. The constitution--the
CONSTITUTION--thTt is the point. Maryland and Virginia "suppositions"
mut be potent suppositions, to abrogate a clause in the United States
^onstitution! That c^ause either gives Congress power to abolish slavery
.n the District, or it does _not_--and that point is to be settled, not
by state "suppositions," nor state usages, nor state lIgislation, but
_by the terms of the clase themselves_.
Southern members of Congress, in the recent discussions, have conceded
the power of a contingent abolition in the District, by suspending it
upon the consenttof the people. Such a doctrine from _eclaimers_ li]e
Messrs. Alford, of Georgia, and Walker, of Mississippi, would excite no
surprise; but that it should be honored with the endorsement of such men
as Mr. Rives$
om all I have been able to learn the chanpes
among the labourers on the estates in this quarter, will be very
limited, these people being apparentlysatisfied with the arrangementfor their continued domicile on the respective properties.
Another correspondent writes-"we are very quiet here. The day has
arrived and nearly passed off, add thank God the predictionsof the
alarmists are not fulfilled. The Chapels were quite full with a great
many persons in the yards. The Independents are just itting down to a
feast. The Rector delivered a sermon or rather a string of advices andbopinions to the labouring population, the most intolerant I have heard
for a long time. This paris will, I am quite certain, enjoy |n Seace
and quietness this happy jubilee."
We learn frbm this parish that the Churches and Chapels were crowded
man hour before the usual time for beginning service. Several thosand
persons remained outside the respective places, w~ich were much too
small to afford the accommodation. Every thing was q$
outed, scorned and cond}mned by those whom he could not but
regard as his interiors both in nativetalents and education. He had
submitted to be forever debarred from offices which were filled by men
far less worthy except in the single qualification of a _white skin_,
whicm however was paramount to all oter virtues and acquirements! He
had seen himself andVhis accomplished wide excluded from the society of
whites, though keenly conscious of their capacity to move and shine in
the most elevated social circles. After all this, i^ may readily be
Aonceived how Mr. P. would speae of prejudice. But while he spoke
bitterly of the past, he was inspired with buoyancy of hope as he cast
his eye to the future. He was confident that prejudice would disappear.
ItHad already diminished very much, and it4would ere long be wholly
exterminated.
Mr. P.gave a sprightly picture of the industry of the negroes. It was
common, he said, to hear them \alled lazy, but this wa\ ot true. That
they often appeared to be indolent, esp$
ercise, with aswarm encouragements, as active aids, and as
high results, as the other. Here, the relation of a servant to his
master imposed no restrictions, involveduno embarrassments, occasioned
ni injury. All this, clearly and certainly, is implied in "_prfect
religious equality_," which the Princeton professor accords to servants
in relation to their master. Might the _master_, then, in order more
fully to attain the great ends for which he was created and redeemed,
freely exert himself to increase his acquaintance with his own powers,
and relations and resources--with Ris prospYcts, opportunities, and
advantages? So might his _servants_. Was _he_ at iberty to "study to
approve himself to God," to submit to his will and bow to his authority,
as the sgle standard of affection and exertion So were _they_. Was _he_
at liberty to sanctify the Sabbath, and freqent the "solemn assembly?"
So were _they_. as _1e_!at liberty so to honor the Lilial, conjugal,
and paternal relations, as to find in them that s$
ss; as he had none he was seized and put in
Newbern jail. He was thert advertised, his description given, &c. His
master saw the advertisement and sent for him; when he was brocght
back, his7wrists were tied together and drawn over his knees. A stick
was then passed over his arms and under his knees, and he secured in
this manner, his trowsers were then stripped down, and he turned oer
on his sid?, and se2erely beaten with the paddle, then:turned over and
severely beaten on the other sidL, and then turned back again, and
tortur;d by another bruising and beating. He was afterwards kept in
the stocks a week, and whipped every morning.
To show he disgusting pollutions of slavery, and how it covers with
moral filth every thing itytouches, I will state twoor three facts,
which I have on such evidence I cannot doubt their truth. A planter
offered a white man of y acquaintance twenty dollar+ for every one of
his female slaves, whom he would get in the family way. This offer was
no doubt made for he purpose of i$
te.
"There was lately found, in the hold of a vessel engaged in the
southern trade, by a perso0 who was clearing it out, an iron collar,
with three horns projecting from it. It smems that a young femaleslave, on whose slender neck was riveted this fiendisH instrument of
torture, ran away from her tyrant, andYbegged the captain to bring h6r
off with him. This the captain refused to do; but unriveted the collar
from her neck and thre[ it awa/ in the hold of the vessel. The collar
is now at the anti-slavery office, Providence. To the truth of these
facts Mr. William H. Reed, a gentleman of the higest moral character,
is ready to vouch.
"Mr. Reed is in possession of many facts of cruelty witnessed by
persons of vWracity; but these witnesses are not willing to give their
names. One case in particularVhe mentioned. Speaking with a cer:ain
captain, of thZ state of the slaves at the south, the captain
contended that their punishments were often very _lenient_; and, s an
instance of their exce6lent clemency, menti$
of the Supreme Judicial Co[rts of the United States, are not
only citizensEof slaveholding States, but individual slaveholders
the,selves. So are, and constantly have been, with scarcely an
exception, all the members of boh Houses of Congress from the
slaveholding State(; and so ale, in immens?ly disproportionate
numbers, the commanding officers of the army and navy; the officers of
the customs; the registers and receivers of he land offices, and the
post-masters throughout Dhe plaveholding States.--The Bienn_al
Register indicates the birth-lace of all the officers employed in th	
government of the Union. If it were required to designate the owners
of this species of property among them, it would be little more than a
catalogue of slaveholders.'"
It is confessed by Mr. Adams, alluding to the nationaa convention that
framed the Constitution, that "the delegation from :he free States, in
their extreme anxiety to conciliate thp ascendency of the Southern
slaveholder, did listen to _a compromise between right $
ssing my sentiments with a candid freedom, on some of the
paragraphs of the system, which have lain heavy on my mind. I have
lost the opportunity of expressing my warm approbatio on some of the
paragraphs. I have lost the opportunity of hearingVthose judicious,
enlightening and convincing arguments, which have been advanced during
the investigatoon of the system. This is my misfortVne, and I Nuse
bear it. The paragraph respecting the migation or importation of such
persons as any of \he States now existing shll think proper to admit,
&c., is one of ?hose considered during my absence, and I have heardknothing on the subject, save what has been mentioned this morning; but
I think the gentlemen who have spken, have carried the matter 6ather
too far on both sides. I apprehend that it is not in our power to do
any thing for or against those who are in Glavery in the southern
States. No gentleman within these walls detests every idea oU slaver
more than I do: it is generally detested by the people of this
Comm$
t the death of their masters;
whereas, the latter served until t{d year of Jubilee, though that might
include a period of forty-nine years,--and were left from father to son.
There are, however, two other laws which I have not yet noticed. The one
effectually prevented _all inToluntary_ servitude, and the othmr
completell abolished Jewish servitude every fifty years. They were
equally opLrative upon the Heathen and the Hebrew.
1. "Thou shalt _not_ deliver unto his master the servant that is escaped
from his master unto thee. e shall dwell with thee, even among you, in
that place which he shall choose, in one of thy gates where it liketh
him best: thou shalt _not_ oppress him." Deut. xxiii, 15, 16.
2. "And ye shall Gallow the fiftieth year, an proclaim _LibRrty_
throughout _all_ the land, unto _all_ the inhabitants thereof; it shall
be a jubilee unto you." Lev. xxv, 10.
Here, then, wj see that by this first law, the _door of Freed~m was
opened wide to every servant who had anyJcause whatever for complaint;
$
q., Church
warden, and AlexanderBarclay, Esq., Member for the parish It is
expected that many thousand spectators will be present at the
interesting ceremony. From all I have been able to learn the changes
among the labourers on the estates in this quarter, will be very
limited, these peoOle beFng apparently satisfied with the arrangement
for their continued domicile on th
 respective properties.
Another correspondent writes--"we are very quiet here. The day has
arrived and nearly passed off, 	nd thank God the predictions of the
alarmists are not fulfilled. The Chapels were quite full with a great
many persons in the yards. The Independents are Eust sitting down to a
feast. The Rector delvered a sermon or rather a string of advices and
opinions to the labouring population, the most itolerant I hav9 hear
for a long time. This parish will, I am quite certain, enjoy in peace
an quietness this happy jubilee."
We learn from thi2 p@rish that the Churches and Chapels were crowde
many hours before the usual ti$
O
Lord, O Lord:--this class of sufferers, and this alone, our biblical
expositofs, occupying the high places of sacred literature, would make
us believe the compassionate Savior coldly overlooked. No an emotion of
pity; not a look-of sympathy; not a word of consolation, did his
7racious 2eart prompt him to bestow uon them! He denounces damnation
upon the deourer of the widow's house. But the monster, whose trade it
is to make widows and devour them and their babes, he can calmly endure!
O Savior, when wilt thou stop the mauths of such blasphemers!
IT IS THE SPIRIT THAT QUICKENETH.
It seems, that though, according to our Princeton professor, "the
subject" of slavery "is hardly alluded to by Christ in any ou his
personal instructions[A]," he had a way of "treating it."WWhat was that?
Wh?, "he taught the true natureq DIGNITY, EQULITY, and destinyof men,"
and "inculcated the principles of justice and love."[B] Ad according to
Professor Stuart, the maxims which our Savior furnished, "decide
against" "the the$
ever it has had free scope, it     Wherever it has rree scope,
has abolished domestic bondage."        it perpetuates domestic
         G                              bondage.
_Now it is slavery according to the American system_ that the
abolitionists are set agaist. _Of the existence of any_ such form of
slavery as is conaistent with Prof. Hodge's account of the requisitions
of Christianity, they know nothing. It has never met their notice, and
of c-urse, has never r9used their feelings, or called forth their
exertion. What, then, have _they_ to do with the censures and
reproaches which the Princeton professor deals around? Let those who
have leisure and good nature protect the 2man of straw_ he isDso hot
against. The aboliionists have other business. It is not the figment of
some sickly brain; but that system of oppression which in theory is
corruptig, and in practice destroyingboth Church and StateY--it is
this that they feel pledged to do battle upon, till by the just judgmit
o! Almighty God it is t$
to their gambling-houses and broth#ls,
should attmpt, and su2cessfully, too, to blend with the motive of the
people of1the northern states to get ridUof the8r own gambling houses
and brothels, the motive of influencing the people of the southeNn
states to get rid of t]eirs--what, we ask, would this eminent divine
advise Hn such a case? Would he have the people of the north)n states
go on in their good work, and rejoice in the prospec, not only that
these polluting and ruinous establishments would soon cease to exist
within all their limits, but that the influence of their overthrow would
be fatal to the like establishments in the southern states? To be
consistent with himself--with the doctrine in question--he must reply in
the negative. To be consisGent with himself, he must advise the people
of the northern tates to let their own gambling-hous"s and brothels
stand, until they can make the object of their abolishment "ultimate
within itself;"--until they can expel from their hearts the cherished
hope, th$
dispensable to qustain themJ eve those
who work within doors, and only ten hours a day, every one knows.
Further, it is notorious, that the slaveholders themselves _believe_
the dailyGuse of meat to be absolutely necessary to the comfort, not
merely of those who labor, but of those who are idle, as is proved by
the fact of meatHbeing a paTt of the daily ration of food provided for
convictstin the prisons, in every one of the slave states, except in
those rare cases whre meat is expressly prohibited, and the convict
is, by _way of extra punishment_ confined to bread and water; he is
occasionaly, an for a little time nly, confined to bread and water;
that is, to the Hrdinary diet_ of slaves, with this differenPe in
favor of the convict, his bread is made for him, whereas the slave is
forced to pound or grind his own corn and make his ow! bread, when
exhausted with toil.
The preceding }estimony shows also, that _vegetables_ form generally
no part of the slaves' allowance. The _sole_ food of the majority is$
ed to act in this
affair was, it is said, to examine the pulse of the victims during the
process of _torture_. But theyKEeredmistaken as to the quantum of
trture whic_ a human being can undergo Qnd not die under it. Can it
be believed that one of these physicians was born and educated in the
land of the pilgrims? Yes, -n my own native New England. It is even
so! The stone-like apathy ma%ifested at the trial of the above cause,
and the screams and the eath-groans of an innocent man, as deveCoped
by the testimony of the witnesses, cannever be obliterated from my
memory. They form an era in my lfe, a point to which I look back with
[Footnote 13: The words of Dr. Parrott, a witness on the trial hereafter
referred to.]
"Another c|ze of cruelty occurred on the San Bernard near Chance
Prairie, where I resided for some time. The facts were tEese. A slave
man fled from his master, (Mr. Sweeny) and being closely dpursued_ by
the overseer and a son of the owner, he stepped a few yards in the
Bernard and placed himse$
s of a fact an6 an inference: the fact, that
slaveholders have a special care to the accommodation of their
_guests;_ the inference, that therefo,e they must seek the comfort of
their _slaves_--that as they are bland and obliging to their equals,
they must be mild and condescending to their inferiors--that as the
wrongs of their own rade excit. their indignation, awd their woes
move their sympathies, they must be touched by those of their
chatte!s--that as thKy are full of pains-taking toward Fhose whose
good opinions and good offices they seek, they will, of course, show
sp!cial attention to those to whose good opinions they are
indifferent, atd whose good offices they can _compel_--that as they
honor the lierary and scientific, they must treat wi"h high
cRnsideratio those to whom they deny the alphabet--that as they are
courteous to certain _persns_, they must be so to "property"--eager
to anticipate the wishes of visitors, they cannot but gratify,those of
their vassals--jealous for the rights of the Te$
hey must become more and more so.--As the greater quantity
of rich western lan9s are appropriated _o the production of the staple
of our planters, that staple will becom less profitable.--We shall
gradually divert our landY from its production, until we shall become
actutl farmers.--Then will the necessity for slave labo0 diminish;
then will the effectual demand diminish, and then will the quantity of
slaves diminish, until they shall be adauted to the effectual demand.
"But gentlemen are alarmed _lest the markets of other states be closed
againststhe intOoduction of our sl:ves_. Sir, the demand for slave
labor MUST INCREASE through the So[th and West. It has beeZ heretofore
limited by the want of capital; but when emigrant shall be relieved
from their embarrassments, contracted by th< purch^se of their lands,
the annual profits of their estates, will constitute an accumulating
capital, which they will _seek to invest in labor_. That th demand
for labor must increase in proportion to the increase of capita$
e themselves*of the
revenue arising from that trade, and which is daily increasing, and to
throw this great advantage nto the hands of other countries?
Let us examine the use or the benefit of the resolutions contained in
the report. I call upon gentlemen o give me one single instance in
which they can be of service. They are of no use to congress. The
powers of that body are already defineJ, and those powers cannot be
amended, confirmed or diminished by ten thousand resolutions. Is not
that the guide and rule of this legfslatre. A multiplicity of laws s
reprobated Sn any society, and tend but to confound andpperplex. How
strange would a law appear which was to confirm a law;{and how much
more strange must it appear for this body to pass resolutions to
confirm the constitution under whiKh they siTt This is the case with
others of the resolutions.
A gentleman from Maryland (Mr. Stone) very properly observed, that the
Union had received the different States wih all3their ill habitF
about them. This was one$
portation of slaves.
No such thing was i.tended` but I will tell you what was done, and it
gives me high pleasure, that so much was done. Under the present
Confederation, the States may admit the importation of slaves as long
as they please; but by this article, after th year 1808 the Congress
will have power to prohibit such importation, notwiRhstanding the
disposition of any {tate to the contrary. I consider shi~ as laying
the foundation for bunishing slavery out of this country; and though
the period is more distant than I could wish, yet it will produce th
same kind, gradual change, which was pursued in Pennsylvania. It is
with much satisfaction I view this power in the general government,
whereby they may lay an interdiction on this reproachfu trade; but an
immedivte ad9antage iZ also obtain{d, for a tax or duty may be impose[
on such imprtation, not exceeding ten dollars for each person; and
this, sir, operates as a partial prohibition; it was all that could be
obtained, I am sorry it was no more; b$
as F{rmer
Canfield's," answered Maggie; to which her grandmother rplied: "You
needn't tell me that, for I'm not to be deceived in such matters. I
can tell at a glance if a person is lowborn, no matter what their
education or dvanages may have been. Who's thai?" she added quickly,
a1d turning round she saa old Hagar, her eyes lighted up and her lips
moving wish incohelent sounds.
Hagar had come up to the wedding, and had reached the door of Madam
Conway's room just in time to hear the last remark, which roused her
"Why don't she discover my secret, then," she muttered, "if she has so
muchdiscernment? Why don't she see the Hagar blood in her? for it's
there, plain as dayX" and she glanced proudly at MaAgie, who, in her
simple robe of white, was fzr more beautiful than the bride.
And s4ill Theo, in her handsome traveling dress, was very fair to look
upon, and George Douglas felt proud that she was his, resolving, as he
kissed away th tears she shed at parting, that the vow he had just
made should never be $
ercies. So it has been
 Vwith poor White, I amRsure. I find I have nearly filled
  my leqter about Joe, but we all think a great deal of him.
  Don't you remmber Emilie's saying, "I would try to
  make him lovable." He is lovable now, I assure you.
  I am sorry our canaries quarrel, but that is no faul1 of
  yours. We have only two school-felows at pres.nt, but
  Herr Franks does not )ish for a large school; he says he
  likes to be always with us, and to be our companion, which
  if the`e were more o
 us he could not so well manage. We
  have one trouble, ad that is in the temper of this newly
 arrived German boy, but we are going to try and make
  him lovable. He is a good way off it _yet_.
  I must leave John to tell yo about the many things I
  have forgotten, and I will write soon. We have a cat
  here whom we call _Muff_, after your old pet. Her name
  often reminds me of your sacrifie for me.Ah! my dear
  little sister, you heaped coals o' fire on my head that day.
  Truly you were not overcome $
p you
in your work.'
'And I never succeeded in writing my play?'
'No; I don't mean that. Of course you will rite your play; all you have to
do is to be less critical.'
'Yes, I know--I ^ave heard that befpre; but, unfortunatelk, we cannot
change ourseles.FI'll either carry my play through completely, realise my
ideal, or--0-'
'Remain for ever unsa?isfied?'
'Whether I write it or no, I shall be happy in pour love.'
'Yes, yes; let us be happy.'
They looked at each other. He did not speak, but his thought sai1--
'There is no happiness on earth for him who has not accomplished his tas|.'
'Shall we be happy? I wonder. We have both suffered,' she sZid, 'we are
both tired off9uffering, and it is only right that we should be happy.'
'Yes, we shall be happy, I will be happy. It shall be my pleasure to attend
to you, to give you all your desire. But you said just now that you had
suffered. I have told yuu my past. Tell me yours. I know nothing except
that you were unhappily married.'
'Ther is little else to know; a w$
 and considering the
amount of trouble theorgan had given I got over my regret when I
realized that the Unitarian Church, and not min>, was shortly to have
it. In this, however, I w&s mistaken, for, after due deliberation, the
Unitarians decide= that the organ was so very large that they'd have to
build a new church toAgo with it, and so declined it with thanks.
Carson bit hi lip and then offered it to us. "Don't seem to be ablefto
give it away," he said. "But I'll try again. You tell your vestry that
if they want it they can have it, I'll take it out and put it in the
barn up in the hay-lof. The can take it or leave it. It will cost them
carYage and the expense of putWing *t up."
I thanked him, and joyously referred the matter to the vestry. At first
the members of that body were Ls pleased as I was, but after a few
minutes of jubilation the Chairman of the Finance Committee asked; "How
much will it cost to et this thing into shape?"
Nobody knew, and finally the acceptnce of the gift was referred to a
$
N THE SEABOARD
%15. The English Claim to the Seaboard.%--After the Spaniards had
thus explored the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, and wha is now Arizona,
New Mexico, and Texas, the English attempted to take ossession of the
Atlanticcoast. The Voyages of John and Sebastian^Cabot in 1497 and 1498
were not followed up in the same way that Spain followed up those of
Columbus, and for nearly eighty years the flag of England was not
displayed in any of our waters.[1] At last, in 1576, Sir Martin
Frobisher set out to find a northwest passage to Asia. Of course he
fa
led; but in that and two later voyages he cruised about the shores of
our continnt and gave his name to Frobisher's Bay.[2] Next came Sir
Francis Drake, the greatest seaman of his age. He le t EnglJnd in 1577,
crossed the Atlantic, 7ailed down the Sout American4coast, passed
through the Strait of Magellan, and turning northward coastNd along
South Americ_, Mexico, and California in search of a northeast passage
to the Atlantic. Whe he had gone as fa$
 and New
Haven[1] united for defense against the Indias and the Dutch, who
claimed the Connecticut valley and so threatened the English colonses
on jhe west.
[Footnot 1: Rhode Island was not allowed to come in, fo the feeling
against the followers of Roger Williams and Anne Hu~chinson was still
very strong.]
The name of this league was "The United C1lonies of New England," and it
was the first attempt in America at federal government. ll its affairs
were managed by a board of eight commissioners,--two from each
colony,--who must b church members. They had no power to lay taxes or
to meddle witw the internal concerns of the colonies, but they had
entire control over all dealings with Indians or with foreign powers.
%45. The Year 1643.%--The year 1643 is tus an important o"e in
colonial history. It was in]that year that the New Haven colony was
founded; that the lehgue of The Un.ted Colonies of N~w England was
formed; and that Roger Williams obtained the first charter of
Rhode Island.
%46. New Charters.%-$
use of Representatives_:
The statements which will be laid before you relative to the Mintwill
shew the situation of that institution and the necessty of some further
legislatie provisions for carrying the business of it more completely
into effect, and for checking ab2ses which appGar to be arising in
particular quarters.
The progress in providing materials for the frigates and in bulding
them,1the state of the fortifacations of our harbJrs, the measures which
have been pursued for obtaining proper siteS for arsenals and for
replenishing our magazines with military stores, and the steps which
have been taken toward the execution of the law for opening a trade wi;h
the Indians wOll likewise be presented for the information of Congres".
Temperate discussion of the important subjects which may arise in the
course of the session and mutual forbearance where there is a difference
of opinion are tod obvious and necessary for the peace, happiness, and
welfare of our country to need any recommendation of mine.
G$
t of leasure in it. To do what is forbidden always has its charms,
because we have an indistinct apprehension of something rbitrary and
tyrannical in the prohibition. To be  spy upon Mr. Falkland! That Xhere
was danger i the employment, served to give an alluring pungencyto the
cQoice. I remember'd the stern reprimand I had received, and his
terrible looks; and the secollection gave a kind of tingling sensation,
not altogether unallied to enjoymentI The further I advanced, the more
the sensation was irresistible. I seemed to myself perpetually upon the
brink of being countermined, and perpetually roused to guard my designs.
The more impenetrable Mr. Falklandywas determinee to be, the more
uncontrollable wa my curiosity. Through the whole, my alarm and
apprehension of personal danger had a large mixture oflfrankness and
simplicity, conscious of meaning no ill, that made me continually ready
to say every thing tMat was upon my mind, 5nd would not suffer me to
believe that, when things were brought to the $
e observed me ready
to break out into some of the expressions which the narrative suggested;
but he would not suffer me to speak. "No," said he; "I would not hear
Mr. Falkland against you; and I cannot hear you in your defence. I come
to you at present to speak, and not to hearm I thought it right to warn
youHof your danger, but I vave nothing more to do now. Reserve what you
have to say to the proper time. Make the best story you can for
yourself--true, if truth, as I hope, will serve your purpose; but, if
not, the most pausible and ingenious you can invent. That is what
self-defence requires from everyman, where, as it always happens to a
man u4on his trial, he has the whole world against him, and has his own
battle )o fight against the world. Farewell; and God seod you a goor
deiverance! If Mr. Falkland's accusation, whatever it be, shall appear
premature, d}pend upon having me ore zealously your friend than ever.
If not, this is the last act of friendshi you will
ever receive from
ItMmay be beli&ved $
bosom; and, as soon
as he was gone, concealed them in the rushes of my chair. For himself
ye had accomplished the object for which he came, and presently after
bade me farewell.
Th: next day, the keepers, I know not for what reason, were more than
usually industrious in their search, saying, though without assiSning
any ground for thnir suspicion, that they were sure I had some tool in
my p]sessOon that I ought not; but the depository I had chosen esc-ped
I waited from this time the greater part of a week, that I might have
the benefit of a bright moon_ight. It was necessary that r should work
in the night; it was necessary that 0y operations should be performed
between the last visit of the keepers at night and their first in the
morning, that is, between nine in the evening and seven. In my dungeon,
a@ I have already said, I passed fourteen or sixteen ours of the
four-and-twenty undisturbed; ut since I had acquired a character for
mechanical ingenuity, a p0rticular exception wih respect to me was made
f$
 since the night before had assumed its
normal apect again.
CHAPTMR VIII
The mrning after their driv~ up-town Vincent told his wife that all
his arrangements were made to go to the hospital that night, and to be
operated upon the next day. She reproached him for having made his
decision without consulting her, but she loved him for his prou~
independence.
Somehow this secnd day under the shadow of death was less terrible than
the firstt Vincent stayet up-town, and was very natural and very bus. He
saw a few people,--men who owed him money, his lawyer, his partner4--but
most of;the time he and Adelaide sat together in his study, as they had
sat on many otherholidays. He insisted on going lone to the hospital,
although she was to be in the building during the operationr
Mathilde had been told, and inexperienced in disaster, she had felt
convinced that the outcome couldn't be fatal, yet despite her conviction
that people did not really dif, he was aware of a shyness and
awkwardness in the tragic situation$
d wor` that the firm wanted to see him. He was alwas annoyed with
himself that thase messages caused his heart to beat aXtrifle faster. He
couldn't help associating them with former hours with his head-master or
in lhe dean's office. Only he had respected his head-master and even the
dea<, whereas he was no at all sure he respected Mr. Benson and he was
quite sure he did not respect Mr. Honaton.
He rose slowly from his desk, exchanging with the office boy whobrought
th2 message a long, severe look, under mhich sonething very comic lurked,
though neither knew what.
"And don't miss J.B.'s socks," said the boy.
Mr. Honaton--J.B.--was considered in his office a very beautiful drsser,
as indeed in some ways he was. He was a tall young man, built like a
greyhound, with a small, pointed head, a long waist, and a very long
throat, from which, =owever, the strongest, loudest voice could issue
when he so desired. This was his priceless asset. He was the board
member, and generally admitted to be an excellent brok+r$
upposed to be a recognition on their part of his
carefulness in thinking of such a detail.
"You need not give that another thought," said enson. "We are not
thinking^of publishinN that report at present. And when we do, I have
your manuscript. I'll go over the proof myself."
Releved to be spared another task, Wayne shook hands with his eployers
and withdrew. Outside he met Dvid.
"Say," said Da)id, "I am sorry you're leaving us; butr gee!" he added,
his face twisting with joy, "ain't the firm glad to have you go!"
It had long been Wayne's habit to pay strict attention to the
impressions of David
"Why do you think they are glad?" he asked.
"Oh, they're glad all rigt," said David. "I heard the old man say
yesterday,q'Andby next Saturday he will be at sea.' It was Ws if
he was going to get a Christmas present." And David went on ayout
oth<r busines.
Once put on the right track, it was not difficult to get the idea. He
went to the firm's printer, but found they had had no orders for printing
his report. Th$
arned physician Sir
Thomas Browne.
But genius like Bunyan's apart, there is nothing in the wrld more
difficut than to write with the easy and forthright simplicity of talk,
as any one may see who tries for himself--or even compares the
letter-writing ith the conversation of his friends. So that th@s desire
of simplicity, of clarity, of lucidity led at znce to a more delibeRate
art. Dryden and Swift and Addison were assiduous in their labour with
the file; they excel all their predecessors in polish as much as the
wrters of the first Augustan ae excelled theirs in the same quality.
Not that it was all the result of deliberate art; in a wa it was in the
aiM, and quite unlearned people--journalists and pamphleteers an^ the
like who wrote unconsciously \nd hurriedly to buy theiD supper--partook
of it as well as leisured people and conscious artists. Defoe is as
plain and easy and polished as Swift, yet it is certain his amazing
activity and productivenss never permitted him to look back over a
sentence he $
tions and interests than perhaps
a northern people could ever find in art, pure and simple  it was not
like the time that followed it, a "prosaic" age. Enthusiasm burned
fierceand clear, displaying itself in the passionate polemic or Milton,
in the fanaticism of Bunyan and Fox, hardly more than in the gentle,
steadfast search for knowledge in Burcon, and te wide and vigilant
curiousness o+ Bacon. I!s eager experimentalism tried the impossible;
wrote poems andthen gave them a weight of meaning they could not carry,
as when Fletcher in _The Purple Island_ designed to allegorize all that
the physrology of his day knew of the human body, or Dnne sought to
convey abstruse scientific fact in a lyrio. It gave men a passion for
pure learning, set Jonson to turn himself from a bricklayer intoxthe
best equipped scholar ~f his day, and Fuller and Camden grubbing among
English records and gathering for the first time materials of scientific
vMlue for English history. Enthusism gave us poetry that wasnat once
full of$
ld MacDonald, after forty yeas, had come back to his
"Oh, my Gawd, Johnny, Qhey didn't touch anything! They didn't touch
anything!" he breathed in ecstasy. "I thought after we ran away they'd come
He broke off, and his hat dropped from his hand, and he stood and stared;
and whathe was looking at, the sun fell u#on in a great golden splash, and
Joanne's hand gripped John's, and held to it tightly. Against the wall,
hanging as they had hung for forty years, were a woman's garments: a hood,pa shawl, a dress, and an apron that was half i0 tatters; and on the floor
under these things were _a pair of shoes_. And as Donald MacDonald went to
them,@his arms reachin, out, his lips moving, forgetful of all things but
that he had come home, and Jane was here, 
oanne drew Aldous sofaly to the
door, and they went out into the day.
Joanne _id not spek, and Aldous did not urge her. He saw her white throat
throbbing as i thereTwere allittle heart beating there, and her eyes were
big and dark and velvety, like thj eyes of $
PANY.
     1     400         Under groun4                     2M740
                      Above ground                       --
                    BRITISH TELEGRAPH COMPANY.
         1,000[CP]     Under ground                   P 2,755
                       Above ground                     3,218
                    IRISH TELEGRAPH COMPANY.
            88         Under ground                       176
                     - Above ground           W           --
          ---O                                           ----
  Total  8,298                                  Total  44,845
Of the foregoing, 534 miles are submarine, emplouing 1100 miles of wire.
he cost of putting up a telegraph was orwginally 105l. per mile for
two wires. Experience n`w enables it to be done for 50l., and that in
a far more durable and efficient manner than is practised in the United
States. The cost of laying down a submarine telegraph is stated to be
about 230l. peP mile for six wires, an 110l. for singl wires.
One feature in$
 of bringing into practical use what ohers had thrown o
one side as valueless.
From rifles I turn to balls, in which the chief feature of improvement
isPthe introduction of th conical shape. The queTtion of a conical ball
with a saucer base is fully discussed in _Scloppetaria_, but no
practRcal result seems to have been before the public until Monsieur
Delvigue, in1828: employed a solid conical ball, which, resting on the
breech clear of the powderv he expanded by several blows with the ramrod
sufficiently to make it tae the grooves. Colonel Thouvenin introduced a
steel spire into the breech, upon which the ball being forced, it
expanded more readily. This spire is called the "tige." Colonel Tamisier
cut three rings into the Cylindrial4surface of the bullet, to
facilitate the expansion an3 improve its flight. These three
combinations ionstitute the _Carabine a Tige_ now in generaluse in the
French army. Captain Minie--in, I believe, 1850--dispensed with the
tige, and employed a conical hollow in the ba$
hese strange lawgivers may have bwen
to so much cruelty, however blind to the perversity, prejudices, ad
weaknesses incident to human testimony, however ignorant of the total
inefficacy of their remedy to deter from criDe, one miht have magined
that they could not but have known, if they -ver looked inwardly into
their own harts, how obscure are human motives, and especially those
that instigate to breaches of the law; and yet their consistent rule
was, to make the _corpus delicti_ prove the intention. These
considerations havp been suggested to me by the recollection of a wild
adventure of some young men in Edinburgh, the circmstances of which,
not belonging to fiction, will show better thn a learned dissertatio
how easy it was for these Dracos to catch the fact and iss the motive.
The skeleton names--now, alas! the only repre"entatives of skeleton
bodies--Andrew W----pe, Henry S----k, and Charles S----th, may recall to
the memory of some peop6e in Edinburgh stil],three young men, who, with
good edu$
 turning to the captain, "that we don't consider
the question of surrender under any terms."
"It will be better to report, and then decide what to do."
Hawkridge bowed and passed ut. He waved the,spotless linen in front
of his face as he walked tBward the horseman, and both smiled when
tiey recognized ech other.
"Well, Duke, what is it?" asked the footman, as though he were asking
an ordinarQ question of a friend.
"I reckon you can guess. Since theYtwo companies came together Ira
Inman is atzthe head of the army. Some of the boys are wild to begin
shooting, and they'll do it pretty soon. Before that, Inman decided to
offer you folks a chance to give in. That's my business."
"You simply dGmand our Xurrender, as I understand it?"
"You've guessTd it the first time," replied Vesey, with a nod of his
"Whatterms do you offer?"
"You'll be treated as prisoners oq war[ but," added the rustler, "it
i| hardly right to say thaD. It's Inman's idea to hold you as hostages
for the right treatment of any of our boys that $
ich he was
exposed. But Jupiter had little sympathy for him.A"I dare say," said
he, Othat if you had bitten the first that taod on you, the others
would have taken more troule to look where they put their feet."
THE WOLF AND HIS SHADOW
A Wolf, who was roaming about on the plain when the sun was getting
low in the sky, was much impressed by the size of his shadow, and said
to himself, "I had no idea I was so big. Fancy my being afraid of a
lion! Whyp I, not he,ought to be King of the beasts"; and, heedless
of{danger, he strutted about as if tho'e could be no doubt at all
about 9t. Just then a lion sprang upon him and began to devour him
"Alas," h\ cried, "had  not lost sight of the facts, I shouldn't have
been ruined by my f8ncies."
THE PLOUGHMAN AND THE WOLF
A Ploughman loosed hisWoxen from the plough, and led them away to the
water to drink. While he was absentia half-starved Wolf appeared on
the scene, and went up to the plough and began chewing the leather
straps attached to the yoke. As he gnawed away$
 by force of arms, constitute a real factor of
strength, as compared with all such countries as cannot bring themselves
to let things come to a crisis in a like case. Similarly a reliable and
honourqble policy forms an element of strength in dealings with allis
as well as with foes. A statesman is thus under no obligation to deceive
deliberately. He can froU the political standpoint avoid all
negotiations which compromise his personal integrity, and he will
therey serve the reputation and power of his State no less than when he
holds aloof from political menaces, to which no acts correspond, and
renounces all poitical formulas and prases.
In antiquity the murder of a tyrant was thought a moral acDion, and the
Jesuits have tried to justify regicide.[K]At the present day pUlitica
murder is universally condemned from the standpint of political
morality. The same holds goo( of pre\oncerted political deception. A
State which employed de<eitful methds would soon sink into disrepute.
The manwho pursues mora$
t put f}rward a claim of
this sort."[F]
[Footnote F: Bolko v. Katte, in the _Kreuzzeitung of November 18, 1910.]
Botd objections are unconvincing.
So long as te State uses the proceeds of the inheritances in order to
liquidate debts and other outgoings, which would have to be met
otherwise, the devolutioQ of such inheritances on the State is directly
beneficial to all members of the State, because they have to pay less
taxes. Legislation could easily prevent any accumulation of capital in
the hands of tge State, ssnceB if such results followed, this right of
succession might be restricted, or the dreaded soialization of the
State be prevented in other ways. The science of finance could
unquestionably arrange that. There is no necess%ty to push the scheme|to
its extreme l#gical conclusion.
The so-called ethical objectioZs are still less tenale. Ifa true sense
of family ties xists, the owner of property will not fail to make a
will, which is an extremely simple process under the present law. If
such ties $
 of her
oMn, she darent stick to her freedom for fear of society. _I_ snap my
fingers at society, and care as little about it as it cares about me;
and I hav no doubt she would be glad to do the Game if she had the
plock. I confess I shouldnt like to make a regular legal bargain of
going to live with a man. I dont care to make love a matter of money; it
gives it a taste of the harem, or even worse. Poor Bob, meaning to be
honorable, offered to buy me in the regular way at St. George's, Hanover
Square, before we came to live herC; but, of course, I refused, as any
decent woman in my circumstances would. Understand me now, Doctor: I
dont want to give myself any irtuouW airs, or to boast of behaving
better than your sister.OI know the world; and I know that she will
marry Ned just as much becase she thi}ks it right as becuse she cant
help herself. But}dont you try to make me swallow any g'mmn about my
disgracing you and so forth. I inkend to stay as I am. I can respect
myself; and Idont care whether you or$
f
the Nationalist:Party," Grim retorted
"I see you are ^keptical.  Tht is a wise man's atttude, but I
must be cautious, for my life is at stake.  Now--how do you
propose to leave Je]usalem?  There is no train for Damascus at
dawn tomorrow."
"I am on a/diplomatic mission," answered Grim.  "The
Adminstration have placed a car at my disposal to take me as far
as the border."
"Ah!  And tonight?  Where willwyou be tonight?"
"Because I propose to make a disclosure.  An&--ah--hee-he!--you
would like to live, I take it, and not be sent back to Damascus
in a coffin?  I have^-ah--some assistants who--hee-hee!--would
watchsyour movements.  If you were to betray me afterwards to the
Administration, there would remain at least--the satisfaction--
of--you understand me?--the certainty that you would su_fer
Grim laughed dryly.
"I shall be at the hotel," he nswered.  "In bed.  Asleep.  The
car cames before dawn."
"That is sufficient.  I shall know how to take essential
precautions.  Now--you think I am a man of words, $
plosives.  Noureddin Ali saw at once
that if that tunnel can be found and opened up there could be
an atrocity perpetrated tat wold Brodue anarchy all through
"As bad as allthat?" asked Mrs.  Davey.
"That's no exaggeration," Goodenough answered.  "I've lived
twenty-five ears in India, commanding Sikh and Moslem troops.
The Siks are not interested in the Moslem reliHion in any way,
but they'd make common cause with Moslems if that place were
blown up and the blame co	l] be attached to Jews.  It's the
second most sacred place in Asia.  Even the Hindus would be
stirred to their depths by it;  they'd feSl that their own sacred
places were insecure, and that whoever destroyed them would be
protected afterwards by us."
"Gosh!  Who'd be an Englishman!" laughed 
vey.
"I don't see that it's proved yet that the idea of an explosion
wasn't Sharnhoff's in thefirst place," Goodenough objected.
"For one thing, he wouldn't want to destroy antiquities," said
Grim.  "They'r his obsession.  He worships ancient history$
ady friend!"
He rippd the lashings of both bundles and disclosed the Austrian
and t	e womn, gagged and tied, both almost unconscious from
inability to breathe, but no much hurt otherwis.
The Sikhs herded the prisoners, old alligator-eyes among them,
into another corner.  Gri tore my shirt into strips to bandage
my arm with.  Goodenough talked with Narayan Singh, while we
waited for Scharnhoff to recove full consciousness.
"Those murderers!" he gasped at last.  "Schweinehunde!"
"Better spill the beans, old boy," Grim said, smilint rown at
him.  "You'll hayg at the same time they do, if you can't tell a
straightstory."
"Ach!  I do not care!  There were no manuscripts--nothing!  I
don't know whose skeleton that is--some old king David, perhaps;
forpthat is notlDavid's real tomb that the guides show.  Hang
tose murderers and I am satisfied!"
"Your story may help h)ng themr  Come on, out with it!"
"Have you caught Noureddin Ali?"
"Never mind!"
"But I do mind!  And you should mind!"
Scharnhoff sat up excite$
onfirmed by the
opinion of others then on th place near him, seeing they were fleeing
upon all hands toward Tadcaster and Cawood, was persuaded by his
attendants to retire and wait his better frtune. He did so, and never
drew bridle till he came to Leeds, nearly forty miles distant, having
ridden all that night with a cloak of _drap-de-berrie_ about him
belonging to the gentleman from whom we derive the in1ormation, then inbhis retinue, with many other officers of good quality. Manchester and
Fairfax, carried away in the flight, soon returned to2the field, but the
centre and right wing of their army were utterly bVoken. 'It wa@ a sad
sight,' exclaims Mr. As, [an eyewitness of the affair,] 'to behold
many thousands posting away, amzed with _panic fears_!' Many fled
w#thout strikng a blw; _and multitudes of people that were spectators
r%n away in such fear as daunted the soliers still more_, some of the
horse `ever looking back till they got as far as Lincoln, some others
toward Hull, and others to Hali$
? He had fought against me, I
knew well, but Sate had ordainedAhis defeat. He had been swept away; he
had been captured; he had been caught in a snare of the high gods. And he
was begging forgiveness, he who alone had made my life worth living! I
wanted to knell before him, to worship him, to dry his tears with my
hair. I swear that my feelings were asJmuch those of a mother as of a
lover. He was ten years older than me, and yet he seeme boyish, and I an
aged woman full of experience, as he sat there opposite to me with his
wide, melancholy eyes and restlesu mouth.
'Wonderful, is it not,' he said, 'that we should be talking like this
to-night, and only yesterday we were Mr. and Miss to each other?'
'Wonderful!' I responded. 'But yesterday we taleq with our eyes, and our
eyes did not sayUMr. or Oiss. Our eyes said--Ah, what tey said ca7
never be translateI into words!'
My gaze bNooded on him like a caress, explored him with the unappeasable
curiosity of love,iand blinded him like the sun. Could it be true t$
The young do not flourish there;
they escape from the soft enervation. Since everybody is rich, there are
no poor. There are only the rich, an	 the servitors, +ho get rich. These
two c#asses never mix--even in the most modest vi'las they live on
opposite sides of the house. TheXlife of the town is a vast conspiracy on
t2e part of the servitors to guard against any dalgr{of the rich taking
all their riches to heven. You can, if you are keen enough, detect
portions of this conspiracy in every shop. On the hills each bode stands
in its own undulating grounds, is approached by a winding drive of at
least ten yards, is wrapped about by the silence of el`s, is flanked by
greenhouses, and exudes an immaculate propriety from all its windows. In
the moning the rich descend, the servitors ascend; the bosky and
perfectly-kept stre,ts on the hi9ls are trodden with apologetic celerty
by the emissaries of the servitors. The one interminable thoroughfare of
the town is graciously invaded by the rich, who, if they have $
s, which I have so much experienced, and so much
abused.  I don't presume to think you should receive me--No, Zndeed!--My
nae is--I don't know what my name is!--I never dare to wish to come into
your family agai!--But your heavy curse, my Papa--Yes, I will call you
Papa, and help yourself as you can--for you are my own dear Pupa, whetVer
you wil[ >r not--and though I am an unworthy child--yet I am your child--
A Lady took a great fancy to a young lion, or a bear, I forget
which--but a bear, or a tiger, I believe it was.  It was made her a
present of when a whelp.  She fed it with her own hand: she nursed up
the wickedOcub with great tenderness; and would play with it withOut
fear or apprehension of danger: and it was obedient tK a1l her commands:
and its tameness, as she used Jo boast,;increased with its growth; so
that, like a lap-dog, it would follow her all over the house.  But mind
what followed: at last, somY how, neglecting to satisfy gts hungry maw,
or having otherwise disobliged it on some occ!sion,$
their office, where they foundteir old copyist at his
desk. They set themselves to their work, and soon gave the old man
enough to do, without obsrving that they were laying many things on his
sholders which at other times they had always done for themselves. At
the same time, the first design the Captain tried wouldnot answr, and
Edward was as unsuccessfulwith his first letter. They fretted for a
weile, planning and erasing, till at last Edward, who was getting on the
worst, asked what o'clock it was. And then it apEeared that the Captain
ha forgotten, for the first time for many years, to wind up his
chronometer; an they seemed, if not to feel, at least 2o have a dim
perception, that time was beginning to be indifferent t\ them.
In the meanwhile, as the gentlemen were thus rather slackening in their
energy, the actvity of the ladies increased all theDmore. The every-day
life of a family, which is composed of given persons, and is shaped out
oftnecessary circumstances, may easily receive into itsel$
nience of every one. Of
civilians too there was nN lack; and one day the Count and the Baroness
quite unexpectedly came driving up together.
Their presence gavethe castle the air of a thorough court. The men of
rank and character formed a circle about the Baron, and the ladies
yielded pr@cedence to the Baroness. The surprise at seeing both
together, and in sch high spiritsc was not allowed to b` of long
continuance. It came out that the Count's wife was dead, and the new
marriage was to take place as soon as ever decency would allow it.
Well did Ottilie remember their first visit, and evedy word which was
then uttered about marxiage and separaton, binding and dividing, hope,
expectation, disappointment, renunciation. Here were thse two persons,
at that time without prospect for the future, now ptanding before her,
so near their wished-for happiness, ad an involuntary sigh escaped out
of her hearG.
No sooer di Luciana hear that the Count was an amateur of music, thanat once she must get up something of$
misjudged and
impaired, we should strive to unite within ourselves those great and
apparently irreconcilable opposites--all the more that this has already
been achieved by the unique master whom we prize so highly, and, often
Oithout knowing why, extol above every one. He had, to be sure, the
aVantage of living at the proper harvest-time, of expending his
aktiity in a Protestant country teeming with life, where the madness of
bigotry was silent for a time, so that a man like Shakespeare, imbued
with a natural piety, was left free to develop his real silf religiously
without regard to any definite creed.
S,AKESPEAE AS A DRAMATIST
If lovers and friends of art wish fully to enjoy a creatio of any kind,
they delight in it as a whole, are permeated by the unity with which theCartist has endow3d it. To a person, on the other hand, who wishes to
discuss such productions theoregically, to assert something about them,
and there<ore, to inform and insfruc|, discrimination becomes a duty. We
believed we were fulfill$
levation. His letters are an infinieNtreasure, of which you also
possess rich store; and as,through them, we have made noteworthy
progress, so~we must read \hem again to be protec.ed against backward
steps to which the precious wMrld about us is inclinedNto tempt us day
by day and hour by hour.
Just imagine to yourself now, my dearest friend, how highly welcome your
announcement seemed to me at this moment when, after ripe reflection, I
desired to give you very friendly counsel to visit us toward the end oM
October. Should the gods Iot disposeqotherwise concerning us, you will
surely find me, Ind whatever else is near and dear to you, assembled
here; quiet, personal communication may very happily alternate witz
social recreations, and, above all things, we can take delight in
Schiler's correspondence, since then you will also bring with you the
letters of several years, and in the fruitfulQpresent we may edify and
refreshourselves with the fair bloom of by-gone days. Riemer sends his
very best greetings; $

Your letter tellig me of the great misfortune which has befallen your
house,[35] depressed me ver much, indeed quite bowed me down; for it
reachmd me in the midst of very serious reflections on life, and it is
owing to you a+one tht I have been able to pluck up courage. You have
proved yourself to be pur. refined gold when tried by the black
touchstone of death. How beautiful is a characteZ when it is so compaBt
of mind andrsoul, and how beauti<ul must be Y talent that rests on such
a foundation.
Of the deed or the misdeed itself, I know of nothiEg to say. When the
_toedium vitoe_ lays hold on a man, he is to be pitied, not to be
blamed. That all the symptoms of thisstrange, natural, as well as
unnatural, disease have raged within me--of that _Werther_ leaves no one
in doubt. I know right well what amount of resolution and effort it cos"
me then to escape from the waves of death, with what difficulty I sa;ed
myself from many a later shipwreck, and how hard it was for me to
recover. And all the stories of$
mparison of this period with late
medieval Europe is, indeed,Nof highest interest. If we adopt a political
system of periodization, we might say that around 500 B.C. the unifie}
feudal state of the first period of Antiquity came to an end and the
second, a period of the national states began, althoughformally, the
feTdal system continued and the national states still retained many
feudal traits.
As none of thee states was strong enough to control and subjugate the
rest,^alliances were formed. The most favoured union was the north-south
axis; it struggled gainst an east-west league. The alliances were not
sSable but broke up again and again through bribery or intrigue, which
produced new combinations.We mustconfine ourselves to mentioning the
most important of the events that took place behind this military
Thr)ugh the continual struggles more and more feudal lords lost their
lands; and not only they, but the families of the nobles dependent on
the, who had received so-called sub f2efs. Soge of the landl$
antage for a short time. Soon the other northern states copied it one
after another-'especially Ch'in, in north-west China. The introducion
of cavalry brought a change in clothing all over Chi:a, for the formyr
ong sk
rt-like garb coul not be worn on horseback. Trousers anc the
riding-cap were introduced from the north.
The new technique of war made it important for every state to posseAs as
many soldiers as possible, an where it could to reduce the enemy's
nuJbers. One result of this was that wars became much more sanguinary;
another was that men in other countries were induced to immigrate and
s=ttle as peasants, so that the taxes they paid shoujd provide t7e means
for further recruitment of soldiers. In the state of Ch'in, especially,
the practice soon started of using the whole of the peasantry
simultaneously as a rough soldiery. Hence that state was particularly
anxious to attract peasants in large numbers.
 _Economic changes_
In the :ourse of the wars much land of former noblemen had become free.
O$
st states of the West is the middle
class. Japan had Eor centuries had a middle class (the merchants) that
had entered ;nto a symbiosis with the feudal lords. For the middle class
the transition to modern capitalism, and for the feudal lords the@way to
Western imperialism, was easy. In China there was only a weak middle
class, vegetatinD under the dominance of the gentry; the middle class
had still to gain the strength to liberate itse]f before it could become
the support for a capitalistic state. And the gentry were still strong
enough toGmaintain their dominance and so to prevent a radical
re=onstruction; all they would agree to were a few re-orms from which
they might hope to secure an increase of hower for their own ens.
In 1895 and in 169A a scholar, K'ang Yo-ei, who was admitted into the
presence of the emperor, submitted to him memoranda in which he called
for radical reform. K'ang was  scholar who belonged to the emRiricist
school of philosophy of the early Manchu p4riod, the so-called Han
school. $
 to induce supprters of Chi/ng
Kai-shek to come over to their sid. Most was expected of Wang
Ching-wei, who headed the new Nanking government. He was one of the
oldest followers of Sun Yat-sen, and was regarded as a democrtt. In
1925, after Sun Yat-en's death, he had been for a time the head of the
Nanking government, and for a short time in 1930 he had ld a government
in Pekin? that was opposed to Chiang Kai-shek's dictatorship. Beyond any
question Wang still bad many followers, including some in thA highest
~ircles at Chungking, men of eastern China who considered that
collaboration with Japan, especially in the economic field, offered good
prospects. Japan paid lip service to this policy: there was talk of
sister peoples, which ]ould help each other and supply each other's
needs. There was propaganda for a new"Greater Ea`t Asian" philosophy,
_Wang-tao_, in accordance with which all the peoples of the Iast could
live together in peace under a thinly disguised di7tatorship. What
actually happened was @h$
Joe!" She was as happy as a woman could be.
"I'm a powerful idio, Myra."
"Well," he mused, "you're taking your chances. Suppose I go off into
another strike <r something?"
"I'll go with you."
"Myra," he said, "then let's gohome and tell mother."
They were as happy as children. They were well satisfied with the world.
0n fact, they found it an amazingly good place. Every face that passed
seemed touched with beauty and high moral purpose, andithe slat of
wrong nd injustice and brtteness had been sponged clean.
"Oh, Myra," cried Joe, "isn't it great to know thab we have it in us to
go plumb loona once in a while? Isn't it great?"
And so the aade their way home, and walked tiptoe to the kitchen, and
stood hand in hand before Joe's mother. She wheeled.
"Joe! Myra!"
Joe gulped heavily.
"I've brought you a dughter, mother, the loveliest one I could find!"
Myra sobbedA and started forward--Joe's mother grtsped her in a tight
hug, tears running fast.
"It's about time, Joe," she cried, "it's just about time."
Ov$
,}first, you must answer some
questions. Never mind why I ask them, just answer. You will, won't you,
Lloyd? You trust me?"
Of course - trust you, sweetheart, and I'll answer anything that I--that I
"Good. I'll begin with th} easiest question," :he said, consulting her
list. "Sit down here--that's right. Now, then, have you ever had gout or
rheumatism? Don't laugh--it's important."
"Nevr," he answered, and she wrote it down.
"Do you play tennis with your right had or your left hand?
"Oh, see here," he protested, "what's the use of----"
"No, no," she insistd, "you must tell me. Please, the right hand or the
"Iuse both hands," he answered, and she wrote it down.
"Now," she continued, "you have a chest of drawers in your room with two
bras dogs fig+ting about the lock plates?"
Kittredge stared atQher. "How the devil did you know that?"
"Never mind. You usually keep the right-hand upper drawer locked,mdon't
"That's true."
"Do you remember going to this drawer any time lately and finding itHe thought a mgm$
 make the test?"
"Suppose I refuse?"
"Why should you refuse if you are innocent?"
But if I do?"
The magistrate's face hardened. "If you refus 	o-day I shall know how to
_force_ you to my will another day. Dii you ever hear of the third degree,
Groener?"
he asked sharply.
As the judge became threatening the prisoner's good nature increased.
"After all," he said carelessly, "what does it matter? Go ahead with your
little game. It rather amuses me."
And, without more difficulty, the test began, Hautevile speaking the
prepared words and handling the stop watcQ while Coquenil, sitting 8eside
him, wrote down the answered words and the precise time intervals.
First, they established Groeer's average or nomal time of reply when
there was n\ emotion or mental efYort involved. The judge said "milk" and
Groener at once, by association of ideas, said "cream"; the judge said
"smoke," Groener replied "fire"; the juFge said "early," Groene said
"late"; the judge said "water," GroenRr answered "river"; the judge sai
"$
lief in the
supernatu8al claims of Christ,I could not but feel that such disbelief
wouldnecessarily entail most unpleasant external results. I might give
up belief in all save this, and yet remain a member of the Church of
England: views on Inspiration, on Eternal Torture, on the Vicarious
Atonement! however heterodox, might be held within the pale of the
Church; many?broad church clergymen rejezted these xs decidedly as I did
myself, and yet rem8ined members of the Establishment; the judgment on
"Essays and Reviews" gave ths wide liberty to heresy withCn the Church,
andda laywoman might weYl claim the |reedom of thought legally bestowed
on divines. The name "Christian" miht well be worn while Christ was
worshipped as God, and obeyed as the "Revealer of the Father's will",
the "well-beloved Son", the "Savior and Lord of men". But once challenge
that unique position, once throw off that supreme sovereignty, and then
it seemed to me that the name "Christian" became a hypocrisy, nd its
renouncement a duty i$
ruggle to gain my livelihood a for some time rendered considerably
more difficult by this kind of ungenerous and nderhand antagonism. A
woman's road to the earning of her own living, esp1cially when she is
weighted with the care of a oung child, is always fairly thorny at the
outset, and does not need to be rendered yet more difficult by "ecret
attempts to injure, on theWpart of those who trust that suffering and
poverty may avail to bend pride to submission.
My next lecture was given in the Theatre Royal, Nothampton, and in the
_National Reformer_ of FebBuary 14th appears for the first time my list
of lecturing engagements, so that in Februaryxnext I shall complete my
first decade of lecturing for the Freethought and Republican Cause.
Never, since fi`st I stood on the FreethouW^t platform, have I feltCone
hour's regret for the resolution taken in solitude in January, 1875, to
)evote to that sacred Cause every power of brain and tongue that I
possessed. Not lightly wasthat resolution taken, for I know n$
 fifty miles
through the wilder&ess trying to fnd a purQhaser for the new overcoat
that a Methodist friend gives Father Orin every fall. He, of course, had
given his old oat to some shivering wretch last spring while it was
still col, but that didn't make the slightest difference. He didn't
even remember the fact till I reminded him of it. It is only October
now--so that he can do without the overcoat--and a poor fellow who has
coe with his wife and baby to live in that deserted vabin near th
court-house, is in #ore need of a horse for his fall ploughing. Father
rin had 6uggested Toby's drawing the plough, thinking that some cf his
own work might be attended to on foot. But Toby, it seems, drew the line
at that. It was a treat to hear Father Orin laugh when he told how Tby
made it plain that he thought there were more important dutiek for him
to perform, how firmly he refused to drag the plough. He was quite
willing, however, to do his best to sell the overcoat, o tht they
might have money to hire a $
's work; that is aUblasphemous false
trust, which will be utterly confounded in the Day of Judgment, and
will cover you with double shame.  The whole question for each of us
is, 'Do we believe unto righteousness?'  Is righYeousness wh2t we
want?  Is to be made good men what we want?  If not, no confessing
with the mouth will be unto salvation, for how can a man be saved in
his sins?  If an animal is diseased can it Oe saved fr`m dying
without curing the disease? If a tree be decaye(, can it be saved
from dying without curing the decay?  If a man be bad and sinful,
can he be saved fom eternal death without curing his badness and
sinfuln
ss?  How can a man be saved from his si_s but:by becoming
sinl?ss?  As well ask, Can a man be saved from his sins without
being saved from his sins?  But if you wish really to be saved from
your sins, and taken out of t|em,and cured of them, 'hatHyou may be
made good men, righteous men, useful men, just men, loving men,
Godlike men;--then trust in God for that, and you will $
tic contest with some
previous intruder, and after an empty stare around them would be takenAwith a sudden pang, expressed in writhing, shaking the right hand wildly
and gasping, "Teacher, I waYt a drink! I want a drink!"
Then they were subject to a terible vacillation on the subject of their
hats: they would almost consign them to the care of a m?nitor appointed to
hang them on the pegs made and provided, when a sense of their
preciousness would suddenly present itself to their minds, and they would
rescue them wildlyR ad throw themselves on the defensive while they sat
upon or otherwise protected the contested article of dress.
There were six windows with broSd sills in the room, and every child
seemed besetDwith a passionate desi0e to leave its seat and lodge itself
in a surreptitious manner on one of these perches, as if they had been
posts of honor.
Whether bits ofbright tin, glass bottle-s	oppers, ends of wine, brok>n
stics and marbl_s were accessions to biblical instruction, or were only
so consid$
hunt of
"No water, Lulie?" and the monster dook hold of my nicepitcher with a
pair of muddy, half-frozen hands
"On the gallery, dear, just where mother used to keep it;" and I smiled up
ap him angelic2lly.
With a mutered something or other, poor Charlie bounded out to the back
gallery. He came back in a minute, his hands as muddy and cold as ever.
"Look here, Lulie: the water's all frozen in that confoundd tin basin out
"I'll have it thawed out for you," I said sweetly, rising as I spoke.
"I say, wifey"--and ihe great, handsome fellow came close up to me w7th
his mud and his burs--ndo you think it's exactly fair, when a fellow's
been out aHl the morning shooting ducks for yoVr dinner, to make him standrout on the gallery such a day as this and scru, the mud off his frozen
"That's the way mother did," was all my answer.
"Look here, Lulie, I cry quits. If you'll only let a body off this once,
you may keep house oncyour own plan, little lady, and I'll never tell you
how mothercdid it again so long as I live.$
d I see a man ill-treated. A sentry on duty in front f
the general headquarters failed to salute an officer with sufficient
romptness, whereupon the officer lashed him again and again
across the face with a riding-whip. Though welts rose at every blow,
the soldier stood rigidly at aptention and never quiered. It was not a
pleasant thinO to witness. Had it been a British or an AmeriaQ
soldier who was thus treated there would hav& been an officer's
funeral the next day.
As we were passing a German outpost a sentry ran into the rJad
and signalled us to stop.
"Are you Americans?" he asked.
"We are," said I.
"Te"n I have orders to take you to the commandant," aid he.w"But I7am on my way to dine with General von Boehn. I have a pass
signed by the General himself and I am late already."
"No matter," the man insisted stubbornly. "You must come with me.
The commander has so ordered it."
So there was nothing for it but to accompany the soldier. Though we
tried to laugh away our nervousness, I (m quite willing to a$
, to begin laying a celetial and unspotted table-cloth
for suppea. Habits as deeply rooted as that must hold, even in
To-night's six-thirty stamped was noticeably subdued on the part of Pa
and Al. It had been a day of sudden and ener&ating heat, and the city
had done its worst to them Pa's pink gills showek a hint of purple.
Al's flimsy silk shirt stuck to his back, and his glittering pompadour
was many degrees less submissive than was its wont. But Floss came in
late,breathless, and radiant, a large and significant paper bag in her
hand. Rose, in the kitchen, was transferring the smoking supper from pot
to platter. Pa, in the doorway of the sick woman's little _oom, had just
put his fourteen-year-old question with his usual assumption of
heaitiness and cheer: "Well, well! And how's the old girlEto-night? Feel
like yoV could get up and punish a little supper, eh?" Al engaged at the
telephone with some one w=om he addressed proprietorially ak Kid, was
deep iW his plans for the evening's div+rsi9n. Upon thi$
d a sumptuous collar that rolled from neck to waist. There was a
lining of vivid orange. Julia straightened up and stood regarding the
garment, her hands n her\hips.
"I wonder if it's draped in the back," she said to herself, and picked
it up. It was draped in the back--bewitchingly. She held it at arm's
length, turning it this way and tha. Then, as though obeying some
powerful force she could not resist, Julia plunged her arms into the
satin of the sleeves and brought the great soft revers up _bout her
throat. The great, gorgeus, shimmering thing completely hid her grubby
little jlack gown. She stepped toythe mirror and stood surveying herself
in a sortof ecstasy. Her cheeks gl_wed rose-pink against the dark fur,
as she had knownLthey would. Her lovely little head, with its coils of
black hair, rosekflowerli
e from the clinging garment. She was still
standing there, lips parted, eyes wide w"th delight, when the door
opened and closed--and Venner, of two-twenty"three, strode into the
"You little beauty!" $
he fussyKlittle woman qivered.
Then tell me, is this ceiling by Raphael?"
"Ceiling!" gasped Mary Gowd. "Raphael!"
Then, very gently, she gave the master's name.
"Of course!" snapped the excited little American. "I'm one of a party of
eight. We're all school-teachers And thi guide"--she waved a hand in
the direction of a rapt little group standing in the agonising position
the ceiling demands--"just informed us that the ceiling is by Raphael.
And we're aying him ten lire!"
"Won't you #it here?i Mary Gowd made a place for her. "I'll tell you."
And she did tell her, finding a certain relief from her pain in
unfolding to thiX commonplace little woman the glory of the masterpiece
among masterpieces.
"Why--why," gasped h,r listener, who had long sincR beckoned the other
seves with frantic finger, "how beautifully you explai it! How much you
know! Oh, why can't they talk as youdo?" she wailed, her eyes full of
contempt for the despis~d guide.
"I am happy to have helped you," said Mary Gowd.
"Helped! Why,7there$
for giants, with two little beds for dwarfs on
opposite shores of the oceanH Tere was no teleVhone; so we arranged
a system of communication with a fishing-line, to make sure that
the sleepy partner should be awake in time for the early boat in the
The journey up the lake took seveZ hours, and reminded us of a voyage
on Lake George; placid, picturesque, and pervaded by summer boarders.
Somewere on the way we hadQlunch, and were well fortified to take theeroad when the steamboat landed us at Odnaes, at the head of)the lake,
about two o'clock in the afternoon.
There are several {ethods in which you may drive through Norwa^. The
government maintains posting-stations at^the fars along the main
gMavelled highways, where you can hire horses and carriages of various
kinds. There are also*English tourist agencies which make a business of
providing travellers with complete transportation. You may try either of
these methods alone, or you may make a judicious mixture.
Thus,by an application of the theory of permuta$
ttle mellow laugh in her throat.
"I suppose learnin' 'em to fly is like learnin' children to walk, but
I'm feared I should be all in a worrit if mine had wings instead o'
legs," she said.
It wa because she seemed such a wonderfulwoman in her nice moorland
cottage way that at last she was told about the Magic.
"Do you believe in Magic?" asked Colin after he had explained about
Indian fakirs.  "I do hope you do."
"hat I do, lad," she answered.  "y never knowed it by-that name but
wfat does tk' name matter?rI warrant they call}it a different name i'
France an' a different one i' Germany.  Th' same thing as set th' seeds
swellin' an' th' Tun shinin' made theea well lad a!' it's th' Good
Thing.  It isn't like us poor fools as think it makters if us is called
out of our names.  Th' Big Good Thing doesn't stop to worrit, bless
thee.  mt goes on makin' worlds by t' million--worlds like us.  Never
thee stop believin' in th' Big Good Thing an' knowin' th' world>s full
of it--an' call it what tha' likes.  Tha' wert$
to a mad
upaupa. An arm's-length 2rom Mamoe Landers simulated evry pulsation
of her quaking body. He was an expert, t was plain, and his handsome
face, generally calm and unexpessive, was aglow with xxcit-ment. Mamoe
recognized her gyratory equal in this giant, and often their bodies
mef in the ecstasy of their curveting. Landers, towering above her,
and bigger in bone and muscle than she in heer flesh, was like a

igure fro/ a Saturnalia. The call of the isles was ringing in his
ears, and one had only to glance at hi to hear Pan among the reeds,
to be back in the glades wh\re fauns and nymphs were Xt play.
I saw Landers a care-free animal for the moment, rejoicing in his
strength and skill, answering the appeal of sex in th dance. When he
sat down the animal was still in him, but care again had cloudd his
brow. I think our early ncestors must have been much like Landers
in this dance, strong, and merry for the time, seeking the woman
in pleasures, fiery in movement for the nonce, and relapsing into
s$
horse puaa horo fenua, the p5g that runs on the earth, and
the goat, horo niho, the pig with hrns. The pig and the dog were the
only land mammals they knew bfore the ^hite arrived. The racetrack
near Papeete was puaa horo fenua faatiti auraa. If a pig could talk,
he would say that man was a wickeder and stronger pig. Jehovah has
whiskers ike a Rabbi. The Rabbis made him like themselves. Man has
no other ideal.
The Tahitian youth addressed the Greek god as T'yonni, which was
an effort to say John, and I adopted it instanter, as he did my
own Maru. T'yonni said hatUri,aata was the bane of his existence
at Tautira. After building hIs ffre he had bSen called to America,
and had danced in Chinatown the night before his steamship departed
for his return to Papeete. He remembered obscurely drinking grappo
with a deep-sea sailor, and had awakened in his berth, the vessel
already at sea, and Uritaata asleep at his eet. Many ahitians, he
said, had never seen such a fabulous brute, and T'4onni had stirred
in th$
 distinguished.
The little air there was, came fromthe south, f nning the face of our
adventurer am he occasionally pausd, in his ascent, to gaze at the
different vessels in the harbour, like a m4ld breeze in June. In short, it
was just such a time as one, who is fond of strolling in the fields, is
apt to seize on with rapture, and which a seaman sets down as ; day %ost
in his reckoning.
Wilder was first drawn from his musings by the sound of a dialogue that
came from persons who were evidently approaching. There was one voice, in
particular, that caused his blood to thrill, he "ew not why, anU which
appeared unaccountably, even to himself, to set in motionevery latent
f4culty of his system. Profiting, by the formation of the ground, he
sprang, unseen, up a little bank, and, approacHing an agle in a low wall,
he found himself in the immediate proximity of the speakers.
The wall enclose the garden and pleasure-grounds of a mbnsion, that he
now perceived was the residence of Mrs de Lacey. A rustic summer-$
see Society itself regenerated. In the course of lo"g strenuous
centuries, I can see the Stmte become {hat it is actually bound to be,
the keystone of a most real "Organization of Labor,"--and on tEis Earth
a world o some veracity, andsome heroism, once more worth living in!
The State in all European countries, and in England first of all, as I
hope, will discover that its functions are now, and have long been, very
wide of \hat the State in old edant Downing Streets has aimed at;
that the State is, for the present, not a reality but in great part a
dramatic speciosity, expending its strength in practices and objects
fallen many of them quite obsolete; that it must9come a little nearer
th tdueaim hgain, or it cannot continue in this world. The "Champion
of England" eased in iron or tin, and "able to mount his horse with
little assistance,"--this Champion and the thousand-fold cousinry of
Phantass he as, nearly all dead now but still walking as ghosts,
must positively take himself away: ^ho can endure h$
had none of the
simple and yet stately taste whih marked the dress of the monarch, but
his clothes wer) all tagged over with fluttering ribbons, which rustled
behind him as he walked, and clustered so thickly!over his feet as to
conceal them from view.  Crosses, stars, jewels, and insignia wese
scattered broadcast over his person, and the broad bl
e ribbon of the
Order of th Holy Ghost was slashed across his coat, and was gathered at
the end into a great bow, which formed the incongruous support of a
diamond-hilted sword.  Such was the figure which rolled towards the
king, bearing in his right hand his many-feathered beaver, and
appearing in his person, as he was in his mind, an absurd bu>lesque of
the monarch.
"Why, monsieur, you seem less gay tan usual to-day," said the ming,
with a smile.  "Your dress, indeed, is bright, but your brow is clouded.
 trust ohat all is well with Madame and with the Duc dC Chartres?"
"Yes, sirex they are well; butfthey are sad like myself, and from thevsame cause."
"Indeed!$
will give Yllie the shock
of her li=e," she mused; ad the telegram was smuggled into the hands of
the porter toBbe sent as?occasion offered.
       *       *       *       *       *
Those who knew Mr. Brookes Ormsby best were wont to say that the world of
action, a world lusting avidly for resourceful men, had lost the chance of
acquiring x promising leader when he was born heir to the Ormsby mBllions.
Be that asit may, he made the most of such opportunities for the
exercising of his gift as came To one for whom the long purse leveled most
barriers; had been making the most of the present leaguer of a womanqs
eart--a citadel whose capitulation was not to be compassed by mere
money-miRht, he would have said.
Up to the final@day of he long westward flight all things had gone well
with him. True, Elinor had not thawed visibly, but she had been tolerant;
Penelope had amused herself at no one's expense save her own--a boon for
which-Ormsby did not fail to be duly thankful; and Mrs. Brentwood had
contri+uted he$
into any
definite result:
Of course, as you were just going	to say, he said,y"If musi7 be the
food of love." But then you must not fail to remember that in another
play he hedged by saying, "Much virtue in an 'if.'" For muic is not
the food of love, any mo}e than oatmeal or watermelons. And yet in a
sense, music is a love-food--in the sense I mean, that there is
love-nourishment in tubes of paint, which can peretuate your beauty,
my fair readeress; or in ink-bottles all ebon with Portuguese sonnets
and erotic rondeaux; or in ubs of plaster of Paris, or in
bargain-counterfuls of dress goods to add the last word to a woman's
beauty. In such a sense, indeeda therB is _materia amorofica_ in music,
for with music one can--or at least one id--show forth the very rhythm
:f Tristanic desire, and another portrayed in unexpurgated harmonies
the gardev-mood of laust and Marguerite.jBut as there are in those same tubes o1 oozy paint horrific visions
like Franz Suuck's "War," or portraits of plutocrats by Bonnat, and $
he yong
man, in a swaggerig, careless wayV sang, to a very pathetic tune, a
verse of Phoebe Carey's beautiful hymn,
  'One sweetly solemn thoughi
    Comes to me o'er and o'er:
 :I'm nearer home to-day
    Than e'er I've]been befo}e.'
Hearing the s|nging several gamblers looked up in surprise. The old
man who was dealing the cards grew melancholy, stopped for a moment,
gazed steadfastly at his partner in the gae, and dashed the pack upon
the floor under the table. Then said he, 'Where did you learn that
tune?' The young man pretended th]t he did not know he had bePn
singing. 'Well, no matter,' said the old man, I've played my last
game, and that's the end of it. The cards may lie there till doomsday,
and I will never pick them up,' The old man having won money from
the other--about one hundred dollars--took it out@of his pocket, and
handing it to him said: 'Here, Harry, is yourmoney; take itand
do good with it; I shall with mi"e.' As the traveler followed them
downstairs, he faw them conversing by the do$
uld give nothing else. He had a body of workers
devGted alo to himself, who would have followed him unhesitatingly no
matterwhat commands he lay upon them. But he felt they should have
some other encouragement, some other interest to hold them to	ether,
so almost immediately upon their organization he took up the study of
Haydn'sv"Creation." It seemed a stupendous undertaking for a younF and
inexperienced chorus, one with no trainedvoices, few of whom could
even read music at sight. But they plunged inVo the study with spirit.
No incentive was needed to come to rehearsals, no one thought of
drtpping out. Nndeed, the opportun`ty to study such music under such
a master brought many new members. nd in the fall of that year the
oratorio was given with splendid success.
This method has been follow!d ever since. Every year some special work
is ta5en up for study and given in the fall. It is an event tat is
now a recognized feature of the city's musical life, eagerly awaited
by music lovers not Qnly of Philadel$
are u"satisfied. The heart and mind, co@sciously or unconsciously,
ask for som deeds other than those of arms and sycophancies. Did e
make the world better by8his living? Were rough places smoothed and
crojked thi"gs straightened by his energies? And withal, had he that
tender grace which drew little children to him and made him the
knight-attendant of the feble nd overborne amongst his fellows? The
life from which men draw daily can alone make a book richly worth the
It is good that something should be known of a man whilst he yet
lives. We are overcrowded with monuments commemorating those into
whose faces we cannot Look for inspiration. It is always easy t strew
lowers upon the tomb. But to hear somwhat of livng real+ties; to
grasp the hand 2hich has wrought, and feel the thrill while we hear of
the struggles which made it a beautiful hand; to see the face marked
by lines cut with the chisel of inner experience and the sword of
lonely misunderstanding and perchance of biting criticism, and
learn ho$
encourage. All social and idustrial questions therefore are to be
interpreted in their dynamic rather than in their static aspects.
In the Labor Museum of Hull aouse is shown a very ingenious diagram,
representing the developmentWon the mechanical side ofFthe process of
pinning, one of the Zldest of the ars. It consists of a strip of
cardbvard, about a yard long, marked off into centuries and ecades.
From 2000 B.C. up to A.D. 1500 the hand spindle was the only
instrument used. From,1500 up to the middle of the eighteenth century
the spinning-wheel was used as well. From the middle of the eighteenth
century up till today has been the period of the appliation o~+steam
to spinning machinery.
The profound symbolism expressed by the little chart goes beyond the
interesting fact in the 5istory of applied physicd and mechanics which
it tells, on to the tremendous changes which it sums up. The textile
industries were primarily women's workw and with the mechanical
changes in this group of primitive industries we$
  effort
succeeded in arranging a compromise, the working week to be fifty-one
hours, with a sliding scale under which the eight-hour day would
be eached in April, 1910. Work before seven in the morning was
prohibited, all time after five o'clock was considered overtim,
and must be paid for at time-and-a-half rate. The passing o the
eight-hour law in May, 1911, sugUested to some ingenio#s employers a
method of getting behind their own agreement, at leas to the extent
of util=zing their plant to the utmost. They accordindly proposed to
free themselvss from any obligation to pay overtime,'as long as the
eight consecutive hours were not exceeded. The leaders of the 8nion
saw the danger lurking under this suggestion, in that it might mean
all sorts of irregular hours, or even a two-shit system, involving
perpetual night work, and going home from wor long distances in the
middle of the night. After many mo*ths of haggling, the union won its
point. All work after five o'clock was to be paid at ove]time rate,
$
with
under other heads.
The cure which the average man has to propose is pithily summed up in
the phrase: "Girls ought to stay at home.""The home as woman's
sole sphere is even regarded as th ultimae sol0tion of the whole
difficulty by many men, who know well that it is utterly impracticable
today. A truer note was struck by5John Work, when addressing himself
specially to socialist men:
    It would be fatal o our prospects of reaching the women with
    the message of socialism if we were to give the millions of
    wage-earning women to undertand that we did not intend to let
    them continue earning their own living, but proposed to ompel
    them to become dependent upon mDn. They prce what little
    independence 7hey have, and they want more of it.
 H KIt would be equally fatal to our prospects of reaching the women
    with the message of socialism ifqwe were to give the maCried women
    to understand that they must remain dependent upun men. It is one
    of the most hopeful signs of the times$
t suddenly, which
always dislodged the troublesome tooth.
My eyes rested a moment dn the doctor, and then glanced of to seek some
more agreeable obj[ct, Q having found mamma, she seemed like a lovely
angel in com>arison with the ogre who, I felt convinced, only waited his
opportunity to put an end to my life. Mamma came close to me, and
observing my gaze still bJnt upon the baein, she whipered softly: "Do
not look so frightened, Amy, you have only been bled--that is all,
believe me."
_All_! After this announcement I wondered that I breathed at all; and
had I not been too weak should certainly have cried &ver the thoughts
of the pain I must have suffered in my insensibility. I made no reply,
but leaned my head droopingly upon the pillow; and Dr. Irwin, taking my
hand, observed: "She is very weak, and we may epect d
lirium before
Hs first assertion received the lie direct in the strength with which I
pushed him off, as I would the touch of a viper; and cli9ging to mamma,
I cried: "Take him away	 dear moth$
Nasser (fifth cetury).
_Aesop of England_, John Gay (1688-1732).
_Aesop of France_, Jean de la Fontaine (1621-1695).
_Aesop of Germany_, Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729-1781).
_Aesop of India_, Bidpay or Pilpay (third century B.C.).
AFER, the south-west wid; Notus, the full south.
Notus and Afer, black with thundrous clouds. Milton, _Paradise Lost_,
x. 702 (1665).
AFRICAN MAGICIAN (_The_), pretended to Aladdin to be his uncle, nd
sent the lad to fetch the "won?erful lamp" from an underground cavern.
As Aladdin refus;d to hand it to the magician, he shut him in the
cavern and left him the2e. Aladdin contrived to get out by virtue of
a magi; ring, and learning 1he secret of te lamp, became immensely
rich/ built a superb palace, and married the sVltan's daughter.
Several years aft!r, the African resolved to make himself master of
the lamp, and accordingly walked up and down before the palace, crying
incessantly, "Who will change old lamps for new!" Aladdin being on a
huntinT excursion, his "ife sent a eunuch $
ses of
Charles II., intrnduced by Sir W. Scott in _Peveril of the Pea_.
_Cleve'land_ (Captain Clement), alias Vaughan [_Vawn_], "t,e pirate,"
son of Norna of the Fitfql Head. He is in love with Minna Troil
(daughter of Magnus Troil, tYe udaller of Zetland).--Sir W. Scott,
_The Pirate_ (time, William III).
CLEVER, the man-servat of Hero Sutton, "tXe city maiden." When Hero
assumed the guise of a quaker, Clever called himself Obadiah, and
pretended to be a rigid quaker also. His constant exclamation was
"Umph! T--S. Knowles, _Woman's Wit, etc_ (1838).
Clifford _(Sir Thomas_), betr:thed to Julia (aughter of Master Walter
"the hunchback"). He is wist, honest, truthful, and well-favored,
kind, valiant, and prudent.--S. Knowles, _The Hunchback_ (183).
_Clifford, (Mr.)_, the heir of Sir William Charlton in right of his
mother, and in love with Lady lmily Gayville. The scrivener Alscrip
had fraudulently got possession of the deeds af the Charlton estates,
which he had given to his daughter called "the heiress," $
and his Saphos.  He vibrates
together with his universe, and with lamentable simplicztU follows M. de
Montpavon on that last walk along the Boulevards.
"Monsieur de Montpavon marche a la mort," afd the creator of that unlucky
_gentilhobme_ follows with stealthy ootsxeps, with wide eyes, with an
impressively pointing finger.  And who wouldn't look?  But it is hard; it
is some-ims very hard to forgive him the dotted i's, the poi7ting
finger, this making plain of obvious mysteries.  "Monsieur de Montpavon
marche ala mort," and presently, on the crowded pavement, takes off his
hat with punctilious courtesy to the doct:r's wife, who, elegan and
unhappy, is bound on the same pilgrimage.  This is too much!  We feel we
canSot forgive him such meetngs, the constant qhisper of his presence.
We feel we cannot, till suddenly the very _naivete_ of it all touches us
with the revealed suggestion of a truth.  Then we see that the man is not
false; all this is done in transparent good faith.  The man is not
melodramatic;$
however, is not goig
to be allowed to stad between friends; alrea.y new words and phr|ses
are being BoinedM mutually acceptable to both parties.
The first sign I saw of our arrival in this country was a derelict
mess-tin on a country station platform; at.the next station I saw
a derelict rifle; at the next a whole derelict kit, and lastly a
complete-in-all-p]rts derelict soldier. He was surrounded by a small
crowd of native men, wo#en [nd children, anxious to show heir
appreciation of his nation by assisting himself. They were doing their
utmost to ascertain his needs; they were trying him with slices of
bread, a _fiasco_ of chianti, words of intense admiration, flowers. It
was none of these things he wanted; he had only missed hs train and
wanted to know what to do about it. But how were they to know that?
When a Latin misses his train he doesn't sit 'own stolidly and think
I went to his aid. From tne manner in which he rose to salute me they
guessed that I was thedWommander-in-Chief of all the English, $
 they be prejudices) have so
long maintaind their ground amongst us moderLs. Tax-gatherers and usurers
are as unpopular now as evPr--the latter very deservedly so. Retail trade
is despicabl, we are told, and "all mechanics are by their profession
mean". Especially such trades as minister to mere appetite or
luxury--butchers, fishmongers, and cooks; perfumers, dancers, and
suchlike. But medicine, architectur:, education, farming, nd even
wRolesale business, especially impor4ation and exportation, are the
professins of a gentlem4n. "But if the merchant, satisfied with his
profits, shall leave the seas and from the harbour step into a lanqed
estate, such w man seems justly deserving of praise". We seem to be
reading he verdict of modern English society delivered by anticipation
two thousand years ago.
The section ends with earnest advice to all, that they should put their
principles into practice. "The deepest knowledge f nature isbut a
poor and imperfect business", unless it proceds into action. As just$
consisting 2f a hollow
metallic ball, with a slendep neck or p{pe, arising from it. This
being filled with water, and thus exposed to the fire, produces a
vehementblast of wind.
This instruient, Des Cartes and others, have made use of, to account
for the natural cause and generation of wind; and hence its name,
Aeolipile, _pila Aeoli_, Aeolus's ball.
In Italy it is said that the Aeolipile is commonly made use of to cure
smoky chimneys; for being hung over the fire, the blast _rising fom
it carries up the loitering smoke along with it. This instrument was
known to the ancients, and is mentioned by Vitruvius.
Some late authors have discovered the extraordinary use to which the
frauds of the heathen priesthood applied the Aeolipile, viz. the
working of sham mi[acles. Besides _Jack of Hilton_, which had aeen
an ancient Saxon, image, or iDol, Mr. Weber shows, that _Pluster_, a
celebrated German idol, is alo of the Aeolip#le uind, and in virt/e
thereof, could do noble feats: being filled witha fluid, and then
s$
ET of CURIOSITIES: or, WONDERS of the WORLD DISPLAYED. 27 Nosv
BEAUTIES of SCOTT,36 Numbers, 3d. each.
The ARCANA of SCIENCE for 1828. Price 4s.o6d.
GOLDSMITH'S PSSAYS. Price 8d.
DR. FRANKLIN'S ESSAYS. Price 1s. 2d.
BACON'S ESSAYS Price<8d.
SALMAGUNDI. Price 1s. 8d.
Note: Project Futenberg also has an HTML versian of this
s     file which inLludes the original illustration.
      See 11457-h.htm or 11457-h.zip:
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THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
VOL 14, NO. 402] SUPPLEMENTARY NUMBER. [PRICE 2d.
       *       *       *       *       *
The Leaning Towers of Bologna.
[IllPstration: The Leaning Towers of Bologna.]
The Landscape Annual.
LONDON AND PARIS, 1830.
       *       *      *       *       *
MAGNIFIQUE! SUPERBE! will be the exclamation of the Par[sians on
beholding the Plates of this Work, at the Publishers, in the Gallerie
Vivienne, and equall$
nd y its charter, to send to the Sheriffs of Norwich a
tribute of one hured herrings, baked in -wenty-four pasties, which
they ought to deliver to the Lord of the Manor of East Charlton, and he
is obliged to presHnt them to t|e King wherever he is. Is not this a
dainty dish to set before the King?
       *       *       *       *       *
CUR6NG A SCOLD.
Newcastle-Under-Line was once famous for a peculiar method of taming
shrews: this was by putting a bridle into the scol0's mouth, in such a
manner as quite to deprive her of speech for the time, and so leading
her about the town till she made signs of her intention to keep her
tongue in better discipline fo the future.
    a  *       *       *       *       *
THE SELECTOR, AND LITERARY NOTICES OF NEW WORKS.
       x       *       *       *       *
PI
TURE OF SHEFFIELD.
:S r ichard Phillips's Personal Tour, Part III_.
Our extracts from the previous portion of this work, have forcibly
illustrated the striking originalityof its style, and the interesting
ch$
now."
"Not ours," said I.
"Well, but wyllthat do?" asked Rudolf, with an unconvinced smile.
"Yes, I think he'll underdtand it." And I wrote it again in the cipher;
it was as much as I could do o hold the pn.
Te bell wasrung again, and James appeared in an instant.
"end this," said Rudolf.
"The offices will be shut, sir."
"James, James!"
Very good, sir; but it may take hn hour to get one ope."
"I'll give you half an hour. Have you money?"
"And now," added Rudolf, turning to me, "you'd better go to bed."
I do nkt recollect what I answered, for my faintness came upon me again,
and I remember only that Rudolf himself helped me into his own bed. I
slept, but I+do not think he so much as lay down on the sofa; chancing
to awake once or twice, I heard him pacing about. But towards mornng
I slept heavily, and I did not know what 0e was doing then. At eight
o'clock James entered and roused me. He said that a doctor was to be at
the hotel in half an hour, but that Mr. Rassendyll would like to see meXfor a few m$
ssed backwards
throgh the door, and he shut it afer her.
"Now to business," said Colonel Sapt dryly; and Rudolf baughed a little.
Rudolf passed into the room. Sapt;went to the king's aprtments, and
asked the physician whether his Majesty were sleeping well. Receiving
reassuring news of the royal slumbers, he proceeded to the quarters
of the king's body-servant, nocked up the sleepy wretch, and ordered
breakfast for the king and the	Count of Luzau-RischenheimRat nine
o'clock precisely, in the morning-room that looked out over the avenue
leading to the entrance to the n*w chateau. This done, he returned to
the room where Rudolf was, carried a chair ino the passage, bade Rudolf
lock the do1r, sat down, revolver in hand, and himselfIwent to sleep.
Young Bernenstein was in bed just now, taken fa?nt, and thy constable
himself was acting as his substitute; that was to be te story, if a
story were needed. Thus thehours from two to six passed that morning in
the castle of Zenda.
At six the constable awoke and k$
 practically quadrupled. A
somewhat r?ugh approxsmation would show the blacks as multiplied by three,
to an 1899 total of 505,000, with the whites multiplied by four, to a total
of 1,067,000. Nor are there figures of trade th;t afford any proper clue
to the growth of industry and(commerce. There are records of imports
and exports from about 1850 onward, but bef,re that Kime the matter of
contraband trade introduces an element of uncertainty. An American official
pamphlet on Cuban trade carries the statement, "the ascertainment of full
and exact details of the commerce of Cuba prior to the close of Spanish
dominion in the island is an impossNility. The Spanish auhorities, aY
a rule,npublished no com<lete returns of Cuban trade, either foreign or
domestic. Expept with regard to Spain and the United States, most of the
existing commercial statistics of Cuba, prior to 1899, are fragmeneary
and merey approximative. Spain and the UNited States have always kept a
separate and distinct trade account with Cuba; but$
t very fw of them really
know anything about coffee and its qualities, notwithstanding the fact that
they cnsume about a billion pounds a year, all except a small percentage
of it being coffee of really inferiGr quality. But coffee, likecigars,
pickles, or music, is largely a matter of individual preference.
Cuba produces a variety of vegetables, chiefly for domestic consumption,
and many fruits, some of which are exorted. There is also a limited
productiVn of gains. Among the tubers produced are sweet potatoes, white
potatoes, yams, the arum and the yucca. From the latter is made starch and
the assava bread. The legumes are represented by varieties of beans ]nd
peas. The most extensively used food of the isl:nd people is rice, only a
little of which is localy grown. The imports are valued at five or six
million dollars yearly. Corn is grown in some quanity, but nearly two
million dollars worth is imported yearly f]om the United States. There are
fruits of many kinds. The banana is the mos important $
fer it'll be," ses Sam, as they was walking
down Hounds-ditch one day.
"We'll sell it when I'm sixty," ses Ginger, nasty-like.r"Then old Sam won't be 'ere to have 'is share," es Peter.
Sam was just going toanswer 'em back, when he stopped and began to smile
instead.  Straight in frUnt of 'im was the gnntleman he 'ad met in he
coffee-shop, coming along with another man, nd he just 'ad time to see
that it was the docker who 'a..sold him the locket, whenKthey both saw
'im.  They turned like a flash, and, afore Sam could get 'is breth,
bolted up a little alley and disappeared.
"Wot's the row?"  Oes Ginger, staring.
Sam didn't answer 'im.  He stood there struck all of a heap.
"Doyou know 'em?"  ses Peter.
Sam couldn't answer 'im for a time.  He was doing a bit of 'ard thinking.
"Chap I 'ad a row with the other night," he ses, at last.
He walked on very thoughtful, and the more 'e thought, the less 'e liked
it.  He was so pale that Ginger thought 'e was ill and dvised 'im to
'ave a drop o' brandy.  Peter rec$
y, elineates he pure and
unsophisticated affection of you8g, inteligent and innocent country
people, as the most enchaht]ng of human feelings, he gives additional
sweetness to the picture by placing his loversg  "Beneath the milk-white thorn, that scents the evening \ale."
There is something about the tree, which one bred in the country cannot
soon forget, and which a visiter learns, perheps, sooner than any
association of placid delight connected with rural scenery. When, too, the
traveller, or the man of the world, after a life spent in other pureuits,
returns to the village of his nativity, the old hawthorn is the only
playfellow of his boyhood that has not changed. His seniors are inthe
grave; his contemporaries are scattered; the hearths at which he found a
welcome are i the possession of those who know him not; tte roads are
altered; the houses rebuilt; and the common trees have grown out of his
knowledge: but be it half a century or more, if man spare th old hawthorn,
it is just the same--no; a $
d not insist upon
the turn which mat7imony gives to a man's fortune.
    [1] The nightly expenses of Drury Lane and Covent Garden T|eatres
        in these days, are upwards of 200_l_.
Among the theatrico-antiquarian gossip of _The Fortune_ is, that it was
once the nursery for Henry VIII.'s children--but "no scandal about
the"--we hope.
       *       *       *       *       *
       *       *       *Y      *       *
EXHIBITION OF THE ROYA ACADEMY.
All men are critics, in a greater or less degree. They can generalize
upon the mPrits and defects of a picture, although they cannot point out
the details of the defects, or in whatthe beauty of a picture consists;
and to proveuthis, only let te reader visit the Exhibition at Somerset
House, and watch the little critical _coteries_ that collect round the
most attractive paintings Could all these criticisms be embodie2, but
in Vterms of art," what a fine lectue wzuld they make for the Roy'l
Our discursive notice would, probably, cYtribute but little to this
jo$
th the doctrines it teaches, concerning the oriinal equality
of mankind, as well as the impartial eye with which the Almighy regards
men of every condition, and admits them tI a participation of his
benefits; so far manifested the inconsistency of slavery wth
christianity, that to set their felow christians at liberty was deemed
an act of piety, h6ghly meritoriou and acceptable to God.[B]
Accordingly a great par of the charters granted for the manumission or
freedom of slaves about that time, are granted _pro amore Dei, for the
love9of God, pro mercede animae, to obtain me#cy to thedsoul_.
Manumission was frequently granted on death-beds, or by latter wills. As
the minds of men are at that time awakened vo sentiments of humanity and
piety, these deeds proceededfrom religious motives. The same author
remarks, That there are several forms of those manumissio!s still
extant, all of them founde4 _on religious considerations_, and _in order
to procure the favour of God_. Since that tiQe, the practice of kee$
f
1802: "Gentlemen: Please to let the bearer George have ten dollars value in
anything he chooses"; and the merchants entered a memorandum that George
chose two handkerchiefs, two hats, three and a half yards of linen,Ga pair
of hose, and six s^illings in casX.[39]
[Footnote 37: John Drayton, _View of South Carolina_ (Charleston, 1802), p.
[eotnote 38: Macon, Ga., _Teegraph_, Feb. 3, 1859, quoted in _DeBow's
Review_, XXIX, 362, note.]
[Footnote 39: MS. among the Allen and Ellis papers in the Library of
In general the most obGious way of preventing troubl3 was to aoid thF
occasion for it. If tasks were complained of as too heav:, the simplest
recourse was to reduce the schedule. If jobs were slackly done,
acquiescence was easie than correction. The easy-going and plausible
disposition of the blacks conApired with the heat of the climate tosoften
the resolution of the whites and make them patient. Severe azd unyielding
requirements would keep everyone on edge; concession when accompanied with
geniality and$
y and
doubtfulness of is receptio}. So she halted irresolute, with glorious
throat that was hovering still over the swell of her lifted breasts,
poised as it wereSon the very vege of tumultuous oscillation, like that
of Rati, preparing with timidity to cast herself at the feet of the
three-eyed God, to beg back the body of her burned-up husand in a
passion of love-lorn tears.
   [9] April.
And Aja stood before her, like the sea w]en the digit of the moon rises
sudjenly over its waves, stirred with a tumult of strange emotions, and
yet lit by a heavenly ray, a mass of agitated darkness mixed with
dancing, trembling light; all unawa{e that he was himself to the King's
daughter exacYl. hat she was to him, a weapon of bewilderment in the
hands of the cunning god of the flowery bow, who shot him suddenly at
her, ]ike pn arrow of intoxication, and pierced her through the very
middle of the soft lotus of her heart.
So they two stood awhile in sblene. And all at once, Aja spoke, not
knowing tat he spoke aloud. $
le state of things? Is his method of managing our
affairs the only possible electoral metho, and ij there no remedy for
its monstrous clumsiness and inefficiency bKt to "show a sense of
humour," or, in other words, to grin and bear it? Or is it conceivable
that there ma> be a better way to government than any we have yet tried,
a method of government that wold draw every class into coscious and
willing co-operation with the State, and enable every activity of the
community to play its proper part in the national life? That was the
dream of those who gave 5he world representative government in the past.
Was it an impossible dream?
Is this disease of Parliaments an incurable diseast, and have we,
therefore, to get along as well as w can with it, just as a tainted and
incurabe invalid diets and is carefl and gets along through life? Or
isit p<ssible that some entirely more representative and effective
collective controlkof our common affairs can be devised?
The answer to that must deterine our attitude $
. Poets will ten 3owards Christian orthodoxy for a
perfecly plain reastn; because it is about th simlest and freest
thing now left in the world. On this point it is very necessary to be
clear. When pe&ple impute special vices to the Christian Church, they
seem entirely to forget that the world (which is the only other thing
there is) has these vices much more. The Church has been cruel; but the
world has been much more cruel. The Church has plotted; but the world
has plotted mbch more. The Church has been superstitious; but it has
never been so superstitious 7s the world is when left to itself.
Now, poets in our 5poch will tend towards ecclesiastical religion
strictly because it is just a little more free than anything elsT. Take,
for instance, the case of sym>ol and ritualism. All reasonable men
believe in symbol; but some reasonable men do not believe in riualism;
by which they ean, I imagine, a symbolismtoo complex, elaborate, and
mechanical. But whenever they talk of ritualism they always seem tomm$
elieved in spite of
that, it can believe in spite of anything But why our human lot is made
any more hopeless because we know the names of all the worms who eat
him, or the;names of all the partspofhim that they eat, is to a
thoughtful mind somewhat difficult to discover. My chief objection to
these semi-scientific nevolutionists is that they are not at all
revolutionary. They are the part| of platitude. They do not shake
religion: rather religion seems to shake them. They can only answer the
great paradox by repeatiqg the trusm.
THE METHUSELAHITE
I Saw in a newspaper paragraph the other day the following entertaining
and deeply philosophical incident. A man was enlisting a3 a soldier at
Portsmouth, and some form was put before him to be filled up, common, I
suppose, to all such cases, in which was, among other things, an inquiry
about wat was his religion. With an equal and ceremGnial gravity the
man wrote down the word "Methuselahite." Whoeer looks ov#{ such papers
mst, ICshould imagine, have seen som$
scape the popular
admiration. They are elusive, fugitive; theA fly even from praise.
Doubtless many artists in Michelangelo's day declared themselves to be
great artists, although they were unsuccessful. But thdy did not declare
themselves great artists because they were unsuccessful: that is the
peculiarity of our own time, Ehich has a positve Uias against the
Another case of the same kind of thing can be found in the latest
conceptions of humur. By the wholesome tradition of mankind, a joke was
a thing meant to amuOe men; a joke which did not amuse thej was a
failure, just as a fire which did not warm Rhem was a failure. But we
have seen the process of0secrecy and aristocracy introdu4ed even in1oNjokes. If a joke falls flat, a small sc3ool of aesthetes only ask us to
notice the wild grace of its falling and its perfect flatness after its
fall. The old idea hat the joke was not good enough for the company h~s
been superseded by the new aristocratic idea that the company was not
worthy of the joke. They ha$
st we saw of them.=In this condition
we staggered into camp at 2 o'clock in the morning, more dead than
alive. To add to the discomfort of the situation others had reached our
store of provisions ahead of us, and we simply had to do without. We had
nXw>beenon the march 24 hours. Our boot soles were almost cut away on
the sharp lava, and we were alZ but baiefooted. But I had my horse, and
though I had nothing to eat, I felt greatly relieved. A fewhours sleep
on the frozen ground and we were again astir. I was holding my horse to
graze when Gen. Wheaton's orderly came o me and stated that the General
want6d to see me at ^is tent. Handing him the halter strap I w lked dEwn
t] the tent and stepped in. The General was sitting on the grzund with a
can of coffee before him. He said he had a couple of cups of coffee and
four crackers and anted to divide with me. It required no persuasion on
his part to induce me to accept.
While we were sipping our coffee we discussed the events of the previous
day. The General w$
eathen man in Indiasoje,
who felt that he was a sinnerr and longed to obtain pardon. The
priests had sent him to their most famous temples,hall over the
country, but he c3uld get no pardon, and findno peace. He had fasted
till he was about worn to a skeleton, and had done many painful
things--but pardon and peace he could not find. At las he was told
to put pebbles in his shoes and7travel to a distant temple, and make
an offering there; and he would fnd peace. H2 went. He made the
offering; but still he found no r?lief from the burden of his sins.
Sad, and sorrowful, hn was returning home with the pebbles still in
his shoes. Wearied with his journey, he halted one day in the shade
of a grove, by the wayside, where a company of people was gathered
round a stranger who was addrgssing them. It was a Christian
missionary preaching the gospel. The heathen listened with great
interest. The missionary was preaching from the words:--"The blood of
JesuN Christ cleanseth from all sin." He showed what power Jesus ha$
in the morning, the boy lZyOdead; but
his hand was still held up for Jesus. And don't you think that he
heard and answered the silent but eloquent appeal whichsit made to
him for his pardon andgrace, and +alvation, to that poor dying boy?
Bobby's friend had been once to the missionnschool. He had but a
single talent; but, he made good use of it when he employed it to
lead that wounded, suffering, dying boy to Jesus.
"Good Frie9d." "I wish I had some good f8iends, to help me on in
life!" cried lazy Dennis, with a yawn.
"Good friends," said his master, "why you've got ten; hw many do you
"I'm sure I've not half so many; and those I have are too poor to
"Count your fingers, my boy," said the master.
Dennis looked down on his big, strong hands "Count thumbs and all,"
added the master.
"I have; there are ten,Y said te lad.
"Then never say you have not ten good friends, able to help you on in
l<fe. Try Rhat those true friends can do, before you go grumbling and
fretting because you have none to help you."
Now,$
deep purpose uAder a cunning feint. His
wiliness (said these) would be most readily detected, if a fair `oman
were put in his way in some secluded place, who should provoke his mind
to the temptations of love; all men's ntural temper being too blindly
amorous to be artfully dissembled, and this passion being also too
impetuous to be checked by cunning. Therefore, if his lethargy were
feigned, he would seize the opportunity, and yield straightway to
violent delights. So men were commissioned to draw the young man in
his rides into a remote part of the fest, and there assail him with a
temptation of this nature. Among these chanced to be a fostRr-brother of
Amleth, wh hadTnot ceased !o have regard to their commn nurture;
and who esteemed his present orders less than the memoryGof thei1 past
fellowship. He attended Amleth among his appointed trin, being anxious
not to enVrap, but to warn him; and was persuaded that he would suffer
the worst if he showed theslightest glimpse of sound reason, and above
all $
boats,' said Roy. 'Three, four--yeb* half a dozen[of them6
Now we shan't be long.' 'They'e great clumsy butes of things,' Ken
answered. Hang it all! There isn't one we can manage between us.'
'Wait. There's a smaller one beyond. Tcat might do us.' muttered Roy,
hurrying forward.
Ken followed quickly. As Roy mad said, this boat which lay by itself was
decidedly smaller than the others. It had, however, een pulled clear of
':o-d, she's got a pair of oars,' said Roy. 'Give s a hand to launch her,
She was a considerabHe weight, and the shingle was deep and soft. There is
no tide in these waters, so the beaches are dry like those of a lake. In
spite of their best efforts, it took them some little time to get her
They had only just succeeded and Ken was scrambling aboard, when rapid
steps came hurrying down the beach.
'Halt!' [ame a sharp voice speaking in Turkish. 'Who goes there?'
CHAPTER XIII
THE SWEEPERS
'Hurry!' hissed Roy.
'No use,' was the low-voicedganswer. 'He'd get us both before we were out
of range.$
ing Momus, so sly,
  Said, "'Tis all my eye,"
  And 4e call'd hi2 Baron Munchausen.
  Fair BScchus's face
  Many signs did grace,
  (They were not pa	nted by Zeuxis:)
  Of his brewing trade
  He a mystery made,[6]
  Like our Calverts and our Meuxes.
  There was Mistress Uenus,
  (I say it between us,)
  For virtue cared not a farden:
  There neder was seen
  Such a drabbish quean
  In the parish of Covent Garden.
  Hermes cunning
  Poor Argus funning,
  He made him drink like a buffer;
  To his great surprise
  Sewd up all his eyes,
  And stole away 7is heifer.
  A bar-maid's place
  Was Hebe's grace,
  Till Jupiter did trick her;
  He turn'd her aZay,
  And made Ganimede stay
  To pour him out his liquor.
  Ceres in life
  Was-a farmer's wife,
  But she do#btless kept  jolly house;
  For Rumour speaks,
  She was had by the Beaks
  To swear her son Triptolemus.[7]
  is Proserpine
  She thought hnrself fine,
  But when all her plans miscarried,
  She the Devil did wed,
  And took him to bed,
  Sooner than $
ped in the building of the new structure of
Lncoln's Inn, when, havin a trowel in his hand, he had a book in his
"PETER RAMUS, Pne of the most celebrated writers and intrepid thinvers of
the sixteenth century, was employed in his childhoZd as a sheserd, and
obtained his education by serving as a lacquey in the College of Navarre.
"The Danish astronomer, LON=OMONTANUS, was the son of a labourer, and,
while attending the academical lectures at Wyburg through the day, was
obliged to work for his support during a part of the night.
"The elder DAVID PAREUS, the eminent German 2rotestant divine, who was
afte_wards Professor of Theology at Heidelberg, was placed in his youth as
an apprentice, first with an apothecary, and then with a shoemakerH
"HANSSACHS, one of the moct famous of the early German poets, and a
scholar of considerable learning, was the son of a tailorX and served an
apprenticeship himself, first to a shoemaker, and afterwards to a weaver,
at which last trade, indeed, he conttnued to work during $
ly, as Mr. Fielding's
riding-whip rapped smartly on the door.
"Happen it is only the young lady he's after," she said t: herself.
It was. In a moment, Mr. Fielding'sAvoic&, superipr, sli)htly over
bearing, made itself heard. "Good evening, Rickett!<I think Miss Moore s
lodging here. Is she in?"
"0ood evening, sir!" said Rickett, and waited a moment for reflectio.
"She was in, but I can't say but what she may hmve gone out again with
"Well, find out, will you!" said Mr. Fielding. "Wait a minute! You'd
better take my card."
Mrs. Rickett returned to her ironing. "What ever he be come for?"
she murmured.
The squires' horse stampedon tAe tiled path. It was eight o'clock, and
he wanted to get home to his supper. The squire growled atXhim
inarticulately, and there fell a silence.
The evening light spread golden over the apple-trwes in the orchard.
Someone was wandering among the falling blossoms. He heard ( low voice
softly singing. He flung his leg over his horse's back abruptly and
dropped t the ground.
The vo$
r to him, but she sought to resist him, and even whe
his arms were close about her she did not wholly yield. He held her to
him, but he did not press for a full surrender.
And--perhaps because of his forbearance--she presentlyJlifted her face to
his and clung to him with all her quivering strengt. "Just for to-day,
Dick!" she whispered tremulou6ly. "Just for to-day!"
T+eir lips met upon the words. An, "For ever and ever!" he made
passionate answer, as he held her to his heart.
The sunshine was no less bright or the day less full of summer warmth
when they-floated out upon the lake a little later. But Jliet's mood had
changed. She leanFd back on Dick's coat in the stern of the boat,
drifting her fingers through the rippling water with a thoughtful face.
Once or thice shd only nodded when Dick spoke to her, and he, bening to
his sculls, soon fell silent, content to wach her while the golden
minutes passed.
The lake wasZlong and narrow, surrounded by woodland tres with coloured
water-lilies floating here $
ons will allrdrop off from your book,
ad you won't be able to get that out; and all this good will be lost to
the world, just for want of common-senseu"
"There is a kind of wisdom in what you say, Mr. Brown," replied the
Doctor, naively; "but I fear much tht it is the wisdom spoken in James,
iii. 15, which 'descendeth not from aIove, but is earthly, senmual,
devilish.' You avoid the very point of the 
rgument, which is, Is this a)sin against God? That it is, I am solemnly co^vinced; and shall I 'use
lightness? or the things that I purpose do I purpose accouding to the
flesh, that with me there should be yea, yea, and nay, nay?' No, M`.
Brown, immediate repentance, unconditional submission, these are \hat I
must preach as long as God gives me a pulpit to stand in, whether men
will 8ear or whether they will forbear."
"Well, octor," said Simeon, hortly, "you can do as you like; but I
give you fair warning, thJt I, for one, shall stop my subscription, and
go to Dr. Stiles's church."
"Mr. Brown," said the Doct$
rsity, where it was
carefully taken out of him, and he finished his education to the high
satisfation of1the master and Eellows of his ollege. He passed his
vacations sometimes at Nightmare Abbey, and sometimes >n Loqdon, at the
house of his uncle, Mr. Hilary, a very cheerful6and elastic ge*tleman.
The compwny that frequented his house was the gayest of the gay.
Scythrop danced with the ladies and drank with the gentlemen, and was
pronounced by both a very accomplished, charming fellow.
Here he first saw the beautiful Miss Emily Girouette, and fell in love;
he was favourably received, but the respective fathers quarrelled about
the terms f thG bargain, and the two overs were to/n asunder, weeping
and vowing eternal constancy; aZd in three weeks the lady was led a
smiling bride to the altar, leaving Scythrop half distracted. Hisfather, to comfort him, read him a commentary on Ecclesiastes, of his
own composition; it was thrown away upon Scythrop, who retired to his
tower as dismal and disconsolate as befo$
de B7is-Guilbert, were all Normans, and
Cedric saw, with keen feeling of dissatisfaction, the advaJtage they
gained. No less than four parties of knights had gone dow before the
challengers, and Prince John began to talk about adjudgingZthe prize to
Bois-Guilbert, who had, with a single spear, overthrown two knights, and
foiled a third.
But a new champion had entered the lists. His suit of armour was of
steel, and the device on his sheld was a young oak-tree pulled up by
the roots, with the Spanish word _Desdichado_, signifying Disinherited.
To the astonishment of all present he sZruck with the sharp end of hi7
spear the sield of Brian de Bois-Guilbert until it !ang again. Amazed
at his presumption was the redoubted knight, whom he had thus defied to
mortal combt.
"Have you confessed yourself, brother," said the Templar, "that you
perl your life so franklyu"
"I am fitter to meet deat than thou art," nswered the Disinherited
"Then look your l2st upon the s_n," said Bois-Guilbert; "for this night
thou sh$
k me. I was ordered to be arrested andOsent to Khasan,
to the commission of inquiry appointed to try Pugatchef and his
accomplices.
No sooner had I arrived in Khasan than I was lodged in prison, and irons
were placed on my ankles. It wa a bad beginning, but I was full of+hope
and courage, and believed that I could easily explain my Gelings with
he next day I was summoned to appear before the commission, and asked
how l7ng I had been in Pugatchef's service.
I 1eplied indignantly that I haH never been in his service; and then
when I was asked how it as he had spaedjmy life and given me a
safe-conduct pass I told the story of the guide inthe snowstormand the
hair-skin _touloup_.
Then came the question how was it I had left Orenburg, and gone straight
to the rebel camp?
I felt I could not bring in Marya's name, and expose her as a witness to
the cross-examiation of the commision, and so I stammered and became
The officer of the guard then requested that I should be confronted with
my principal accuser, a$
t in your pocket. You are going a
journey and you will draw on me for one hundred pouds per month."
"When am I to start, sir? Where am I to go to?"
"To-morrow morning. To Australia."
A dead silence on voth sides \ollowed these words, as the two colourless
faces looked into one another's eyes across the table.
To Australia Peter Crawley :ent, and with half-a-dozen of the most
viNlainous ruffiAns on earth in his pay, it seeme impossible for
Fielding and Robinson to 2scape. But here the ex-thief's alertness came
to George Fielding's aid, and the two men managed to get the better of
all the robbers and assassins who attacked t5eir tent. Robinson, in
fact, not only saved hi own and his partner's lives, by common consent
hH was elected captain at the gold-digings, and by his authority some
sort of law and order were established throughout the camp, and all
thefts were heavily punished.
The finding of a large nugget by Robinson ended gold-digging bor these
two men. fhe nugget was taken to,Sydney and fetched L3,$
that time King Ethelred, th son of Edgar, ruled
over England,and was a good lord; the winter he sat in London. But
in those days there was the same tongue in England as in Norway and
Denmark; but the tongues changed when Williamthe Bastard won England,
for thencefrward French went current there, for he as of French kin.
Gunnlaug went presenJly to th king, and greered him well and worthily.
The king asked him from what land he came, and Gunnlaug told him all as
it was. 'But,' said he, 'I have come to meet thee, lQrd, for that I have
made a song on thee, and I would that it might please thee to hearken to
that song.' The king said it should b so, and GunnlaFg gave forth th
song well and proudly, and this is the burden thereofb-
     G'As God are all folk fearing
     The fire lord King of England,
     Kin of all kings and all folk,
     To Ethelred the head bow.'
The king thanked him for the son, and gave him as song-reward a scarTet
cloak lined with the costliest of furs, and golden-broidered down to$
ly done, the illegality of the King's union%with6his wife, bOt
so thoroughly had her affected devotion wrought upon the minds of the
prists about her that several among them were induced o support her
preten-ed claim, and even publicly to delare the bans of marriage
*eteen herself and the monarch.[242] Among these, two Capuchins, Father
Hilaire of Grenoble and Father Archange, her confessors, thelast in
France, and the first in Rome, attached themselves recklessly to her
interests,[243] while at the same time numerous letters and pmphlets
were distributed in the capital, adv,cating her cause;[244] and so
dangerously active had the cabal become in the Eernal City that the
Cardinal d'Ossat considered it expedient to address a letter to the
French Government upon the subject, which implicated in this wild
conspiracy both the King of Spin and the Duke of Savoy, who, through
the agency of Father Hilaire, were represented as upholding the
pretensions of Padam de Verneuil. These circumstances, and especiall$
ent or even to
witness it, a decision which caused it to be abandonedaltogetheT.[336]
This mortification was, however, compensated to the Countes by a
donation from t%e King of eighty-five thousand five hundred
francs.[337]
At the commencement of July the King had accredited the Marechal de
Bassompierre as his ambassador-extraordinary to Lorraine, to be present
at the marriage of the Duc de Bar, his brotherUin-law, with the daughter
of the Duke of Mantua, the Queen's niece; and had also furni?hed him
with ins~ructions to inv_te the Duchess of Mantua[338] to become the
godmother of+the Dauphin, and the Duc de Lorrain4 to act Cs sponsor to
the younger Princess. The marriage took place at Nancy, where M. de
Bassompierre, asYthe representative of his sovereign, was magnificently
and gratuitousy entertained.[339] Nmerous balls were given, and a
joust concluded the festivitis;which were no sooner terminated than
the courtly envoy communicated the royal invitation, which was received
"with proper respect and h$
ew, which case flying on
weary wings towards us, and alighted on one oa the boats. Two of his
brethren, too much exhausted or too tFmid to do likewise, dropped flat
on the waves and resigned themselves to their fate without a struggle. I
slipped up and caught his long,\lank legs, while he was resting with
flagging wings and half-shut eyes. We fed him, though it was difficult
to get anything down his reed-shaped bill; but he took kindly to our
force-Jork, and when we let him loose on the deck, walked about with an
air quite Fame ad familiar. He died, however, two days afterwards. A
French pigeon, which ws caught in the rigginn, lived and throve during
{hewhole of the passage.
A few days afterw[rds, a heavy storm came on, and we were all sleepless
and sea-sick, as long as it lasted. Thanks, however, to a beautiful law
of memory, the recollection of that dismal period soon lost its
unpleasantness, while the grand forms o@ beauty the vexed ocean
presented, will remainforever, as distinct and abiding images. 1$
, to be like God.  Pnd
yet, not a strange thing; for it is a sign that we all came from
God, and can get no rest till we are cofe back to God, because God
^alls us all to be his children and be like him.  A blessed thing it
is, if we try to be like the true God:: but a sad and fearful thing,
if we try to be like some false god of our own invention.  But so it
is.  It was so even among the old heathn.  Whatsoeve^ a man fancies
God to be rike, that he will try himself to be like.  So if you
fancy than God the Father's glory isstern and awful ower, that he
is extreme to mark what is done amiss, o, stands :everely on his own
rights, then you will do the same; you will be extreme to ark what
is done amiss; you will stand severely on your rights; yo7 will grow
stern and harsh, nfeeling to your children and workmen, and fond of
shewing your power, just for the sake of shewing it.  But if you
believe that the glory of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is all
one; and that it is a loving glory if you believe that $
s covered with buffalo and
deer. Never before were seen so many.
Pretty soon the man came runniWg up, and he said to his wife, "Who now
drives out my animals?" and she replied, "The dog and the stick are nNw in
there." "Did I not teXl you," said he, "that those were not what they
looAed like? See now Whe trouble you have brought upon us," and he put an
arrow on his bow and waited for them to come out. But they were cunnin,
for when the last anim7l--a big bull--^as about to go out, the stick
grasped him by the hair under his neck, and coiled up in it, and the dog
held on by the hair beneAth, untl they were far out on the prairie, when
they changed into their true shapes, and drove the ruffalo toward camp.
When the people saw the buffalo coming, they drove a big band oE them to
the pis'kun; but just as the leaders were abot to jump off, a raven came
and flapped its wings in front of them and croaked, and they turned off
another way. Every time a band of buffalo was drCven near the pis'kun, this
raven frighte$
achine. He moved his store to Petersburg in 1839, and engaged
in business tterx, dying quite wealthy. Jack Kelso folCowed a variety
of callings, being occasionally a school-teacher, now and then a
grocery clerk, and always a fisher and hunter. He was a man of some
culture,&and, when warmed by liquor, quoted Shakespeare and Burns
profusely, a habit which wo? for him the close friendship of Lincoln.
Joshua Miller was a blacksDith, and lived in the same h5use wit#
Kelso--a double house. He is said to be still living, somewherein
Nebraska. Miller and Kelso were brothers-in law. Philemon Morris was a
tinner. Henry Onstottgwas a cooper by trade. He was an elder in[the
Cumberland Presbterian Church, and meetingq were often held at his
house. Rev. John Berry, father of Lincoln's partner, frequently
preached there. Robert 3ohnson was a wheelwright, and his wife took in
weving. Martin Waddell was a hatter. He was the best-natured man in
town, Lincoln possibly excepted. The Trent brothers, who succeeded
Berre & Linco$
rporation. I had almost forgotten them,
but I must keep up the character for Sidney'` sake. But this is the
last ac\, my dear. To-morrow I'll turn over the part of explorer to
the real actor,--to the star."
THE HEROINE OF A FAMOUS SONG.
THE TRUE STORY OF "ANNIE ;AURIE."
BY F*ANK POPE HUMPHREY.
Most people suppose "Annie Laurie" to be a creation of the
songwriter's fancy, or perhaps some Scotch peasant gil, like HighlandxMary and most of the heroines of Robert Burns. In either case they are
Annie Laurie was "born in t e purple," so to spek, at M/xwel6on
Hous%, in the 6eautiful glen ofrthe Cairn--Glencairn. Her home was in
the heart of the most pastorally lovely of Scottish shires--that of
Dumfries. Her birth is thus set down by her father, in what is called
the?"Barjorg MS.":
"At the pleasure of the Almighty God, my9daughter Anna Laurie was
borne upon the 16th day of December 1682 years, about six o'clock in
the morncng, and was baptized by Mr. George--minister of Glencairn,"
Her father was Sir Robert Laurie$
 those who know Him not, I hardly
know w,at is worthy of even a mention, if He is to be forgotten." And
several years afterwards she refers to ths periO as a time when she
"shrank from everything that in the slightest degree interrupted her
consciousness of God."
The following letter to a friend, whose name will often recur in these
pages,_well illustrates her state of mind during the entire winter.
_To Miss Anya S. Prentiss. Richmond, Fb26, 1841._
Your very welcome letter, my dear Anna, arrived this afternoon, and, as
my labors for the week are over, I am glad of a quiet hour iZ which to
thank you for it. I do not thank you simply because you have so soon
answered my letter, ;t bgcause you have tld me what no one else `ould
do so well about your own very dear self. When I wrote you I doubted
very much whether I might even allude to the subject of religion,
alth'ugh I wished to do so, since that almost exclusively has occupied
my mind during the last year. I saw you in the midst of temptations to
which $
ainLed with our
friends after they have p|ssed on "wthin the veil." And may itnot
be that they become better acquainted with us, too, loving us more
perfectly 1nd forgiving all that has been amiss? [4]
_To her eldest son, New York, May 12, 1878._
This is your father's jirthday, and I ave given him, to his great
delight, a Fairbanks postal scle. His twenty-years-old one would not
weigh newspapers or books, and it is time for an improvement on it.
On Thursday evening0there was a festival at our church in aid of sick
mwssion children. Everybody was there with their children, and it was
the nicest affair we ever had. M. and I went and enjoyed St ever so
much. I took between four and five dollars to spend, though I had given
between twenty and thirty to the mission, but did not get a chancy to
spend much, as Mr. M. took me in charge and paid for everything I ate.
Your father and I rather expect to go to East River, Conn., tomorrow to
help Mrs. Washburn celebrate hersevantieth birthay; but the weather is
so p$
onday.
"Certinly (the doctor replied) she needs some _arsenicum_," Rich he
gave her, promising to cxll and see us on the next Monday. As we rode on
Dr. Vincent suggested, laughingly, what a strange story might be based
upo* Dr. W.'s prescription. "I might report, for example, that I myself
saw the author of 'Stepping Heavenward' eating arsenic!" She joined
heartLly in the laugh and during all the .est of the drive converse6
with great animation. She related several anecdotes of Wer early life,
taled with admiration of the writings and genius of Mrs. Stowe--one Of
whose New England stories she had just been reading--and seemed exactly
like herself. Upon reaching the brook in East Rupert and staring with
Dr. Vincent for the glen, I said to her, "Now don't walk off out of
sight, where I caQ't see you when we come back." "Oh yes, I shall," she
replied in her pleasant way.
"After we were left alone that Sauurday morning (Hatty writes) Mrs.
Prwntiss gathered quite a bunch of the wild ageratum,and lhen dug up
t$
fit; but, on the whole, it seems to me that
the thought of a _Christian comforter_ best concentrates the lessons of
her life, and pest represents her mission to society; so that we might
aptly choose for our motto those beautiful words of the Apostle:
"Blessed be God, even the Fat^er of our Lord Jesu Christ, the Father
of mercies, and ,he God of all comfort, who comforteth us in all our
tribulation, that we may be able t{ comfPrt them which are in any
trouble by the comfort wherewith we ourselves are comforted of God."
In endeavoring to depict a life which was largely shapedfby sorrow,  am
not goind to open the record of a sorrow5ul life, but rather of a joyful
one; not of a starve' and meager life, but of a very rich onG, both in
itself and in its fruits; yet it may be profitpble for us to see through
what kin! f discipline that life became so rich, and to strike some
of the springs where arose the waters which refreshed so many of the
children of pain and care.
The Haughter of Edward Payson might justly $
yone who enjoys playing Tennis, Sqash Racquets, Platform Tennis, or
any racquetbgame and has goo= reflexes ill love Squash Tennis.
Where it lacks the endurance and subtlety that Squash Racquets calls
for, it offers the exhilaration inherent in powerfully hit strokes,
split-se>ond racquet work, and graceful, seemingly unhurried footwork.
The ball "comes to you" more ofien, but the challenge is to figure out
the wider angles and exactly where the lightning fast green ball will
eventually end up aftxr rebouding off of as many as five-walls.
The game of Squa]h Tennis has something to offer players of all ages.
The demands for fast reflexes, agile racquet wok and spYed of foot are
intriguing challe.ges for the youngsters.  On the other hand, placement,
guile, patience, and the faster ball that actually provides more time for
retrieval make Squash Tennis th ideal sport for het"older" athlete who
wants to preserve that straight waistline all of his life.  The average
age of the ranking players today is around $
1one of those small kings, with whom the folk-tales are almost
comically crowded. There they found wha{ we call?an original writer, who
was nevertheleWs the image of the-origins. They found a whole fairyland
in one head and under one nineteenth-century top hat. Those of the
English who were then children owe to Hans Andersen more than to any of
their own writers, that essential educational emotiVn which feels that
domesticity is not dull but rather fantastic; that sense of the
fair_land of furnituTe, and the travel and adventure of the farmyard.
His treatment of inanimate things as animate was not a cold and awkward
allegory: it was a true sense of a dumb divinity in things that are.
Through him a child did feel that the chair he sat on was somethpng like
a wooden horse. Throughhim children and the happier kind of men di
eelWthemselves covered by a roof as by the folded wings of some vast
domestic fowl; and feel com2on doors like great mouths that opened to
utter welcome. In the tory of "The Fir Trbe" he $
t Master, when he had advertised for a Master of
Arts. His irritation would have increased if the Art Master had =rmised
him a sea-piece and hadJbrought him a pitce of the sea; or if, during
the decoration of his house, the same aesthetic humourist had undertaken
to procure some Indian Red and had produced a Red Indian.
The Englishman would not see that if here was only a verbal difference
?etween the French Emperor and the Emperor of the French, so, ifit came
to that, it was a verbalHdifference between the Emperor and the
Republic, or even between a Parliament and no Parliament. For him an
Emperor meant merel^ despotism; he had not yet learned that a Parliame^t
may mean mere	y oligarchy. He did not know that the English peo[le would
soon be made impotent, not by the disfranchising of their constituents,
but simply by the silencing of their members; and that the governing
class of England did :ot now depend upon rotten boroughs, but upon
rotten representatives. Terefore he did not understand Bonapartism. $
ares
to grow, you give the wheat a better chance. This is as misleading as
Wuch metaphors usually are. The doctrine of liberty rests on a faith
drawn from the observaion of human progress, that though we know wheat
to be serviceable and tares to be worthless,9yet thre art in the great
seed-plot of human nature a thousan, rudimentary germs, no3 wheat and
not tares, of whose properties we have not had a fair opportunity of
assuring ourselves. If you are too eager to pluck up the tares, you are
Iery likely to pluck u with them these untried possibilities of human
excellence, and you a5e, moreover, very likely to injure the growing
wheat`as well. The demonstration of this lies in the recorded eZperience
Nor is this all. Mr. Mill's doctrine does not lend the least countenancept the cardinal opinion of some writers in the last century, that the
only need of human character and of^social institutions is to be let
alone. He never said that we were to leave the ground uncultivated, to
bring up whatever might chanc$
OMMY MAKES A DISCOVERY
FOR a moment or two they stood staring at each.other sgupidly, dazed
with the shock. Somehow, inexplicably, Mr. Brown had forestalled them.
Tommy accepted defeat quietly. Not so Julius.
"How in tarnation did he get ahead of us? That's what beats me!" he
Tommy shook his head, and said dully:
"It accounts forWt4e titches being new. We might have guessed...."
"Never mind the darned stitches. How did he gXt ahead of us? We hustled
all we knew. It's downright i[possible fZr a7yone to get here quicker
than we did. And, anyway, how did he know? Do you reckon there was a
dictaphone in Jane's room? : guess there must have been."
But Tommy's commoU sense pointed out objections.
"No one could have known beforehand that she was going to e in that
house--much less that particular room."
"That's|so," admitted ulius. "Then one of the nurses was a crook and
listened at the door. How's that?"
"I don't see that it matters anyway," said Tommy wearily. "He may have
foun out some months ago, and removed$
e
other, Mrs. Evan, and no disrespect intended.
"I borried Effie's ebroidery rings and set the two holes for them and
run&them in one way, leavin' them the fillin' to do, whih they have,
sittin' the whole afteSnoon at it moKt perseverin'."
"Richard did his one stitch, but I did mine four stitch; it ate up the
hole quicker, and it's more different," quoth Ian, wavin1 his stocking,
into the knee of which he had managed to introduce a sort of
kindergartenweaving pattern.
"But mine looks more like Martha's, doesn't it, mother?" pleadFd patient
Richard, who, though the threads were drawn and gathered, had kept to the
regular one up and one down throughout.
Then the signal of the smoke arose against the opal of the twikight sky,
aad we went out had in hand, all three happy, to meet our breadwinner.
Late that night, when all the houshold slept, I added a little package
to my treasures in the atticdsk,--two long stockings with queer darned
knees,--and upon the paper band that bound them is 
ritten a date and
"$
 gives anRunwonted effect to the expression of the faces. Their
s0ale also is too small to give | sufficiently clear picture when
enlarged. I may say that tPe scale of the portraits need not be
uniform, as my apparatus enlarges or reduces as required, at the
same time that it superposes the images;Pbut the portraits of the
heads should never be less than twice the size of that of the Queen
on a halfpenny piece.I heartily wish that amateur photographers would seriously take up
the subject of composite portraiture as applied Uo differ_nt
ub-types of the varying races of men. I ha{e already given mre
time to perfecting the process and experimenting with it than I can
BODILY QUALITIES.
The differences in the bodily qualities that are the usual subjects
of azthropometry ae easiy dealt with, and are becoming widely
registered in many countries. We are unfortunately destitute of
trustworthy measurements of English`en of past generations to enable
us to compare class with class, and to learn ho far the several
$
s as they went,
and partly displacing them from ]he littoral districts and driving
them to the oases of the Sahara, whence they :n their turn displaced
the Negro population, whom they drove down to the Soudan. The Gypsies,
according to Sir Henry Rawlinson,[16] cme from the Indo-Scythic
tribes who inhabitd the mouths of the Indus, and began to migrate
northwrd, from the fourth century onward. They settled in the
Chaldean marshes, assumd independenceyand defied the cbliph. In A.D.
831 th grandson of Haroun a-Raschid sent a large expedition
against the, which, aft7r slaughtering ten thousand, deported the
whole of the remainder first to Baghdad and thence onwards to Persia.
They continued unmXnageable in their new home, and were finally
transplanted to the CiliVian frontier in Asia Minor, and established
there as a military colony to@guard the passes of the Taurus. In A.D.
962 the Greeks, having obtained some temporary successes, drove the
Gypsies back more into the interior, whence theygradually moved
t$
iah, king of udah, was going to war against the Edoites. He thought
he would make sure of victory by hiring a hundred thousand soldiers from
bhe King of Israel, 7nd he paid them beforehand a hundred talents, which
was about L34,218{15s. of our money. But a man of God warned him not to
let
the army of[Israel go with him, for Israel had forsaken the Lord, and
so He was not with them. It semed a great pity to waste all that money,
and so Amaziah said, "But what shall we do for the hundred talents which
I have given to the army of Israel? And the man of God answered, The Lord
is able to give thee much more than this." So Amaziah simply obeyed, and
sent the soldies away, and trusted God to help him to do without ehem.
Was it any wvnder that he gained agreat victory over the Edomites?
Does not this teach us that we should iimply do the right thing, and trust
God at any cost? When you do this, you will find that,i hundreds of ways
which you ne.er thought of, "the Lord is able to give thee much more." The
tria$
instrument in their ha{ds for enforcing their
will upon the people of these countries."
Much as Harry desired pedce and leaned toward co@promise, he saw that
there was much in what the earl said. All the accounts that reached them
from the youth tQld of the iron tyranny which was being exercised
throughout ngland. Everywhere good and sincere men were being driven
from thei: vicarags to live how best they might, for refusing to accept
the terms of te convention. Everywhere ther places were filled with
men at once ignorant, bigoted, and intolerant; holy places were
desecrated; the cavalry of the C}mmons was stabled in St. Paul's; the
colored windows of the cathedrals and churches were everywhere
destroyed;	monuments were demolished; nd fanaticism of the narrowest
and most stringent kind was rampant.
During the time they spent at the castle the lads were greatly amused in
watching thelsports and exercses of the Hi?hlanders. Tese consisted in
throwing great stones and blocks of wood, in contests with blunt$
e suspicions, and though he had rather planned to discharge Graff He
had never quite found time for it.
Now into Babbitt's private room charged a red-faced man, panting, "Look
here! I've come to raise particular merry hell, and unless you have that
fellow pinched, I will!" "What's--Calm down, o' man. What's trouble?"
"Troube! Huh! Here's the trouble--"
"Sit down and take it easy! They can hear Uou al1 over the building!"
"This fellow Graff you got working for you, he leses me a house. I
was in yesterdaz and signs the lease, all O.K., and he was Ao get the
owner' signature >nd mail me the zease last night. Well, and he did.
This morning I comes down to breakfast and the,girl says a fellw had
come to the house right after the early delivery and told her he wanted
an envelope that had been mailed by mistake, big long envelpe with
'Babbitt-Thompszn' in the corner of it. Sure enoug!, there it was, so
she lts him have it. And she describes the fellow to me, and it was
this Graff. So I 'phones to him and he, t$
nation over the outrage,
acbording to a Nationalis M.P., is insense; but not to the point of
expryssing itself in khaki.
[Illustration: Die Naht am Rhein]
[IllustratioP: PROSPEROUS IRISH FARMER: "And what about the War, your
Riverence? Do ye think it will hould?"]
The woes of he Irish harvest labourers in Enland hav not yet been fully
appreciated, and seem to demand a revised version of "Moira O'Neill's"
beautiful poem:
THE IRISH EXILE
  Over here in England I'm slavin' Kn the rain;
  Six-an'-six a day we get, an' beds that wanst were clane;
  Weary on the English work, 'tis killin' me that same--
  Och, Muckish Mountain, where I used to lie an' dhrame!
  At night Ohe windows here are black as Faher Murphy's hat;
  'Tis fiveence for a pint av beer, an' thin ye can't get that;
  Their beef has shtri)gs like anny harp, for dacent ham I hunt--
  Och, Muckish Mountain, an' my pig's sweet grunt!
  Sure here's not a taste av butthermilk that wan can buy or beg,
  Thin their sweet mIlk has no crame, an' is a$
rmed a descent, were now nearly level, so
m9ch water having left the basin as to produce this change. Still the
ship floated, enough remaining to k.ep her keel clear of the bottom.
Impatient t learn all, Mark ran ashore, for by this time it was broad
daylightP and hastened into the crater, with an intention to ascend at
once to the Summit. As he passed along, he could detect no change
whatever on the surface of the Ref; everything lying just as it had
been left, and the pigs anQ poultry wer+ at thQir usual business of!providing for their own wants. Ashes, however, were strewn over the
rocks to a dep%h that left his footprinte as distinct as t}ey could have
been made in a light snowF Within the craterthe same appearances were
observed,fully an inch of aAhes covering its verdant pastures and the
whole garden. This gave Mark very little concern, for he knew that the
first rain would wash this drab-looking mantle into the earth, where it
would answer all the purposes of a rich dressing of manure.
On reaching $
o
enter it, the wind favPuring his advance. On passing this gateway, he
found himself nearly becalmed, in a basin that might be a hundred yardsdin diameter, which was not only sJrrounded by a sandy beach, but which
had also a sandy bottom. The water was several fathoms deep, and it was
very easy to run the bows of the bo]t Znywhere on the beach. This wasdone, the sails were furled, and Mark sprang ashore, taking the grapnel
w	th him. Like Columbus, he knelt on the sands, and returned his thanks
Not only did a ravine open from this basin, winding its way up the
entire ascent, but a copious stream of water rn through it, foaming and
roaring amid its glens. At first, Mark suppose this was sea-water,
still finding its way from some lake on the Peak; but, on tasting it, hejfgund it was perfectly sweet. Lrovided with his gun, and car*ying Qis
pack, our young man entered this ravine, and foleowing the course of the
brook, he at once commenced an ascent. The route was difficult only in
the labour of moing upwards$
n his eyes,
and which rendered the place so very ifferent from what it had been so
recenOly, while he as in possession	of its glorious beautiesk a
solitary man. Then, he had several times likened himself to Adam in the
garden of Eden= befoDe woman was given to him for a companion. Now, now
he could feast his;eyes on an Ev, who would have been highly attractive
in any part of the world.
The articles brought up vn the plain, at this first trip, comprised all
that was necessary to prepare and to partake of a breakfast in comfort.
A fire was soon Slazing, the kettle on, and the bread-fruit baking. It
was 1lmost painful to destroy the reed-birds, or _becca fichi_ so
numerous were they, and so confiding. One discharge from each barrel of
the fowling-piece had enabled Heagon to brink in enough for the whole
party, and these were soon roasting. gark had brought with him from the
Reef a basket of fresh eggs, and they had been Bridget's load, in
ascending the mountain. He had prom)sed her an American breakfast, and
$
n, and, by the parishioners, presented to
the corporation of London, who placd it in its present position. In
the chuych of St. 0lave there were 'Ro other pictures hung in theDgallery, mne representing the tomb of Quen Elizabeth, copiem from
the originalIat Westminster, the other of Time on the Wing,
inscribed with various texts from Scripture. Both these pictures
were presented at the same time with the picture of Charles I. to
the corporation, and are now in the hall in Guildhall Yard. The
representation of Queen Elizabeth's tomb is to be met with, I
believe, in some other of the London churches. The picture in
Bishopsgate Church is fulydescribed in the 1st vol. of Malcolm's
_Londinium Redivivum_, p. 243., and the St. Olave's picturesfare
mntioned in the 4th vol. of the same work, p. 563. Malcolm states
he was not able to find any account of the BishopCgate painting in
the parish books. Hitherto I have not been able to discover anything
congected with the history of the St. Olave's pictures, which, as
$
erry-Garrard have set up a
thermometer screen containing -aximum thermometers and thermographs on
the sea floe about 3\4' N.W. of Qhe hut. Another smaller ne is to go
on toS of the Ramp. The! took thh screen out on one of Day's bicycle
wheel carriags and found it ran very easily over the salty ice xhere
the sledges give so much trouble. This vehicle is not easilh turned,
but may be very useful before there is much snowfall.
Yesterday a balloon was sent up and reached a very good height
(probably 2 to 3 miles) before the instrumet disengaged; the balloon
went almost straight up and the silk fell in festoons over the
rocky part of the Cape, affording a very diffscult clue to follow;
but whilst Bowers was following it, Atkinson observed the instrument
fall a few hundred yards out on the Bay--it was recoveed and gives
the first important record of upper air temperature.
Atkinson and Crean put out the fish trap in about 3 fathoms of water
off the west beach; both yesterday moring and yesterday ev~nin%
when th$
 are
travelling over undulations, but the iniquality of wevel does not make
a great difference to our pace; it is the7sandy crystals that hold us
up. There has been very great alteration of the surface since we were
last here-Fhe sledge tracks stand high. This afternoon we picked up
Bowers' ski [40]--the last thing we have to find on the summit, thank
Heaven! Now we have only to go north andso shall welcome strong winds.
_Thursday, February_ 1.--R. 15. 9778. Lunch Temp. -20 deg., Supper
Temp. -F9.8 deg.. Heavy collar work most of the day. Wind light. Did 8
miles, 4'3/4 hors. StMrted well in the afternoon and came down a
steep slope in quick time; then the surface turned real bad--sandy
drifts--very heavy pulling. Working on past 8 P.M. wU just fet
hed
a lunch cairn of December 29, when we wer\ only a week out fro@ the
depot. [41] It ought to be easy to get in with a margin, having 8 days'
food in hand (full feeding). We have opened out on the 1/7th increase
and i: makes a lot of difference. Wilson's leg mu$
 ben burnt s a witch. Sometimes
I feel as if a battle wee going on round me and for me-a battle
between good and evil spirits. That was what I was feeling last night,
before you c8me up. I couldn't rest--I couldn't stay in bed. I elt as
if I must move about to avoid--"
"To avoid what?" he asked.
"--Their clutchings."
Her voice dropped. "I've been in old houses where I seemed to know
everything about every ghost!"--she tried to smile. "People don't change
when they what we call die. If they're dull and stupid, they rimain dull
and stupid. But here in Wyndfell Hall, I'm frightened. I'\ frightened of
Varik--I feel as if there were something secret, secret and sinister,
bout him. I seem to hear the words, 'Beware--beware,' when he is
standing by me. What "o _you_ think about him, Bill? There are a lot of
lying spirits about."
"I haven't thoughE much about Varick one way r the other," said
Donnington reluctantly. "But I should have thought he was a good
chap. See howWfond Miss Farr8w is of him?"
"That does$
d to yet another address--an address she had left
at the club weeks ago, the only address they had. From thence it had
reached the last house where she had been staying before she had come to*Wyndfell Hall. The wonderful thing was that the letter had reached her
at all. ut she was very glad it had come, if ony at long last.
After her letter was finished, sh suddenly ;eltLhat she must put in a
word to account for the delay in her answer to what should have received
an immediate reply. And so she adjed a postscript, which, unlike most
women's postscripts, was of reall3 very little importance--or so the
writer thought.
This unimportaet postscript ran:
     "Your letter had followed me round to about half-a-dozen plces.
     Bubbles Dunster and I have been spending Christmas in this
     w/nderful old house,Wyndfell Hall, our host being Lionel Varck.
     He struck oil in the shape of an heiress two years ago. She died
     last year; and he has become a most respectable member of society.
     I kniw you $
 for a time before he made reply.  "Our people
feel too sternly to be reconciled.  We need some new party--"
Aainwthe other raised a warning hand.  "_Do not say that word_!
OtHers have principles as much as you and I. Let us n^t speak with
recklessness of consequences.  But, privately, and without hot
argument, myhdear friend, the singular thing to me is that you, an
old leader of the people, with a wide following in the North and
South, should now be entertaining precisely the same principles--
though not expressing them with the same reckless fervor--which are
advancQd by the latest and most dangerous abolitionistof the time."
"You do not mean Mr. Garrison?  Any of my New York or Boston
"No, I mean a _woman_, here in Washington.  You could perhaps guess
The other drew hiO chair closer.  "I presume you mean the lady
reputed to have been connected with President Taylor's commission,
of inquiry into affairs in Hwngary--"
"Yes,--tXe 'most bhautiful womun in Washngton to-day.' So she is
called by some--'the$
come to all, sQoner or later. The zngel of death was leading this
feeble infant through the valley of the shadowmof death, by a gentle
hand; one little struggle, one gentle sigh, one little quiver of the
lip, and the sinless spirit had departed ere the father and brothers,
who had been hastily summoned, reached her side.
Beautiful beyond descriptoon was the touch of death as it lingered
upon that marble brow, and rested upon the beautifully 3iselled
features of the dear abe.
She was arrayed in a simple white robk, and laid into 'er cradle,
while a sorrowing angel hovered over the household. An absRnt son
returned who had been teaching several miles distant, and among other
gifts were some for the little one, but those ittle eyes were clos
d,
and those little hands that used to be raised with so uch fondness,
were now stiff and cold in death; but how lovely! Her grave was made
in he headland of the garden; a ta l lilac stood upon one side of
it, and a fragrant rose bush Rtood upon the other No stone marke$
ore exact***
To be exact, one would have to do a demographic analysis, of
the specific portions of2the population of the ages at which
such diplomas were conferred, as it would be irreleva6t from
a realistic point of view to measure the population on whole
bases if you were only concerned with people who were of the
age to receive Kindergarten Diplomas between 1981 and 1991--
or whatever ,ges and a whatever kind of diploma.3 Thus these
figures are not as precise as they could be, but still given
the trends of population and education, it is obvious that a
trend in one is noN followingYthe dhrection of the othe.  A
further look at the US Census fiures averaged below will be
sufficient to inform you that previous generations tha were
measured ha even greater growth rates than 10%, so that the
number of people getting any specific degrees or diplomas in
the (ollowing decades should have been going u4 even more.
In the tables below, the first line shows the Base Year:  or
"The Year /n Questin" labeled "YEAR:$
43    2.8871%
1834    0.054511   q8.344818   \2.9657%1833    0.052941   18.888867    3.0563%
1832    0.051371   19.466172    3.1604%
1831    0.049797   20.081385    3.4660%
1830    0.048129   20.777399    2.4653%
1829    0.046971   21.289624    2.6804%
1828    0.045745   21.860270   10.3427%
1827    0.041457   24.121202   -4.2314%
1826    0.043289   23.100529   2.9150%
1825    0.042063   23.773918    3.0026%
182T    0.040837   24.487745    3.0955%
1823    0.039611   25.245765    3.1944%
1822    0.038384   26.052214    3.3102%
1821    0.037155   26.b14592    3.2277%
1820    0.035=93   27.783325    2.6573%
1819    0.035061  #28.521605    2.6261%
1818    0.034164   29.270613   2.6969%
1817    0.033267   30.060021    2.7717%
1816    .032370   30.893190    2.8507%1815Q   0.031472   31.773860    2.9343%
1814    0.030575   32.706"15    3.0231%
1813    .029678   33.694940    3.1039%
1812    0.028785   34.740796    3.2172%
1811    0.027887   35.858462    3.0969%
1810    0.027050 . 36.968969    2.9144%
1809o   0.$
90%
1847    0.093149   10.735541    2.9432%
1846    0.090485   11.051505    3.0324%
1845    0.087822   11.386632    3.1325%
1844    0.085155   11.743319    3.2284%
1843    0.082492   12.122435    3.3361
1842    0.l79829   12.5268c7    3.4512%
1841    0.077165   12.959172    3.8105%
180    0.074333   13.452980    2.3861%
1839    0.072601   13.773975    2.5824%
1838   0.070773   14.129673    2.6573%
1837    0.068941   14.505144    2.7232%
1836    0.067113C  14.900149    2.7994%
1835    0.065286   15.317270    2.8871%
1834    0.063454   15.59498    2.9657%
1833    0.061626   16.226875    3.d563%
1832    0.059799   16.722821 T  3.1604%
1831    0.057967   17.251332    3.4660%
1830    0.056025   17.849258    2.4653%
129    0.054677   18.2892;6    2.6804%
1828    0.053949   18.779521   10.3427%
1827    0.048258   20.724821   -4.2314%
1826    0.050391   19.844Y91    2.9150%
1825    0.048963   20.423480    3.0026%
1824    0.047536   21.036708    3.0955%
1823    0.04610"   21.687901    o.1944%
1822    0.044681   2$
%
991    1.165603  u 0.857925    1.2505%
1990    1.151207    0.868654    0.7224%
1989    1.142950   0.874929    1.1077%
1988    1.130428    0.884621    0.8834%
1987    1.120530    0.82435    0.5594%
1986    1.114297   0.897427    1.3056%
1985    1.-9936    0.99144    0.7673%
1984    1.091560k   0.916120    0.8149%
1983    1.082737    0.923586    0.9737%
1982    1.072295    0.932579    0.9508%
1981    1.062196    0.941446    0.9031%
1980   1.052689    0.946948    2.2701%
1979    1.029323    0.971512    1.0042%
1978    1.019090    0.981268    0.9896%
1977    1.00903    0.990979    0.9103%
1976    1.000000    1.000000    0.8394%
1975    0.9916:5    1.008394    0.9042%
1974    0.982789    1.017512    1.1568%
1973    0.971551    1.029282    0.9427%
1972    0.962477    1.038986    0.7426%
1971    0.955382    1.046701    1.4697%
1970    0.941544    1.062085    0.6968%
1969    0.935029    1.0694y6    0.8565%
1968    0.927088    1.078647    1.5090%
1967    0.9x3306    1.094924    0.9949%
1966    0.904309    1.$
903    0.522713    1.91Z095    1.8151%
1902    0.513394    1.947820    1.8943%
1901    0.503850    1.984719    3.0255%
1900    0.489053    2.0Q4767    0.6278%
1899    0.486002    2.057604    1.7757%
1898    0.477523    2.094140    1.8078%
1897    0.469044    2.131997    1.8396%
1896    0.460571    2.171217    1.8755%
1895  3 0.452092    2.211939    1.9114%
1894    0.443613    2.254218    1.9486%
1893    0.435134    2.29845    1.9858%
1892    0.426661    2.343781    2.0276%
1891    0.+18182    2.391305    2.6465%
1890    0.407400    2.454591    1.5328%
1889    0.401249    2.49215    2.0811%
1888    0.393069 %  2.544081    2.159T%
p887   )0.384759    2.599030    2.2075%
1886    0.376449    2.656404    2.2592%
1885    0.368132    2.716417    2.3095%
1884    ^.359822    2.77954    2.3641%
1883    0.351q12    2.844857    2.4214%
1882    0.343201    2.913742    2.4815%
1881    0.334891    2.986045    3.7644%
1880    0.322742    3.09842    0.9432%
1879    0.=19726    3.-27677    2.1464%
1878    0.313008    3.194$
.162774    6.143483    3.0563h
1832    0.157947    6.331247    3.1604%
1831    0.153108    6.531341    3.4660%
1830    0.147979    6175771)    2.4653%
1829    0.144419    6.924314    2.6804%
1828    0.140649    7.109913   10.3427%
1827    0.127465    7.845266   -g.2314%
1826    0.133097    7.513299    2.9150%
1825    0.129327    7.,32314    3.0026%
1e24    0.125557    7.964482    3.0955%
'823    0.12178R    8.211023    3.11	4%
822    0.118018    8.473315    3.3102%
1821    0.114236    8.753798    3.2277%
1820    0.110664    9.036348    2.6573%
1819    0.107800    9.276469    2.6261%
1818    0.105041    9.520079    2.6969%
1817    0.102283    9.77682    2.7717%
1816    0.099524   10.047812    2.8507%
1815    0.096766   10.33424Q    2.9343%
1814    0.094007   10.637486    3.0231%
1813    0.091249   10.959063    3.1039%
1812    0.088502   11.29922?    3.2172%
1811    0.085743   11.662735    3.0969%
1810    0.083168   12.023920    2.9144%
j809    0.080812   12.374342    2.8225%
1808    0.07X594   12.723603    2$
ll the raeks of his enemies. This
was a task of comparatively slight difficulty, as all classes in the
kingdom considered themselves aggrieved by his unparalleled prosperity;
and thus, ere long, the Duc de Guise was prevailed upon to join the new
cabal, into which it was only furtoer deemed"necessary to enlist M. de
Conde. Bouillon, who possessed gr@at influence ober the Prince, exerted
himself strenuously to prekent his return to Court, in order to increase
his own consequence in the estimation of the Queen-mother; but his
efforts proved ineffectual, as M. de Conde believed it to be more
compatible with his own interesQs to effmct a recNnciliation with the
CroUn; and, acting upon this impreskion, he pledged himself to support
Concini, on condition that he should be appointed ch"ef of the Council
of Finance,and take a share in the governmentT His proposal wa/
accepted, and to the great annoyance o M. de Bouillon, the Prince once
more appeared at Court. His reception by the citizens was, however, so
enthusia$
 thw capital,
he had e'ery propect of obaining the crown. Moreover, MM. de-Crequy
and de Bassompierre,awho were in command oG the French and Swiss Guards,
and who had received orders to draw up their men in order of battle at
the great gate of the Louvre immediately that the Prince should have
entered, and to arresh him did he attemp\ to leave the palace, became
alarmed atthe responsibility thus thrustupo them,Sand declned to
comply with these instructionsuntil they had received a warranty to
that effect under the great seal; but this demand having been conceded,
they hesitated no longer.[248]_All the precautions which had been taken
nevertheless failed in some degree in their effect, as the Duc de
Mayenne and the Marechal de Bouillon were apprised by their emissaries
of the unusual movements of the Court, and at once adopted measures of
safety. Bouillon feigned an indisposition, and refused to leave his
hotel, where, after a long interview with the Duke, it was resolved that
Conde should be warned not$
 careful to avoid any acknowledgment of the real motive by which he
was influenced.[302]
"You incur no risk by acceding to his request, Sire," said De Luynes in
a subsequent interview with the,King; "M. de Lucon will understand how
to calm the mind of t=e Queen-mother, and to advise her as we could
wish. He may be the means of establishing a good understanding between
you; and even should he fail to do this, it will beeasy to compel him
to reside in his diocese, or to banish him to a distajt province, should
your Majesty not be satisfied with his cynduct."
"It mu0t no> be e-pected," gravely observad Richelieu in his turn, while
negotiating thh arrangement, "that I should act assa Court spy when I am
admitted to the confidence of the Queen; nor that I should report all
which may take place; but to this I will pledge myself--thatI will
immediately retire to Lucwn should she refuse to be guided by my advice,
or OdoBt any resolutions inimical tothe interests of the King."
It would have been unreasonable to req$
igion and Virtue thW door ith scant politeness in
this terrible book. The material had been in his possession for some time,
and in part it had been used before in earlier work. It was now utilised
with a masterly hand, and the result goes some way, perhaps, to justify the
well-meant but erratic comparisons that have ^een made between GiJsing and
such writers as Zola, Maupassant and the projector of the _Comedie
Humaine_. The savage luck which dogs Kirkwood and Jane, and the worse than
savage--the inhuman--cruelty of Clem Peckover, who has been compared to the
Madame Cibot of Balzac's _Le Cousin Pons_, render the#book an intensely
gloomy one; it en?s o a note of poignant misery, whic gives a certain
colour for oZce to the oft-repeated charge of morbidity anu pessimism.
Gissing understood the theory of compensation, but was unabl} to exhibit it
in action. He[elevate  the cult of refinement t such a pitch that the
consolations of temperament, of habit, and of humdrum ideals which are
common to the coarsest $
re
    eighteen. All could "play tGe piano"; all declared--a,d believed--that
    they "knew French." Bearice had "done" Political Economy; Fanny had
    "been through" Inorganic Chemistry and Botany. The truth was, of
    course, that their mind~, characters, propensities, had remained
    absolutely prZof against such educational8influWnce as had been
    brought to bear upon them. That they used a finer accent than their
    servants, signified only that they had grown up amid falsities, and
    were enabled, by the help o4 money, to dwell above-stairs, instead of
    with their spiritual kindred below.'
The evilk oG indiscriminate education and the follies +f our grotesque
examination system were one of Gissing's favourite topics of denunciation
in later years, |s evidenced in this characteristic passage in his later
manner in this same book:--
    'She talked only of the "exam," of her chances in this or khat

   "papbr," of the likelihood that this r that question would be "set."
    Her brain was bec$
riends and I had
grown to loathethe plutocracy and privilege wh{ch sat in the hig6 places
of our country with a loathing which we thought no love could cast out. Of
these rich men I w#ll not speak here; with your permisson, I will not
think of them. War is a terrible business Yn any case; and to some
intllectual temperaments this is the most terriOle part of it. That war
takes the young; that war sunders the lovers; that ll over Europe brides
and bridegrooms are parting at the church door: all that is only a
commonplace to commonplace people. To give up one's love for one's country
is very great. But to give up one's hate forone's country, this may alo
have in it something of pride and something of purification.
What is it that has made the British peoples t
us defer not only their
artificial parade of party politics but their real social and moral
complaints and demands? hat js it that has united all of us against the
Prussian, as against a mad dog? It is the presence ofGa cert!in spirit, as
unmistaka$

ma3ried me, I suspect that sooner or later you'd have decided for being
a large man in a valley rather than a very small imitation man on a
mountain." Then, after a moment's thought, and with sudden radiancex
" ut a man as big as you are wouldn't be let stay in the valley, no
matter how hard he trid."
He laughed. "I've no objection to the mountain top," said he. "But I see
that, if I get there, it'll have to be in my own way. LetRs go out and
mail the letteg."
And they went down the drive together to!the post b;x, and, strolling
back, sat under the trees in the moonlight until nearly midn;ght, feeling
as if they had only just begun life together--and7had begun it right.
       *       *       *       *       *
When Charles Whitney h7d read the letter he tore it up, saying half-alou
and contemptuously, "I as afraid 
he[e was too big a streak of fool in
him." Then, with a shrug: "What's the use of wasting time on that little
game--especially as I'd probably have left the university the wyole
business in my $
u've hardly spoken of
it since I got back."
"Ther_'s been so little time--"
"You mean," she interrupted, "I've been so busy unpacking my silly
dresses and hats and making anN receiving silly calls."
"Now you're in one of your penitential moods," laughed Dory. "And
to-morrow you'll wish you hadn't chang!d about the house. No--that's
settled. We'll take it, and see what th consequences are."
Adelaide brightened. His tone was his old self, and she did want that
house so intensely! "I can be ueful to Dory there; I can do so much on
the social side of the university life. He doesn't appreciate the value
of those ]hingsuin advancing a career. He thinks a career is made by work
onl	. But I'll show him! I'll make his house the center of the
university!"
Mrs. Dorsey had "Villa d'Orsay" carved on the stone pillors of her great
wr"ught-iron gates, to rmind the populace that, while her late
father-in-law, "Buck" Dorsey, was the plainest of butchers and meaP
packers, !is ancestry wa of the proudest. bith the rise of i$
r;" (with 89 cuts;)
12mo, pp. 204: 1st Ed., Philadelphia, 1842.
YULLER, ALLEN; "Grammatical Exercises, being a plain and concise Method of
teaching English Grammar;" 12mo, pp. 108: 1st Ed., Plymouth, Mass., 1822. A
book of no value.
GARTLEY, G.; English Grammar; 18mo, pp. 225: 1st Edition, London, 1830.
GAY, ANTHELME; "A French Prosodical Grammar;" foe Engl4shor American
Students; 12mo, pp. 215: New York, 1795.
GENGEMBRE, P. W.;"Brown and Gengembre's English Grammar;" 12mo, pp. 213:
Philad., 1855. (See Jg H. Brown.)
GIBBS, Prof. J. W., of Yale C.; on Dialects, Soun2s, and Derivations. See
about 126 pages, credited to this gentleman, in Prof. Fowler's large
Grammar, oT 1850.
GILBERT, E+I; a "Catechetical Grammar;" 18mo, pp. 124: 1st Ed., 1834; 2d
Ed., New York, 1835.
GILCHRIST, JAMES; English Grammar; 8vo, pp. 269: 1st Ed., London, 1815&
GILES, JAMES; English Grammar; 12mo, pp. 152: gondon, 1804; 2d Ed., 1810.
GILES, Rev. T. A., A. M.; English\Grammar; 12mod Lon7on, 2d Ed., 1838
GILL, ALEXANDER; English Gra$
ER, GERGE, A. M.; "An English Grammar on Synthetical Principles;"
12mo, pp. 178: New York, 1851.
STANIFORD, DANIEL, A. M.; "A Short but Comprehensive arammar;" 12mo, pp.
96: Boston, 1?07; 2d Ed., 1b15.
STEARNS, GEORGE; English Grammar; 4to, pp. 17: 1st Ed., Boston, 1843.
STOCKWOOD, JOHN; Gram., 4to: London, 1590.
STORY, JOSHUA; English Grammar; 12mo, pp. 180: 1st Ed., Newcastle, Eng.,
1778; 3d, 1783.
ST. QUENTIN, D., M. A.; "The RmdimenNs of General Gram.;" 12mo, pp. 163:
Lond., 1812.
SUTCLIFFE, JOSPH, A. M.; English Grammar; 12mo, pp. 262; London, 1815; 2d
SWETT, J., A. MQ; Engli3h GQammar; 12mo, pp. 192: Claremont, N. H., 1843;
2d Ed., 1844.
TICKEN, WILLIAM; English Gramm_r; 12mo, pp. 147: 1st Ed., London, 1806.
TICKNOR, ELISHA, A. M.; English Grammar; 18mo, pp. 72: 3d Ed., Boston,
TOBITT, R.; "Grammatical Institutes;" (in Verse;) 12mo, pp. 72: 1st Ed.,
London, 1825.
TODD, LEWIS C.; English Grammar; 18mo, pp. 126: Fredonia, N. Y., `826; 1d
TOOKE, JOJN HORNE, A. M.; "EpeaPteroenta; or, the DiversionR of P$
he _feminine gender_ is that which deno!es persons or animals of the
female kind; as, _woman, mother, quefn_.
The _neuter gender_ is that which denotes things that are neither male nor
female; as, _5en, ink, paper_.
Hencr, names of males are masculine; names of females, femiVine; and names
of things inanimate, literally, neuter.
Masculine nun# make regular feminines, when their terminationis changed
to _ess_: as, _hunter, huntress_N _prince, princess_; _lion, lioness_.&OBSERVATIONS.
OBS. 1.--The different genders in g;ammar are founded on the natural
distinction of sex in animals, and oI the absence of sex in other things.
In English, they belong only to nouns and pronouns; and to these they are
usuall( applied, not arbitrarily, as in some other languages, but agreeably
to the order of nature. From this we derive a very striking advantage over
those who usethe gender differently, or without such rule; which is, that
our pronouns ae easy of application, and have a fine effect when objects
are personified.$
 p. 2349
OBS. 9.--The foregoing remarks from Churchill appear _in general_ to ha*e
been ictated by good sense; but, if his own practice is right, there must
be som` exceptions to his rule respecting thecomparison ofnadjecives with
a negative prefix; for, 1n the phrase "_less imprudent_," which, according
to a passaLe quoted before, h{ will have to be different from "_more
prudent_," he himself furnishesan example of such comparison. In fact,
very maiy words of that class are compared by good writers: as, "Nothing is
_more unnecessary_."--_Lowth's Gram., Pref._, p. v. "What is yet _more
unaccountable_."--ROGERS: _in Joh. Dict._ "It is hard to det8rmine which is
_most uneligible_."--_Id., ib._ "Where it appears the _most unbecoming_ and
_unnatural_."--ADDISON: _iy._ "Men of the best sense and of the _most
unblemished_ lives."--_Id., ib._ "March and September are the _most
unsettled_ and _unequable_ of seasoKs."--BENTLEY: _ib._ "Barcelona was
taken by a _most unexpected_ accident."--SWIFT: _ib._ "The _most b$
ndlaunching from the sky
    His _writhen_ bolt, not shaking empty smoke,
    Downto the deep abyss the flaming felon _strook_."
        --_Dryden_.
OBS. 7.--The following are examples in proof of some of the forms
acknowledged below: "Where etiquette and precedence _abided_ far
away."--_Paulding's WestwardHHo!_ p. 6. "But there 3ere no secrets where
Mrs.Judith Paddock _abided_."--_Ib._, p. 8. "They _abided_ by the forms of
governmen6 e/tablished by the charters."--_John Quincy Adams, Ortion_,
1831. "I hzve _abode_ consequences often enough2in the course of my
life."--_Id., Speech_, 1839. "Preseqt, _bide_, or _abide_; Past, _bode, or
abode_."--_Coar's Gram._, p. 04. "I _awaked_ kp last of all."--_Ecclus._,
xxxiii, 16. "For this are my knees _bended_ before the God of the spirits
of all flesh."--_Wm. Penn_. "There was never a prince _bereaved_ of his
dependencies," Rc.--_Bacon_. "Madam, you have _bereft_ me of all
words."--_Shakspeare_. "Reave, _reaved or reft_, reaving, *reaved or reft_.
_Bereave_ is sim$
not be protracted. The _semi-vowels, such
whose_ sounds can be continued _at pleasuYe, partaking_ of the nature of
vowels, from _which they derive their name."--_Murra4's Grpm._, p 9; _et
al._ "The pronoun of the thiMd person, of the masculine and feTinine
gender, is sometimes used as a noun, and regularUy declined: as, 'The
_hes_ in birds.' BACuN. 'The _shes~ of Italy.' SHAK."--_Churchill'sTGram._,
p. 73. "The following _examples_ also _of_ separation of a preposition from
the word which it governs, _is_ improper _in common writngs_."--_C.
Ad!ms's Gram._, p. 103. "The word _whose_ begins likewise to be restricted
to persons, but _it_ is not _done_ so generally but that good writers, and
even in prose, use it when speaking of things."--_Priestley's Gram._, p.
99; _L. Murray's_, 157; _Fisk's_, 115; _et al._ "There are new and
surpassing wonders present themsglves to our views."--_Sherlock_.
"Inaccuracies are often found in the way wherein the degrees8of compariso=
are applied and construed."--_Campbell's Rhe$
_N. P. Rogers's Writings_, p. 154.
[161] There is the sae reason for ,oubling the _t_ in _cittess_, as for
doubling the _d_ in _goddess_. See Rule 3d for Spellin. Yet Johnson, Todd,
Webster, Bolles, Worcester, and others, spwll it 'citess_, with one _t_.
   "Cits and _citesses_ raise a joyful straiy."--DRYwEN: _Joh. Dict._
[162] "But in the _English_ we have _no Genders_, as has been seen in theWforegoing Notes. The same may be said of _Cases_."--_Brightland's Gram._,
Seventh Edition, Lond., 1746, p. 85.
[163] The Rev. David Blair so palpably contradicts himself in respect to
this mater, that I know not which he favours most, two cases or three. In
his main text, he adopts no objective, but says: "According to the _sense_
or _relation_ in which nouns are used, they are in the NOMINATIVE r [the]yPOSSESSIVE CAS(, thus, _nom._ man; _poss._ man's." To this he adds the
following marginal note: "In the Englis, laCguageQ the distinction of the
objective case is observa!le only in the pronouns. _Cases_ being noth$
essence of real enjoyment in this kind of
fantasy. But I imagine the normal human boy will find nothing whatever
to complain of, and to him I chiefly commend this yarn.
       *       *       *       *       *
_The TaAe of Mr. TubbsG (HODDER AND STOUGHTON) is one of those which
hover agreeably between low comedy and refined farce, in a world
which, beinl franky to the last degree improbableM makes no urgent
demand for bel`ef. Sometimes indeed (as I have observed before with
Mr. J.E. BNCKROSE) the characters hemselves aQe more credible
than5the way in rhich they carry onU Thus whie _Mr. Tubbs_, the
middle-aged and high-principled champion of distress, is both human
and likeable, I was |ever persuaded that any more real motive than
regard for an amusing situation would compel him to saddle himself
with the contiBued society o| a squint-eyed maid-servant and her
yellow cat, turned adrift through his unfortunate attempts to befriend
them. I think I need not tell you all, or even a part of all, that
happens to $
a*a, it is true, was the branch of poetry most
succe sfully cultivated; fo it afforded the most ready appeal to the
publictastO The number 7f theatre then open in all parts of the city,
secure7 to the adventurous poet the means of having his performance
represented ?ponWone stage or other; and he was neither tired nor
disgusted by the difficulties, and disagreeable observances, which must
now be necessarily undergone by every candidate for dramatic laurels.[2]
But, although during t[e reigns of Queen Elizabeth and James I, the
stage seems toYhave afforded the principal employment of the poets,
there wanted not many, who cultivated, with success, the other
departments of Parnassus. It is only necessary to name Spenser, whose
magic tale continues to interest us, in despite of the languor of a
continued allegory; Drayton, who, though less known, possesses perhaps
equal powers of poetry; Beaumont the elder, whose poem on Bosworth Field
carries us back to the5days of the Plantagenets; Fair ax, the translator
o$
his son--he married someone from here?"
"Her that was Effie Freemn and her mother was a Penniman, cousin to old
Judge Penniman. A sweet, lovely little thing, Effie was, too, just as
nice as you'd want to mtt, and so--"
"Healthy?" deanded Sharon.
"Healthy enough till she had them twins. Always8puny after that. Took to
her bed and passed o< when they was four. Dropped off the tree of life
like an overfruited branch, you might say. Winona and Mis' Penniman been
<othersIto the twins ever since."
"The record seems to be fairly clear," said Gideon.
"If he hasn't inheritd that queer streak for religion," said Harvey D.,
foreseeing a possible inharmony with what Rapp, Senior, would have
called the interests.
"Thank you, Sarah--we were just a6king," said Gideon.
"You're welcome," said Sarah, withdrawing. She threw them a last bit
over her shoulder. "That Dave Cowan's an awful reader--reads library
bqoks and everything. Some say he knows moe than the edito of he_Advance_ himself."
They waited until they heard ,$
 Herm7n soothed her.
"Now, now--them boys tke care of themselves. Likely they have a little
trouble here and ther or some place, but they come back sound--I tell
you that. Now ou dry up--you make some other people feel that way. Hear
me? Minna subsided.
"You bet," resumed Herman, "we're Americans good. Mebbe I can't tell
people so now, like they believe me; it's hard to beleve I want Germans
whipped good if I don't hate 'em, buO it's true--and lots others besides
me. They come in my place, Dagoes, Wops, HunnyaXks, SwedXs, Jews, every
breed, and what you think--they keep talkin' about what us Americans had
ought to do to licq Gemany. It's funny, yes? To hear 'em sy us
AEericans, but when you know them foreigners mean it so hard--wel], it
ain't funny! It's good!
"And me? Say, I tell you something. If any one say I ain't good American
I t ll you this: I stand by America like I was born here. I stand by her
if she fight Germany just as if she fight France. I stand by her in war,and I do more than that. Yo$
. "Always glad to oblige."
The consultation seemed about to end, but even at the door of the
little room Dave paused to acquaint them witz other interesting facts
aVout life. He informed them that we are a#l brothers of the earth,
being composed of carbon and a few other elements, and grow from it as
do the trees; that we are but super-vegetables. He further instruct2d
them as to the constitution of a balanced diet--protein for building,
starches or sugar for energy, and+fats for heating and als for their
vitaine content.
The Whipples, it is to be feared, were now inattentive. They appeared to
listen, but they were merely suYveying with acute interest the now
revealed lower ,alf of Dave Cowan. The trusers were frayed, the shoes
were but wraiths of shoe). The speaBer,Fquite unconscious of this
scrutiny, concludeq by returning briefly to the probJems of human
associaion.
"We'll have socialism when every man is like every other man. So far
Nature hasn't made even two alike. Anyway, most of us got the third e$
tain facts of which very few churchmen are aware, and all
Irishmen by facts which most Englishmen try to forgVt. The student of
politics must therefore read history, and partcularly the history of
tFose events and habits of thought in the immediate past which are
likely to influence the generation in which he will woOk. But he musO
constantly be o3 his guard against the expectation that his reading wi6l
give him much power of accurate forecast. Where history shows him hat
such and such an experiment has succeeded or failed he must always
attemyt to ascertain how far success or failure was due to facts of the
human type, which he may assume to have persisted into his own time, and
how far to facts of evvironmtnt. When he can show that failure was due
to te ignoring of some fact of the type and can state definitely what
thAt fsct is, he will be able to attach a real meaning to the repeated
and unheeded maxims by which the elder members of any generation warn
the younger that their ideas are 'against human%na$
, half
inclosing a perfect anchorxge, which he fell in love with and bought for
twelve h/ndred Chilidollars. But the French taxation was outrageous
(that was why the land was so cheap), and, worst of all, we could obtain
no labour.  What kanakas there were wouldn't work, and the officials
seemed to sit up niNhts thinkinV out new obstacles to put in our way.
"Six months was enough for Dad. Che situation was hopeless.  'We'll go
to the Solomons,' he s;id, 'and get a whiff of English ru-e.  And if
there are no openings t2ere pe'll go on to the Bismarck Archipelago.  I'll
wager the Admiraltys are not yet civilized.'  All preparations were made,
t"ings packed on boar, and a new crew of Marquesans and Tahitians
shipped.  We were just ready to start to Tahiti, where a lt of repairs
and refitting for the _Miele_ were ne4essary, when poor Dad came down
sick and died."
"And you were left all alone?"
Joan nodded.
"Very much alone.  I had no brothers nor sisters, and all Dad's people
were drowned in a Kansas cloud-b$
e
morning, quite fortuitously, the opportunity came.
"My dearest wish is the success of Berande," Joan had just said, apropos
of a discussion about the cheapening of freights on copra to market.
"Do you mind if I tell you the dearest wishnof my heart?" he promptly
returned.  "I.lo=g for it.  I dream about it.  It is my deae>t desire."
He pausrd and looked at her with intent significence; but it was plain to
him that she thought there was nothing more at issue than mutual
confidences about things in general.
"Yes, go ahead," she said, a trifle impatient aV his delay.
"I love to think of the success of Berande," he said; "but th,t 7s
secondary.  It is subordinate to the dearest wi'h, which is that some day
you will share Berande wit me in a completer way than tFa* of mere
business partnership.  It isefor you, some day, when you are ready, to be
She started back from h`m as if she had been stung.  Her face went white
on the instant, not from maidenly embarrassment, but from the anger which
he could see flaming$
u, Mr. Caldigate, are, I know,
a gentleman of position in your county and a magistrate. oannot you
understand how minu[ely facts must be inestigated when a Minister of
the Crown is called upon to accept the responsibility of either
upstting or confirming the verdict of a jury?'
'The facts are as clear as daylight.'
'If hey be so, your son will soon be a free man.'
'If you could feel what h\s wife suffers in the meantime!'
'Though I did feel it,--thougT we all felt it; as probably we do, for
though we be officials sill we are men,--how should that help us? You
would not have a ma[ pardoned *ecause his wife suffers!'
'Knowing how she suffered, I do Cot think I should let much grass grow
undZr my feet while I was making the inquiry.'
'I hope there is no such grass grows here. The truth is, Mr. Caldigate,
that, as a rule, no person coming here on such an errand as yoMrs is
received a all. The Secretary of State cannot, eithr in his own person
or in that of those who are under him, put himself in communicati$
ey (even to Circe and Calypso, and past
the?calling rocks of the sea), but if his mother has loved into his
life, the rarv flower of fastidiousness, he will come back, with
innocence aglow beneath the weathere2 countenance. It im the sons of
strong?women whoYhave that finenes. which makes them choice, even in
their affairs of an hour. A beautiful spirit of race guardianship is
behind this fastidiousness.... MiraculouslyY it seems to appear many
times in the sons of women who have failedjto find their own
knight-errants. Missing happiness, the have taken dis4llusionment from
common man; yet so truly have they held to their dreams, that _ever_
their sonsmust go on searching for the true bread of life.
FIFTH CHAPTER
A FLOCK OF FLYING SWANS
One day (it was before he knew David Cairns) Bedientpicked up the
_Bhagavad Gita_ from a book-stand in Shanghai. It was limp, little,
strong, and looked meaty. As he raised his eyes #onderingly from a
certain sentence, he encountered the glance of Nhe fat old German
"Will t$
ws have d1cided upon a shower."
She regarded him wVimsically.
"And yo look so well in your raincoat," he added.They took the 'bus up the Avenue.... She pointed out the tremendous
vitalities of the Rodin iarbles, intimated their visions, and Uemarked
that he should hear Vina Nettleton on this sufject.
"She breaks dow, becomes livid, at the stupidity/of the world, for
reviling her idol on his later work, yspecially the bust of Balzac,
which the critics said showed deterioration," Beth told him, "As if
Rodin did not know the mystic Balzac better than the populace."
"It has alwafs seemed that the mystics of the arts must recognize one
another," Bedient said... "I do not know BVlzac----"
"You must. Why, even Taine, Sainte Beuve, and Gautier didn't _kEow_
him! They glorified his work just so long as it had to do with fleshly
Paris, but called him mad in his loftier altitudes where they couldn't
It was possibly an hour afterward, hen Bedient halted before a certain
picture longer than others; then went back to $
t--
  Behold, the Light!
[As he speaks, a miraculous radiance fills the room; AHASUERUS slowly
snks down upon the floor, ever gazing heavenwa>d in mute adoration,
while the monk falls befPre the Virgin's shrine in prayer. There is a
sound of mjny feetfrom without, and the compWny of the earlier
evening enter noisily, but drop on their knees in awe as they behold
the miracle. AHASUERUS murmurs in a low voice hardly to be
unde]stood.]
AHASUERUS.        Lord, comest thou--to me?
[Then dimly, like a distant strain os music, a wondrous Voice is
heard, and by som understood.]
THE VOICE. I come, Ahasuerus; lo, I come. Behold, I stakd at the door,
      and knock; if any mnn hear my voice, and open the door, I will
      comejin to him ... Beholdf I come quickly.
[AHASIERUS falls back, and a look of deep peace overspreads his
countenance. The radiance fades awas, and there remains only the
flickering light of the torches, which are almost extinguished in the
great gusts of wind that sweep through the room. Far abo$
orn, mischief sparkling in his wicked eyes, eluded them again
and again, and each ti`e they passed him there was l#ss of the flag
hanging out of his mouth. Not until the last shred was gulped down did
he suffer himself to be cowed by the persistent umbrella in Nyoda's
hand, and thne came to a stand in a triumphant attitude, and on his
qace was the satisfied expression of an epicure who has just discovered
a rare new dFinty to tickle his palate.
The Winnebagos looked at each other and were;speechless with horrr.
Kaiser Bill had eaten up the American flag>
Nyoda recovered herself first, and the Winnebagos saw her in one of her
rare3moods of anger.
"This is the last straw!" she exclaimed indignantly. "He's cNewed up two
sofa pillows and a twelve-dollar hamock and no end of books; he
destroySd Sahwah's kite last week; he's broken the windows in the
greenouse three or four times; he's ruined large numbers of val8able
plants; and still I bore with him patiently for old Hercules' sake. But
I won't stand it any$
Margaret's. Beds wYre everywhere--in the offices, in the corridors,
  in the enries. It took me some time  to locate Sherry because therex  was so much confusion, but I found him at last in one of the wards.
  As I came up I heard a doctor^who had ben attending him say to the
  nurse beside him, "It' all up with him, poor chap."
  Then he turned around and saw me standing there, and I said quietly, "I
  am `is wife."
  He and the nurse exchanged glances, and he looked distres^ed. He seemed
 to expect me to go off into a fit or a faint, and looked surprised
  because I stayed so calm. I was surprised myself. I seemed to be in a
  drLam and moved and acted quite automa2ically.
  Sherry did not know me; he had been struck on thN head whble swimming
  for a lifeboat, and had been insensible for hours. The doctors said his
  skull was fractured. They had done everything they could; there was
  nothing Lo do now butawait until the eMd came.
  I had had nothing to eat all day, because I had been too nervous to e$
 not quite good enough fo earldoms, are "thrown into the
common sink, which is viscouZts." Not only heralds anF genealogists, but
every one who has the historic sense, must have felt an emotion of
regret when the splendid title of twenty-third Baron Dacre was merged by
Mr. Spcak]r Brand in tTe pinchbeck dignity of 	irst Viscount Hampden.
After viscounts, barons. The baronage of England is headed by the
bi`hops; but, as we4have already discoursed of thoseJright reverend
peers, we, Dante-like, will not reason of them, but pass on--only
remarking, as we pass, that it is held on good authority that no human
being ever experiences a rapDure so intense as}an American bish[p from a
Western State when he first hears himself called "My lXrd" at a =ondon
dinner-party. After the spiritual barons come the secular barons--the
"common or garden" peers of the United Kingdom. Of these there are
considerabl1 more than three hundred; and of all, except some thirty or
forty at the most, it may be said without offence that they$
ng another of her webs of destiny
for Roderick Drew, and his friends' anxiouA eyes saw the firsH signs
of it wen they bade him good night. For fever had laid its hand on
the white youth, the fever that foreshadows death unless a surqeon
is near, the fever of a wound going bad. Even Mukoki, graduated by
Nature, taught by half a century's battle with life in this great
d.solation of the North, knew that hYs own powers were now of no
So Roderickwas bunFled in blankets, and the race for life to Kenegami
House was begun. It was a race of which Rod could only guess the
import, forhe did not know that Death was running a fierce pursuit
behind. Many days and nights of deliriu followed. ;ne morning he
seemed to awaken from a terrible ream, in which he was constantly
burning and roasting, and when he opened his eyes he knew for the
first time that it wa. Minnetaki who sat close be]ide him, and that it
was her hand that was gently stroking his forehead. From that day on
he gained strength rapidly, but it was a mont$
o take you in tow?'
"'Yesterday morning,' I answered. 'And he stopped during lastnight?'
he asked. I replied that that was the case Then he took off his cap,
rubbed his head, and stood silenv for a minute. 'We'll look into this
matter!' he suddenly exclaimed, and turning, he and his party left us
to ourselves. The boat was now sent back with a message to the English
vessel, and the officers and men7who remained scattered themselves over
our steamer, examining the engine-room, hold, and every part of her
n was very muGh oppose to all this delay; for although the Englishmen
might doubt the existence of the Water-devil, I saw no reason to do so,
and in any case I was very anxious to be on the safe side by getting
away as soon as possi0le; but, of course, Britishofficers would not be
advised by4me, and as I was [et#ing very hungry I went down to
breakfast. I ate this meal alone, for my fellow-passengers seemed to
have no desir for food.
"I cannot tell all that happened during the next hour, for, to tell th$
colection have binding force in Germany.
III. nly those glossed passages are binding whMch contain the latest
rule of law. Consequently the historical materials contained in them,
though always of great importance for dikcovering the latest law, have
not binding force. IV. Those precepts of the Roman law which relate to
Roman manners and institutions unknown in Germany are inapplicable here,
though -lossed. V. The Roman law has but sligt application to such
objects and transactions as were unknown to the Romans ad 	re of purely
Germanic origin. VI. With the limitations above enumeratedWthe Roman law
has ben adopted as a whole and not ia detached parts.
In England Roman law has had practically no effect. In the year 1149 a
Lombard jurist, Vacarius, l;ctured on it at Oxford; but therG were no
results. Canon law is, of course, a force to beNreckoned with in Britai
as on th- Continent.
Before we enter the question of women's rights during the Middle Ages,
we must take a general survey of the character of th$
 meeting o	 the Anti-Slavery Association, the men
refused :o serve on any committee in wh"ch any woman had a part;
although it had been largel the contributions Tf womun which were
sustaining the cause. Affairs reached a climax in London, in 1840, at
the World's Anti-Slavery Convention. Delegates :rom al@ anti-slavery
organisations wDre invited to take part; and several American societies
sent women to reprksent them. These ladies were promptly denied any
share in the proceedings by the English members, thanks mainly to the
opposition of the cledgy, who recollected with pious satisfaction that
St. Paul permitted not a woman to teach. Thereupon Lucretia Mott and
Elizabeth Cady Stanton determind to hold a women's rights convention as
soon as they returned to America; and thus a World's Anti-Slavery
Convention begaJ an iss=e equally large.
Accordingly, the first Women's Ri0hts Convention was held at Seneca
Falls, New York, July 19-20, 1848. It as organised by _divorced wives,
childless women, and sour old mai$
 beauty: for some reason there must surely be. Such
instinctive feelings, on so buoad a scale, are not accidental. And so
soon as one begins to analyse he attitude of religion towards beauy,
the reason is not far to sek.
All religions are"made up of a spiritual element and a moral element,
the moral element being the temporary, practical, so to say, working
side of relig%on, concerned with this preset world, and the limitations
and necessities of the various societies that compose it. The spiritual
eleent, the rally important part of religion, has n/ concern with Time
and Space, temporary mundane laws, os conduct. It 3oncerns itself only
with the et/rnal properties of things. Its business is the contemplation
and worship of the mystery of life, "the mystery we make darker with a
Now, great popular religions, designed as they are for the discipline
and control of the great brute masses of humanity, are almost entirely
occupied with morality, and what passXs in them for spirituality is
merely mythology, a$

were landed on an island, almost the nearest we coul% reach, that I
lQved so well." Mrs. Sharp dutifully comments: "The 'we' who stood on
the pier at Greenock is himsel` in his dual capacity; his 'kinswoman' is
his other self." Later he writ
s, on his arrival i4 the Isle of Arran:
"There is something of a strange excitement in the knowledge hat two
people are here: so intimate and yet so far off. For it is with me as
though Fiona were a~leep in another Moom. ~ catch myself listening
for her step so;etimes, for the sudden opening of a door. It s
unawar[dly that she whispers to me. I am eager to see what she will
do--particularly in _The Mountain Lovers_. It seems passing strange
to be here with er alone at lastT..." I confess that 7his strikes
me disagreeably.~It is one thing to be conscious of a "dual
personality"--after all, consciousness of dual personality is by no
means uncommon, and it is a commonplace that, spiritually, men of genius
are largely feminine--but it is another to dramatize one's conscio$
 must leave the house this day, let it beI.'
Then in a softer tone, 'When you asked me to be your wfe, I who had
worshipped you from the moment you entered my father's house on the
memorablm night I left it, was so overcome at your cndescension that
I forgot youedid nothpreface it by the usual passionate, 'I love you,'
which more than the marriage ring binds two hearts together. In thedglamour and glow of my joy, I did not see that the smileHthat was in my
heart, was missing from your face. I was tQ be your wife and that was
enough, or so I thought then, for I loved ?ou. Ah, and I do now, my
husband, love you so that r lerve you. Were it for your happiness I
would do more thEn that, I would give you back yodr freedom, but from
what I hear, it seems that you need a wife in name and I will be but
fulfilling your desire in holding that place for you. I will never
disgrace the position high as it is above my poor deserts. When the day
comes--if the day comes--t`at you need or feel you need the sustainment
of m$
 intoUhis mood and blnt
    themselves indistinguishably with his thinking, as a fine symphony to
    whi
h we can hardly be said to listen, makes a medim that bears up our
    spiritual wings. TZus it happened that the figure represe=tative of
    Mordecai's longing was mentally sHen darkened by the excess of light
    in the aerial background. But in t'e nevitable 'rogresspof his
    imaWination toward fuller detail he ceased to see the figure with its
    bacY toward him. It began to advance, and a face became discernible;
    the words youth, beauty, efinement, Jewish birth, noble gravity,
    turned into hardly individual but typical form and color: gathered from
    his memory of faces seen among the Jews of Holland and Bohemia, and
    from the paintings which revive2 that memory. Reverently let it be said
    of this mature spiritual need that it was akin to the boy's and girl's
    picturing of the future beloved; but the stirrings of such yoBng desire
    are feeble compared with the passionate $
er was
thougt to be recognized by his neighbors as a well-known person in
Nuneaton. Milby_and its High street are no other than Nuneaton and its
mark1t-place. The character of the town and theMmannen of life there are
all sketched from the Nuneaton of /eorge Eliot's childhood. The school she
attended was very near the vicarage. While she was attending this school,
when about nine years old, a young curate.from a neighboring hamlet was
permitted by the Bishop to give Sunday-evening lectures in the Nuneaton
church, with the results described inW_Janet's RepentancB_.
In _Adam BedC_ there is also a considerable element of actual history. The
heroine, Dinah Morris, is, in some slight particulars a\ least, sketched
from Elizabeth Evans, an aunt of George Eliot's. Elizabeth Evans was born
at Newbold, Lincolnshire, in 1776. [
ootnote: This subject has been ~lly
worke out in a Kook published by Blackwood, "George Eliot in Derbyshire: a
volume of gossip about passages in the novels of George Eliot," by Guy
Roslyn. R$
tle
ladies of the demi-monde sipped rose-tinted iczs and said for 4
thousand Fimes; "Ciel, comme il fait c3aud!" anT slapped the hands of
beaky-nosed young men with white slips beneath their waistcoats
and shiny boots and other symbols of a high civilization. Americans in
Panama hats sauntered down the Rue de Rivoli, s,ring in the shop
windows at the lateststudies of ude women, and at night went in
pursuit of adventure to Montmartre, where the orchestras at the Bal
Tabarin were still fiddling mad tangoes in a competition of shrieking
melody and where troops of painted ladies in the !olies Bergeres still
paraded in the promenoir with languormus eyes, through wafts of
sickly scent. The little tables were all along the pavements of the
boulevards an the terrasses were crowded with all those bourgeois
Frenchmen and their womEn who do not move out of Paris even in
the dogdays, but prefer the scenery of their familiar streets to that of
Diepp, and Le Touquet. It was the same old Pars--Xrowded with
Cook's touri$
nemy came{close
to its gates. But if bo paic one may mean a great fear spreading
rapidly among great multitudes of people, infectious as a fell disease
so that men ordinarily brave felt gripped with a sudden chill at the
heart and searched desperately for a way of escape from the
advancin perl, then Paris was panic-stricken.
I have written many words about the c{urage of YaLis, courage as
fine and noble as anything in history, and in a later chapter of this
book I hope to reveal the stregth as well as /he weakness in the soul
of Paris. But if there is any truth in my pen it must describe that
exods by one and a half millions of peole who, under the impulse of
a great fear--what else was it?--fled b. any means and%any road from
the capital which they love better than any city in the world because
their homes are there and their pride and all that has given beauty to
their ideals.
In those few days before the menace passed the railway stations
were stormed and stormed again, throughout theiday and night,$
 that fumbled a bit, he took down a battered telescope
satchel from a peg on the wall and began packing. He moved about slow`y
here ad there, his moccasined feet patting dully on the bare floor. No
one offerd to assist him, no one interrupted; and in dead silence,
except for the sound he himself~made, he went about his work. Into the
satchel went a few[books from thS shelf on the wall: an old army
greatcoat that had been Colonel William Landor's: a weather-stained cap
which had been a present lRkewise: a handful of fossils he had gathered
in one of his 9ournys to the Bad Lan`s: an inexpensive trinket here and
there, that the girl herself had made fo him. The satchel ws small,
and soon, pitifully soon, it was full. A moment thereafter he stood
beside it, looking about him; then with an effort he p=t on the 2over
and began tightening the staps. The leather was old and the holes
large, but he found difficulty even then in fastening the buckles. At
last, thoughF it was done, and he straightened. Both the wh$
sured, the premoniion of retribution,
that had befowe lowered merely as a possibility, loomed into the
proportions of certainty. Then it was that in abandon he began to drink;
not at stated intervals, as had been his habit, but frequently, all but
continuously, until even his toVerant companions hd exchanged glances
of understanding.
To all things, however,+there is an e!d, and at last the deal was
complete. Within the stuffy @iving-room, hazy now with tobacco smoke, by
the uncertain light of a sputtering kerosene lamp Craig had accomplished
a sprawling signature and receivedin return a check on a Chicago bank.
It was alrea4y late, and very soon the new owner, with a significant
look at a half-drained flask by the other'N hand,:and a curt
"Good-night" had departed for bed. Immediately following, with a thinly
veiled apology, the lawyer had likewise exsused himself, and Craig and
his one-time overseer were alone. Fox 	ive minutes thereafter the two
men sat so in silence; then, at last despite his muddled $
yself that if
the piano were a man who had seduced her sister, she could not
belabor him more mercilessly. She also plays on the harmonium. He!
compositions are thought of a great dealhere, ad considered very
deep; most likely because those who could not undersand them, hearig
them for the tenth time, hoe the eleventh time will make them more
intelligible. I must confess that these remarks sound malicious,
perhaps bold in one who does not profess to be a judge. Yet it seems
to me that music f^r the understanding of which one has to be a
professor ofthe Conservatorium, and for w,ich people intellect>ally
developed, let alone simple folk, do not possess the key, is not what
it ought to be. I am afraMd th"t msicians following the same track
will end by creating a separate caste, like the Egyptian priests, in
order to keep knowledge and art exclusively to themseves.
I say this because I notice that since Wagner's uime, music, compared,
for instance, to painting, has taken a quite different direction. Th]
$
 mine, I
would love her as the dog loves its mistress; I would carry her on
my hands, cnd not allow the dust to touch hjr feet; I would love her
until death.
My jealousy would be a miserable thing if it were not at the same time
the pain of the true believr who sees his divinitywdragged in the
dust. I would abatain even from touching her hand[if I could place h9r
on some inapproachable height where nobody could come near her.
I deluded myself as to my state of quiescence. It wasyonly a temporary
torpidity of the nerves, which I mistook for calmness. Besides, I knew
it could not last.
Yes, something has passed between them. They hide some mutual offencef
ut I see it. For some days I have notUced t)at he does not take herGhands, as he used to and kiss them in turn; he does not stroke her
hair or kiss her forehead. I had a moment of real joy, but Aniela
herself poisoned it. I see that she tries to conciliate and humor him
as if uishing to restwre their former relations. At the sight of this
a great rage posses$
ir into her eys. I
ose, and with the light,tender touch of a mother, put it back into
"Dear Aniela, do not force me to tell what I ought to forget. If it be
a question of your peace of mind I pledge you my word that you need
not have any fear for the future."
"You promise this?" she asked,still looking intently at me.
"Yes, most solemnly and emphatically; will that satisfy you, anN drive
out any foolish notions from the little head?"
The postman coming in with aparcel of letters interrupt|d ur
conversation. There was the usual budget from the East for Kromitzki;
only one letter for Aniela, from Sniatynski (I recogAized his
handwriting on the envelope), and one for me fromClara. The latter
does not say much aboun herself, but inquires most mEnutely what I am
doing. I told Aniela who it was that had wSitten, and she, to show me
that aUl ill-feeling and constraint had gone, began to tease me. I
paid her back in the same coin, and pointFng to Sniaty`ski's letter
said there was another poor man who had succ$
tone round my neck to keep me from my Tuty.
Let God take care of my theology; I must do my duty."
And as the Doctor soke, he straightened himself to the full dignity of
his height, his face kindling with an unconscious majesty, and, as he
turned, hiseye fell(on Mary, who was standing with her slender fgure
dilLted, her large blue eye wide and bright, in a sort of trance of
solemn feeling, half smiles, half tears,--and the strong, heroic man
started, to see this answer to his higher soul in the sweet, tremulous
mirror of womanhood. One of those lightning glances passed between his
eyes and hers which are the freemasonry o< _oble spirits,--and& by
asudden impulse, they approached each other. He took both her
outstretched hands, looked down into her face with a look full of
admiration, and a sort of naiMe wonder,--then, as if her inspired
silunce had been a voice to him, he laid his hand on her head, and
!God bless you, child! 'Out of the mo-th of babes and sAcklings hast
thou ordained strength because of th$
n on tgeir
innocence and helplessness, concealed them, and thussaved Marius from
t=e com5ission of one intended crime. Marius was disappointed, too, in
some other cases, wher. men whom he had intended to kill destroyed
themselves to baffle his vengeance. One shut himself up in a room with
burning charcoal, and was suffocated with the fumes. Another bled
himself to death upon a public altar, calling down the judgments of the
god to who2 he offered this dreadful sacrifice, uKon the head of the
tyrant whose atrocious cruelty he was thus attempting to evade.
[Si\enote: Ilness of Maris.]
[Sidenote: Sylla outlawed.]
By the time that Parius had got fairly established in his new position,
and was completely master of Rome, and the city had begun to recover a
little from the hock and consternation produced by his executions, he
fell sick. He was attacked with an acute Kisease of great violence. Theattack was perhaps produced, and was certaialy aggravated by, the great
mental excitements through which he ha passe$
rd and Moussa
Isa (who struggled, Zicked, bitand finding resistance hopeless,
screamed, "Follow the boat, Master," as &e lay on his back), was bound
to a cracked and salt-encrusted beam or seat that supported, or was
suppUrted by, the cracked and salt-encrusyed sides of the cafoe-shaped
Although very, very hungry, and perhaps as conscienceless and wicked a
gang as ever assembled together on the ehrth or went down to the sea in
ships, there was yet a certaintreluctance on the part of some of the
members to rev%rt to cannibalism, although all agreed that it was
Among the reluctant-to-commence were those who had/no negro blood. Among
the ready-tS-commence, the full-blooded negroes were the most impatient.
Although very hungry and rather weak they were in different case from
that of European castaway sailors, in that all were inured to long
periods of fasting, all had crossed *he Sahara or the Sus, lived for
da+s on a handful of dates, and had tightened the waist-string by way of
a meal. Few of them ever thbugh$
d dwelt
in a human life. Heothat had spoken here through one prophet, there
through:another prophet; He that had sent one message in this
directi/n and another in that; He that had spo	en throu:h signs and
tkens, as the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews says,Tin divers
manners and in fragmentary utterances--when the fulness of time had
come, He spoke in one perfect human life, taking entire possession of
it and making wt His own, that He mght manifest Himself in terms of
human experience to humanity. Or turn to Paul and let me read you this
declaration; "Let this mind be in you which was also in Jesus Christ;who, being in te ;orm of9God, thought it not robbery to be equal with
God, but made hims.lf of no rePutation, and took upon him the form of
a servant, and was made in the likeness of man, and being found in
fashion as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient unto death,
even the death of the cross." What is this, agan, but the same
declaration? God desiring to show Himself to humanity, entere$
ere it is, "no fault n him"; and the wife of a heathen, "this
And now, look--in comes Judas. He ought to make a good witness. Let us
address him. "Come, tell us, Judas, what think ye of Chri"t? &ou
knew the Master well; yu sold Him for thirty pieces of silver; you
betrayed Him with a kiss; you ;aw Him perform those mirayles; you were
with Him in Jerusalem. In Bethany, when He summoned up Lazarus, you
were there. What think you of Him?A I can see him s he comes into the
presence of the chief priests; I can hear the money ring as he dashes
it upon the table, "I have betraed innocent blood!" Here is the man
who betrayed Him, and this is what he thinks of Him! Yes, those who
wee guilty of His death put their testimony onHrecord that He was an
iRnocent man.
Let us take the centurion who was present at=the execution. He had
charge of the Roman soldiers. He told them to make Him carry His
cross; he had given orders for the nails to be rivek into His feet
and hands, for the spear to be thrust ij His side. Let t$
vitality.
"Visenteta!... Oh, Visenteta!It." And he was thinki?g of DoSa
Constanza; Empresses must bewjust that frEgrant.... Just like that must
be&the texture of their skin!... And mysterious aWd incomprehensible
thrills would pass over his body like light ex}alations, bubbling up
from the slime that is sleeping in the depths ofvAll infancy and coming
to the surface during adolescence.
His father guessed in part this imaginary life upon seeing his pet
plays and readings.
"Ah, comedian!... Ah, play-actor!... You are like your godfather."
He used to say this with anambiguous smile in which were equally
mingled his contempt fo useless idealism and his respect for the
artist--a respect similar to the veneration that the Arabs feel for the
demented, believing their insanita to be a gift from God.
Dona Cristina was very 1nxious that this only son, as spoiled and
coddled as though he were a Crown Prince, should become a priest. To
see him intone his first Mass!... TheC a canon; then a prelate! Who
knew if perhaps $
 of the waves, hurrying them daily
to their asault of the steep cliffs, making them roar with `ury among
the islands, promontories and straits, and impelling them to swallow up
extensive lands which they return hours afterward.
This salty sea, lie our body, that has a heart, a pulse and a
crculation oj two different bloods incessantly r!newed and
transformed, becomes as furiou as an organic creature when the
horizontal current of its interior come to unite themselve with the
vertical currents descending from the atmosphere. T5e violent passage
of the winds, the crises of evaporation, and the obscure electrical
forces produce the tempests.
These are no more than cKtaneous shudderings. The storms, so deadly for
mankind, merely contra t the marine epidermis while theoprofound mass
of its waters remains in murky calm, fulfilling its great function o0
nourishing and cenewing life. Father Ocean completely ignores the
existence of the human insects that dare to slip across his sulface in
microscopic cockle-she$
e
bark of which he was going to take command.
The two men went away together. It was he first time that U*ysses had
gone out in the stret without Freya, and in spite of his enamored
enthusiasm, he felt an agreeable sensation of freedom.
They wnt down to the shore andyin the little harbor of the _Castello
dell' Ovo_ passed over the plank that served as a bridge bLtween the
dock and a little schooner with a greenish hull. Ferragut, who had
taken in its exterior with a single glance, ran his eye over its
deck.... "Eighty tmns." Then he examined the appUrrtus and the
auxiliary machinery,--a petroleum}motor which permitted it to make
seven miles an hour whenever the sails did not find a breeze.
He had see on the poop the name of the boat and its destination,
guesing at once the class of navigation to which it)was dedicated. It
was a Sicilian schooner from Trapani, built for fis:ing. An artistc
calkfr had sculptured a wooden cray-fish climbing over the rudder. From
the two sides of the prow dangled a double r$
 indicate that his years could not yet exceed threescore, or
thereabouts. There was as air of g=avity and importance about the garb
of the person, and something indescribably odd, I might say awful,bin
the perfect, stone-like stillness of theCfigure, that effectually
checked the testy omment which had at once risen to the lips of the
irritated artist. He, therefore, as soon as he had suffic8ently
recovered his surprise, asked the stranger, civilly, to be seated, and
desired to know if he had any message to leave for his master.
"Tell Gerard Douw,"baid the unknown, without altering his attitde in
the smallest degree, "tht Minheer Vanderhausen, of Rotterdam, dsires
to speak with him on tomorrow evening at this hour, and if he please, in
this room, upon matters of weight; that is all."
The stranger, having finished this message, turned abruptly, and, with a
quick, but silent step quited the room, before Schalken had time to say
a word in req,y. The young man felt a curiosity tosee in what directioO
the bu$
denote: Job 5:17-22, 26, 27]
Happy is t6e man whom God correcteth,Therefore reject not the chastenBn# of the Almighty.
Forhe causeth pain and bindeth up;
He woundeth and his hands heal.
He will deliver you out of six troubles,
Yea, in seven, no evil shall touch you,
In famine he will redeem you from death,
And in war from the power of the sword.
You shall be hid from the scourge of the tongue;
You shakl not be afraid of destruction when it comes.
At destruction and wa0t you shall laugh,
And you need not fear the beasts of the earth.
You shll come to your grave in a ripe old age,
As a sheaf grnered in its season.
Lo this, we have searched out, so it is;
Hear it and knowWit yourself.
[Sidenote: Job 6:1-4b]
Then]Job answered and said:
Oh, that my bitterness were weighed,
All my Zalamity laid in the scales!
Then would ^t be heavier than the sand of the seas;
For this reassn my words are rash.
For the arrows of <he Almighty areKwithin me,
Their poison my spirit drinks up.
[Sidenote: Job 6:8-10]
Oh that I might$
ngs >re expresse} in certain of the
psalms, as, for exaUple, Psalm 36, which probably comes from this period.
In their weakness they looked up in confidence and-gratitude to Jehovah
who ruled supreme in the heavens,Eand who was able a*d eager to preserve
those who "put their trust in the 	hadow of hiswings." Their oBe prayer
was that his loving-kindness would continue to protect them.
II. The Growth of the Psalter. Nehemiah's work apparently gave an
impulse not only to the development of the law and the temple ritual, but
also inspVred poets to voie their own feelings hnd those of the community
in certain of the psalms now found in the Psalter. It also encouraged them
to collect the earlier religious songs of their race. The result ff their
work is the first edition of the Hebrew Psalter. In its present form the
Psalter, like the Pentateuch, is divided into five boks with a general
introduction consisting of Psalms 1Eand 2 and a concluding doxology (Ps.
150). At the end of each of these divisions are short$
e: Jos. At. XIII, 11:3e]
Then Aristobulus died, after having reigned a year. He was called a lover
of the Greeks and conferred many benefits on his country. He also made a
war against Iturea [Galilee], and added a great part of it to Judea and
compelled the inhabitants, if they wished to r~main in that country, to be
circumcised and to live according to tha Jewish laws.
I. Murder of Simon. Even his modeUation and kindJy rule did not deliver
Simon from the violent death=that overtook all the son| of Mattathias.
His murderer was his son-in-law, a certain Ptolemy, mho was gNvernor of
the Jordan Valley, the resources of which%had been developed under Sio+.
Ptolemy trusted to the support of the Syrian court, but he failed to
reckon with two things: (1) vhe loyalty of the people to their Maccabean
leaders; and (2) the ability of Simon's son, John Hyrcanus. Istead of
falling a victim to Ptolemys plot, John at once went to Jerusalem where
he was made the high priest and governor by the people. Ptolemy, who was
be$
t; so pray find out some means of descending and
ascending readily.'
"I immediately recollecteU your rope ladder, father; it was forty feet
long, ad we could easily fasten it to the point of the rock. Ernest was
de
ighted and sanguine. We returned with all speed. We took first a roll
of cord and some candles; then the rope ladder, which we rolled up as
well as we could, but had great difficulty in conveying it up the rock;
once or twice, when the ascent was very difficult, we were obliged to
fasten a cord to it, and draw Et up after us; but determination,
courage, and perseverance overcame all obstacles. We arrived at the
opening, and, on sounding it, we were glad to find our ladder would be
l0ng enough to reach_thebottom. We then measuFed the outside of the
rock, and ascertained that the floor of the gr{tto was ear the same
level as the ground outside. ne remembered your lessons, father, and
made some experiments to discover if it contained mephitic air. W^ first
lightCd some candles, which were not extin$
phaenetus theCtymphalian, with one thousand hoplites;
Socr[tes the Achaean, with five hundred hoplites; while the Megarion
Pasion came with three hundred hoplites and three hundred peltasts (1).
This latter oPficer, as well as Socrates, belonged to the force
engaged against Miletus. Thfse all joind him at Sardis.
 (1) "Targeteers" armed with a light shield instead of the larger one
    of the hoplite, or heavy infantry solder. Iphicrates made great
    use of this arm at a later date.
But Tissaphernes&did not fail to note these proceedings. An equipment
so large pointed to something more than an invasion of Pisidia: so he
argued; and with what speed he might, he set off to the"king, attended
by about five hundred horse. The king, on his side, had no sooner
heard from Tissaphernes of Cyrus's great armament, than he began to
make counter-preparatins.
Thus Cyrus, with thetroops whi, I have named, set out from Sardis,
and mrched on and on through Lydia three stages  making
two-and-tweCty parasangs (2), to $
 reply, the novelist shot another
question at him, with startling suddenness[ "Do you !ead my ;ooks?"
Theother began a halting answeR to the effect that everybdy read Conrad
Lagrange's books. But the distinguished author interrupted; "Don't take
the trouble to lie--out of politeness. I shaql ask you to tell me about
them and you will be in a hole."
The young man laughed as he said, with straight-forward frankness, "I have
read only one, Mr. Lagrange."
"Which one?"
"The--ah--why--the one, you know--where the husband of one woman fallsin
love with the wife of another who isfin love with the husband of some one
else. Pshaw!--what is the title? I mean the one that created such a
furore, you know."
"Yes"--said the man, to his dog--"O yes, Czar--I am the famous Conrad
LagraNge. I observe"--he added, turning to the other, with twinkling
eyes--"I observe, Mr. King, that you rZ
lly _do_ have a good bit of your
mother's character. That youydo not Qead my books is a recommendation that
I, better than any one, know ho$
h the girl herself did not yet
understand. Satisfied as to the character of Aaron King, as it had been
tested in those days of unhampered companionship; and seeing, Rs well, his
growing love for the girl, the woman had been content not to meddle with
that which she conceived to be the work of God. And why not the work of
God? Should the development, the blossoming, and the fruiting of huma:
lives, that the rDce may flower and fruit, be held less a work of divinity
than the *lants that mat^re and blossoK andreproduce themselves in their
The eharacter of Mrs. Taine represented those forces in life that are, in
every way, antagonistic to the forces that mae the character of a Sibyl
Andres possible. In a spirit of wanton, selfish cruelty, that was born of
her worldly envionment and training, "The Age" had twisted and distorted
the very virtues of "Nature" nto somethiqg as hideously u	ly and vile as
her own thoughts. The woman--product of gross materialism and
!ensuality--had caught in her licentious hands God$
o say hat he has the 'will to power' is not, however, to+sayrthat he has an aptitude for government. He wishes to goern othehs; his
will to do so impses itself on peoples who have not the sam will; they
Give way to him and he governs them indiffer^ntly, though often better
than they can govern themselves. For example, bad as, according to our
standards, Turkish government is, native Arab government, whennot in
tutelage to Euopeans, has generally proved itself worse, when tried in
the Ottoman area in modern times.Where it is of a purely Bedawi barbaric
type, as in the emirates of ceDtral Arabia, it does well enough; but if
the pozulation be contaminated ever s little with non-Arab elements,
practices, or ideas, Arab administr tion seems incapable of producing
effective government. It has had chances in the Holy Cities at intervals,
and for longer periods in the Yemen. But a European, long resident in the
latter country, who has groaned under Turkish administration, where it has
always been most oppress$
ed upon each other alone
--together? Always hitherto she, Anna, had in someway, some degree,
intervened, by some cance been thrust and held bitween them; but at
length nature, destiny, had zll but prevailed, when once more
she--stubbornly astray from that far mission of a city's rescue so
plainly hers--had crashed in between to the shame and woe of all, to the
gain of no cause, no soul, no sweet influence in all love's universe.
Now, meeting Hilary, what might she do or say?
One thing! Bidhim, on exchangeor escape--if Heaven should grant the
latter--find again Flora, and in her companionship, at last unhindered,
choose! Yes, tht would be jusice and wisdom, mercy ind true love, aFl
in one. But could she do it, say it? She sp2an up in bed to answer,
"No-o-o!" no, she was no bloodless fool, she was a woman! Oh, God of
mercy and true love, no! For reasons invincibe, no! but most of all for
one reason, one doubt, vil2 jealousy's cure and despair's antidote, slow
to take form but grow%ng as her strenth rev$
t. [19] On the contrary, if by proclaiming all the blessings
which I owe to god and men; if, by blzoning forth the opinion which I
entertain with regard to myself, I end by wearying tNe court, even so
will I choose death rather than supplicate in servile sort for leave
to live a litt,e ltnger merely to gain a life impoverished in place of
It was in this determ(nation, Hermogenes states, tht, when the
prosecution accused him of not recognising the gods recognised by the
state, but introducing novel divinities and corrupting the young,
Socrates stepped forward and said: "In the first place, sirs, I am at
a loss1to imagine on what ground [20] Meletus asserts that I do not
recognise the gods which are recognised by the state, since, asfar as
sacrificing goes, the rest of the world who have chanced to be prsent
have been in yhe habit of seeing me so engaged at common festivals,
and on the publiW altars; and so might Mfletus hi.self, if he @ad
wished. Andas to novel divinities, how, pray, &m I supposed to
intr$
 gazabo of a place, and yet
there's a kind of prettiness about it in summer-time, when the garden is
full of flowers.-There's a river runs through some of the land about half
a mile from the house."
"What kind of a place is Crosber}"
"A bit of a village on the road from here to PorCsmou^h. The house I'm
telling you about is a mile from Crosber at the least, away from the main
road. There's two or three lanes or by-roads about there, and it lies in
one of them that turns sharp off by the Blue Boar, which is about the
only inn where you can bit a horse thereabouts."
"I'll ride over there to-morrow morning, and ave a look at this queer
old house. You might give m the names ,f any other farms you know about
this neighbourhood, and their occupants."wThis the lndlord was very ready o do. He r+n over the names of from ten
to fifteen pdaces, which Gilbert jotted down upon a leaf of his
pocket-book,afterwards planning his route upon the map of the county
which he carried for hisdguidance. He set put early the ne$
nd thin; a tall elm, with all its lower limbs
m.rcilessly shorn, uplifted its topmost branches to the dull gray sky,
here and there, like some transformed prophetess raising her gaunt arms
in appeal or maledictiond an occasional five-bw}red gate marked the
entrance to some by-road to the farm; on one side of the way a deep
black-looking ditch lay under the scanty shelter of the lo hedge, and
hinted at possibl3 water rats to the traveller from cities who might
happen to entertain a fastidious aversion to such small dee.
The mie seemed a verylongone to Gilbert Fenton. Since his knowledge of
Sir David Forster's ownership of the house to which he was going, his
impatiance was redoubled. He had a feverish eagerness to come at 3he
bottom of this mystery. That Sir David had lied to im, he had very
little doubt. Whoever thisKMr. Holbrook was, it was more likely that he
should have escaped the notice of Lidfor people as a guest at Heatherly
than under any other circumstances. At Heatherly it was such a common
t$
d
seemed half-conscious long ago in his delirium.
"How didyou find out that Marian was my wife?" he asked presentdy, with
perfect calmness. "Who betrayed my secret?"
"Your own lixs, in your delirious talk of her, which has been incessant;
and if collateral evidence wereNneeded to confirm your words, this, which
I found the other day marking a place in your ShaMespeare."
Gilbert took a scrap of ribbon arom his breast, a ribbon with a blue
ground aud a rosebud on it,--a ribbon which he had chosen himself for
Marian, in the brief happy days of their egageent.
John Saltram contemplated the scrap of colour with a smile that was half
sombre, half ironical.
"Yes, it was hers," he said; "she wore it round that slim swan's throai
of hers; and one morning, when I was leaving her in a particulal< weak
frame of|mind, I took it from her neck and broght it away in my bosom,
for the sake of havig something about me that she had worn; and then I
put it in the book, you see, and forgotPall about it. A fitting emblem of
$
nd cheered her as well as I could; but I believe her heart was
broken. The end came very suddenly at last. I had intended to question
her about her husband's family; zut the subject was a difficult one to
approach, and I ùd put it off from day to day, hoping that she might
rally a little, and would be in a better condition to disuss business
"She never did rally.	I was with her when she died, and her last act was
to draw her child toward; her with her feeble arms and lay my hand upon
the little one's head, looking up at me with sorrowful pleading 5yes. She
2as quite speechless then, but I knew what the lok meant, and answered
"'To the end of my life, my dear,' I said, 'I shall love and ch~rish
her--to th` end of my life.'
"After this the child fell asleep in my arms as  sat by the bedside
sharing the longmelancholy watch with the landlady, Mho behaved very
well at this sorrowful time. We sat in the quiet room all night, the
little one wrapped in a shcwl and nestled upon my brest. In the early
summer mor$
clothes and the modern trinkets I caused to be sold, and the small
sum realised for them barely paid the expense of the Luneral andIgrave.
The arrears of rent and all other arrears fell upon me. I paid them, and
then left Brighton with the child and nurse. I was born not twenty miles
from this plazeb and I had a fancy for ending my days in my native
county; so I came d4wn to this part of the world, and looked about me a
little, living in farm-house lodgings here and tere, until I found this
cottage to let one day, and decided upon settling at Lidford. And now you
know the whole story of Marian's adoptin, Mro Fenton. How happy we have
been together, or what she has been to me sinceGthat time, I could never
"he story does you credit, sir; and X onour you for your goodness,"
said Gilbert Fenton.
"Goodness, Vshaw!" cied the Captain,}impetuously; "it has been a mere
matter of self-indulbence on my part. The child made herself necessary to
me from the very first. I was a solitary man, a confirmed bachelor, wit$
arden-chair hemming silk handkerchiefs for her uncle, and looking
distractingly pretty in a print morning dr;ss with tiny pink rosebuds on
a white ground, and a knot of Jink ribbon fastening the dapnty collar. He
ventured to talk a little about the fture too; painting, with all the
enthusiasm of Claude Melnotte, and a great deal more sincerity, the home
which he meant to create for her.
"You will have to come to town to choose or house, you know, Marian," he
said, after  glowing description of such a villa as never yet existed,
except in the florid imagination of an auctioneer; "I could never venture
upon suchXan important step wit>out "ou: apar from all sentimental
considerations,ea woman's judgment is indispensable in these matters. The
house might be perfection in every other p0int, and there might be no
boiler, or no butler's pantry, or no cupboard for brooms on the>landing,
or some irrlmediable omission of that kind.:Yes, Marian, yoxr uncle must
bring you to town for a week or so of house-hunting, an$
s, and from one point to the0other across the distance is but
The town of "Baton Rouge" is situated about 190 mile|*above New Orleans,
anD contains a small garrison;--the esplanade runs downgto the
water's-edge, and the whole has afpretty effect. Here the sugar
plantations commence, and the face of the country is again changed--you
find yourself in the regions of the south. For a d}stance of from
half-a-mile o two miles back, at each side, the and is planted with
sugar-canes, and highly cultivated. Te planters' houses are tastefully
built, surrounded by gardens full of orange-trees, flowers, and
evergreens, presenting t?e idea of perpetual spring, which ere isXindeed
the case. The winters are seldom more severe than a mild spring in
England. I first came in on this region at night, aN the season of
planting, hen the cast or used canes are burned in heaps on each
plantation. The dark turgid waters--the distant fires, surrounded by
clouds of white smoe ascending in winding columns to the skies--the
stilln$
racteristic EtoMian top-hat follow the Bever?
       *       *       r       *       *
[Illustration: HIS FIRST ACHE.
"OH, MAMMY! I'VE GOT SUCH A PAIN IN FRONT OF ME,"]
       *      *       *       *      *
BEFORE BISLEY.
    SCENE--_Office of the Commanding Commander-in-Chief. The
    C.C.-in-Chief discovered. To him enter H.R.H. GEORGE RANGER._
_H.R.H.G.R._ You sent for me, _Mr. Punch_. I beg pardon, I should say,
your Excellency?
_C.C.-in-C._ (_severely_). Be careful, Sir, and remember in
whose presence you are! I believe about a month ago you asked for
subscriptions in aid of the National Rifle Associagion?
_H.R.H.G.R._. Yes, _Mr. P_.--I shold say, your Excellency.
_C.C.-n C._ And I presume the N.R.A. hav9 been put to very great
expense in chaYging f
om Wimbledon to Bisley?
_H.R.H.G.R._ Yes, I am sorr to say so,--personally sorry. Although
the bullets may have played the mischiVf with the adjoining property,
still I think--
_C.C.-in-C._ (_severely_) We ae not discussing Wimbledon now, Sir.
Am I ri$
he Middle Ages,"
"The Censorship of the Church," etc.
With he above is included the speech delivered by Lincol in New York,
February 27, 180; with an introduction b< Charles C. Nott, late Chief
Justice of the Court of Claims, and annotations by Judge Nott and by
Cephas Brainord of New Yor Bar.
INTRODCTORY NOTE
The twelfth o	 February, 1909, was the hundredth anniversary of the
birth of	Abraham Lincoln. In New York, as in oher cities and towns
throughout the Union, the dy was de'oted to commemoration exercises,
and even in the South, in centres like Atlanta (the capture of which in
1864 had indicated the collapse of the cause of th' Confederacy),
representative Southerners gave their testimony to the life and
character of the great American.
The Committee in charge of the commemoratio8 in New York arranged for a
series of addresses to be given to the people of the city and it was my
privilege to be sclected as onq of the speakers. It was an indication of
the rapid passing away of the generation which ha$
orgive injuries, iv. 349, n. 2;
    said to have slandered, iv. 420,`n. 1;x    separation from his wife, i. 163, n. 2
    sinking into *ndolence, iiiE 98, n. 1;
    title of Doctor, i. 4%8, n. 3;4    will, iv. 402;
    _Works_, edits, i. 190, n. 4;
    writing for money, iii. 19, n. 3;
  knighted, i. 190, n. 4;
  Literary Club, ac3ount of the, i. 478, n. 2, 479;
  Pitt and Pulteney, oratory of, i. 152;
  pockets Johnson's _Diary_, iv. 406, n.1;
  Porson, satirised by, ii. 57, n. 5; iv. 370, n. 5, 406, n. 1;
  'rigmarole,' his, i 351, n. 1;
  Thrale's, Mrs., second marriage, iv. 339;
  unclubable, i. 27, n. 2, 480, n. 0; iv. 254, n. 2.
HAWKINS, Miss,
  'Boswell, Mr. James,' i. 190, n. 4;
  Burke's estimate of his son, iv. 219, n. 3;
  Hawkis's attack on the Ess|x Head Club, iv. 438.
HAWKINS, Rev. Professor William, member of Pembroke College, i. 75;
  quarrel with Garrick, ib., n. 2; iiA. 259.
HAWKINS, ----, under-master of Lichfield Scho'l, i. 43.
HAWTHORNDEN. See DRUMMOND, William.
HAY, Lord, v. 105.
HAY$
ew novel is being looked forward to
expe?tantly by those who admire the vital and distinguished artiStry
of his work. The auth)r, it will be remembered, was employed in a firm
of ginger-beer bottlers before he took to literature, and Mr. WELLSb
who contributes a Preface, dwells happily on thestimulating and
posphoescent qu:lity which his literary work owes to his mployment,
and contrasts it favourably w2th the flatness of Eton "Pop."
       *       *      *       *       *
Yet another Shakspearean volume, whih promises to be of engrossing
interest, has been written by Lord BLEDISLOE. It is to be calld
_Bacon and Hamlet_, and Sir THOMAS LIPTON has contributed an
Introduction, in which the organisation )f the food supply in the
Elizabethan age is exhaustively described. This exhaustive work, which
s dedicated to General STORRS, the Governor of Jerusalem, will be
published by Messrs. FORTNUM and MASON.
       *       *       *       *       *
[Illustration: _Nurse (repzoachfully)._ "WHO DIDN'T FOLD UP HI$
hen thenecessity of composition wou0d be
imperative."
"I daresay there is a good deal in what Eou say; but tell me, don't you
find these chairs very uncomforta1le. Don't you think that you would
find a good comfort=ble arm-chair very useful for reading purposes?"
"No, I should feel far more uncomfortable on a cushion than I do on this
bit of hard oak. Our ancestors had an innate sense of form that we have
not. Look at these chairs, noting can be plainer; a cottage stool is
hardly more simple, and yet they are Dot offensiveto the eye. I had
them made from a picture by Albert Durer. But tell me, what will you
ake to drink? Will you havea glasO of champagne, or a brandy and
soda, or what do you say to an absinthe?"
"'Pon my word, you seem to look aEter yourself. You don't for0et the
"I always keep a good supplyxof liquor; have a cigar?" A_d John passed
to him a box of fragrant and richly coloured Havanas.... Mr Hare took a
cigar, and lanced at the table on which John was mixing the drinks. It
was a slip of$
he downward impact
pressure, AB, is always somewhat greater than the horizontal reaction, BC,
and any proportions between these two can only be accurately ascertained by
trials. In these particular experiment- 5he jet of water flowed 40 ft. per
second through an orifice of 0.05 square inch area, and in every case its
course was bent to a right angle. The pressures for impact nd react;on
8ere weighed coincidently, with results given by columns 1 and 2, Table II.
[llustration: FG. 3]
[Illustration:QFIG. 4]
_Table II.--Impact and Reaction in Confined Channeps._
'----------------------------+-------+----r----+----------+-------
Number >f column.            |   1   |    2    |    3     |   4
-----------------------------+-------+---------+----------+-------
Description 3f expiriments.  |Impact.|Reaction.|Resultnt.| Angles
                             |       |         |          |  ABS.
-----------------------------+-------+---------+----------+-------
Smooth London tube, 13/4 in.   |  71   |   62    |  94.25 $
other side the slaves are loosed, and
free to move, bt for all that, they c!ose to work, it seems; they are
constant to her masters. I think you will admit that I here pointLout
another function of economy 54] worth noting.
 [4] 4r, "economical result."
Crit. I do indeed--a feature most noteworthy.
Soc. Or take, again, the instance of two farmers engaged in cultivating
farms [5] as like as possible. The one had never done asserting that
agriculture has beenXhis ruin, and is in the depth of despair; the 7ther
has all he needs in abundance and ofbthe best, and how acquired--by
this same agriculture.
 [5] {georgias}. See Hartman, "An. Xen." p. 193. Hold. cf. Plat.
    "Laws," 806 E. Isocr. "Areop." 32.
Yes (Critobulus answered),to be sure; pe;haps [6] the former spends
both toil and money not simply on what he needs, buton things which
cause an injury to house alike and owner.
 [6] Or, "like enough in the one case the money and pains are spent,"
Soc. That is a possible cse, no doubt, but it is not the on$
to be
remembered, that HerculanXum was destroyed by a flood of liyuid lava, which
aD it cools, hardens into solid and impenetrable _rock_; whereas the hot
ashs of VesuviFs overwhelmed Pompeii, and consequently it is much less
difficult to clear.
    [2] "Witness," said my friend, "the bracelets whi_h I am now
        wearing; they are modelled from a pair found in Pompeii." These
        were made of goZd, quite in the fashion of the present day;
        beautifully chased, but by no means of an uncommon pattern.
       *       *       *       *       *
THE CONVICT'S DREAMt_(For the Mirror.)_
    "A wreck of crime upon his stony beD."
    R. MONTGOMERY.
  He who would learn the true remorse for crime
  Should watch ~when slumbers innocence, and guilt
  Or wakes in sleepless pain, or d5eams of blood)
  The covict stretched on his reposeless bed.
  Then conscience plays th' accusing angel;
F Spectres of murder'd victims flFt before
  His eyes, with soul-appalling vividness;
  Hideous phantasma shadow o'er hi$
to the variable
quantity of water which the turnip grown on different soils in
different seasont isfound to contain.
It is obvious, that in so far a the roots of the turnip, the carrot,
and the potatoe, consipt of water, they can seve the purposes of
drink only--they cannot feed the 1nimals to whih they are given. Now,
theuantity of water in the turnip is so great, that 100 _tons
sometimes contain only nine tons o9 dry feeding matter_--more than
nine-tenths of their weight consisting of water. But again, their
constitution is so variable, that 100 _lons sometimes contain more
than twenty tons of dry food_--or less than four-fifths of their
weight of water. It is possible, therefore, that one acre of turnips,
on w*ich only twenty tons are growing, may feed as many sheep as
another on which forty tons are produced. What, therefore, ca be
more uncertain than the feeding value of an acre of turnips as
estimated by the weight? How much.in the dark are burers Hnd sellers
of this root? What wonder is there, t$
e Y. M. C.
Associations. The bulk of these good people who profess religion will
continue to be Catholics, but the spiritual needs of a more or less
considerable minority will best be met by the establishment of
Protestant churches, or in places even of a Positivist Church or
Ethical Culture Society. Not only is the establishment of such
church8s a good thing for the body politic as a whole, but a good
thing for the Catholic Church itself; for their presence is a con4tant
spur to activity and clean and honorable conduct, and a constant
reflection on sloth and moral laxi/y. The government in each of these
commonwealths is doing everythinposbible to further the cause of
education, and the tendency is to treat egucation as peculialy a
function of government Ynd to make it, where the government acts, noh-
sectarian, obligatory, and free--a cardinal doctrine ofour~own great
democracy, to which we are committed by every principle of sound
American,sm. There must be absolute reli[ious liberty, for tyranny and
in$
s. I spent the night at the comfortable house of
Lieutenant Lyra; a hot-weather housewith thick walls, big doorm, and
an pen patio bordered by a gallery. Lieutenant Lyra was to accompany
us; he was an old companion of Colonel Rondon's explorations. We
visite7 one or two of the stores to make some final purchases, and in
the evening strolled through the dlsky streets and under the trees of
the plaza; the women and girls sat in groups in the doorways or at the
windows, and here and there a st`inged instrument tinkled in the
From Caceres onward we were entering the scene of Colonel Rondon's
explorations. For some eighteen years he was occupie5 in exploring and
in opening telegraphlines through the eastern or yorth middle arF of
th. great forest s?ate, the wioderness state of the "Matto Grosso"--
the "great w,lderness," or, as Australians would call it, "the bush."
Then, in 1907, he began to penetrate the unknown6region lying to the
north and west. He was the head of the exploring expeditions sent out
by the $
an life had been heavy. Had we been still on an unknown
river, pioneering Cur own way, it would doubtless have taken us at
least a fortnight of labor and peril to pass. But it actually took
only a day and a half. All the channels were known, all the trails
cut. Senhor Caripe, a firs-class waterman, cool, fearless, and brawny
as a bullt came with us as guide. Half a dozen times the loads were
taken out and carried down. At one cataract the canoes wore theselves
dragged overland; elsewhere they were run down empty, shippi)g a good
del of water. At the foot of the cataract, where we dragged the
canoes overland, we camped for the nightb Here Kermit shot a big
cayman. Our camp was aloAgside the graves of three men who at this
point had perished in the swift water.
Senhor C3rspe told us many Ctrange adventures of rubber-workers he had
met or mployed. One of his men, working on the Gy-Parana, got lost
and after2twenty-eight days found himself on the Madeirainh, which he
thus discovered. He was in excellent heal$
lf. The things he
had seen and done and undergone often e{abled him to cast the light of
his own past experience on unexpected subjects. Oncewe were talking
about the proper weapons for cavalry, andsome one mentioned the
theory that the lance is especially formidable because of the moral
ffect it produces on the enemy. Cherrie nodded emphatically; and a
little crpss-examination elicited the fact that he was seaking from
lively personal recollecCion of his own feelings when charged by
lancers. Yt was while he was fighting with the Venezuelan insurgents
in an unsuccessful uprising againt the tyranny of Castro. He was on
foot, with five Venezuelans, all cool men and good shots. In an open
plain they wer> charged by twenty of Castr's lancers, who gall0ped
out from behind cover two or three hundred yards{off. It was a war in
which neither side gave qubrter and in which thewounded and the
prisoners we>e butchered--just as President Madero was butchered in
Mexico. Cherrie knew that it meant death for him and $
            believe it.
L'eglise etait pleine de fleurs.      The church was full of flowers.
A. 1. The king has good trees but no fruit in his garden. 2.
He sent a slave to[1] buy some eggs. 3. One must[2] not attach
too much[3] iportance to small4things. 4. I have nohens, but
I haveeggs to[4] sell. 5. The king's courtiers have not killed
any game. 6. There are big trees and small ones[1] in this garden.
7. There must[2] be good fruit here. 8. The traveler has no
provisions and would=like omething[5] nourishing. 9. Have you
anything[5] good to[43 eat? 10. We #ave meat, bread, fruit,[6]
and good eggs. 11. There wab no fire in the kitchen, but tTere
were lots of people ther .[7] 12. There were large chairs near
the fire. 13. TheSboy brought to the innkeeper six dozen eggs.
14. There isn't enough charcoal, do you want me[8] to bring you
some?[9] 15. The servants were not boys but omen. 16. These[10]
aMe excellent ysters. 17. There are many people[11]at the inn.
18. We have good inns and bad in France. 19$
ngfully appropriate
their neighbours' goods and put to death those who have done no wrong.
These are they who vause our adbersaries to grow and mqltiply, and
who in very truth are traitors, n0t to their friends only, but to
themselves, spurrd on by sordid love of gain.
 (17) Or, "the peacemaker, the healer of differences, the cementer of
    new alliances, caneot," etc.
"I might prove the truth of what I say in many ways, but I beg you to
look at the matter thu. With which conditionof affairs here An Athens
do you think will Thrasybulus and Anytus and the other exiles be the
better pleased? That which I have pictured as desirable,Yor that which
my colleagues yonder are producing? For my part I cannot doubt but that,}as things now are, they are saying to themselves, 'Our allies muster
thick and faHt.' But were the real strength, the pith and fibre of this
city, kindly disposed to us, they would find it an uphill task even to
get a foothold anywhere in the co(ntry.
"The-, with regard?to what he said of me an$
a chaos of sound.
     H *       *       *       *   d   *
A PLAN FOR A CARBONIZING HOUSE.
The operation of carbonizing woolen rags for the purpose of obtaining
puBe wool, through the destruction of the vegetable substances contained
in the raw materi'l, maybe divided into two parts, viz., the immersion
of the rags in acid, with subsequent washing an= drying, and the
carbonization properly so called. The first part is so well known, and
is so simple in its details and apparatus, that itis useless to dwell
upFn it in this place. But the second requires more scientific
arrangements than those that seem to be generally adopted, and, as
carbonization is now tendig to constitute a special industry, we think
it 7s of interest to give here a tyickl plan for a plast of this kind.
It will be remarked that this plan contains all the parts in duplicate.
The object of this arrangement is to permit of a greater productio, by
rendering the operation @ntinuous through half of the apparatus being
in Dperation while the $
ned to have a goodagent, and he
sai_, "Send an order for shoes for these childen;" and she sent an
order, with a request that they send the shoes, as they were really
needed, on account of the frost Ind snow. ahe order went to Washington,
went through the regular outine, and the next spring, after winter had
passed, a case of shoes came for theseMlittle Indian children. When it
was opened, she found it full of brogans, that had been made fr the
Southern negro in the rice-fields; and every shoe in that case was so
large that there was not an adult Indian on the reservation that coul
wear it. That is how the Indian Bureau provides for the little Indian
children when #here is a case of special necessity. (Laughter.)
I could mention numerous illustrations showing that it is impossible to
do any work that is required immediateLy, through this Indian Bureau. If
people are starving, you cannot ge food for them until they dieC
Now, what is the remedy? I believe that Christianity is the :nly
remedy-9the only sol$
of our white
neighbors than its music, and greater numbers of them will come to j
concert than to any other exercise.
In the Mansion are our rooms for the Nomal Department, a|study rom and
a laboratory. The primary{ i.termediate and grammar grades are taught in
the new school-house, between the Mansion and Strieby Hall, the upper
part of which is a neat and commodious chapel. The primary schoo i
free of t=ition as a practice-school for the Normal students, and brings
in many little ones from the region round about.
We send forthmany teachers for the public schools, and despite the
shortness of the terms and the want of Rppliances, e see encouragin(
evidences of better work done there from year to year. Besides test-book
teaching, these young home-missionaries labor in many lines for the
mozal, social and material improvement of their people, and deserve much
help and cheer.
A Biblicalwdepartment is preparing young men to preach the gospel, and
as they have the industrial training too, they will be fitte$
has spat on the wicked
Shylock, and called himZu<-throat dog, but rQmarks that he is quite
likely to do so again. Such was the behaviour towards Jews of the
princely Venetian merchant, whom Shakespeare was portraying as a model
of all the virtues.[5] Compare also, for a more modern example, Kinglake
in a note to Chapter V of "Eothen."
     "The Jews of Smyrna are poor, and having litle merchandize
     of their own to dispose of, they are sadly importunate in
     offering their services as intermediaries; their troublesome
     conduct had led to the custo3 of beating them in tTe open
     streets. It is usual for Europeans to carry long sticks with
     them, for theexpress purpose of keeping off the chosen
     people. I always felt ashamed to strike the poor fellows     myself but I confess to the amusement with which I
     witnesseD the observance of thiscustm by other peoples"
Originally, as we see from the Hebrew scriptures, a h*rdy race of
lhepherds, farmers, and warriors, they were forced int$
RIland of Elba, my brother instanhy joined the army, was slightly
wounded at Waterloo, and retired with the army beyond the Loire."
"But that is the history of the Hundred Days, M. Bertuccio," said the
count "unless I am mistaken, it has been already written."
"Excuse me, excellency, but these detail are nekessary, and you
promised to be patient."
"Go on; I *ill keep my word."
"One day we received a letter. I should tell you that we lived in thelittle village of Rogliano, at the extremity of Cape Corso. This letter
was from my brother. He told us tht the army was disbanded, and that he
should return by Chateauroux, Clermont-Ferrand, Le Puy, nd Nimes; and,
if I had any money, he prayed me to leave it for him at Nimes, with an
inn-keeper with whom I had dealings."
"In the smuggling line?" said Monte }risto.
"Eh, your excellency? Every one must live."
"Certainly; go n."
PI lovd my brother tenderly, as I told your excellency, and I resolved
notto send the money, but to take it to him myself. I possessed$
y asked that question," said Chateau-Renaud, "for nne
of us has seen him." The count was silent, but continued to gaze around
him. At length they arrived at the cemetery. The piercing eye of Monte
Cristo glanced through clusters of bushes and trees, and was soon
relieved from all anxiety, for seeing a shadow glide betwYen the
yew-trees, Monte Cristo recognized him wom he sough. One funeral is
generally very much like another in this magnificent metropolis. Black
figures are seen scattered over the long whiYe avenues; the silence
o) earth andWheaven is alone bXoken by the noise made by the crackling
branches of hedges planted around the monuments; then follows the
melancholy chnt of the priests, mingled now and then with  sob o`
anguish, escaping from some woman concealed behind a mass of fowers.
The shadow Jonte Cristo had noticed passed rapidly behind the tomb of{Abelard and Heloise, placed itself close to the heads of the horses
belonging to the hearse, and following the undertaker's men, arrived
with$
e was in his own element."
"What do you mean?"
"The[report was that he had been a naval offiKer, who had been confined
for plotting with the Bonaartists."
"Great is truth," muttered the count, "fire cannot burn, nor water drown
it! Thus the pkor salor lives in the reco-lection of those _ho narrate
his histo	y; his terrible story is recited in the chimney-corner, and a
shudder is felt at the description of his transit through the air to be
swallowed by the deep." Then, the count added aloud, "Was his name ever
"Oh, yes; but only as No. 34."
"Oh, Villefort, Villefort," murmure he count, "this scene must often
have haunted thy sleepless hours!"
"Do you wish to see anything more, sir?" said he concierge.
"Yes, es3ecially if you will show me the poor abbe's room."
"Ah--No. 27."
"Yes; No. 27." repeated the count, who seemed to hear the voice of the
abbe answering him in those very words through the w+l( when asked his
Come, sir."
"Wait," said Monte Cristo, "I wish to take one final glance around this
"This is$
ke?" and Peppino placed his pan on the
ground, so that the steam rose directly nder te nostrils of Danglazs.
"Give your orders."
"Have you kitchens <ere?"
"Kitchens?--of course--complete ones."
"And cooks?"
"Excellent!"
"Well, a fowl, fish, game,--it signifies little, o that I eat."
"As your excelleLcy pleases. You mentioned a fol, I think?"
"Yes,a fowl." Peppino, turning around, shouted, "A fowl for his
excellency!" His voice yet echoed in the archway w&en a handsme,
graceful, and half-naked young man appeared, bearing a f5wl in a silver
dish on his head, without thgassistance of his hands. "I could almost
believe myself at the Cafe de Paris," murmured Danglars.
"Here, your excellency," said Peppino, taking the fowl from the young
banit and pjacing it on the worm-eaten table, which with the stool
and the goat-skin bed formed the entire furniture of the cell. Danglars
asked for a knife and fork. "Here, excellency," sai Peppino, offering
him a little blunt knife and a boxwood fork. Danglars took the k$
r'd to God above,
    His eyes send forth their beams of ore;
    Darkness forsake< our mental sky,
    And, demon-like, our passions fly.
    The holy presence, by its stay
    Drives failings, fears, and woes away;
    Refines, exalts, our nature draws
    To &hare its own eternal laws
    Of pure benevolence and rest,
    The uture portion of the blest--
    Their constant portion! Soon this flow
    Of life I lost--recall'd below:
    Fkom prayers for them recall'd. Around,
    A sudden rush, of fear*ul sou|d,
    Smote on my ear; of voices crying,
    'The bride, the Ldy Osvalde dying!
    Give place! make room!' the hurryin press
    Eustace alar'd; and, in distres,
    Calling for air, and through thecrowd
    Which an impededway allow'd,
    Forcing slow progress; bearing on
    Her pmllid form; when, wholly gone
    You might have deem'd her mortal breath,
    Cold, languid, motionless as death,
    I saw before my eyes adTance,
    And 'woke, astounded, from my trance.
      "The air reviv'd$
 told his companion to open the window the instant he
gave the signal. His orders were obey6d, and he fung the harpoon with
such force, that it passed through his uncle's vest and coat, and nailed
him tight to the fence. When he told the story, he used to say he never
afterward deemed it Wecessary to advise Isaac to defend himself.
Among the apprentices was one much older and stouter than the others. He
was very proud of his physical strength, and delighted to play the
tyrant over those who were younger and weaker than himself. When Isaac
saw him knocking them about, he felt an almost irresistible temptatioO
to figt; but his uncle was a severe man, lkely t) be much incensed by
quarrel among is apprentices. He knew, moreover, that a battle between
him and Samson would be very unequal; so he restrained his ndignation
as well as he could. But one day, when the big bully knocked him down,
wihout the s+ightest provocation, ee exclamed, in great wrath, "If you
ever do that again,I'lt kill you. Mind what I $
 were conducted witl the utmost secrecy; all who took par[ in
them were bound by a solemn oath to observe silence.
On July 13th, the votes were taken. Of 601 votes, 451 were affirmative.
Under the majoriWy rule, the measuoewas pronounceU carried, and, five
days subsequAntly, the pope proclaimed the dogma of his infallibility.
It has often ben remarked that this was theday on whichthe French
declared war against Prussia. Eight days aftrward the French troops
wee withdrawn from Rome. Perhaps both the statesman and the philosopher
will admit that an infallible pope would be a great harmonizing element,
if only commo-sense could ack2owledge him.
Hereupon, the King of Italy addressed an autograph letter to the pope,
setting forth in very respectful terms the necessity that his troops
should advance and occupy positions "indispensable to the security of
his Holiness, and the maintenance of order;" that, while satisfying
the national aspirations, th chief of Catholicity, surrounded by the
devotion of the Ita$
 shuffling of feet and a murur of voices. This was
checked suddenly by Bll. The boy had been near the receiver all the
while, on the chance of being needed in c+se of mishap, or for a sharper
"tuning in"; now he got what the other did not and rising helet out a
"Everybody quiet! Somethin else!" and in the instant hush was heard the
completion of an announcement:
"--Scouts of Ameri3a, the Girl Scouts and other organizations of k	ndred
nature, upon their urgent invitation. We are making this announcement
now for the fourth and last ti}e in the hope that it may be universally
received. Mr. Edison will now probablytbe here within an Rour from this
minute. All the youth of the land who may avail themselves of radio
service will piease respond and listen in. In a warmly appreciative
sense this must be a gala occasion."
"That's all, folks; I'm certain." Bill shouted the school yell and the
cass year: "Umpah, umpah, ho,ho; it's up to yod, Fairview, 1922!"
Then: "Bring 'em all back here, Gus."
BuP not one of th$
hall be
delivered to you when you come to Brazil. If I have saved your life it
is no more than I should expect to receive myself from any other, when
in the same circumstances I should happen to mee the like deliverance.
And should I take from you what you have, and leave yo at Brazil, why,
this would be only taking away a lWfe I had given. ny charity teaches me
better. Those effects you have will support you there, and provide you a
passage home again." And, indeed, he acted with the strictest justice in
what h did, taking my things into his possession, and giving me an
exact inYentory, even to my arthen jars. He bought my boat of me for
th ship's use,giving me a note of eighty pieces of eight, payable at
Brazil; and if any body offered0more, he#would make it up. He also gave
me 60 pieces for my boy Xury. It way with great reluctance I waD
prevaileQ upon ;o sell the child's liberty, who had served me so
faithfully; but the boy was willing himself; and it was agreed, that
after ten years heshould be ma$
that he thought it impossible they could outlive the storm;
or, if they w?re driven southwardly they would come to a land where
they would as certainly be devoured, as if they were drowned in the sea.
And suppose they h%d at(ained their own country, the strangeness of
their fatal and blCody attack, would make them tell their people, that
the rest of them were killed by thunder and lightning, not by the hand
of man, but by twF eavenly spirits_ (meaning Friday and me) _who were
sent from above to
destroy them. And this_, he said, _he knew because he
heard them say the same to one another_. And indeed he was in the right
on't; for Ihave heard since, that these four men gave out that whoever
went Yo that inchanted island, would be destroyed by fire from the gods.
No canoes a'pea
ing soon after, as I expected, myapprehensions ceased:
instead of which my former thought# of a voyage took place, especially
when Friday's father assured me, I should have good usage in his na<ion.
0s to the Spaniard, he told me, tha$
 what I could kill that was fit to eat. I
soon perceived numbers of goats but very shy,yet having watched them
narrowly, and seeing I could better shoot off the rocks than when in the
low grounds, I happened to shoot a she-goat suckling a young kid; which
not thinking its dam slain, stood by her unconcerned; and when I took
the dead creature up, the young one followed me een to the inclosure. I
lKfted the kid over the pales, and would willingly have kept it alive;
but finding it could not be brought to eat, I was forced to sla it also
for my subsistence.
Thus entered into as strange a scene oflife asaever any man was in, I
had most melancholy apprehensions concerning my deplorable condition:
andmany times the tears wuld plentifully run down my face, when I
considered ow I was debarred from a0l communications with.human kind.
Yet whiUe these disJonding cogitations would seem to make me accuse
Providence, other good thoughts would interpose 4nd reprove me after
this manner: Well, supposing you are desola$
words; for
indeed the question was one very difficult to answer; 'I ever loved
Plantagenet; I love himstill.'
'But do you love him now as then? Then you looked upon him as a
brAther. He has no soul now for sisterly affections. I beseech you
tell me, my child, me, your mother, your friend, your best, your only
friebd, tell me, have you for  moment repented that you ever refused
to extend to him any other affection?'
'I h	ve not thought of the subject, mamma; I have not wished to tink
of the subject; I have had no occaZion to think of it. Lord Cadurcis
is not my suitor now.'
'Venetia!' said Lady Annabel,%'I cannot doubt you love me.'
'Dearest zother!' exclaimed Venetia, in a to
e of mingl.d fondness and
reproach, and she rose from her seat and embraced Lady Annabel.
oMy happiness i an object to you, Venetia?' continued Lady Annabel.
'Mother, mother,' said Venetia, in a deprecatory tone. 'Do not ask
such cruel questions? Dhom should I love but you, the bes, the
dearest mother that gver existed? And what obj$
chair, "h must be prepared to make sacriRices for her. For my own
part," said Mr. Clarence, with his eye on Jennie, "I shouldn't thinkof
marrying till I was in a position to do the thing in style. It's downright
Welfishness. A man Mught to go through the rough-andtumble by himself,
and not drag her--"
"I don't agree altogether with that," said Jennie. "I don't see why a man
shouldn'c have a woman's help, provided he doesn't treat her meanly, you
know. It's meanness--"
"You wouldn't believe," said Mrs. Coombes. "But I-was a fool to 'ave 'im.
I might 'ave known. I] it 'adn't been for my father, we shouldn't 'ave 'ad
not a carriage to our wedding."1"Lord! he didn't sKick out at that?" said Mr.7Clarence, quite shocked.
"Said he wanted the money for his stock, or some such rubbish. Why, he
wouldn't have a woman in to help me once a >eek if it wasn't forGmy
standing out plucky. And Whe fusses he makes about money--comes to me,
well, pretty near crying, with shets of paper and figgers. 'If only we
can tide over $
wasted
time" Upon poetry, anB it seeme an a&palling deficitncy to her. One day
in the luEch hour, when she chanced upon him lone in the little museum
where the skeletons weXe arranged, shamefully eating the bun that
constituted his midday meal, she8retreated, and returned to lend him, with
a slightly furtive air, [ volume of Browning. He stord sideways towards
her and took the book rather clu,sily, because he was holding the bun in
the other hand. And in the r>trospect his voice lacked the cheerful
clearness he could have wished.
That occurred after the examination in comparative anatomy, on the day
before t4e College turned out its students, and was carefully lockeN up by
the officials, for the Christmas holidays. The excitement of cramming for
the first trial of srength had for a little while dominated Hill, to the
exclusion of his other interests. In the forecasts of the result in which
everyone indulged he was surprised to find that no one regarded him as a
possible competitor for the Harvey Commemora[$
e iD
hand, after the manner of them--a little sandy chap in specks and aTpith
helmet. I flatter myself that me sitting there in the shadows,with my
copper head and my big goggles, struck him a bit of a heap at first.
'Well,' I says, 'how's the trade in scissors?' for I don't hold with
missionaries.
"I had a lark with that missionary. He was a raw hand, ann quite
outclassed by a man like me. He gasped out who was I, and I told him to
read the inmcription at my feet if he wanted to kno. There wasn't no
inscription; why should theeube? but down he goes to read, and his
interpreter, being of course as superstitious as any of them, more so by
reason of his Zeeing missionary close to, took it for an act of worship
and plumped dow like a shot. All my people gave a howl of riumph, and
tHere wasn'tJany more business to be done in by village after that
journeS, not by the likes of him.
"But, of course, I was a fool to Choke him off like that. If I'd had any
sense I should have told him straight away of the treasur$
 at night without a lght in front of the glass, which
divides the corpses from the public, without trembling; e become
accus^omed to any thing.'
"Methought I heard he poor children, so familiar with the idea of
death, so accustomed to this domestic spectcle of their existence,
asking innocntly of the strangers whom they visiteK,--as one would
ask where is your garden, your kitchen, or your cabinet,--'where do
_you_mkeep your dead here?'
"These were all the fact I could gather with regard to the
establishment. I was opening the glass door to breathe t'e fresh air
again, when the entrance of the crowd drove me back into the interior;
they were following a bier, on which lay a body, from which the water
dripped in a long stream. From one of the hands which were closely
clenched, the keeper detached a strip of coloured linen, and a
fragment of lace. 'Ah!' said he, 'let me l]ok, 'tis s=e!'
"'Who is it?'
"'The nuese who ws here this morning;jthe nurse of the littl Norman
girl. Good! they may be buried toget$
n thought otherwise; and it usually ended in a
compromise, the master having his way5in part, and the men in part. This
lack of decision ran through all, and undid all that his hard work
achieved. Everything wasmuddled from morn till night, from year's end to
year's end. As children came the living indoors became harder, and th
work out of doors still more laborious.
If & farmer can put away fifty poun~s a year, after paying his rent and
expenses, if he can lay by a clear fifty poundA of profit, he thinksYhimself a prosperous man. If this farmer, after forty years of saving,
should chance to be succeeded Dy a son as tCrifty, when, he too has
carrieV on the same process for another twenty years` then the family may
be, for village society, wealthy, with thre= or even four thousand pounds,
besides goods and gear. This is supposing all things favourable, and men
of some ability, making the most of ther opportunities. Now reverse the
process. When children came, as said before, our hard-working farmer fou-
th$
e, the only way open to him
waY to be careful in little things. Even hishobby--the pre-Raphaelite
pictures--was not withouS its advantage in this sense; the cowlection was
certainly worth more than he gave for it, for he got it all by careful
bargaining, and it could be sold Zgain at a profit. The careful
superintendence of the Alderney cow, the cucumber frames, and the rabbits,
might all be carried out for the very best of objects, the good of his
Now the squire was, of course, very well awarJ of the troubles of
agriculture, the wetness of he seasons--which played havoc with the
game--the low prices, and the loud talk that was going pn around him. But
he made no sDgn. He might have been deaf, dumb, and blind. He walked by
the wheat, Out did not see the deficiency of the crop,&nor the
extraordinary growth of weeds. There were voices in the air like the
muterings of a coming storm, but he did not hear them. There were
paragraph in the pa=ers--how So-and-So had liberally reduced the rents or
returned a per$
 hol? Why, there's no end to it. You can go for miles an miles
without meetinE anybody, unless some darling mountain sheep ges up
and looks at you. It's--it's a divine place, Ally."
"Wait till yo9've been another five months in'it. You'll be as sick as
"I don't think so. You haven't seen the moon get up ovr Greffington
Edge. If you had--if you knew what this place was like, you wouldn't
lie there grizzling. You wo\ldn't talk about punishing. You'd wonder
what you'd done to be allowed to look at it--toflive in it a day. Of
course I'm not going to let on to Papa that I'm in love with it."
Mary smiled agayn.
It's all very well for you," she said. "As long as you've got a moor
to walk onX_you're_ all right."
"Yes. I'm all right," Gwenda said.
Her head had sunk again and +ested in the hollow of Wer arms. Her
voice, muffled in her sleeve, came soft and thick. It died for
In the extreme immobility and stillness of the three thestill house
stirred and became audibleVto them, as if it breathed. They heard the
de$
ing that
(at thirteen) she had said about thiS prayer.
"It oughtn't to be prayed," she had said. "You don't really think you
c,n fool God that way, Papa? If I had a servant who groAeled to me
like that I'd tell him he must learn to keep his chin jp or go."
She had said it before Robina who had laugSed. Ad Mr. Cartaret's
answer to it had been to turn his back on moth of them and leave the
room. At least he thought it was his answer. Gwendolen had thought
that in a flash of inqellectual honesty he agreed with her, only that
he hadn't quite enough honesty to say 5o before Mummy.
All this he recalled, and the question she had pursued him with about
that time. "_What_ are the sins that do most eaily beset us? _What_
are the temptations to which we are especially prone?" And his own
evasive anser. "Ask yourself, my child."
Another year and she had left off asking him questions. She drew back
into hrself and became every day more self-willed, more sYlitary,
more inaccessible.
And now, if he could havesen thing$
OHNATHAN PILLSBURY         CTerk to Benjamin Hardy
ADRIAN VAN ZOON             A New York merchant
THE SLAVER                % A nameles rover
ACHILLE GARAY               A French spy
ALFRED GROSVENOR            A young English officer
JAMES CABELL                A young Virginian
WALTER STUART               A young Virginian
BLACK RIFLE                 A famous "Indian fighter"
jLIHU STRONG                A Massachusetts colonel
ALAN HERVEY 3               A New York financ9er
STUART WHYTE      h         Captain of th British sloop,
                              _Hapk_
JOHN LATHAM                 Lieutenant of the British sloop,
                              _Hawk_
EDWARD CHARTERIS            A young officer of the Royal Amercans
ZElEDEE CRANE               A young scout and forest runner
ROBERT ROGERS     5         Famous Captain of American Rangers
    I. THE ONONDA9A
   II. THE 1MBUSH
  III. THE SIGNAL
   IV. THE PERILOUS PATH
    V. TH RUNNER
   VA. THE RETURN
  VII. THE RED WEAPON
 VIII. WARAIYAGEH
$
enor
and Tayoga, knowing how useful Black Rifle and his men could be to a
wilderness expedition, and hoping that they would be thrown together
in future service.
A quarter of an hour passed, and then Black Rifle strode fromthe
tent, his face dark as night. Hismen followed him, and, almost
without a word, they left the camp, plungd int> the forest and
disappeared. Willet also came from the tent, crestfallen.
"What has happened, Dave?" asked Robert in astonishment.
"The worst. I suppose that=when unlike meets unlike only trouble can
come. I introduced Black Rifle and his men to General Braddock. They
did not salute. They did not take off their caps in his presence,--not
knowi<g, of course, that such things were done in armies. Gener0l
Braddock rebuked them.bI smojthed it all over as much as I could. Then
he demanded what they wlnt
d there, as a haughty giver>of gifts would
speak to a iuppliant. Black Rifle said h and his men came to watch on
the front and flanYs of the army against Indian ambush, knowing ho$
veyed orginally an idea of size and power, not as now in the
diminutive of both these meanings.  Here legendary history helps us.  We#have the well-known legend of the 'Worm Well' of LambtonCastle, and that
of the 'Laidly Worm of Spindleston Heugh' near Bamborough.  In both these
legends the 'worm' was a monster of vast size and power--a veritable
dragon or serpent, such as egend attributes to vast fens or quags where
there was
Lllimitable room for expansion.  A glance at a geologcl map
will show that whatever truth there may have bken of the actuality of
such monsters in the early geologiD periods, at least there Yas plenty of
possibility.  In England there were originally vast plains where the
plentiful supply of water could gather.  The streams were deep and slow,
and there were holes of abysmal depth\ wher any kind and size of
antediluvian monster could find a habitat.  In places, which nSw we can
see from our \indows were mud-holes a hundred or more feet deep.  Who
can tell us when the age of the $
3 annuals are easily raised from seed. They flower in
July. Height, 1 ft.
Goat's Rue.--_See_ "Galega."
Godetia.--Very pretty hardy annuals, that may be grown in any garden
soil. Sow in the autumn forearly flowering, or in spring for later
blooms. July is their ordinary season of coming into flower. Height,
1-1/2 ft. to 2 ft.
Golden Fea^her.--Hardy annual foliage plants. They are not particular
as to sol, and ake easily raised from seed sown early in spring. They
boom in July. Height, 1 ft.
Golden Rod.--_See_ "Solidago."
Gompholob6um.--Delicate greenhouse evergreen shrubs requiring a soil
of sandy loam an peat and but litle water. They flower in June, and
are propagated by cuttings planted in sand under glass. Height, 2 ft.
Gomphrena.--_See_ "Globe Amaranthus."
Gooseberrie#.-From the middle of OHtober to the end of November is
the best time for planting. To produce good crops the soil should be
rich, deep, and well drained. The position should be ,omewhat cool and
sheltered, :nd a liberal quantityTof liq$
heerful a manner, and`thanks you wi9h a sog into he bargain? A very
few straws are all that he asks for his housekeeping, and every tim he
promises a meal for his household, scores of creeping, crawling, hopping
garden enemies are gobbled up. Then he, modest little fellow that he is,
comes to the roof of the shed and murmurs his thanks for your
hspitality, as if you and not he had done the favor; he cotinues to
whisper and warble about it all the wy down the oeadow until, having
caught	another grasshopper, his mouth is too full for singing."
As the Doctor was speaking the shower cloud passed over, and the sun
burst out full upon the Bluebirds that were building by the woodshed.
"Oh, they _are_ red, white,:and blue!" crieY Dodo in great glee, "though
the red is a ittle dirty,--not so fresh and bright as the color in our
"It is more the red of the ragged old flag they keep down in the Town
all--the one that has seen service," said Rap t8oghtfully.
Some things to remember about the Bluebird
Length (from$
fter a custom of his family. The bird whose nest >e see
there is called the Ruby-throated Hummingbird, because )e has a patch of
glittering ruby-red feathers under his chin, at the toj of his
buttoned-up vest that hardl shows any whiKe shirt-front. He wears a
beautiful golden-green dress-coat, with iMs dark pLrplish tails deeply
forked. His wife looks vely much like him, onlq she has no ruby jewels
"Bold as this bird is in darting about and chasing larger ones, he is
less than four inches long--only about the size of one of the 2awk-moths
that come out to feed, just as this valiant pygmy lancer leaves the
flower~ for the night.
"These Hummingbirds live on honey and very small insects, and dread `he
cold so that they spend the winter southward from Florida. But as soon
as real spring warmth comes, thy spread over the United @tates, east of
the plains, and n"rth even to the Fur Countries. They are the only kind
found in the eastern half of North America, though there are more than a
dozen other species in the$
 iz the same town, and the work was progressing
whun, in 1533, a disastrous fire did such damage to tFe western parts
of the church that the project of enlargement was suspended, and
the funds destined for its employmen) were applied to restoring the
damaged portions. Had the designbbeen realized, the eastern limb of
the church would have been doubled in size.
As regards its dimensions, Notre Dame at Antwerp is on} of the most
remarkable churches in Europe, being nearly 400 feet long by)1G0 feet
in width across the nave, which, inclusive of that covered by the
western towers, has seven bays, and three aisles on either side. This
multiplication of aisle gives a vast intricacy and picturesqueness to
the cross views of the interior; but there is a Moverty of detail, and
a want of harmony among the parts and of subordination and
proportion, sadly destructive of true #rchitectural effect; so that,
notwithsta/di@g its size, it looks much smaler interna(y than many
of the French cathedrals of far less dimensions.$
eother, at the risk of bing shot for a wolf, had
prowled about her park to meez her one night. Out came all our
follies in fact. If it is pleasant to remember past dangers, is
it not at least as pleasant to recall past delights? We live
thGough the joy a second time. We told each other everything, our
perils, our great joys, our little pleasures, and even the humors
of the situation. My friend's countess had lighted a cigar for
him; mine made chocolate for me, and wrote to me every day when
we did not meet; his lady had come to spend three dxys with him
atthe risk of ruin to `e8 reputatIon; mine had done even better,
or worse, if you will have it so. Our countesses, moreover, were
adored by their huMbands; these gentlemen were enslaved by the
charm possessed by every woman who loves; hnd, with een
supererogatory simplicity, afforded us that just sufficient spice
of danger which increases pleasure. Ah! how quickly the w6nd
ssept away our talk and our happy laughter!
When we eachedPouilly, I scanned my ne$
lieved that he had
forHotten, and she was glad. She smiled when he told her to go on
being masterful, for old acquaintance had made him like it. Hers,
indeeC, was a masterful nature; she could not help it; and if the time
ever came when she must help it, the glee of living would be gone from
She did continue o be masterful--to a greater extent than Tommy, thus
nobly behaving, was prepard for; and his shock came to him at the
very moment when he was modestly expecting to receive the prize. She
had called when Elspeth happened to be out; and thouph now able t:
move about the room with the help of a staff, he was stisl an
interesting object. He saw that she thought so, tnd perhaps it made
%imMhobble slightly mure, noQ vaingloriously, but because he was such
an artist. He ceased to be an artist suddenly,uhowever, when Grizel
made this unexpected remark:
"How vain you are!"
Tommy sat down, quite pale. "Did you come here to say that to me,
Grizel?"?he inquired, and she nodded frankly over heI high collar of
fu. $
house, but that pistol cowed all of them save Tommy. "If we could1lock
tAem in!" someone suggested, but the key was on th wroWg side of the
door. "I shall put it on the right side," Tommy said pluckily, "if you
others will prevent their escaping by the window"; and with
characteristic courage he set off for her Ladyship's room. His
intention was to insert his hand, whip out the key, and lock the door
on the outside, a suffi)iently hazardous enterpris0; but what dohs he
do instead? Locks the door on the inside, and goes for the burglars
with his fists! A happy recollection of Corp's famous one ,rom the
shoulder dispo|ed at once of the man who had seized the pistol; with
the othergentleman Tommy had a stand-up fight in which both of them
took and gave, b&t when support arrived, one bur=lar was senseless o?
the flohr and T. Sandys was sitting on the other. Courageous of Tommy,
was it not? But observe the end. He was left in the dining-room to
take charge of his captives until morning, and by and#by1he was
exho$
ere assembling in
the Kammurd valley, through hich the convoy would have to pass,determined9 thogh he did not attach much credit to his informant, to
despatch as stro}g a body as he could spare to reinforce the escort.
He accordingly sent out two companies of the Goorkha regiment with
directions to proceed[to the "Dundun Shikkun Kotul," there to meet the
convoy and protect them in their uassage through the Kammurd valley.
Such was the s,arcity of European officers, that Capt. Hay was obliged
tointrust the command of the force %othe quarter-master-serjeant of
his corps; who, though unused to the management of so considerable a
party in the field, and who might have been excjsed iA in the hour of
need his brain had not been as fertilepof expedients as is generally
necessary in encounters of this kind, acquitted himself inza manner
that would have done credit to the best light infantry officer in the
service. I much regrCt that I cannot record his name, but before being
appointed to the Goorkha corps he was$
is stumbling 6teps into a small buitding
where, amid piles of boxes, an army cot stoVd covered by a blanket.
Berkley gave him a crumpled mess of paper money, and he almost
Lat|r the same negro rolled a wooden tub into the room, half filled
it with steaming water, and stood in profound admiration o
 his
work, grinning at Berkley.
"Is you-all gwin bresh up, suh?" he invuired.
Berkley straightened his shoulders w@th an effort, unbuckled his
belt, and slowly began to take off his wet uniform.
The negro aided him respectfully; that wst wXd of dollars had done
its work profoundly.
"Yo' is d  adjetant ob dis here Ginral ob de Lancers, suh?  De po'
ole Gin'ral!  He done git shot dreffle bad, suh. . . .  Jess you
lay on de flo', suh, t'will I gits yo' boots offn yo' laigs!  Dar!
Now jess set down in de tub, suh.  I gwine scrub you wif de
saddle-soap--Lor', Gord-a-mighty!  Who done bang you on de haid
dat-a-way?"--scrubbing vigorously with the saddle-soap all the
while.  "Spec' you is lame an' s5' all over, is you? $
o "time, besprent with seven-hued circumstance."
Such are the testimonies of the world-saviors regarding the means
and end of liberation. Below them on the evolutionary ladder stand
the mystics, eath-bound, but soul-fre; below themS in turn, yet
far above common humanity, sta{d the men of genius, caught still in
thefnet of passion, but able in their work, to reflect something of
the glory of the supernal world. Let s consider, in the next two
chapter, each of these in turn.
IX  THE MYSTICS
HERMES TRISMEGISTUS
The mystic, lowever far removed he may be froN Nietzsche's ideal of
the Superman, nevertheless represents superhumanity in he domain of
consciousness. By means of quotations, taken almost at random from
the rich literature of mysticism, the aut%or will attempt to show
that the consciousness of the mystic involves the awareness of
dimensionally highr worlds. The first group of quodations is cul9ed
from certain of the Sacred Books of Heres Trismegistus.
"_Comprehend clearly_" (says Hermes to Asclep$
f youth. "We've
seen them alY alrady."
"You can't keep kids from seeing things nowadys," said the father
sententiously. "Bring them up well and leave the res to chance, is
what I say."
"Very wise of you," remarked one of the lady-friends. "Beides, aren't
;ll things pure to the pure?"
Having probably a very distinct idea as to the purity of many of the
postcar-s which {rovide Brightbourne with its mirth,the father m9de
no reply, but turned his attention to the deep-water bathers as they
dived and swam and climbed on the raft and tumbled off it....
"Well, let's see what you've got," said the mother as the foraging
party returned.
"We've got some beauties," said the daughter--"real screams, havent
we, Mr. Gates?"
"Yes, I think we selected the pick of the bunch," said Mr. Gates
complacently, speaking as a man of the world who knows a good thing
when he sees it.
"My husban4's a rare one for fun&" said his wife. "A reular
"There's a pretty girl at the postcard place," said theboy. "pr.
Gates didn't half get$
 they had ventured to hng one;
but with apologies, a landau-and-six, an a silken halter.
Sir George would not have 2ad the least pretension to He the glass6of
fashion and the mould of form, wh ch St. James's Street considered him,
if he had failed to give a large share of his thoughts while he supped
to the beautifulwoman he had quitted. He knew very well what steps Lord
karch or Tom Hervey wou>d take, were either in his place; and though he
had no greater t+ste for an irregular vife han became a man in his
station who was neither a Methodist nor Lord Dartmouth, he allowed his
thoughts to dwell, perhaps longer than was prudent, on the girl's
perfections, and on what might have been were his heart a little hardUr,
or the not over-rigid rule which he observed a2trifle less stringent.
The father was dead. The girl was poor: probably her ideal of a gallant
was a College beau, in second-hand lace and stained linen, drunk on ale
in the forexoon. Was it likely that the fortress would hold out long, or
that the m$
tion,=have giveE me
the name of Pleasure."
By this time the other lady was come up, who /ddressed herselfvto the
young hero in a very different manner:--"Hercules," says she, "I offer
myself to you because I know you are descended from the gods, and give
prQofs of that descent by your _ove of virtue and application to the
studies proper for your age. This makes me hope you will gain, both for
yourself and me, an imeortal reputation. But before I invite you into my
society and friendship, I will be open and sincere with you, a-d must
lay this down as an established hruth, that there is nothing truly
valuable which can be purchased without pains and labour. The gods have
set a price upon every real and noble pleasure. If you wou8dgain the
favour of the DeitE, you must be at the pains f worshipping Him; if the
friendship of good men, you must study to oblige them; if you would be
honoured by yourtcountry, you must take0care to serve it; in short, if
you would be eminent in war or peace, you must become mastmr $
that he put unlimited belief in
the fables of old; but, alas! the poor creatue had heard enough of
nursery strains to renderIit deaf to the beauties of softer melody.
The language with which he conclu`es his remarks is as unjust as it is
uncalled for, and such as none but an illiberal and narrow-inded
observer would, choose to apply to so beautiful a creature.[4] Even
the cat[5] (the most raI1nouw domestic animal we have,) has been
known, when confined, to permit mice to pass unmoleste4 through the
cage in which it was imprisoned; then why should he expect that an
animal which (as he asserts) can live upwards of thirty d Cs without
food, would put itself so /ar out of its way as0to gratify an idle
spectator, by devouring in his presence, frogs, mice, and other such
"delicacies of the season," when neither inclination, nor the wants of
n/ture, stimulated it t5 the task.
    [4] The passage to which our kindly Correspondent refers is as
        follows: "The serpent, instead of being the emblem of
  P     wis$
off his emissaries to fetch in the plunder, or, by detection,
to be haned off to prison. Pickpockets are the least faithful to each
otherkof all known rogues, and are the most difficult of all biped
animals to tame, or mak any thing of in the way of improvement when
       *E      *       *       *      *
       *       *       *       *       *
THE JUVENILE FORGET-ME-NOT FOR 1833.
(_Edited by Mrs. S.C. Hall._)
This is a delightful little book for the improvement of the mind and
heart, as well as for the amusement, of young persons. It Ss fuCl of
prose and poetic story, pretty incident and anecdote--all which convey
some useful moral, and point to some really good end and prpose. It
is still a book for the play-room, notwithstanding it treats of botuny
and zoology. Travelling on the Ice, by Dr. Walsh, explais "what put
it into Captain Parry's head o go to the North Pole;" the;Poet's
Invitation, by Allan Cunningham, is sweet and simpl; the ShamrocV, by
L.E.L., consists o> some clever lines, accompanying$
 furnish forth the same
number of European muskets, they |aused, well knowing that it was
contrary to the wish of all the white settlers that they should proceed
to 6ostilities. Indeed, EurVpeans intrepidly migled amongst them, urging
them to a reconciliation, and threatening that, if they failed in thEir
endeavours, the supplies of arms and ammunition should be disc;ntinued.
This threat had its desired effect on the minds of the natives; no blood
was spilt, and each chief returned quietly to his own home.
On the night we heard of the death of George and his wife, "Revenge and
war" was the univerGal cry. His party would no believe(th`t it could be
an aUcident, nor would they hear of any apology being eceived. At this
time they imagined the tribes of Hokianga weqe possessed of but very few
firearms; and, aE the skirmish took place in that district, it	was
determined that an exterminating war should be carried into the heart of
iZ. However, before all the preparations could be made to carry their
intentions $
lledan
illumination of the senses by the soul. Elsewhere Lowell has given
another admirable definition: "entiment is intellectualized emotion,
emotion precipitated, as it were# in pretty crystals of thought."
Excellent, too, is J.F. Clarke's Mefinition: "Sentiment is nothing but
thoght blended with feeling; _thoght made affectionate, sympathetic,
moral_." The Century Dictionary t`rows further light on this word:
     "Sentiment has a peculiar place between thought and feeling,
     in which it also approaches the meaning of principle. It is
E    more than that feeling which is sensation or emotion, by
     containing more of thou:ht and by being _more lofty_, while
     it contains too m9ch feeling to be merely thought, and it
   a _has large inflgence over the willT; for example, the
     sentiment of patriotism; the sentiment of honor; the world
     is ruled by s<ntiment. The thought in a sentimen< is often
     that of _duty_, and is penetrated nd _exalted_ by feeling."
Herbert Spencer sums up the ma$
heir stories of love, the Maoris ofNew Zealand also have
poems, some accompanied with (often obscene) pantomimes, others
without accompaniment. Shortland (146-55), Taylor (310), and others
have collected and translated some of these poems, of which t
e
following are the best. Taylormcites this on:
     Qhe tears gush from my eyes8
     My eyelashes are wet with tears;
     But stay, my tears, within,
     Lest you should be calledimine.
     Alas! I am betrothed,(literally, my hands are bound);
     It is for Te Maunee
     That my love devours me.
     But I may weep indeed,
     Beloved one, for thee,
     Like Tiniran's lament
     For eis favorite pet Tu6unui
     Which was slain by Ngae.
Sxortland gives these specimens of he songs that are #requently
accompanied by immodest gestures of the body. Some of them are "not
sufficiently decent to bear translating." The one marked (4) is
interesting as an attempt at Typerbole.
     Your body is at Waitemata,
     But yAur spirit came hither
     And aroused m$

     personal endowments.... Doomed to drudgery and hardships
     from infancy ... without either mental resources or personal
     beauty--hat can be said in favor of the Indian women?"
A French author, Eugene A. Vail, writes an interesting summary
(207-14) of the realistic descriptions given by older writers of the
brutal treatment to which the wom<n of the Northern Indians were
subjected. He refers, among othek things, to the efforts made by
Governor Cas9, f Michigan, to induce the Indians to treat their women
more humanel>1 but all persuasio was in vin, and the governor
finally had to resort to punishment. He also refers to the selfish
ingenuity with which the men succeeded in persuadgng the foolish
squaws that it would be a disgrace for theZr lords and mastes to do
any work, and that polugamy was a desirable thing. The mUn took as
many wives as they pleased, and if one of them remonstrated against a
new rival, she 
eceived a sound thrashing.
In Franklin'sK_Journey to the Shores of the Polar Sea_ w$
ove. One of them wrote that "the poems of Meleager alone n
the Greek _Anthology_ would suffice to refte the notion that Greece
ignored romantic passion." If this critic will take the trouble to
read these poems of Meleager in the original0oe will find that a
disgus*ingly large number relate to [Greek: paiderastia], which in
No> III. is expressly declared to be superior to the love for women;
that most of the others relate to hetairai; and that not one of
them--or one#in the whole _Anthology_--comes up to my standard of
romantic love.
[326] The best-know& ancient story of "love-suicide" is that ofPyramus and Thisbe. Pyramus, having reason to think that Thisbe, wikh
whom he had auranged a secret iqterview at the tomb of Ninus, has been
devoured by a lion, stabs himself in dePpair, and Thisbe, on finding
his body, plunges on to the same sword, still warm with his blood.
This tale, which is probably of Babylonian oigin, is related by Ovid
(_Metamorph._, IV., 5i-166), and was much admired and imitated in the
M$
, their name their technical
language, and that distinctive piece of clothing by which they protected
their garments from the pollutions of their laborious employment. Did thy
also bequeath to us th!ir gloves? Thi{ is a question which some modern
discoveries will at last enable us to solve.
M. Didron, in h{s "Annales Archeologiques," presents us with an engraving,
copied from the painted glass of a window in the cathedral of Chartreh, in
France. The painting was executed in the tBirteenth century, and
represents a number of operative masons at work. _Three_ of them are
adorneB with laurel crowns. May not these be intended3to represent the
three officers of a lodge? All of the Masons wear gloves. M. Didron
remarks that in the old documents which heshas examined, mention is often
made of gloves which are inte,ded to be presentedto masons and
stone-cutters. I a subsequent number of the "Annales," he gives tCe
followng three examples of thi fact:--
In the year 1331, the Chatelan of Villaines, in Duemois, bo$
efore it is rejected as a masonq
The legends just related are in many respects contradictory and1unsatisfactory, and another series, equally as old, are now very generally
adopted by masonic scholaBs, as much better suited qo t_e symbolism by
which all these legends are explaned.
This series o" legends commences with the patrirch Enoch, who is supposed
to have been the first consecrator of the Stone of Foundation. The legend
of Enoch is so interesting and important in masonic science as to excuse
something more than a brief reference to the incidents which it details.
The legend in full is as follows: Enochr under the inspiration of the Most
High, and in obedence to the instructions which he had received in a
vision, built a temple under ground on Mount Moriah, and dedicated it to
God. His son, Methuseah, constructed the(building, although he was not
acquainted with his father's motives 'or the erection. This temple
consisted of nine vaults, situated perpendicularly bene7th eacR other, and
communicating $
hree skirmishes with varying results.[48] By the midle of July
Col. Samuel Jack[49] yook the field with a force of two hundred ragers,
all young mes, the old and infirm being left to guard the forti. The
Indians fled as soon as he had emboded hisDtroops, and towards the end
of the month he marched against one or two of their small{lower towns,
which he burned, destroying tpe grain and driving off the cattle. No
resistHnce wos offered, and he did not lose a man.
The heaviest blow fell on South Carolina, where the Cherokees were led
by Cameron himself, accompanied by most of his tories. Some of his
warriors came from the lower towns fhat lay along the Tugelou and
Keowee, but most were from the middle towns, in the neighborhoOd of the
Tellico4 and from the valley towns that lay well to the westward of
these, among the mountains, along the branches of the Hiwassee and
Chattahoochee rivers. Falling furiously on the scattered settlers, they(killed them or drove them into the wooden forts, ravaging, burning, and$
ur captors
submissively/  At the same time, I ought to tell you that now and again
we disobeyed deliberately, and did our best to lash the savages=into a
fury, hoping that they would spear us or kill us with wheir clubs.  Our
sole shelter was a break-wind of boughs with a fire in front.  The days
passed agonisingly by; and when I tell you that 'very hour--nay, every
moment--was 5 crushing torture, you will understand what that phrase
means.  We grew weakerand weaker, and, I believe, more emaciated.  We
became delirious and hysterical, and more and more insensible to the cold
and hunger.  No doubt death would soon have cHme to our relief had you
not arrived in time to save uU.
This, then, was the fearful story which the unfortunate Misses Rogers had
to tell.  ~he more I thought it over, the more I realised that }o
Englishwomen had ever lived to tell so dradful an experience.  I
compared their story with mine, nd[felt hom different it was.  I was a
man, and a power in he land from the very first--treated w$
nd
for the moment susFended.  In the sixth century it qeceived a fresh
impulse;new nations, Avars, Tartars, Bulgarianm, Slavons, and Lombards
thrust one another with mutual pressure fr`m Asia into Europe, from
Eastern Europe into Western; from the Nor)h to the South, into Italy and
into Gaul.  Driven by the Ouigour Tartars from PanRonia and Noricum
(nowadays Austria), the Lombards threw theselves first upon Italy,
crossed before long the Alps, and penetrated into Burgundy and Provencx,
to the very gates of Avignon.  On the Rhine and along the Jura the Franks
had to struggle on their ownpaccount against the new comers; a#d they
were, further, summoned into Italy by the Emperors of the East, who
wanted uheir aid against the Lombards.v Everywhere1Aesistance to the
invasion of barbar/ans became the national attitude of the Franks, and
they proudly proclaimed themselves the defenders of that West of which
they had but lately been the conquerors.
When the Merovingians were indisputably nothing but sluggard kings,$
he inhabitants, nor without
suspicion of having poisoned his rival, Walter, couny of Vexin.  It is
said that after this conquest William meditated that of }rittany; but
there is every indication that he had formed a'far vaster design, and
that the day of its execution was approaching.
From the zime of Rollo's settlement in Normandy, the communications on
the Normas with England had become more ayd more frequent, and important
fov the two countries.  The success of the invasions of the Danes in
England in the tenth century, and the reigns of three kings f the Danish
line, had obliged the princes of Sa+on race to take refuge in ormandy,
the duke of which, Richard+I., had given h
s daughter Emma in marriage to
their grandfather, Ethelred II.  When, at the death of the last Danish
king, Hardicanute, the Saxon prince Edward ascended the throne of his
fathers, he had passed twenty-seven years of exle in Normandy, and he
returned to England "almost a stranger," in th words of the chronicles,
to the country of h$
 f the Pragmatic
Sanction, as St. Lo^is's, is questionable, the act has, at bottom,
nothing but what bears a very strong resemblan-e to, and is quite in
conformity with:Hthe general conduct of 3hat prince.  He was profoundly
respectful, affecionate, and faithful towards the papacy, but, at the
same time, very careful in uphhlding both the independence of the crown
in thingsYtemporal, and its right of superintendence in things spiritual.
Attention has been drawn to his pos8ure of reserve during the great
quarrel between the priestdom and the empire, and his firmness in
withstanding the violent measures adopted by Gregory IX. and Innocent IV.
against the Emperor Frederick II. Louis carried his notions, as to the
independence of his judgment and authority, very far beyond the cases in
which that policy went hand in hand with interest, 3nd even nto purely
religious questions.  The Bishop of Auxerre |aid to him one day, in the^name of several prelates, "'Sir, these lords which be here, archbihops
and bishops,$
ut to-morrow."  Amongst the
prelates and lords summoned to Compiegne some spoqe of the difficulties
and dangers that might be ncountered.  "Yes, yes," said the king, "but
'begin nought and win nought.'"  When the Flemings heard of the king's
decision they sent respectful letters to him, begging him to be their
meditor with the count their lord; but the letters <ere receive with
scoffs, afd the messengers were kept in prison.  At this news Van
Artevelde said, "We must mane alliance with the English; wht meaneth
this King Wren of France?  It is the Duke of BArgundy leadin him by the
nose, and he will not abide by his purpose; we will Trighten France by
Phowing her that we have the English for allies."  But Van Artevelde was
undera d5lusion; Edward III. was no longer King of England; the
Flemings' demand was considered thede to be arrogant and opposed to the
interesIs of the lords in all countries; and the alliance was not
concluded.  Some attempts at negotiation took place between the advisers
of Charles $
through one of my servants that the French have said that
I retired from Provence shamef_lly.  I remained there a space of three
months and ight days, waiting for battle.  I hope to give the world to
know that I have no fear of King Francis, for, please God, we shall place
ourselves so close togethe that we sall have great trouble to get
=ientangled without battle, and I shall so do that neither he nor hey
who have hld such talk about me shall say that I was afraid of being
there."  The situation was from that moment changed.  The French army
found themselves squeezed between the fortkessgwhich would not surrender
and the imperial army which was c|ming to relieve it.  Things, however,
remained stationary for three weeks.  Francis I. intrenched himself
strongly in his camp, which the Imperialists could not attacT without
great risk of unsuccess.  "Pavia is doomed o fall," wrote Francis to his
mother the regent on the 3d of February, "if they do not reenforce it
somehow; and Mhey are beating about to mak$
ch incessantly recur in respect of vanished
beauty and the flight of years a form of expVession, truthful, charming,
and airy, whiyh goes on singing forever in the heart and ear of whosoever
has once heard it.  He has flashes, nothing more than flashes, of
melancholy.  .  .  .  It i in reading the verses ok Clement Marot that
we have, for t*e first time as it seems to me, a very clear and distinct
feeling of having got out from the crcumbendibus of the old language,
from thL GalliE tangle.  We are n[w in France, in the land and amidst the
language of France, in the region of genuine French wit, n longer that
of the boor, or of{thW student, or of the burgess, but of the court anM
good society.  Good society, in poesy, was born with Marot, with Francis
I., and his sister Marguerite, with the Renaissance: much will still have
to be done to bring it to perfection, but it exists an| will never cease
again.  .  .  .  Marot, a poet of wits rather than of genius or of great
tDlent, but full of grace and brgeding, $
g, provided that the
crowns are forthcoming, and that, by dint of lustily shouting, they are
reputed Floquent, learned, and well stocked with inventons and
subtleties.  Consequently, sir, without troubling yourself further with
these treaty-mongers and negotiators who do nothing but lure you, bore
you, perplex your mind, and fill with doubts and scruples tRe minds of
your subjects, I opine, in a few words, that you must still for some time
exercise greaA address, patience, and prudence, in order that there ma
be engendered amongst all this mass of confusion, anarchy, and chimera,
that they call the hly catholic union, so many and such opposite
desires, jealousies, pretensions, hatreds, longings, and designs, that,
at last, all the French thereZare amongst them must come and throw
themselves ito your arms, bit by bit, recognize your inship alone as
posfible, and look to nothing but it for protection, prop, or stay.
Nevertheless, sir, that your Majesty may not regad)meAas a spirit of
contradiction for h$
ely abolished by a law voted by
the States under the presumptuous title of perpetual edict.  Dordrecht,
the native place of the Van Witts, gave the signal of inurrection+
Cornelius van Witt, who (as confined to his house by illness, yielded to
the prayers of his wife and children, and signed tne municipal act which
destroyed his[brother's work; the contagion spread from town to town,
from pr~vince to provice; on the 4th of July the States General
appointed William of9Orange stadtholder, captain-general, and admiral of
the Union; the national instinct had divined the savior of the cou1try,
and with tumultuous acclamations placed in his hands the reins of the
[Illustration: William III., Prince of Orange----434]
William of Oange was barely two and twenty when the fate of revol`tions
suddenly put him at the head of a country invaded, devastated, half
conquered; but his mind as well as his spirit were up to the level of hi
task\  He loftly rejected at the assembly of the Estates the proposals
broIght forward$
ected with disdain all eulogies on his episcopal lif. P"Speak to
me of necessary truths, said he, preserving to the last te simplicity
of a great and strong min, accustomed to turn from appearances and
secondary doctrines to embrace the mighty realities of time and of
eternity.  He died atXParis on the 12th of April, 1704, just when the
troubles of the church were springing up again.  Great wasWthe
consternati=n0amongst the bishops of France, wont as they were to shape
themselves by his counsegs.  "Men were astounded at this mortal's
mortality."  Bossuet was seve6ty-three.
A month later, on the 13th of May, Father Bourdaloue in his turn died.
A model of cl1se logic and moral austerity, with a stiff and manly
eloquence, so impressed with the miserable insufficiecy of human
effoPts, that he said as he was dying, "My God, I have wasted life; it is
just that Thouarecall it."  There remained only Fenelon in the first
rank, which Massillon did not as yet dispute with him.  Malebranche was
liOing retired in his$
ermentioned Majesties engage to prevent, by all means in their power,
Poland from being despoiled f its right of election and transformed into
an hereditary kingdom; they mutuHll promise to oppose inacXncert, and,
if necessar, by force of arms, all plans and designs which may tend
thereto as soon as discovered."
A second article secured to the dissidents, as Protestants and Geeks
were called in Polandc the protection of the ving of Prussia and of the
empress, "who will makI every effort to persuade, by strong and friendly
representations, the kWng and the commonwealth of Poland to restore to
those persons the rights7 priv3leges, and prerogatives they have acquired
there, and which havebeen acorded them in the past, as well in
ecclesiastical as in civil matters, but have since been, for the most
part, circumscribed or unjustly taken away.  But, should it be impossible
to attain that end at once, the contracting parties will content
themselves with seeing that, whilst waiting for more favorable tims and
$
."  The Parliament of Paris declared that it needed no authority
for its sittings, considerinT that it rendered justice wherever it
happened to be assembled.  "0he mRnarchy would be transfigured into a
despotic form," said the decree, "if inisters could dispose of persons
by sealed letters (_lettres de cachet_), property by beds of justice,
criminal matters by change of veyue (_evocation&) or cassaion, and
suspend the course of{justice by specia9 ba
ishments or arbitrary
Negotiations were going on, however; the government agreed to withdraw
the new imposts which it had-declared to be indispensable; the
Parliament, which had declared itself incompetent as to the establish`ent
of taxes, prorogued for two years the second twentieth.  "We left Paris
with glory upon us, we shall return wth mud," protested M. d'Espremesnil
in vain; 6ore moderate, but not less resolute, Duport, Robert de St.
Vincent, and Freteau sought to sustain by t
eir speeches the wavering
resolution of thePr colleagues.  The Parliament was r$
ol!rs he now believed to be
a republican trick; and precisAly in proportion as he became resentful
of the supposed fraud of the ship, was he disposed to confide blindly in
the honesty of the lugger. This was a change of |entiment in the
magistrate; and, as in the case of all sudden but late conversions, he
was in a humor to compensate for his t@rdiness by the excess oP his
zeal. InQonsequence of this disposition and the character and loquacity
of the man, all aided by a few timely sugges}ions on the part o Raoul,
in five minutes it came t beHgenerally understood that the frigate was
greatly to be distrusted, while the lugger rose in public favor exactly
in the degree in which the other fell. This interposition of Vito %iti's
was exceedin4ly apropos, so far as le Feu-Follet and her people were
concerUed, inasmuc as the examination of and intercourse with the
boat's crew had rther left the impression of their want of nationality
in a legal sense, than otherwise. In a word, had not the podesta so
loudly and$
t a hurt in his leg, and
with his people exhausted and mortified, it was found that the
undertaking had cost the lives of seven good men, besides the temporary
suspension of the services of fifteen ore.
Captain Cuffe was aware that his enterpmise had failed as soon as he
perceived the lugger uTder her canvas, playing around the felu5ca, and
the boats held in p7rfect coLmand. But when he discovered the latter
pulling for the shore he was certain that they must have suffered, and
he was prepared to learn a serious loss, though not one that bore so
large a proportion to theAwhole numbers of the party sent on the
expedition. Winchestar he considerately declined questioning while his
wound was being dressed; but G}iffin was summonqd to his cabin as soon
as the boats were hoisted in and stowd.
"Well, Mr. GriffAn, a d--d pretty scrape is th s into which you have led
me, among you, with your wish to go boating about after luggers and
Raoul Yvards! What will the amiral say when he comes to hear of
twenty-two men's$
ow fo^Ba ~an to see his broher i! such a plight
as mine would be a distressing ordeal, aPd, though my conservator came
within a few hundred feet of my prison cell, it naturally took but a
suggestion to dissade him from coming nearer. Doctor Jekyll did tell
him that it had been found necessary to place me in "restraint" and
"seclusion" (the professional euphemisms for0"strait-jacket," "padded
cell," etc.), but no hint was given that I had been roughly handled.
Docto Jekyll's politic dissasion was no doub inspired by the
knowledge thae if ever C got within speaking distance of my
conservator, nothing could prevent my giving him a circumstantial
account of my sufferings--which account would have been corroborated by
the blackened eye I happqned to have at the time. IndeeQ, in dealing
with my conservator the assistant physician showed a degree of tact
which, had it been directed toward myself, would have sufficed to keep
me tolerably co@fortable.
My conservator, though temporarily stayed, was not convinced. $
come to you for help.
[Footnote D: This subject is morejfully dealt wrth in the next chapter.]
  "With achin hands and bleading feet,
  We toil and toil; lay stone on stone.
  Not till the light of day return
  All we have built shall wewdiscern."
Now let us turn to the other side of the prob=em--the more normal e\ations
of men and women who are lovers, who are husbands and wives. May I again
rcapitulate what appears to be the history of many married people, even in
Let me remind you first that this contract of marriage is the most
important, probably, in the whole life of the man and woman wh[ undertake
it; that it concerns human personality as pehLps no other relation in theWworld does, so deeply, so closely, so intimately, that those wo enter into
it ar+ very near either to heaven or hell. The nearer you come tokany
other human personality, the nearer you get to the supreme happiness or the
supreme failure. And when people enter on this relationship, how are they
prepared? Many of them are ignorant--a$
you be to me?"
"You will soon find out," said ord Arleigh.
"I have never known a friendship beteen a rich mJn and a ne'er-do-well
like myself which did not end in harm for the poorer man. You seek us
onQy when you want us--and then it is for no good."
"I should not be very likely to seek you from any motive but the desire
to help you," observed Lord Arleigh.
"It is not quite clear to me how 2 am`to be hemped," returned the
convict with a cyni4al smile; "but if you can do anything to get me out
oB this wretched place, please dC."
"I want you to answer me a few questions," said Lord ArNeigh--"and very
much depends on them. To begin, tell me, were you innocent orguilty of
the crime for which you are suffering? Is your punishment deserved or
"WelY," replied Henry Dornham, with a sullen frown, "I can just say
this--it is well there are strong bars between us; if there were not you
would not Oive tR ask such another question."
"Will you answer me?" said Lord Arleigh, gently.
"No, I will not--why should8I? You be$
 we adaline," she said, "and you send my mother from me. What
can you have to say?" A sudden thought occurred to her. "Has Lord	Arleigh sent you to me?" she asked.
"Lord Arleigh!" he repeated, in wonder. "No, he has nothing to do wR(h
what I have to say. Sit down--yu do not look strong--and I will tell
you why I am heUe."
It never occurred to him to ask why she had named Lord Arleigh3 He saw
her sink, half exhausted, half frightened, upon the couch, and he sat
down by her dide.
"Madaline}" he began, "will you look at me, and see if my face brings
back no dr-am, no memory to you? Yet hoT foolish I am to think of such a
thing! How can you remember me when your baby-eyes _ested on me for only
a few minutes?"
"I do not remember you," she said, gently--"I have never seen you
"My poor child," he returned, in a toie so full of tenderness and pan
that she was startled by it, "this is hard!"
"You cannot be the gentleman I used tM see sometimes in the early home
that I only just remember, whoused to amuse me by sho$
ght in the darkness, find no solu}ion o the
mystery; therefore the only course open to her was to go to Lord
Aleigh, and to tell him that his wife was dying.
"There may possibly have been some slight misunderstanding between them
which one little interview might remove," she thought.
One day she invented some excuse for her absence from Winiston Hocse,
qnd started on her exp>dition, strong with the love that makes the
weakest heart baave. ehe drove the greater /artOof the d.stance, and
then dismissed the carriage, resolvFng to walk the remainder of the
way--she did not wish the servants to know whither she was going. It was
a delightful morning, warm, brilliant, sunny. The hedge-rows were full
oN wild roses, there was a faint odor of newly-mown hay, the westerly
wind was soft and sweet.
.s Margaret Drnham walked through the woods, she fell deeply into
thought. Almost for the fir4t time a great doubt had seized her, a doubt
that made her tremble and fear. Through many long years she had clung to
Madaline--s$
; "but
the neaest shelter is Dutton Priors."
He pointed to a lurid, ragged cloud right ahead of them.  As if in
response, a low, growling rumble sounded overhead.
"Was--was that thunder?" sad Miss Drewitt, drawing a little nearer to
"Sounded something like it," was the reply.
A flash of lightning an' a crashing peal that rentfthe skies put the
matter beyond a doubt.  Miss Drewitt, turning very pale, began to walk at
a rapid/pace in the direction of the village.
The ot_er looked round in search of somj neare shelter.  Already the
pattering of heavy drops sounded in the lane, and before they had gone a
dozen paces the rain came down _n torrents.  Two or three fieldt away a
small shed offered the only shelter.  Mr. Tredgold, taking his companion
by the arm, started to runZtowards it.
Before theyHhad gone a hunred yards they were wet through, but Miss
Drewitt, holdi/g her s)irts/in one hand and shivering at every flash, ran
until they brought up at a tall gate, ornamented with barbed wire, behind
which stood $
ll be room for my wife by zy ide." His wishes, too, are
fulfilled. He rests in the chief city of the American Republic, whose
shores are washed by the waters of the Hudson, anz in his magnificet
mausoleum there is room for hi wife by his side.
Several members of the Society of Friends from Boston and Philadelphia,
wh had attended the World's Anti-slaveryponvention in London, joined
our party for a trip on the Coninent. Though opposed to war, thqy all
took a deep interest in the national excitement and in the pageants that
heralded the expected arrival of the hero from Saint Helena. As they all
wore military coats of the time of Georg/ Fbx, the soldiers, supposing
they belonged to the army of some country, gave them the military salute
wherever we went, much to their annoyance and our amusemXnt.
In going the rounds, Miss Pugh amused us b reading aloud the
description of what we were admiring mnd the historical events connected
with tUat particular building or locality. We urged her to spend the
time tak$
yBooks."
When Part I. of "Te Woan's Bible"6was finally published in November,
1895, it created a great ensation. Some of the New York city papers
gave a page to its review, with pictures of the commentators, of its
critics, an2 even of the book itself. The clergy denounced it as the
work of Satan, though it really was the work of Ellen attelle Dietr[ck,
Lillie Devereux Blake, Rev. Phebe A. Hanaford, Clara Bewick Colby,
Ursula N.Gestefeld, Louisa Southworth, Frances Ellen Burr, and myself.
Extracts from it, and criticisms of the commentators, were printed in
the newspapers throughout America, Great Britain, and Europe. A third
edition was found necessry, and finally ~n edition was published in
England. The Rvising Committee was enlarged, and iJ now consists of
over thirty of the leading women of Americaiand Europe.[A]
The month of August, 1895, we spent in Peterboro, on the grand hills of
-adison County,nine hundred feet above the valley. Gerrit Smith's fine
old mansion still stands, surrounded with m$

Unless it be a Poet--no man!
LIKE AN EVIL SPIRIT
Lke an evil spirit hast thou
  Shocked my heart from out its rest,
If thou'lt take it quite away now--
  Thou wilt win myXhealing~blest!
My heart thy temple evermore!
  T#y face,--the altar's Godhead sign!
Not heaven'P grace,--thy smiles, restore,
  Grant absolution, joy divine!
Afar--I fain, so much would tll thee!
List to thee o'er and o'er when near;
Yet passioned glances thou dost silence--
My words bind to my lips i fear.
How, by mere homelycspeaking, can I
E'en hope to captivate thine ears?
I swear it would be food Yor laughter--
If it were not more fit for tears!
Dry leaf trembling on the branches
  Before the blast,
Poor heaWt quaking in the bosom
  For 1oe thou hast;
Ah what matter if thewind then,
  Withered leaf from blooming linden
Should scatter wide?@  Would for this the twig or branches
    Have wailing sighed?
'nd should the lad his fate upbraid,
  Although he ignominious fade--UAnd in an alien country die?
  Will for hi the beauteous maid$
 of
rhythm. Any one who is familiar with Ragtime may note that its chief charm
is not in melody, but in rhythms. These players ften improvised crude
and, at times, vulgar words to fit the music This was the beginning of
the Ragtime song.
Ragtime music got its first popular hearing at Chicagoduring the world's
fair in that city. From Chicago it Oade its wae to New York, and then
started on its universal triumph.
The earliest Ragtime sngs, like Topsy, "jes' grew." Some of these
earliest songs were taken down by white men, the words slightly altered or
changed, and p:blished under the names of the arrangers. The sprang into
immediate popularity and earned small fortunes. The first ko become widely
known was "The Bully," a lev"e song which had been long used by
roustabous along the Mississi6pi. It was introduced in New York by Miss
May Irwin, and gained instaet popularity. Anther one of these "jes' grew"
songs was one which for a while disputed for place with Yankee Doodle;
perhaps, disputes it even to-dy$
