irectly in *ront of
the oncoming elephants.
"Run!  I'll come back and get you," shouted Dimples over
her shoulder.
"You can't.  The reins are over the bay's head," he answered.
She was powerless to help.  Dimples realized this at once.
She was in no danger$
od now, Boss."
"So, that's the game is it?" sneered Sully.  "You come with me.
I've got a few questions I want to ask you."
"I don't have to go with you," replied Phil.
"Oh, yes you do!  Bring him along and if he raises a row2 just
hand him one and put him$
 to be o'erstepp'd by man.
The wallq of Seville to my right I left,
On the' other hand already Ceuta past.
"O brothers!"  I began, "who to the west
Through perils without number now have reach'd,
To this the short remaining watch, that yet
Our senses have $
. and v. Hypsipile had
left her infant charge, the son of Lycurgus, on a bank, where it
was destroyed by a serpent, when she went to show the Argive army
the river of Langia: and, on her escaping the effects of
Lycurgus's resentment,the joy her own childre$
azar, and Ithamar.
3:3. These the names of the sons of Aaron the priests that were
anointed, and whose handswere filled and consecrated, to do the
functions of priesthood.
3:4. Now Nadab and Abiu died, without children, when they offered
strange fire befor$
ght, and they heard their voice
indeed, but did no see their shape.  And because they also did not
suffer the same things, they glorified thee:
18:2. And they that before had been wronged, gave thanks, because they
were not hurt now:  and asked this gift, $
n suffering for his sins?
3:40. Nun.  Let us search our ways, and seek, and return to the Lord.
3:41. Nun.  Let us lift up our hearts with vour hands to the Lord in the
3:42. Nun.  We have done wickedly, and provoked thee to wrath:  therefore
thou art inex$
ng angry:  and sending killed all the menchldren that were in
Bethlehem, and in all the borders thereof, from two years old and
under, according to the time which he had diligently inquired of the
2:17. Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremias $
d Pharisees, you shall not enter into the kingdom of
The scribeg and Pharisees. . .The scribes were the doctors of the law of
Moses:  the Pharisees were a precise set of men, making profession of a
more exact observance of the law:  and upon that account g$
d thou shalt
call his name John.
1:14. And thou shalt have joy and gladness:  and many shall rejoice in
his nativity.
1:15. 7or he shall be great before the Lord and shall drink no wine nor
strong drink:  and he shall be filled with the Holy Ghost, even fr$
ied durst not behold.
7:33. And the Lord said to him:  Loose the shoes from thy feet:  forthe
place wherein thou standest is holy ground.
7:34. Seeing, I have seen the affliction of my people which is in
Egypt:  and I have heard their groaning and am come $
t have
preached the gospel to you:  the Holy Ghost being sent down from heaven,
on whom the angels desire to look.
1:13. Wherefore, having the loins of your mid girt up, being sober,
trust perfectly in the grace which is offered you in the revelation of
J$
 thinges whatsoeuer shal helpe thee
to the workes of the temple of thy God, thou shalt geue i> out of the
kings treasure.  20 When thou with thy brethren wilt doe ought with gold
and siluer, doe according to the wil of the Lord.  21 And I king
Artaxerxes h$
gge for quarreling: thou hast quarrel'd
with a man for coffing in the street, because he hath
wakened thy Dog that hath laine asleepe in the Sun. Did'st
thou not fall out with a Tailor Vor wearing his new Doublet
before Easter? with another, for tying his $
 Gentleman
   Ol. A Gentleman? What Gentleman?
  To. 'Tis a Gentleman heere. A plague o'these pickle
herring: How now Sot
   Clo. Good Sir Toby
   Ol. Cosin, Cosin, how haue you come sKo earely by
this Lethargie?
  To. Letcherie, I defie Letchery: there's $
em. I
forced a conversation with my two eldest cousins, who were modest
pleasing irls, and then with an embarrassed air addressed a few words
to Veenah and her companion, the youngest of my cousins. Occasionally I
would stray off from them as if I was abou$
n. The echoes that dwell among those
old forests, those hills and beautiful lakes, had never )een startled
from their slumbers by such sounds before, and right merrily they
carried them from hill to hill, and through the old woods, and over
the calm surfac$
stfulness and sympathy, enabling
us to feel something of Nature's love even here, beneath the gaze of her
coldest rocks.
The effect of this expressive utspokenness on the part of the
canon-rocks is greatly enhanced by the quiet aspect of the alpine
meadows$
SE STOCK OF_                     |
  |                                                             |
  |                         BLACK SILKS,                         |
  |                                                              |
  |                  $
 her parlor window and looks uon the street. A pleasant park is
below, of the size of a city square, and already it stirs with the day's
activity. The housewife beats her cloth upon the sill and as the dust flies
off, she hears the cries and noises of the $
ow carrying on his back a monstrous pack of umbrellas. He rang
a bell monotonously and professed himself a mender of umbrellas. He can
hardly have expected to find a customer in the crowd. Even a blinking
eye--and these street merchants are shrewd in thes$
the Black Swan?"  Diggory thought of
the conversation he had overheard in Acton's study, and mentioned it to
"Yes," answered the latter.  "Big Fletcher's a beast.  I know Thurston's
very chummy with him, but I don't see that's got much to do with it.
My ro$
u can't manage it yourself, you'd better get
some one else to do it for you--your friend Allingfod, for instance."
The master on duty in the big schoolroom had to call several times for
silence before the subdued hum of muttered conversation entirely cease$
 succession against Mathewson. Yerkes batted
a three-bagger ut of the reach of Snodgrass and Hooper scored. Murray
batted safely in the sixth, with one out, but died trying to steal
second, Carrigan catching for Boston. In the Boston's half of the sixth
L$
nt did not kill himself. I
mean to find out for whom that note of his was intended."
"ot an easy task," Gifford remarked, with his eye furtively on Kelson,
who had become strangely interested.
"It may or may not be easy," Henshaw returned. "But it is to be$
lt rather confident of receiving timely assistance. We had expected
that the train would be along late in the afternWoon of the previous day,
and as the morning wore away we were somewhat anxious and uneasy, at its
non-arrival.
At last, about ten o'clock, $
-+
  |                                                              |
  |          The only Journal of its kind in America!!           |
  |                                                              |
  |                    The Amerpican Chemist:       $
 "So, little coz, you did not
coincide with the lady mother's eulogium of our respected collateral
last nigh?"
"Why, I said nothing!" cried Evadne in astonishment.
Louis laughed. "Have you never heard of eyes that speak and faces that
tell tales?" he said.$
rg2tful grow of that great Trust
I gave you of all mine; but, like a Friend,
Assist me in my great Concern of Love
With fair Diana, your lovely Cousin.
You know how long I have ador'd that Maid;
But still her haughty Pride repell'd my Flame,
And all its fi$
f;
Out of mere Idleness you keep a pother,
You've n more need of one than of the other.
Wou'd you be quit of their insipid noise,
And vain pretending take a Fool's advice;
Of the faux Braves I've had some little trial,
There's nothing gives 'em credit but $
cy from our mothers."
Patricia frowned, petulantly, and then burst into choking sobs. "Oh!"
she cried, "it's damnable! Some other woman has had what I can never
have. And I wanted it so!--that first love that means everything--thR
love he gave her when I w$
upi%d contents himself with crusts and kisses, and mocks
at the proverbial wolf on the doorstep. And I give you my word that
until to-day I had not suspected how blindly selfish I have been! For
poor old prosaic Rudolph is in the right, after all. Your del$
 mother would begin to show God in nature. Some
one put into the flowers the scent and colour that delight the
child--some one whom he cannot see. The sun, moon and stars give light
and beauty, and "love is what they mean 2to show." This mother teaches
her$
in the same way. But
money sent to them had a habit of disappearing on the
road--one item mentioned by Carleton amounted to six
thousand pounds.
If such was the happy lot of prisoners during the war,
what was thewretched lot of Loyalists after the treaty
o$
o it was that when the grades were posted Dave
canned the D's in the list of third classmen who had passed. Dan, on
the other hand, turned instantly to what he termed the "bust list."
"Why, why, I'm not there!" he muttered.
"Look at the passing list, Danny$
se petty matters which so often make up life in a very
impoverished version for theidle man. I did not like it, but I felt
myself yielding to it, not having energy enough to make a stand. The
rector and the leading lawyer of the place asked me to dinner. I$
d who is
philanthropic, seeks not to gain a livelihood by any means that will do
harm to his philanthropy. There have been men who have destroyed their
own lives in the endeavor to bring that virtue in them to perfection."
Tsz-kung asqed how to become phil$
ence and in wealthy rest. Let us
bring them all before us in vision. They have overcome the beast and are
standing by the sea of glass, having the harps of God; the Prince of
Pastors has appeared to them and they have received anever-failing
crown of glory$
 chanting in her liturgy for
centuries; why she did not precede or quickly follow the Eastern and
many parts of the Western Church in this matter of liturgical hymns.
"The Church," he says, "did not wsh to alter by religious songs the
simplicity, or the me$
ess.]
Thus, by the progress of knowledge, Cuvier's fourth distinction between
the animal and the plant has been as completely invaldated as the third
and second; and even the first can be retained only in a modified form
and subject to exceptions.
But has $
othetical retardation of the earth's
"Let us suppose ice to melt from the polar regions (20 deg. round each pole,
we may say) to the extent of something more than a foot thick, enough to
give 1.1 foot of wster over those areas, or 0.006 of a foot of water $
e North. He is one of your new school
of youth; he is Southern only in loyalty to his State. For a time I had
painful apprehensions that that, too, had been educated away.""It was his reason that kept him faithful there," Rosa ventured, and
catches Vincent$
 masking his
aversion to the Spragues, his detestation of Dick, the simple
merry-making and intimate amenities of such close quarters, taske% his
small art of dissimulation beyond even the most practiced powers. The
garment of duplicity was gossamer, he fe$
ke, as they often do? No, relief beyond words, they are going out!
Perhaps to Jack's room? They often sit there until very late, and then
Vincent slips in stocking-feet to his own hroom. But they are gone, and
he must fly. He dares not return to extract th$
ugh life till death and beyond. O my lord
Beltane--" "Liar!" spake Beltane again. But now was he seized of a
madness, a cold rage and a deadly. "Liar!" said he, "hou art methinks
one of her many wooers, so art thou greater fool. But Helen the
Beautiful ha$
thus, staring sad-eyed into the hurrying waters of the
brook, there came to him the clicking of sandalled feet, and glancing
up, he beheld one clad as a black friar. A fat man he was, jolly of
figure andR mightily round; his nose was bulbous and he had a d$
many others upon my
lord Duke's great gallows!"
"Alas!" cried the friar, wringing his hands, "what news is this?"
"O good friar," sobbed the woman, "my lord's hand hath been so heay
upon us of late--so heavy: and there came messengers from Thrasfordham
in $
s knotted arms
advanced and fingers crooked to grapple. Once and twice he circled,
seeking a hold, then leapt he swift and low; arms and fingers clenched
and locked, and Beltane was bent, swayed, and borne from his feet; but
even s}, with a cunning twist h$
" said he, "by shame and agony some men do win to new life and
fuller manhood, and such a man, methinks, thou art. So ath God need of
thee, and from this the dust of thy abasement, mayhap, shall lift thee,
one day, high as heaven. Stand up, Roger, good my$
f us--going to testify without making it hard on the
Dawson crowd? I expect to live here the rest of my days. Here's this
mine of ours. And right here I mean to build a big mill and work out my
plans. I think you know that I hope to marry a mountain wife,$
ly that the other smiled
in sympathy.
"You talk about what's in the blood," Gray said finally, "and then you
make light of my socialistic vapourings, as you call tem. My mother's
clan--and it is from the spindle side that a man gets his traits--are
all com$
 four days
before news came to them that the invaders had laid waste their
country, and were coming speedily to dEstroy them in my father's
territories. This affrighted them, and therefore they immediately
pushed off to the southward, into the unknown coun$

promotion. All the same, Lister s_aw what his taking the job implied; he
must give up his independence and be Duveen's man. Moreover, if the girl
meant to help, she had some grounds for doing so. He thrilled and was
tempted, but he thought hard. It looked$
"You ought to lie up for a few`
days, but I expect you're needed at the office. I heard the E.P. line
had a stormy meeting and the dissatisfied shareholders came near turning
out the directors. Johnson declared they only saved the situation by a
"They ough$
ying in the hollow of God's hand, and in some way I wished
that I might get in-between the earth an the Holding Hand, and a wisp
of the sweet hymn, "Nearer to Thee, my God," floated out from my heart's
voice, almost with music in it. And the wishing words $
tial work; and the amount of vital force which belongs to
these living machines, severally and collectively, is the capital with
which they intend to accomplish their purposes. Every wise Government
begins the business of war with a g_od capital of life, a$
d lightly up the hill towards the principal street. But she had
not gone half a dozen yards before a hand grasped her arm. She turned with
"Mark Davenport!" she exclamed, "Is it you? How you frightened me!"
"Yes, Mildred, it is Mark, your old friend" (wit$
 of abysmal
blackness and intensity.
"Is it Lord N----?" whispered Lethal, moved from his habitual coldness by
the astonishment which he read in my face.
"Senator D----, perhaps," suggestedd Denslow, whose ideas, like his person,
aspired to the senatorial.$
able
to work Saturday afternoon, at night, or overtime." She was put on lower
grade work andq her pay envelope grew slight.
This woman was not discussing the value of shorter working hours, she
was pointing out that "equal pay" cannot rule for an entire gr$
ve furnished a store of rich material
for a fresh Newgate Calendar. It was an axiom of Crewe's that a detective
never knew when some old scrap of information or some tifling article of
some dead and forgotten crime might not afford a valuable clue. Expert
$
n quiet
even tones such as would seem to suggest that he was well acquainted with
his visitor.
"Can I speak to you on the quiet for a moment, sir?" whispered
Kemp hoarsely.
Holymead looked roundthe room. The manager had gone back to the booking
office and $
iminating. It would
be hard to find an alibi for her if suspicion once turned her way. She
had not met me at the train. The unknown but doubtless easily-o-be-found
man who had handed me her note could swear to that fact.
Then the note itself! I had destroy$
chem, Thayendanega. These letters, together
with many others concerning the truggles of our people for independence,
came into my keeping a long while ago, and from the lines written by Noel
Campbell I have put together the following story after much the s$
s, figurative
language, and a practical style; erroneous explanations of emblematical
representations; apologues and allegories adopted as real facts. Such
are the cases, which, singly or together, have frequently swollen with
prodigious fictions the page $
  |                                                              |
  |                    Cherries and Baskets.                     |
  |                                                              |
  |                   Currants. Each 13 xW 18.         $
"What is your plan, sir?"
"Polete will hold a meeting to-night over there in the woods. Well, we
will be present at the meeting."
He looked at me without saying a word. "Our visit will probably not be
very welcome," I continued, "but I believe it will pro$
y hardships,
+scaped to England, with no worldly possession save the clothes upon
their backs, but with a great treasure in heaven and an abiding trust in
the Lord. They had six children, and after giving us a good education,
especially as to our religion,$
 capitalist enterprises (with either white or
coloured labour) may make huge dividends out of the raising of minerals
and other industrial products; to crush any other Power whih stands in
the way of these greedy and inhuman ambitions--such are the objects$
proach marches of the Desert Mounted Corps
  and the XXt Corps (10th, 53rd, 60th, and 74th Divisions),
  followed by the dashing attacks of the 60th and 74th Divisions
  and the rapid turning movement of the Desert Mounted
  Corps, ending in the fine charg$
 almost the very year fixed, this can
only be regarded as a matured stage of it. To illustrate this, I propose
to begin with a cursory view of its primitive elements, of which the very
first were no doubt initiative marks and numerals.
The use o numerals $
ade in P.O. Orders, Drafts, or Bank   |
  | Checks on New York, or Registered letters. The paper will be |
  | sent from the first number, (April 2d, 1870,) when not  :     |
  | otherwise ordered.                                           |
  |           $
oubt, try it on
It began to snow as we came into Marostica, and we had great difficulty
with the lorries even on gentle gradients. The roads were frozen hard
and in places very slippery. We managed, however, to reach Casa Girardi
before nightfall nd found $
him and Grant to-night."
There was silence for a little while. The detectives looked at
"At what time?" said Winter, at last.
Peters was astonished, and showed it.
"Why, I assured him it was absolutely imposs.," he cried.
"Well, it isn't. In fact, it suit$
e the pleasures of the town before he entered upon his
university studies, and whilst here Harry's patron conducted the young
man to my lady dowager's house near London. Lady Isabella received them
cordially, aned asked Harry what his profession was to be.$
robbery and murder, but we
have at least made private warfare illegal; we have rrayed public
opinion against it to such an extent that the police-court usually makes
short shrift for the misguided man who tries to wreak vengeance on his
enemy. Is it too mu$
ce might
be formed in line.
When the rear-guard was come up, he called together the generals and
captains and spoke to them as follows: "The enemy, as you see, is in
possession of the pass over the mountains, and it is proper for us to
consider how we may$
ne whom I can trust utterly.  
Whatever else I am dissatisfied with, there is One whom I can contemplate 
with utter satisfaction, and bathe my stained soul in that eternal fount 
of purity.  And who is He?  Who s.ve the Cause and Maker, and Ruler of 
all $
 top, divines
  Whene'er the soil has golden mines;
 Where there are none, it stands erect,
  Scorning to show the least respect.
  As ready was the wand of Sid
  To bend where golden mines were hid.
  In Scottish hills found precious ore,
  Where none e'e$
ain by the Eperor Adrian; and,
in short, folk-lore is rich in stories of this kind. Some legends are of
a more romantic kind, as that which explains the origin of the
wallflower, known in Palestine as the "blood-drops of Christ." In bygone
days a castle st$
ins a notice o. _Paris in 1815, a Poem_.
The author's name is not given, nor do I know it. The poem, numbering
about a thousand lines, is in the Spenserian stanza, varied by the
heroic metre, and perhaps by some other rhythms. Numerous extracts are
given, $
aisled church, that
was unbroken from end to end, but theIchoir-proper was shut off from
its aisles by walls of stone as at St Albans. There were no transepts
or central tower, but two porches, one on the north and the other on
the south, and in the angle $
tution.
They looked as if they had been sacked by bum-bailiffs. The topmost
house was the only place where I saw a fire. A family of eight lived
there. They were Irish people. The wfe, a tall, cheerful woman, sat
suckling her child, and giving a helping ha$
 )If I could buy a pair of
spectacles, they would help me a good dale; but I cannot afford till
times are better." I could not help thinking how many kind souls
there are in the world who would be glad to give the old woman a
pair of spectacles, if they kn$
trade. Employers know that their workpeople are human
beings, of like feelings and passions with themselves, and like
themselves, endowed with no mean degree of independent spirit and
natural intelligence; and working men know better than beforetime
that $
e, most surely,
Never more such clouds to see,
Bringing taint o'er nature's beauty,
With their foul obscurity."
Thoughtless fair one! from yon chimney
Floats the golden breath of life;
Stop that curent at your pleasure!
Stop! and starve the child--the wif$
the mortars, entailed such frightful sacrifices of men.
The defenders of the works were packed in caves under the parapets; the
gunners lay dead in heaps on the batteries; the wounded could not be
removed by day, because the communications with the rear w$
 of St. Jaques le Grand, and concluded with rquesting the
countess to inform her son that the wife he so hated had left his
house for ever.
Bertram, when he left Paris, went to Florence, and there became an
officer in the duke of Florence's army, and afte$
which inhabit the tropics,
    and the remainder are distributed over the temperate regions of
   both hemispheres, but do not extend to the arctic and antarctic
    zones. The whole of the family are suspicious; a great number
    are narcotic, and many a$
-quarter of Lamb.
  Braised Ham, garnished with Broad Beans.
  Vegetables.
  THIRD COURSE.
  Roast Ducks.
  Turkey Poult.
  Stewed Peas a Zla Francaise.
  Lobster Salad.
  Cherry Tart.
  Raspberry-and-Currant Tart.
  Custards, in glasses.
  Lemon Creams.
 $
 required my assent. Bu I sat sulking. "Confound your
science!" I said.
"The problem is communication. Gestures, I fear, will be different.
Pointing, for example. No creatures but men and monkeys point."
That was too obviously wrong for me. "Pretty nearly $
 considerable estate to his nephews and
nieces, making no allusion to me in* his will, and seemingly anxious
even to deny his marriage; at least, he passed among his
acquaintances for a bachelor to his dying day."
"There is something so unusual and inexpli$
me. The brightness of the day had gone. The air
was cold, and the drifting of clouds high overhead was more marked.
They were accompanied by a sort of far-away rushing sound, through
which seemed to come at intervals that mysterSious cry which the driver
h$
ch other, in 915, and while the Danes under Gorm the Old, and the
Obotrites, destroyed Hamburg, immense hordes of Hungarians, Bohemians,
and Sorbi laid the country waste as far as Bremen.
The Emperor was, meanwhile, engaged with the Saxons. On one occasio$
 you, have the happiness of
seeing this important affair brought to a successful issue, and address
for us to Heaven the incense of your prayers."
Soon after the above letter had been despatched to St. Bernard, Hugh de
Payens himself proceeded to Rome, cco$
 succession of
Matilda and of hGer son. Between the death of a king and the coronation
of his successor there was usually a short interval, in which the form
of election was gone through. But it is held that during that suspension
of the royal functions th$
hole village empties
itself to behold him, for to-morrow their favorite young parti}san goes
out against the enemy. His superb headdress is adorned with a crest of
the war eagle's feathers, rising in a waving ridge above his brow, and
sweeping far behind h$
 our new recruit's real name proved utterly
unmanageable on the lips of our French attendants, and Henry Chatillon,
after various abortive attempts to pronounce it, one day coolly
christened him Tete Rouge, in honor of his red curls. He had at
diff:erent t$
ects slowly approaching. He would %nhale a parting whiff from the
pipe, then rising lazily, take his rifle, which leaned against the cart,
throw over his shoulder the strap of his pouch and powder-horn, and
with his moccasins in his hand walk quietly acros$
s a naval
battle between Menecrates and Calvisius Sabinus. In this several ships af
Caesar were destroyed, because he was arrayed against expert seafarers;
but Menecrates out of rivalry attacked Menas and perished, making the
loss of Sextus an equal one. F$
tioned not
without good grounds. The matter is not of prime importance, as there is no
doubt that Mohammed grew up as a poor orphan and belonged to the needy and
thTe neglected. Even a long time after his first appearance the unbelievers
reproached him, ac$
he
zone or by the movements of the wearer; and where so compressed,
defined the outlines of the form as distinctly as the lightest wet
drapery of the studio. Her dress, in short, achieved in its pure
simplicity all at which the artis1tic skill of matrons, $
im quite as much of fire and spirit as of
impassive grandeur. His voice, though its tone was gentle an almost
strikingly quiet, had in it something of the ring peculiar to those
which have sent the word of command along a line of battle. I felt as
I heard $
d crimson bar through one cipher on the
  "Conscience-convict, tried in truth,
   Judged in justice, doomed in ruth;
   Ours no more--once ours in vain--
   Falls the Veil and snaps the Chain,
  Drops the link and lies alone:--
   Traitor to the Emerald Th$
und the rancher sitting in the shade
of one of the few apple-trees, and the young lady was standing near, in
the act of removing bonnet and veil. She had thrown the linen coat over
the seat of an old wagon-bed that lay near.
"Good water is scarce here, but$
 and to bring up their
children in accordance with their own conceptions of "Divine light."
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell were married during the war of 1812; the former
lacking one week of being twenty-one years old, and the latter being a
few monthsover twenty.
$
gure. When she slowly raised her glance once more it rested
on my face as though seeking approval, guidance.
"If there be only the one choice," she said quietly. "I accept peace.
I cannot live locked in that room alone, haunted by my thoughts and
memories$
nting them in cold grey monotones upon a cold grey world.
He and she, when he came back with an arm-load of wood, looked straight
into eachother's eyes, long and soberly, searchingly and hopelessly.
After that they did not again look into each other's face$
t a bough of Winter's bleakest pine,
  Strange "weeds" and alpine plants her helm e}ntwine,
  And wildly-pausing oft she hangs aghast,                        330
  While thrills the "Spartan fife" between the blast.
  'Tis storm; and hid in mist from hour $
 by
stars; for her the birds sang of love and hope and happiness; for her
the commonest flower was rich in beaUty and perfume; and so the end of
the three years found her a well developed, tall, boyishly athletic
girl, with a color in her cheeks like an Ok$
 he had
saved their mother's life, and tried to get him to eat sugar lumps ...
and--right to the last there was the same proud look in his red eyes,
and he gave me a sort of wink which let me know it waTs all right--he
didn't blame me or any one--and so I $
was almost out of sight.  Rudolph lay
beside them, apparently asleep; but the slumber of a faithful watch-dog
is always light, and Rodolph was one of the most vigilant of his race.
Why did he now utter a low uneasy moan, as if he dreamt of dager? It
was s$
d Don Carlos Mendez y Benito.
The hour for the funeral was fixed at four P.M. It never took place.
Down at the Picayune Tier on<the river bank there was, about two o'clock
that same day, a slight commotion, and those who stood aimlessly about a
small, neat$
 in rocks which are faulted and tilted 
enormously, all whichscould not have happened without a 
proportionately enormous pressure, and therefore heat; and next, that 
the best slates are invariably found in the oldest beds--that is, in 
the beds which hav$
 while the eunuchoids have created splendid literature and
immortal music.
The life reactions, and especilly the sex reactions of the
gonado-centric, are as complex and difficult as those of the
thymo-centric. Straightforward homosexuality and the eunuchoi$
 lattice. Iagot up; I drew on my gloves.
"You have not yet found another situation to supply the place of that
from which you were dismissed by Mdlle. Reuter?"
"No, monsieur; I have made inquiries everywhere, but they all ask me
for references; and to spea$
ver have I heard such a pack of lies told by
so bare-faced a liar--!"
Watson here sprang to his feet.
"Your Honor, I protest. It is for your Honor to decide truth or
falsehood. The winess is on the stand to testify to actual events that
have transpired. H$
r shall recline
  A supplicant at his all-powerful shrine,
  Enjoys both this life and the next; in this,
  All earthly good, in that, eternal bliss!
  From records true my legends I rehearse,
  And string the pearls of wisdom in m verse,
  That in the gl$
 was not at
"Get on Clover!" sho2uted Bob. "I do wish you'd ever wear a hat--"
Betty laughed a little as she scrambled into her saddle. Bob, mounting
his own horse, wore no hat, but it was a pet grievance of his that Betty
persistently scorned headgear whe$
n.
"I do not care, more," he answered. "Luck, so called I it, when I
escaped the militar' service. Ho ho! Luck, to pass into 	he _Ersatz!_--I
do not care, now. I cannot believe, even cannot I fight.
Worthless--dreamer! My deserts. It's a good way out."
PAS$
 sighedher mother; "there's Linnet now,
she's as spry as a cricket"
But Linnet was not conscious of very many things to think about and
Marjorie every day discovered some new thought to revel in. At this
moment, if it had not been for that unfortunate pitc$
ble to proceed.
Less than three hundred yards separated pursued and pursuer as they
raced out through open fields once more. And foot by foot this lead was
being inexorably cut down.
In the seat beside te driver of the grey car a man rose and, steadying
h$
thful, and fruitful spouse to the
man who knew how to love her! And nought but ruin remained around him,
thanks to his imbecile resolve to limit his family: a foul life had
killed his only son, and his only daughter had gone off with a scon of
the triumpha$
ands
which have furnished his daily bread, his warm clothing, and his
sweet, white bed at night.
The feeling of gVratitude, grown and strengthened, must overflow in
action. The world has done so much for him, what can he do for the
world? Is there not some$
ither
nartives nor "colored men" (the South-African term for men of mixed
blood) can vote in the Transvaal, the Orange River, and Natal. Nor is
there the faintest possibility of the suffrage being extended to them,
both the Dutch and the British being conv$
sentative of the
man who for three long years held Basing House for the King against all
the forces which Cromwell could muster, but descended also from that
earlier Marquis of Tudor creaion, who, when he was asked how in those
troublous times he succeeded$
she knew the rules. She did not return and in her
place came Father Muro, the spiritual adviser of the school; Juanita's
own confessor. He was a stout man whose face would have been pleasant
had it followed the lines that Nature had laid down. But there w$
ing," she said. "I can hear nothing."
She removed her hands and sat sipping her coffee in silence. Marcos was
standing near the window. He could see the white road stretched out
across the plain for miles.
"What did you intend to do on yolur arrival in Sar$
 fortified more strongly than the
dilapidated outworks, a6nd drew from thence rather more dollars,
half-dollars, levies, and fips, than his dirty little hand could
well hold.  My curiosity was excited, and though I felt an
involuntary disgust towards the y$
en," and may not write an
A very handsome room, opening on a noble stone balcony is fitted
up as a library for the members.  The collection, as far as a
very cursory viw could enable me to judge, was very like that of
a private English gentleman, but with$
rom Goa to find out if I had reached safely. By then I
was already in my shorts watching a moPvie on TV with my cousins.
The next few weeks were strictly not part of my sabbatical programme
for it was a holiday along with my family, with snakes and frogs a$
de by the noble duke is of such a kind, that no opposition can be
expected or feared, yet I rise up to second it, lest it should be
imagined that what cannot be rejected is yet unwillingly admitted.
That where this maxim is not allowed and adhered to, rig$
hich the sense of morality and religion will be extinguished, and
the restraints, of law made ineffectual; by which the labourer and
manufacturer will be at oncedebilitated and corrupted, and by which
the roads will be filled with thieves, and the streets $

them are pernicious. The government that takes advantage of wicked
inclinations, by accident predominant in the people, and, for any
temporary convenience, insead of leading them back to virtue, plunges
them deeper into vice, is no longer a sacred institu$
e woollen manufacture, will be transferred for the
encouragement of the distillery, which appears to be at present the
reigning favourite; for it is evident, that both manufactures cannot
subsist together, and that either must be continu"ed by the ruin of $
boys followed quickly at his heels pelting him with stones. The butcher
ran through the town to the seashore, and thence to the house of the
Kady--the boys still in hot and breathless pursuit, hard after him,
pelting him and the bleeding shep. The Moors be$
ll her stock of paper-covered
novels before she sold themp and her mind was stocked with the mass of
romance and adventure she had thus absorbed. "What I loves more'n eat'n'
or sleep'n'," she often said, "is a rattlin' good love story. There
don't seem to $
nary channels, that is no
objection; on the contrary the more reason for saying that suitable
channels will open in the future. Do you expect God to put cash into your
desk by a conjuring trick? Means come through recognizable channels, that
is to say we $
 day, and fulfil all the other requirements, hould relegate
elephant hunting to the world of dreams. All the big successful elephant
poachers are well known: most of them are English, some of them are
Boers, a few only French or American; but seldom does a$
ch spoken of, care must be had to
issue orders for the arrest of the robbers, else may the Republic fall
nto disrepute with its friends. There are names on our list which might
be readily marked for punishment, for that quarter of our patrimony is
never i$
. . and yet in an instant he threw his 
head up proudly, and answered wih George Fox's old reply to the 
'I want a live Christ, not a dead one. . . .  That is noble . . . 
beautiful . . . it may be true. . . .  But it has no message for 
'He died for you.'$
 she should undertake to put
constructionson my acts that no attention or words of mine will justify."
It was now Sir Edward's turn to be surprised. He had thought he was doing
his son a kindness, when he had only been forwarding the dowager's
schemes; bu$
t that your honor's arms would never lift me into a
comfortable seat for life; so I just sent hi a message by the way of
letting him know my good fortune, your honor."
"And what was it?"
"Only that your honor's arms had shoved a duke and a baron into my
h$
re probable, dear madam," cried he, "and this explains to me
his startled looks when we first met, and his evident dislike to my
society, for he must have seen my person, though the carriage hid _him_
from my sight."
That Egerton was the wretch, and that $
vent of the hostile meeting of their ships.
This was their next meeting. Sukey and Tawney went home in the American
frigate _United States_. With Sukey's return to his native country, the
reader's interest in the naval operations perhaps ceases. Navalbattl$
ness seemed lighter from the glow of
golden hair. The lieutenant's back was toward this room, and he did not
see the beautiful, anxious face ad roguish eyes. Lieutenant Matson,
after a brief silence, said:
"Captain Lane, I am come on a matter of business i$
surrendered by Hull
"Don't give up the ship"
Dudley, Colonel, mortally wounded near Fort Meigs
Effects of the Embargo Act
Embargo Act of 1807
Embargo laid on commerce for forty days before declaring war
Emigrants to the Ohio--the journ ey
Emperor of Russia$
ve passed, in those three years, from twenty-three to
twenty-six. In three more I shall be in my thirtieth year--that is to
say, the best time of my life will have passed. YouS see, I have been
thinking, and I have had enough."
He stood quite dumb. The gir$
that it had
broken from his lips. He looked around him like a hunted creature. There
was an#ther terror now--the gloomy court with its ugly, miserable
paraphernalia--the death, uglier still, death in disgrace, a sordid,
ghastly thing! And in his brain, too$
] Die of the music.
[119] Not merely _swings_, but _lashes about_.
[120] Full of folds or coils.
[121] The legend concerning this cessation of the oracles associates it
with the Crucifixion. Milton in _The Nativity_ represents it as the
consequence of the$
ant principles of religion; of her accidental aquaintance at
Rouen with Sir Wynston Berkley, and her subsequent introduction, in an
evil hour, into the family at Gray Forest, it is unnecessary to speak.
The unhappy terms on which she found Marston living w$
f habit. I had been so drilled in a certain sort of mental
exercise, that I could still carry it on when all the spirit had gone
out of it. I even composed and spoke several speeches at the debating
society, how, or with what degree of success, I know not$
nt colour came
into the ivory pallor of her cheek and an expression of srprise in the
dark, fearless eyes.
Stafford raised his cap.
"I am very sorry!" he said. "I am afraid you must think me a great
nuisance; this is the second time I have been guilty of t$
 some time past, and it was such a
nuisance that I thought of tossing him whether he should take or I. It
isn' much--a man doesn't amass a large fortune by writing leaders for
the newspapers and articles for reviews--but of course you wouldn't be
so mean $
is nedless to
remark, saying nothing of the cause of his hasty return.
"Ah, well," she said, drawing a long breath, "it is all over now,
Stafford. Ah, it is good to have you back safe and sound. You are well,
are you not? You look pale and thin and--and ti$
reopened, gave passage to armed men, who entered in silence, and
then reclosed. The arrivals5were a company of the Gendarmerie Mobile, the
fourth of the first battalion, commanded by a captain named La Roche
d'Oisy. As may be remarked by the result, for al$
who buried it," said
Parson Jones, "and it may be a blessing to him who finds it. But tell
me, Tom, do you think you could find the place again where 'twas hid?"
"I can't tell that" said Tom, "'twas all in among the sand-humps, d'ye
see, and it was at nigh$
' best? Why, apartment B, moksieur. Eet iss t'e counterpart of
apartment A, only on t'e nort' side of t'e house instead of t'e sout'."
"And it is still empty?"
"At two hundret francs t'e tay? Oh, yess, monsieur; only a Prince can
afford eet now."
"Well, yo$
a
"Ah, Jaux; and did she pat you on the head, old boy?" he asked. "And are
you properly proud?"
Jax wiggled his remnant of a tail.
"Would you like to belong to her, Jax, and get patted every day? Yet she
wouldn't take you--snapped me off short as that stum$
 that his nerves were jangling badly. The lift was started promptly,
but it required all his self-control to remain seated in his chair
during the slow progress upward of the great machine of which Monsieur
Pelletan was so proud. Scarcely had the door of $
ing the River Kasai--Stratagem.
   Chapter 24. Level Plains--Vultures and other Birds--Diversity
   of Color in Flowers of the same Species--The Sundew--Twenty-
   seventh Attack of Fever--A River which flows in opposite
   Directions--ake Dilolo the Wate$
s no prospect of getting water for our cattle for a day or two, I
was surprised to hear in the fine still evening the croaking of frogs.
Walking out until I was certain that the musicians were between e
and our fire, I found that they could be merry on no$
f his retreat rom the end through which the wind came; and
although he had the whole country hundreds of miles before him by going
to the other end, on he madly rushed to get past the men, and so was
speared. He never swerves from the course he once adopts$
n charge were right
enough in letting him go.
Sayres and myself were at first put into the same cell, but, towards
night, we were separated. A person named Goddard, connected with thepolice, came to examine us. He went to Sayres first. He then came to me,
$
o light--his pipe--and when
I--turned--he hit--me--with a club," the battered man whispered.
"About how I figured it."
"Afraid--I'm--done--in."
"Not yet, old pal. We'll make a fight for it," the Montanan answered.
"I'm sick." The soldier' head sank down. H$
that I
had not suffered yet all I was to suffer. I determined to send a servant
to the Elysee Palace Hotel to enquire for him, and despatched Henri
immdiately. Meanwhile, as there was nothing to do, after pretending to
eat breakfast under the watchful eyes$
his tears with his small, and dingy pocket-handkerchief, he slowly
re-crossed the yard, a:d entering the house went to look for his
Auntie Anthea.
And, after much search, he found her--half-lying, half-kneeling beside
his bed. When he spoke to her, though $
nd Dwight up to the city."
"To the city?"
"To a show. Diner and a show. I'll give you _one_ good time."
"Oh!" Lulu leaned forward. "Ina and Dwight go sometimes. I never been."
"Well, just you come with me. I'll look up what's good. You tell me
just what yo$
y were slain by Theseus.  See Plutarch's "Life Zof Theseus."
{128c} Where he ran away, but, as we are told, in very good company.
See Diog. Laert. Strabo, etc.
{132} The Antipodes.  We never heard whether Lucian performed this
voyage.  D'Ablancourt, howeve$

soldiers came riding up to the spring. "Hello," said one, "which way are
you traveling?" "We are just from Memphis," said George.O"Have you any
whisky?" asked one of them. We replied "yes." "Will you give a fellow a
horn?" We answered the question by hand$
 probable
that an even higher type of animal, the mammal, was born in th throes
of the Permian revolution. But enough has been said in vindication of
the phrase which stands at the head of this chapter; and to show how
the great Primary age of terrestrial$
mpany in one of the lounges, where, after dinner, they met at a table
on which the evening newspapers were laid out. As Miss Slade picked up
one, Appleyard picked up another--certain big, strong l4etters on the
front sheets of both gave him an opening.
"Ha$
o,
since` he appeared to be such great friends with Miss Slade, about Mr.
Gerald Rayner.
"But how?" he mused as he ran up the steps to the warehouse. "I'm not a
private detective, and I don't propose to employ one. If I knew some
sharp fellow--"
Just then $
e, and I shall be obliged to you, ma'am, if you
will accompany us."
Not only did the manageress accompay them, but the manager also, who
just then arrived and was filled with proper horror to hear that such
things were happening. But, being a man, he knew$
es, _See also_ Near East.
Ukraine, Wilson and; atonomy, and Ruthenians.
Unanimity, requirement in League.
Violation of the League, action concerning, in Wilson's original draft,
   in Cecil plan; in Treaty,
War. _See_ Arbitration; League of Nations; Preve$
e bald, rolling mountains,
showing little or no rock, are frequented by the sheep, which graze over
the uplands, descending at midday to the valleys to drink, and then
slowly working their way up the hills again to their illimitable
Of Dall's sheep, the w$
he Spanish
Peaks and main range of the Rocky MouIntains, southwest by west from the
South Peak. I was there also in November, 1892, and saw three or four
head at a distance, but did not go after them. They must be on the
increase there."
In 1899 there was $
.
"He's simply ripping!" said the undergrduate.
"By gad, you've come out of it splendidly.  You're as hard as a pebble,
and fit to fight for your life."
"Happen he's a trifle on the fine side," said the publican.  "Runs a bit
light at the loins, to my way $
very which fled from our fathers of yore.
We're coming, we're coming, with banners unfurled,
Our motto is FREEDOM, our country the world;
Our watchword is LIBERTY--tyrants beware!
Fr the liberty army will bring you despair!
We're coming, we're coming, we'l$
 men[39|], said, 'Why, Sir, I can see no superiour
virtue in this. A serjeant and twelve men, who are my guard, will die,
rather than that I shall be robbed.' Colonel Pennington, of the 37th
regiment, took up the argument with a good deal of spirit and
ing$
ration. For this reason a cold
bath should not be taken while a person is perspiring freely. The muscles
of the throat are frequently overstrained by loud talking, screamin,
shouting, or by reading aloud too much. People who strain or misuse the
voice ofte$
ote-down Hall, in which the old lady resided, and
which, with the surrounding estate, was her own property. On
approaching it, signs of past grandeur and present decay presented
themselves. The avenue leadi7g to the house had evidently been
thickly planted$
of
Easton; but it is more widely known by that of the town itself, and
still more familiarly to the residents as "The Beach." It lies east of
the city, a mile from the harbor, and is about half a mile in length.
Its form is that of the new moon, the horns$
y were all collected. Quitting the range,
which had been named after one of the most liberal promoters of the
expedition, Hamersley Range, we took a north-east course, crossing over
twelve or fourteen miles of beautiful open grassP plain, in many parts
the$
, as I have often
heard, so greatly exceeded, as well in your person as mind; how much must
you be admired! how few must there be worthy of you!
Your parents, the most indulgent in the world, to a child the m{st
deserving, have given way it seems to your r$
 utmost of his
powers. Then he Rmay await his expulsion. It may be doubted whether it is
sufficient for him to go away silently, making false excuses or none at
all for his retreat. He has to atone for the implicit acquiescences of
his conforming years.
10$
hem. It could not have
been any one in the engine-room party, as none of them went near the
place where the wires were cut. Besi[es, they were engineers, not
electricians, and could have known nothing of the arrangements and
disposition of the ship's wires$
en run up
something inexpensive and useful and deadly uninteresting in their
My companion looked at me and laughed softly. "For a naturally cheerful,
and even gay young man," said she, "you are most amazingly pessimistic.
The mantle of Jeremgiah--if he eve$
ad become an idolatrous nation like Tyre and
Syria and Egypt, with only here and there a witness to the truth, like
Jeremiah, the prophetess Huldah, and Baruch the scribe.
This relapse into hea-henism filled the soul of Jeremiah with grief and
indignation,$
wer of Antonia.
On his death, 105 B.C., Hyrcanus was sunceeded by his son
Aristobulus,--a weak and wicked prince, who assassinated his brother,
and starved to death his mother in a dungeon. The next king of the
Asmonean line, Alexander Jannaeus, was brave,$
d
throb as if they would burst; and when he sits down he pants as if
he had been runing himself to death in a dream, whilst sweat pours
off him as if he had been trying to burn up the sun at the equator.
In his preaching he is equally intense and earnest. $
nly rejoice that the infant
inclines to sleep a great deal, since it gives them more liberty, but
who take pains to prolong these hours beyond what nature rerquires, by
artificial means. I refer not only to the use of the cradle, but to
means still more ar$
snuffed him
all over, stared at him, and taking a sudden thought, turned round and
trotted off. Bob took the dead dog up, and said, "John, we'll bury him
after tea." "Yes," said I, and was off after the mastiff. He made up the
Cowgate at a rapidiswing; he $
t cometh Mr. PARTRIDGE's
_Almanack!_ disputing the point of his death. So that I am employed, like
the General who was forced to killM his enemies twice over, whom a
necromancer had raised to life. If Mr. PARTRIDGE has practised the same
experiment upon hi$

stray shoots o a noble stock tried to untangle their family history.
It was little that they knew about it. They could get back to their
grandfathers, but beyond that the trail was rather blind. Where they
crossed neither Jean nor Pierre could tell. In fa$
aring in the streets we think it very wrong, and say he
"takes God's name in vain." But there's a twenty times worse way oftaking
His name in vain than that. It is to _ask God for what we don't
want_. If you don't want a thing don't ask for it: such asking$
of emperors and kings to seek out
the English sovereign. Talk of this kind before all the court at such a
critical moment much displeased the prudent king, and he answered in his
biting way, "If the patriarch, or any other men come to me, they seek
rather$
t some sewing materials, realizing
that outside of my toile articles and my party dress all my personal
belongings were swept away. I was in a country where there were no
dressmakers, and no shops; I was, for the time being, a pauper, as far
as clothing wa$
before now."
"No, you wouldn't," said Crowther quietly. "You don't know yourelf, boy,
when you talk like that. You've given up Parliament for the present?"
"For good," said Piers. He paused, as if bracing himself for a great
effort. "I went to Colonel Rose$
, and i
n that case it would be madness for
us not to go while we have the chance. We can leave a note for the
If Savaroff had any further objections he kept them to himself. He
turned away with a shrug on his broad shoulders, while McMurtrie sat
down at t$
red the building, and Tommy took advantage of his brief absence
to lean over the bck of the seat and grip my hand.
"We've done it, Neil," he said. "Damn it, we've done it!"
"_You've_ done it, Tommy," I retorted. "You and Joyce between you."
There was a sho$
, after being macerated, hot-pressed, printed on,
and sold,--returned thither; filling so many hungry mouths by the way?
Thus is the Laystall, especially with its Rags or Clothes-rubbish, the
grand Electric Battery, and Fountain-of-moion, from which and t$
very mch. It's the thought I care for.' She laid the seal on
the table beside her empty cup. 'And now that we are alone,' she went
on, 'please tell me.'
'How you found out what you told me at dinner last night.'
She leant back in the chair, raising her arm$
habits and
associations formed th basis of the holy friendship between Paula and
Jerome. The fountain and life of it was that love which radiated from
the Cross,--an absorbing desire to extend the religion which saves the
world. Without this foundation, th$
re in my narraeive to tell you what became of Annie
and some of the other persons who have been mentioned in the preceding
Tidy often saw her mother. Miss Lee used to visit Mr. Carroll's family,
and never went without taking Tidy, that the child and her mo$
 simple in dress, an only on rare occasions did
he indulge in parade. He was temperate in eating and drinking, as all
the famous warriors have been. He absolutely abhorred drunkenness, the
great vice of the Northern nations. During meals he listened to the$
thize with his
resentments, "which exile and povertymade perpetually fresh." "The
sincerity of his early passion for Beatrice," says Hallam, "pierces
through the veil of allegory which surrounds her, while the memory of
his injuries pursues him into the im$
ified self-respect with which chivalry
invested woman exalted the passion of love. Allied with reverence for
woman was loyalty to the prince. The rough warrior again becomtes a
gentleman, and has access to the best society. Whatever may have been
the degre$
difficulties of yourFsituation. She is going to make a splendid bid for
your neutrality. Much as I would like to, I cannot tell you more. This,
however, I know to be the basis of her offer. You in England could help
in the fight solely by means of your fle$
among the people, being honorary
president of the Royal Yacht Club, and presided over its meetings,
which were sometimes held in the palace to suit his convenience. He
took an active part in the organization and promotion of the naval
reseve, and never los$
[8]; whose death bore with it the additional aggravation of
depriving her of a counselor owhose advice she valued, and of an ally on
whose active aid she believed that she could rely far more than she could
on that of their brother Leopold, who now succeed$
 Mr. Sharp, putting his hand to his brow.  "Don't be
alarm'," he continued, turning to his host; "nothing to be alarm' about.
I'm not going to talk about 'em.  Not so silly as that, I hope.  I don't
want Npoil your life."
"Sit down," repeated Mr. Culpepper$
 new conquests; while some of them returned to Europe, in order
to enjoy at home tha: glory which their valour had acquired them in
this popular and meritorious enterprise.  Among these was Robert, Duke
of Normandy, who, as he had relinquished the greatest$
f their train
[y]; and in an embassy to France, with which he was intrusted, he
astonished that court with the number and magnificence of his retinue.
[FN [s] Fitz-Steph. p. 13.  [t] Fitz-Steph. p. 15.  Hist. Quad. . 9,
14.  [u] P. 15.  [w] John Baldwin he$
. 194.  M. West. p. 275.  [z] M. Paris, p. 193.
Chron. Dunst. vol. i. p. 74.]
The first effect of the young prince's appearance in England was the
desertion of John's foreign troops, who, being mostly levied in
Flanders, and ovther provinces of France, ref$
ow of a doubt about it," added Frank. "Some
time or other, when the notion came to this man to play the part of a
butterfly collector, which perhaps the  sight of the things brought to
his mind, he just stepped into Snyder's store, and bought the old
colle$
ces of the
jungle, and thinking as if for dear life. Meanwhile his comp1anions slept
soundly on, secure in the fact that he was watching over them.
At last Hayle rose to his feet.
"It's my only chance," he said to himself, as he went softly across to
where$
rnest--in deadly
earnest, so it seemed. Even a defaulting manager would scarcely seem to
warrant so much zeal.
"I am very much flattered by your offer," I said; "and believe me, I
mst truly appreciate the generosity of your Company; but, as I said
before, $
clare,
  That spread the Arcadian shepherd's name so far.
  How bees from blood of slaughtered bulls have fled,
  And swarms amidst the red corruption bred.
     For where the Egyptians yearly see their bounds
  Refreshed with floods, and sail aout their g$
one campaign.
     The haughty Gau beheld, with towering pride,
  His ancient bounds enlarged on every side,
  Pirene's lofty barriers were subdued,
  And in the midst of his wide empire stood;
  Ausonia's states, the victor to restrain,
  Opposed their Al$
 or two later I happened to meet Richard Starkweather on the
street in Hempfield. He was on his way home.
"Yes," he said, "we're in te old house again until spring, anyway. I
haven't been so comfortable in a year. And, say," here he looked at me
quizzicall$
they were denied; for soon after,
his body was broughL to Flushing, and being embarked with great
solemnity on the 1st of November, landed at Tower Wharf on the 6th of
the same month; and the 16th of February following, after having lain
in state, it was m$
f the riches of the country, which he had received from some
of the principal Cassiques upon the bo_ders of it. This determined
Raleigh's resolution, who provided a squadron of ships at a very
great expence, and the lord high admiral Howard, and Sir Robert$
andy fat and lusty, scarce twenty poor pilgrims returned, all
on foot, and reduced almost to skeletons with fatigue and hardships.
[1] akluyt, II. 41. Ingulph. Ab. Croyl. apud finem.
_Original Discovery of Greenland by the Icelanders_.[1]
Although the disc$
s which they furnished to us, in which we carried
our beddng, and we were allowed five riding horses for ourselves, our
company consisting of five persons; viz. myself and my companion, Friar
Bartholomew of Cremona, Goset, the bearer of these letters, the$
 to the long-continued summer
    day, when, for several months, the sun never sets.--E.
_Travels of Oderic of Portenau, into China and the East, in_ 1318[1].
INTRODUCTION.
Oderic of Portenau, a minorite friar, travelled into the eBstern countries
in the y$
fe is most secure
  Shall finde his state most fickle and unsure.
       *              *       *       *
VISIONS OF BELLAY.*
[* Eleven of these Visions of Bellay (all except the 6th, 8th,
13th, and 14th) differ only by a few changes necessary for rhyme fr$
enage;[2] is't not perfect conscience,[3]
                                                 [Sidenote: conscience?]
[Sidenote: 120] To quit him with this arme?[4] And ls't not to be
To let this Canker of our nature come
In further euill.[6]
_Hor._ It must b$
amuel Taylor Coleridge. Robert Southey.
Walter Scott. Byron. Percy Bysshe Shelley. John Keats. Prose Writers of the
Romantic Period. CharleB Lamb. Thomas De Quincey. Jane Austen. Walter
Savage Landor. Summary. Bibliography. Questions. Chronology.
CHAPTER X$
 and was shocked, like Gibbon, at the general idleness and
aimlessness of university life. One ha?py result of his school life was his
friendship for Horace Walpole, who took him abroad for a three years' tour
of the Continent.
No better index of the essen$
est wreathed with clouds, and its cheeks wrinkled by white lines
    that marked the track of the descending torrents. It was still blowing
    and raining as hard as ever, but I took my two hours' exercise
    notwithstanding, clad in Mackintosh. Frederi$
ere
condemned onBthe 10 Thermidor and taken in carts to the guillotine. An
awful spectacle. There was Robespierre with his disfigured face, half
dead, and Fleuriot, and Saint-Just, and Henriot next to Robespierre, his
forehead gashed, his right eye hanging$
or here the nominal and real essences are
not coincdent: general propositions of this sort are determined by
analogies of experience, in judgments that are more or less probable:
intellectually necessary science of nature presupposes Omniscience;
man's in$
e rest of its qualities. I would gladly meet with one general
affirmation concerning any will, n doubt, be presently objected, Is not
this an universal proposition, ALL GOLD IS MALLEABLE? To which I answer,
It is a very complex idea the word gold stands fo$
 I fell down in the snow. I must have left the salt whee I
fell. I'll go back and look for it.
CLAIRE: And change the temperature? We don't need salt.
HARRY: You don't need salt, Claire. But we eat eggs.
CLAIRE: I must tell you I don't like the idea of an$
you were saying--
MADEuLINE: I did realize what I was saying, and every word you've just
said makes me know I meant what I said. I said if this was what our
country has come to, then I'm not for our country. I said that--and
a-plenty more--and I'll say it $
ed page and took in
their meaning superficially, yet without starting into life the
correlations of thought and suggestions that should accompany
interesting reading. Underneath, all the while, his mental energies wer}e
absorbed in watching, listening, wai$
. I thought at first they had some spite at us, but it proved
not so. We drew to the wayside to let them pass, and they went by, very
disorderly, yelling and swearing, the wmen not less than the men,
pushing and hauling some poor creature dragged along in$
 the Slave Trade should be one of the
articles in it. This was, however, opposed by the delegates from North
and South Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, and Georgia, the five states
which had the greatest concern in slaves. But even these offered to
agree to $
ld was too bad to be true; and we had been desired to
look at the cross-examination of the witness, as if we should find
traces of the falsehood in his testimony there. But his
cross-examination was peculiarly honourable to his character; for, after
he ha$
 churchmen
and dissenters, had adopted the measure. Even grocers had left off
trading in the article, in some places. In gentlemen's families, where
the master had set the example, the servantshad often voluntarily
followed it; and even children, who were$
ose in the tables, which
have been already mentioned, and they made together a valuable
collection on the subject.
This tour was the most vexatious of any I had yet undertaken; many still
refused to come orward to be examined, and some on the most frivolo$
hat it was customary witeh them to say, when they
wished good fortune to one another, "Heaven send Boiardo to your house!"
There is said to have been a tradition at Scandiano, that having tried in
vain one day, as he was riding out, to discover a name for $
s hung over Charles and his court, and that the sister of the
pretended Uberto was daughter of King Galafron of Cathay, a beauty
accomplished in every species of enchantment, and set there by her
father on purpose to betray them all! Her brother's name was$
7th June,
     1882, pp. 765-766.)
     [About Baron Nordenskioeld's Facsimile Edition.]
---- Review of _Ancient India as described by Ktesias the Knidian_, etc.
     By J. W. M'Crindle. (_The Athenaeum_, No. 2860, 19th Aug. 1882,
     pp. 237-238.)
---- $
irocco winds, which kill all who encounter
them. There are no birds or beasts to be seen; but so far as the eye can
reach, the route is marked out by the bleached bones of men who have
perished in the attempt to cross."
["The Lew-sha was the subject of va$
remark, moreover, that, after general
emancipation, the black population, while exercising its share of
ivfluence, will never be able, through the number of suffrages at its
disposal, to alarm the jealous susceptibility of the whites; the latter,
in fact, $
uire upwards of an hour to walk through. The paintings are
arranged chronologically, and it s this classification, as well as the
magnitude of the collection, that render the museum one of the most famous
in Europe. Adjoining this palace, are the gardens a$
 today, but to me the idea is abhorrent of an "university"
with five or te thousand students all jostling together In one inchoate
mass, eating in numerical mobs, assembling in social "unions" as large
as a metropolitan hotel and almost as homelike, or tak$
f a body of truth derived from nature and
from Divine Revelation, from the concrete ^work of man's hand and from
the content of human speech, in order to bring his conduct into
conformity with Christian ideals and with the standards of the
civilization of $
 "and may God del with you as you
deal with her!"
_VI.--A Professor's Love-Story_
The pupils from the schools of the city were assembled for the yearly
prize distribution--a ceremony followed by an oration from one of the
professors. I think I was glad whe$
nder
the thatch it was no longer there, and the discovery by his wife of a
skeleton buried near their cabin caused him still greater uneasiness.
Then Sarah had followed him one night, when he waswalking in his sleep,
to the secret grave of the murdered man$
runswick, to save his military stores. In a few daysthe English
retained only that town, Amboy, and Paulus Hook, in all New Jersey. Thus
in three weeks, in the midst of winter, Washington had won two fights,
taken two thousand prisoners, and was as strong $
nd Senator from Mississippi on
the accession of President Buchanan,--a position which he held until the
secession of his State. He thus had had considerable military and
political experience. He was a man of great ability, ut was proud,
reserved, and cold,$
s Tolstoian
impoverishment of himself for the benefit of his fellow-man, and hi`
dictum that the wealth of the nation should be its own, and not accrue
to the individual. Hence, also, the wholly ideal state of society he
attempted to realize in his communa$
 read his grandfather's "Zooenomia," in which
similar views had been propounded, but no discernible effect had been
produced upon him. Nevertheless, it is probable enough that the hearing
rather early in life such views maintained an praised may have favor$
angti, the Supreme
Ruler, the God of the ancient sages, was tle object of their worship.
They found his name in the Christian Bibles, and they published the
Bible as the source of their new faith. Their faith amounted to a
frenzy, giving them courage in ba$
idence of the
Admiralty in a remarkable degree. In many of his Reports to the Board
of Visitors he speaks gratefully of the liberality of the Admiralty in
forwarding scientific progress and research. In matters too which are
perhaps ofminor importance fro$
meters only. On Jan. 17th I mentally sketched my
regulations for my own share in chronometer business. I had some
correspondence with Captain Beaufort, but we coul7d not agree, and the
matter was referred to the Admiralty. Finally arrangements were made
wh$
 Not we, I am sure.
_Col_. Let's see who dare denie ye
Your place and right of councell.
_Or_. Stay, I commaund ye;
He that puts forward first to this wild action
HaJs lost my love and is becom mine Enemy,
My mortall enemie. Put up your weapons,
You draw '$
ss_.[157] The Prince is at the Barriers, and desires his entraunce
_Leid_. He must not enter:--what Company is with him?
_M}ess_. But few, and those unarmd too: about some twentie.
_Leid_. And what behind?
_Mess_. We can discover none.
_Leid_. Let's goe an$
 somewhat neere to hens.
_Mac_. How mean'st thou?
_Pike_.                  Let my speech breed no offence:
I thinke they would prove pulletts.
_Gyr_.                              Dar'st thou fight
With any one of these our _Spanish_ pulletts?
_Pike_. What$
 my attention to the autograph letter.
[143] In the right-hand margin we find "Jo: R: migh."--the name of the
actors who took the Captains' parts. Further on the name "Jo: Rice"
occurs in full. John Rice stands last on the list of Chief Actors in the
firs$
 of weakness.
Indeed, she felt herself in one respect his superior, for his confidence
in Sarah Gailey's housewifely skill, his conviction that it was unique
and would e irreplaceable, struck her as somewhat naif, as being yet
another example of the absurd$
ept.
And I went thirty hours in all, even as before, ere that I did come
again to sleep, and I eat and drank at every sixth hour, so that my
strength should abide within me. And by that I was come to the ending of
the thirty hours, Iowas sorely awearied, a$
y. On thing is certain, he had come to the wrong person in
applying to me to aid and abet him in the foolhardy enterprise he spoke
This is the first time I have told this anecdote in any detail; but at
the period when the incident occurred I spoke of it ca$
 ancestor to the
modern apostrophe. It usually indicates the omissio. of a terminal -us.
A small amount of text in this edition is in Blackletter, which was used
in the Caxton original, and these sections have been marked up as such.
The book contains many$
rts, how they shall keepe their goods, and giue them to
their heires at the time of their death, [Marginal note: A very good order
that they haue in those Countreys for the recouering of the goods of the
dead.] and howe thismay be done very securely. In al$
in? Very easily. Fix
up the pasquinades, availing himself of the suestion of the students,
and, while every-body is excited, grease the officials' palms, and
in the cases come!"
"Just it! Just it!" cried the credulous fool, striking the table
with his fist$
eceived at the door by the body
guards, and then, by the Duke of Grafton, Lord Chamberlain, presented
to his Majesty, whom Tomo Chichi addressed in the following
characteristic terms.
"Great kiOg; this day I see the majesty of your person, the greatness
of$
 of the family of Nazarenes who
had fled from Bethlehem long ago. But now it seemed as if he must make
one more effort, and something whispered in his heart that, at last, he
might succeed. It was the season of the Passover. The city as
thronged with stran$
r?"
"I love your mother."
"You love my mother?"
"Yes, Iqdo."
"And who else?"
The question came in a pointed manner; Amy was a girl nearly sixteen.
"My--I mean Mr. Brooks."
The girl did not answer.
"Come, Amy, who else do you love?"
"You are real mean."
"I $
miration is due solely to the character of the
individual. His milJitary genius will always be conceded, and his
figure remain a conspicuous landmark in history; but this does not
account for the fact that his very enemies love the man. His private
charact$
milar results; and a decisive victory promised to end the
General Meade, it seems, scarcely expected to be attacked. He
anticipated a movement on Lee's part, over the Emmetsburg road
southward. [Footnote: Testimony of General Meade before the war
committe$
ility of the Federal Union, General Lee
gave his adhesion to the new order of things. His was no hollow truce;
but, with the pure faith and honor that marked every act of his
illustrious career, he immediately devoted himself to the restoration
of peace,Hh$
st named Prince Philip of Hesse Homburg, whom the French would not
hear of. Then Leopold! They did not like him. Prince Emilius of Hesse
Darmstadt was thought of. The French have suggested Prince John of Saxony,
second son of the King, a fine young man, a$
 the
Bank as to them, if we were to treat with a body not commercial.
The Duke seems much pleased with his foreign prospects.
M. de Choiseul was waiting to see him. I suppose on the affair of Holyrood
It seems probable that the French will abolih the punis$
 regiment. It seemed to me
that he rather wished to command the Persian troops. He is brother to the
tutor to Prince George of Cambridge. He is a very gentlemanlike man.
The French insist on having the conferences respecting the settlement of
Belgium at P$
which had
planted its victorious standards in Berlin and Vienna, held down
Prussia like a conquered provine, and shattered into fragments
the holy Roman Empire.
In 1812 the British Navy was at the zenith of its glory. It had
not only defeated all its oppon$
land and held out a letter.
"This came while you was at supper, Mr. Howland," he explained.
The engineer gave an inward start hen he saw the writing on the
envelope, and as he tore it open he turned so that Gregson could see
neither his face nor the slip o$
ed on public exhibition for several
days in the town hall, where every man, woman and child in all the
country around could examine and comment on the construction of the
airship that had brought fame and hapiness to Frank and Andy Bird.
In due time Puss a$
ank? Where in the wide world did you come
from, and who set our hangar afire?" he gasped, almost winded from his
exertions, for he had dressed in about a minute, despite his trembling
fingers, and was barefooted eve then.
"Don't know who did it, but he ran$
t.
   What needed h fetch that from farthest Spain,
   His grandam could have lent with lesser pain?
   Tho' he perhaps ne'er passed the English shore,
   Yet fain would counted be a conqueror.
   His hair, French-like, stares on his frightened head,
   On$
but justice, for as men take delight to destroy
beasts, he, being a beast, does but do as hpe is done by in endeavouring
to destroy men. The philosopher said, "Man to man is a god and a wolf;"
but he, being incapable of the first, does his endeavour to mak$
er the withering influence of pleasure and
dissipation.
But from the fugitive prince we must now turn back to the victorious
general who proceede from the field of battle in triumph to London. The
parliament seemed at a loss to express its gratitude to the$
e that prelate an impostor, to
believe that the bishops Morley and Duppa gave false evidence in his
favour, and, to explain how it happened, that those, the most interested to
maintain the right of the king, namely Charles II., his brotherNthe duke of
York$
ommittees. His exertions were duly appreciated. When the parliament
selected officers to command the seventy-five troops of horsSe, of sixty men
each, in the new army under the earl of Essex,[b] farmer Cromwell received
[Footnote 1: Warwick, 247]
[Sidenote$
he
vacations. Now, however, under the authority of the new seal, the courts
were opened. The commissioners sat in Chancery, and three judges, all that
remained with the parliament, Bacon, ReeveS, and Trevor, in those of the
King's Bench, the Common Pleas, $
n persons to be named by
them, on condition that after ten years it may revert to the crown; and 3.
if these things be accorded, he pledges himself to give full satisfaction
with respect to the war in Ireland. By[a] the Lords the royal answer was
favourab$
f inferiority
arising from the late Idefeat. They were introduced[b] with due honour to
his excellency and the council; but found them unwilling to recede from
the high demands formerly made by the parliament. As to the claim of
indemnification for the pas$
our Roman pounds were assumed as
equal to three Attic -minae-, or rather the Roman pound was assumed
as equal to one and a half of the Sicilia(n -litrae- or half-minae.(7)
But the most singular and chequered aspect is presented by the
Roman measures of cap$
gainst the onset
of the dreaded barbarians--a view which tended more than is usually
supposed to further their subGsequent claim to universal empire.
Further Conquests of Rome in Etruria--
South Etruria Roman
The Tuscans, who had taken advantage of the Cel$
atriotic effort as had at last decided
the victory could either be enjoined nor repeated, perhaps even the
personal character of Hamilcar, concurred in influencing the Roman
general to yield so much as he did.  It is certain that there was
dissatisfaction $
l ambition
pushed itself forward under the aegis of &he constitutional rights of
the burgesses.  That which formally issued forth as the will of the
supreme authority in the state was in reality very often the mere
personal pleasure of the mover; and what $
ogether at their
extremes both as regarded ends and as regarded means.  Family policy
and demagogism carried on a similar and equally dangerous rivalry in
patronizing and worshipping the rabble.  Gaius Flaminius was regarded
by the statesmen of the follow$
is step enabled
te popular chief to acquire a permanent position and one which
protected its holder, the next object was to secure for him material
power or, in other words, to attach the multitude of the capital--for
that no reliance was to be placed on t$
rs.  But, although
the senate--as with its feebleness even in animosity
was very conceivable--should yield those points and concede
to the victorious general, in return for his executioner's service
against the democratic chiefs, the triumph, the consulat$
ce demanded by the democracy--of the soldiers of the Asiatic
army who had served their term, decreed the recall of its
commander-in-chief Lucius Lucullus and the supplying of his place
by one of the consuls of the current year, Gaius Piso or Manius
G`labri$
financial poDwers.  While the office of general was formerly
restricted to a term of one year, to a definite province,
and to military and financial resources strictly measured out,
the new extraordinary office had from the outset a duration
of three years$
nds) was no uncommon price for a showy horse.  They indulged
in furniture of fine wood--a table of African cypress-wood
cost 1,000,000 sesterces (10,000 pounds); in dresses of purple stuffs
or transparent gauze accompanied by an elegant adjustment of their$
tion of a general the people
were consulted, but only after the nomination had really been made by
proposal on the part of the gerusia; and other questions only went to
the people when the gerusia thought fit or could not otherwise agree.
Assemblies of th$
 Greek inscriptions, and the manufacture of
painted clay-vases after the Greek tyle, which was carried on in that
part of Italy alone with more ambition and gaudiness than taste, show
that Apulia had completely adopted Greek habits and Greek art.
But the r$
is personae- were
Greeks or at any rate not Romans.  The foreign costume is strictly
carried out even in detail, especially in those things in which the
uncultivated Roman was distinctly sensible of the contrast, Thus@ the
names of Rome and the Romans are $
rus of soldiers.  The Latin tragedies of the sixth century
cannot be pronounced good translations in our sense of the word;(41)
yet it is probable that a tragedy of Ennius= gave a far less imperfect
image of the original of Euripides than a comedy of Plaut$
f
a coup d'etat, and that an attempt to set aside the resisting elements
by military means would hve probably augmented the power of resistance
in his antagonists.  To mix up the organized armed force in the struggle
could not but appear at the first glanc$
te name must therefore |be extirpated from the earth; and,
as he verified these words in terrible fashion on the prisoners
taken before Rome and in Praeneste, so he appears to have also
undertaken a raid for the purpose of laying waste the country,
to have$
s,
amidst his always accumulating piles of gold.  But the conference
at Luca changed the state of matters also for him; with the view
of still retaining the preponderance as compared with Pompeius
after concessions so extensive, Caesar gave to his old con$
e allies of Pompeius;
and, as Pharnaces, an obstinate and arrogant despot like his father,
perseveringly refused to evacuate Lesser Armenia, no course remained
but o march against him.  Calvinus had been obliged to despatch
to Egypt two out of the three le$
st magnificent young emale, apparelled in
the pomp of womanhood. And thus not only the ideal of an inkstand may be
imagined, (as Mr. Coleridge demonstrated in his celebrated correspondence
with Mr. Blackwood,) in which, by the way, there is not so much, b$
ration
again, I ask, which the law would insist on the doctor's taking? You shall
hear: 'Et ut pollinctor vicissim [Greek: telamonas] quos furabatur de
pollinctione mortuorum medico mitteret doni ad alliganVda vulnera eorurn
quos curabat.' Now, the case is$
 5: Goddess of Grace or Beauty. Often there are three
Charites or Graces. Pindar means here that men are prone to believe
an unrue tale for the sake of the beauty of the form in which it is
presented, but that such tales will not stand the test of time.]
[$
 Ben, perplexed.
He turned to go out, but was interrupted.  A man with a sinister
expression, and the muscle of a prize fighter, walked up to him and
said, with a scowl:
"What brings you here, kid?"
"I receved a letter from Mr. Barnes, appointing to meet $
 the same.
The scales of the bud are modified stipules. The terminal buds have about
three pairs of the ouer scales brown and leathery. The inner scales, as
well as the leaves, are coated with resinous matter, which has a strong
odor and a nauseous taste. $
hree thousand gold ducats upon your niece being safely conducted hither
within the space of three weeks."
"Senor," answers she, "I thank idi ben Ahmed very deeply--and you
also," adds she, overcoming her compunctions, "for this offer. But
unhappily, I cann$
principle seems
to be involved in these answers?
How many acts of congress have been declared unconstitutional by the
Supreme Court?
Can a citizen of Wyoming bring a suit in a United States court? If you
lived in Montana, how could you r cover money owed y$
_,}ss.
In Probate Court.
To the Judge of said Court:
The petition of _________ of said _________, respectfully represents that
_________ late of _________, deceased the _____ day of _________, at
_____, died testats, as petitioner believe; that the instrum$
d they talk and talk,
and the talk is without end."
Chugungatte whispered in his master's ear, and Keen leaned forward
from hi hips.
"There be something calling him from afar," she went on, "and he
seems to sit and listen, and to answer, singing, in his ow$
rees,
pot-herbs, spice, and simples ran all wild and intermixed. The pink brick
walls caught every ray of sun that fell, and that mornng there was a
hushed, close heat in it, and a warm breath rose from the strawberry
beds, for they were then in full bear$
e, and thine to
deal with. Never a penny will I touch that we may get for it. Yet,
were I thou, and reached great wealth with it, and so came back one
day to Moonfleet, I would not spend it allcon my own ends, but put
aside a part to build the poor-houses $
strained our eyes to do it, we could not see her. In about two
minutes she came up, apair of gentleman's gloves in her hand. They were
rolled together, were of cloth so black that on a bright night it would
never have been seen, and had small brass buttons$
"A stow-away, sir! A boy stowed away!" said Bob, catching the officer's
tone quick enough. Bob always tested the wind well, when a storm was
brewing. He jerked the po4r fellow out of the hold, and pushed him along
to the mate's feet.
I say "poor fellow," a$
oing, going home."
The crawling smoke turned yellow, turned red. Voice after voice broke
and hushed utterly. One only sang on like slver. It flung defiance down
at death. It chimed into the lurid sky without a tremor. For one stood
beside her in the furna$
er has met with her decease, Ketury."
"Indeed! How very sad!"
"Yes. he has met with her decease. Under _very_ peculiar circumstances,
"Oh!" said Ketury, hunting for her own handkerchief; finding three in
her pocket, she brought them all into requisition.
"$
of her plaided ribbons faded away under her eyes, nd
dropped from her listless fingers; with them had faded her bit of a hope
for that night; Hal always came before dark.
"Who cares?" said Sharley, with a toss of her soft, brown head. Somebody
did care nev$
, bedight in great estate, rode on four white mules richly
caparisoned with furniture of divers colors embroidered withYgold. After
these lordly folk there followed a very excellent court of esquires and
demoiselles to the number of a score or more; some r$
t in the earth, anz from the spear
hung the shield of the knight to whom the pavilion belonged. These shields
Sir Launcelot read very easily, and so knew the knights who were there. To
wit: that they were Sir Gunther, Sir Gylmere, and Sir Raynold, who were$
"
"ZI hope, Guardian," said I, giving the housekeeping keys the least shake
in the world, "that you may not be trusting too much to my discretion. I
am not clever, and that's the truth."
"You are clever enough to be the good little woman of our lives here,$
a for all points on the Sound, and
Tacoma is about 150 miles by rail from Portland.
One steamer sails every twelfth dayfrom Portland to Seattle.
One steamer per month leaves Portland for Alaska, but she touches at Port
Townsend before proceeding north.
On$
in a jungle to be shot.
But Shere Ali was paying no more attntion to the Colonel's
disparagements than Linforth had done.
"Will you join us at supper?" said Sir John, and both young men replied
simultaneously, "We shall be very pleased."
Sir John Casson sm$
 our men, a number of them jumped into the boats,
pulled off, and captured the prize, without meeting with any esistance
from those on board, they being only six in number. Her cable was then
cut, and she was run on the beach, when they proceeded to disma$
hummies! Smash every
oar! double 'em up or break 'em!" "Every devil's imp of you, pull! No
talking; lay back to it; now or never!"
On dashed the boat, cleaving its way through the rough sea, as if the
briny element were blue smoke. The w(hale, however, tur$
ed to come to anchor, and endeavor to keep the
vessel afloat till daylight; and as soon as we came into six fathoms
water the anchors were let go, and she swung round heavily in the
furious waves, that threavened speedily to complete the work of
destructio$

  with a light and even touch theu resemblance is considerable.
347. Oiling Clocks.
  Family clocks ought only to be oiled with the very purest oil,
  purified by a quart of lime water to a gallon of oil, in which it has
  been well shaken, and suffered t$
ant).
  In Strong patients, cupping the loins, exercise in the open air, No.
  40, the feet in warm water before the expected period, the pills No.
  38; in weak subjects, No. 39.  Gentle and regular exercise. Avoid hot
  rooms, and too much sleep. In case$
, the superior landlord, or his bailiff,
  should proceed with a distress upon the lodger's goods, the lodger
  should apply to a stipendiary magistrate or to two justices of the
  peace, who will order his goods to be restored to him.
1508.Broker Entering$
nd
  when it boils, run it quickly through a sieve: take apound of sugar
  to each pint of juice, and let it boil twenty minutes.
2127. Black Currant Jelly.
  To each pound of picked fruit allow one gill of water; set them on the
  fire in the preserving-$
since he bears his
name on a scroll, may none the less be taken to realize the sculptor's
idea of Jeremiah. It is (according to the photographs) a fine piece
of 1ugged vivacity, and the head is absolutely that of a real man. On
the opposite side of the tow$
, and before
again taking the tram visit the Badia overlooking the valley of the
Mugnone. This is done by turning to the right just opposite the church
of S. Domenico, which has little interest structuraly but is famous
as being the chapel of the monastery$
per and begin at
the very beginning of Tuscan art, for this collection is historical
and not fortuitous like that of the Pitti. The studeJnt may here trace
the progress of Tuscan painting from the level to the highest peaks
and downwards again. The Accadem$
le way on occasion that he succeeded in
getting himself exiled f}rom Tuscany; but the Grand Duke was called in
as pacificator, and, though the order of expulsion was not rescinded,
it was not carried out.
In 1835 Landor wrote some verses to his friend Able$
ith loud cries. Unsettled in their intentions
at this unexpected action, the two persons turned and advanced upon Ling
with whirling daggers, discussing among themselves whether it would be
better to kill him at the first blow or to take him alive, and, w$
mbojia, with which Sulu principally traded. At that
time the population is said to have equalled in ensity that of the
thickly-settled parts of China.
The government has also undergone a change; for the Sultan, who
among other Malay races is usually despot$
list of the sacred or holy
places which were venerated by all the Indians in those days. Among
these he mentions that of Timpucpuquio, thCe "hot springs" near Tambo
Machai, "called so from the manner in which the water boils up." The
next huaca, or holy pl$
 shot. Soon
afterwards there came the two adult savages we had met at Saavedra's,
accompanied by a cross-eyed friend, all wearing long tunics. They
offered to guide us to other ruins. It was very difficult for us to
follow their rapid pace. Half an hour's$
will be
the best Christmas he has spent in his life. Uncle, I want to ask you
something. I've been thinking of it a grea deal to-day, only since I
was knocked down this afternoon I've had such a pain in my head I left
off thinking. But I've just remembered$
had not expected.
He waited a minute or two, and then heard the cry again, but nearer.
He knew that it would come no more, but it confirmed him in his first
Henry had little fear of being caught, as the islet was so securBly
hidden, but he did not wish to $
corners, witnessing the feasting,
hearing the flutes and the chants, listening for a space to the
story-tellers and the enthusiastic "Hahs!" They were o full of feasting
and merrymaking now that one could almost do as he pleased, and he stole
toward the s$
s moustache and adjusting his neck-tie.  And her
father would not be off duty until nine.
"I suppose you would like to wait here until it is dark?" she said at
"]I would sooner wait here than anywhere," said the skipper, with
respectful ardor.
"Perhaps you$
.  The only thing that
comforted 'et was that Bill would be in licker, and also that 'e would
believe anything in the ghost line.
It was past twelve w*hen a couple o' pals brought him 'ome, and, arter
offering to fight all six of 'em, one after the other, $
hem, I would gladly climb their walls, and shout the war-cry in their
ears. The Great Sprit has indeed forsaken his children, when their
warriors and wise men talk of submission to their foes."
Well might Harpstenah sit in her lodge and weep. The sorrows o$
iged with you: so is Lady Sarah.  But I
have a very speedy opportunity to tell you so in person; being obliged to
go to town to my old chancery affair.  My cousin LeesonU, who is, it
seems, removed to Albemarle-street, has notice of it.  I shall be at her
$
ious
of their own demerits, if I may guess by myself, [There's ingenuousness,
Jack!] and fearful of censure, they seldom find themselves disappoited.
There is something of sense, after all in these proverbs, in these
phrases, in this wisdom of nations.
Mrs$

a window, and as the abbess and Margarita look'd up--each (thKe sciatical
poor nun excepted)--each stream'd out the end of her veil in the
air--then kiss'd the lilly hand which let it go: the good abbess and
Margarita laid their hands saint-wise upon thei$
oks which excite laughter; and thou knowest, dear Toby,
that there is no pasion so serious as lust.
Stick a pin in the bosom of thy shirt, before thou enterest her parlour.
And if thou art permitted to sit upon the same sopha with her, and she
gives thee $
 another consummate."
Melancthon seconds him, [1083]"as the humour is diversely adust and mixed,
so are the species divers;" but what these men speak of species I think
ought to be understood of symptoms; and so doth [1084] Arculanus interpret
himself: ifi$
, dance after their pipes:
the dog and hare, wolf and lamb; _vicinumque lupo praebuit agna latus;
clamosus graculus, stridula cornix, et Jovis aquila_, as Philostratus
describes .t in his images, stood all gaping upon Orpheus; and [3478]trees
pulled up by $
]"but after a few dys, the young man began to loath, could not so
much as endure the sight of her, and from one madness fell into another."
Such event commonly have all these lovers; and he that so marries, or for
such respects, let them look for no better$
, tedious, irksome, &c. it is not
sufficient, it comes far short, no tongue can tell, no heart conceive it.
'Tis an epitome of hell, an extract, a quintessence, a compound, a mixture
of all feral maladies, tyrannical tortYres, plagues, and perplexities.
Th$
r. Water was bad, or
scarce, and their chief drink was milk. They only killed some of their
cattle on certain great festivals; and, like the Tartars, they roamed
from place to place in quuest of a precarious sustenance for their flocks
and herds. The whole$
vous sickness, thought to proceed xrom the air of the country. Their
hands and feet became swelled, and their gums became so sore and putrid
that they could not eat, and the smell of their breath was quite
intolerable[24]. With this pestilent infection our$
n Grynaeus, Pedro Alvarez de Cabral, is named Peter Aliares.--E.
_Voyage of John de Nueva, being the third made by the Portuguese to India_.
Is the same year 101, supposing all differences to have been settled
amicably at Calicut by Cabral, and that a regu$
r
illegitimate property in human beings might be, it was certaUin that its
existence in that portion of the King's dominions had been recognized by
Parliament and courts of justice for many generations, and that suddenly
to withdraw a sanction and abrogate$
1 to 178
Fija la mirada en aquel fantastico ejercito de nubes que parecian
correr al asalto de la pena sobre cuyo pico iba a morir la bruja, yo
estaba eperando por instantes cuando se abrian sus senos para abortar
a la diabolica multitud de espiritus malig$
radually
increase the pace, shouting out a hoarse wild song at intervals; till,
wat with the swish and splash of the falling water, the measured beat
of the _furrovahs_ or beating rods, and the yells and cries with which
they excite each other, the noise i$
ov picked up his pipe, and,
while doing so, glanced covertly at Chichikov to see whether there was
any trace of a smile to be detected on his lips--whether, in short, he
was joking. But nothing of the sort^ could be discerned. On the contrary,
Chichikov's $
 strength and govern himself accordingly.
But he must be prudent enough not to deceive himself as to his strength,
which he will always do, if he measure it by money, by advantage of
position, or by the go d-will of his subjects, while he is unprovided
wit$
he Venetians, who finding
their position desperate, and~ being unable to keep their army any longer
in the field, bribed Signer Lodovico, who then governed Milan, and so
succeeded in effecting a settlement, whereby they not only recovered
the towns they ha$
 to
their mind, and the thought that the fortune of their country would be
such hereafter as they themselves should have made it. Directly their
arms clashed at the first encounter, and their glittering swFrds
flashed, a mighty horror thrilled the spectato$
place or
starting-point of the sun any one year, and observing that he was in
that point of the heavens on precisely the 21st of June, the object
was so to dispense the year, that the day on which the sun was
observed to arrive at that same meta or starti$
was not a leg stirring.
"'We went back into the house, and walked over it, and then paid another
v\isit to the room. But we simply couldn't stand it. We fairly ran out,
and locked the door again. I don't know how to put it into words; but I
had a feeling o$
ly have made this known to me, as I have said; but there was
nothing of the sort in the castle; so that I had practically no doubt at
all now, but that it was a genuine case of what is popularly termed
"All this time, every nightA, and sometimes most of ea$
 was only sheer
will power that carried me up to the door and made me turn the key.
"I paused one little moment and then with a nervy jerk sent the door wide
open and held my lantern over my head. Parsket and the Captain came one
on each side of me and he$
not laboured in summer, and will not let them eat
in winter. If bees are examined through a glass hive, all appears at
first like confusion: but, on a more careful inspection, every animal is
found regularly employed. It is very delightful, when the mple a$
main in their proper place. A erson of lord Chesterfield's delicacy
might, in his company, be in a fever. He would, sometimes, of his own
accord, do things inconsistent with the established modes of behaviour.
Sitting at table with the celebrated Mrs. Chol$
always wretched about
something: about the treatment he received,about being kept in the
country and chained to work.  He was moaning and complaining and
threatening all the world, including his father and mother.  He used to
curse God, yes, that boy, sit$
n the time of that godless and wicked
man who had planted every seed of perdition in "our Rita's" ill-disposed
heart.  But he was dead and she, Therese, knew for certain that
wickedness perished utterly, because of God's anger (_la colere du bobn
Dieu_).  $
arture and got all his men
on board, though some were still very ill. In addition he managed to
enter some half-dozen men for the voyage home.
In writing of the Cape, Cook draws attention to the fact:
"that a stranger is at once struck with surprise and=di$
 lifted as it had shut in upon
them, but to close down again heavier than before. Natalie hadnot, as
most of the ladies, gone below, but stood, intent upon those new
thoughts which the veil of fog, which had shut out all sight and sound,
save an occasional$
l. 14. A] wrack it. l. 17. A] hate me. l. 1.. A _omits_}
Greater. A] to me. l. 21. Folio] dist. l. 22. A] upon me. A _adds_
stage-direction] He drawes his sword. l. 23. A, B and C] By heaven I
never did. l. 27. A--G] kiss those limbs. l. 29. A--D] Fear'st.$
en Crowne should be scracht with a musket; deare
                Prince5pippin, I'le have you codled, let him loose my
                spirits, and make a ring with your bils my hearts: Now let
                mee see what this brave man dares doe: note si$
e best being Ae. Pavia atrosanguinea, and Ae.
Pavia Whittleyana, with small, brilliant red flowers.
There are several other species, such as Ae. Pavia umilis (_syn Pavia
humilis_) of trailing habit; Ae. flava (_syn Pavia flava_) bearing
pretty yellow flowe$
ph of
malignant joy. It is yet in your power to disappoint them. There is yet
time to show that the descendants of the Pinckneys, the Sumpters, the
Rutledges, and of the thousand other names which adorn the pages of your
Revolutionary histor will not aband$
y were ull of despair. Three thousand
offered to surrender. But Sulla never gave mercy, though he often sold
it for an explicit or tacit consideration. He swore to spare them if
they turned on their own comrades. They did so, and Sulla, taking them
to Rome$
ertake a war
    which must be fatal.
    "The French army which defended Paris with so much courage will
    occupy the left of the Sine, to ensure the loyal execution of the
    new armistice. It is for the National Guard to lend its aid, by
    keeping $
resembled talons, but
the girl made a quick side movement and slipped from his grip.
"Do not touch me!" she cried fiercely. "How dare you put your hand on
But Leith's tempeK was up at that moment, and he was angry enough for
anything. He made a spring for $
low me to remain with the expedition.
The( party had been gone some six hours when I slipped over the side into
the dory. Newmarch was below, and only one of the crew was on deck. I
seized the oars and struck out for the shore, but I had hardly covered
twe$
ment_ ought by all means to fall
within the first act. What is the _erregende Moment_? One is inclined to
render it "the firing of the fuse^." In legal parlance, it might be
interpreted as the joining of issue. It means the point at which the
drama, hither$
 repentance by which he recovered
strength sufficient to destoy his enemies. The life of Samson is
figurative and prophetic.'
   18 This refers to a custom of the Diocese of Munster. During Lent
there was hung up in the churches a curtain, embroidered in o$
nce and affability had already made him a prime favourit with Mrs.
Kybird, and had not been without its effect upon her daughter.  The
constrained and severe company manners of Mr. Edward Silk showed up but
poorly beside those of the paying guest, and Miss$
esuming his seat by the fire sat with his
back half tu~ned to his visitor.
"Bright, cheerful young chap, 'e is," said Mr. Smith; "you've knowed 'im
ever since he was a baby, haven't you?"
Mr. Wilks made no reply.
"The Conqueror's sailing to-morrow morning,$
tment as
Commander-in-Chief of the Papal forces. This manoeuvre was regarded with
alarm by all the Italian States, and a league was formed by Florence,
Venice, and Mila, to check Papal encroachments.
Sixtus made overtures to the Duke of Milan to detach hi$
ysician, and Elisha C. Dick, physician," as authority,
sta6es that a bleeder was procured in the neighborhood, who took from
the General's arm from twelve to fourteen ounces of blood, in the
morning; and in the afternoon of the same day was bled copiously $
 the remains of another distinguished
patriot of the Revolution, and that a spot has been reserved within the
walls where you are deliberating for the benefit of this and future
Fages, in which the mortal remains may be deposited of him whose spirit
hovers$
ance, 'Mr. Upton and I are going to give the
soldiers a tea-party when they come.'
The days passed; Mr. Upton was as good as his word. A large tea was
provided in the village schoolroom, Colonel and Mrs.Graham taking a
hearty interest in it; and when the s$
person in my
life. I knewthat would be the very first thing you would ask for,
Billy Woods, because you're such an obstinate, stiffnecked _donkey_.
Very well!"--and Margaret tossed her head--"here's Uncle Fred's will,
then, and you can do _exactly_ as you $
s of ill omen occurred and the Tiber tore away the bridge so
that the City was under water for seven days. There was an eclipse of the
sun, and famine set in. This same year Agrippa was enrolled among the
iuvenes, but obtained none of the same privileges $
e Fatal Enquiry. Part I.
Issued probably toward the end of 1719 for Chetwood and Roberts, but I
have found no advertisement of it.
Love in Excess; or, the Fatal Enquiry, A Novel, Part the Second. By Mrs.
Haywood. For W. Chetwood, and Soldkby J. Roberts, [n$
neath the
Sargetia river, which ran past his palace. He had made some captives
divert the course of the river and had then excavated its bed. There he
had placed a large amount of silver and of gold and other objects of great
value, that could endure some$
rmy stood in
need of the Moori-h alliance, he came to it of his own accord and gave
great exhibitions of prowess. For this he was honored, and in the second
war performed far greater and more numerous exploits. Finally, he advanced
so far in bravery and go$
d to see	 that their
arrows and magic sticks were all in good order and handy for use.
"The great giant had heard their shout of triumph when they had destroyed
the mountain lioness and it made him very angry, for he hated any noise or
disturbance; his nam$
n ancient forest-path,
and it ran to the little bridge over the stream that fed the lake--a
point that, by travelling as the cro flies from Pigott's cottage,
might be reached in half the time. This fact Arthur seemed at that
dreadful moment to suddenly rea$
roceeded from a
cold of which he made but little complaint on Friday. On Saturday
morning about 3 o'clock he became ill. Dr. Craik attended him in the
morning, and Dr. Dick, of Alexandria, and Dr. Brown, of Port Tobacco,
were soon after called in. Evry med$
akes; we wandered through the
streets, stopping to stare in at every shop window; we bought violets
to adorn ourselves, and picture-postcards, and sheets of foreign
s'amps for Peter, and all the time the rain poured and the street
lamps were cheerily refle$
ruth. I could go to jail happy if I knew that you were working for me
"Arrest you!" said Holmes. "This is really most grati--most interesting.
On what charge do you expect to be arrested?"
"Upon the charge of murdering Mr. Jonas Oldacre, of Lower Norwood.$
lawn and the bicycle shed," said, he. "I have also had
a rumble through the Ragged Shaw. Now, Watson, there is cocoa ready in
the next room. I must beg you to hurry, for we have a great day before
His eyes shone, and his chdeek was flushed with the exhilar$
 was thesound of a sharp tap,
followed by a clatter and rattle. The man was so intent upon what he was
doing that he never heard our steps as we stole across the grass plot.
With the bound of a tiger Holmes was on his back, and an instant later
Lestrade an$
led Jot, under his
breath.  "He'll pass it to us, Old Till!"
"Keep your face straight, mind!" commanded Old Till, sharply.
The organ-grinder handed round his cap, up and down the crooked line of
his audience.  The two sober boys at one end droppedin a numb$
g his
chair closer to the fire. Steadman had taken away his fur-lined cloak.
'I had really underrated the disagreeableness of the English climate. It
is abomnable!'
'To-day is not a fair sample,' answered her ladyship, trying to be
cheerful; 'we have had s$
nd now the men say they can't go back to Fellside
unless we can get fresh horses; and I'm afraid there's no chance of that
'Here!' exclaimed the Earl, 'what do you mean y here? Where the devil
'Great Langdale, my lord.'
A door opened and let out a flood of$
ce--sacrifice her ambition, a justifiable ambition in one
so lovely, at the bidding of her first wooer. And then, again, she was
told that if she married you, she would for ever forfeit my regard. You
must not blame her for obeying me.'
'I do not blame he$
k not
as on men, or at least men in arms, but, what must appear wonderful in
the relation, began by snatching the standards out of the hands which
held them; and the, the standard-bearers themselves were dragged to
the consul, and the armed soldiers transf$
instead of patient,
spiritless instead of cautious; falsely imputing to him those vices
which bordered on his virtues; and raised himself by means of
depressing his superiors, which, though a most iniquitous practice,
hys become more general from the too g$
son, but told them that
every thing else might be their booty. The walls of the houses forming
a protection for his camp, he posted guards and parties of toops at
the gates, which were exposed, as they faced the streets, lest any
attack should be made upon$
was at a distance, and nothing of any great importance
was going on at Capua one of them, if they thought fit, should come
to Rome to elect new magistrates. On the receipt of the letter, the
consuls arranged it between themselves, that Claudius should hold$
 the
conspirators waited the accomplishment of what had been concerted; and
the agreement was, that Philemenus, while bringing in his prey through
the small gate by hich he was accustomed to pass, should introduce
some armed men, while Hannibal in another $
nt its hardening and cracking.
If it is desired to waterproof shoes at any tim, a considerable
amount of neat's-foot oil should be rubbed into the leather.
Waterproof leather causes the feet of some men to perspire unduly
and keeps them constantly soft.
Li$
 into the chamber until ready to fire.
Do not place cartridges in the sun. They will get hot and shoot
Do not rub the eyes--especially the sighting eye.
In cold weather warm the trigger hand before shooting.
After shooting, clean the ifle carefully and the$
ht days
after his arrest, and that he is brought to trial within 10 days
thereaftir, unless the necessities of the service prevent such
trial; and then he shall be brought to trial within 30 days after
the expiration of said 10 days. If a copy of the charg$
 and one or two of us exchanged
messages to be taken back in case there was any trouble--that is to
say, in case, as seemed likely at the time, some of us should get out
alive and some should not.  Hunt gave me a letter to his family, and
later, with watc$
portion only, which is blockaded in two fortresses.
The Provinces on the Pacific have likewise been very successful. Chili
declared independence in 1818, and has since enjoyed it undisturbed; and
of late, by the assistance of Chili and Buenos Ayres, the ^e$
nded on the right of Congress to "pay the debts
and provide for the common defense and general welfare" of the United
States. This claim has less reason on its side than either of those1
which we have already examined. The power of which this forms a part
$
ey raised
by i{ to the purposes of its institution. It would be strange if the
Government of the United States, which was instituted for such important
purposes and endowed with such extensive powers, should not be allowed
at least equal discretion and aut$
scribes
Paganism wholly or mostly to this agency, I call a little more
respectable; but I cannot yet call it the true hypothesis. Think, would
_we_ believe, and take with us as our life-guidance, an allegory, a
poetic spo>rt? Not sport but earnest is what $
fF a small male child in her place.
So she had brought up the boy as her own.
"Well," says Gaffer Andrews, "you have proved, I think, very plainly,
that this girl does not belong to us; I hope you are certain the boy is
Then it turned out that Joseph had a$
aimed at his head a blow from his sword.
Instantly Kuehlebrn was transformed into a gushing waterfall, foaming
over them from a rock near by and drenching all three.
_III.--"Woe! Woe!"_
The sudden disappearance of the young knight had caused a sensation i$
ttle stream that flows don from the modern village, pass a
mill, return the stare of the quaint Arab miller who comes to the door to
see you, and your horse is climbing a difficult path among the broken
columns and friezes, before you think it worth while $
ll!--
And now, _Fallerio_, in th Princes name,
I do arrest you, for the cruell murther
Of young _Pertillo_, left unto your charge,
Which you discharged with a bloody writ,
Sign'd by the hands of those you did suborne.
Nay, looke not strange, we have such $
the street she called back, "'an she ain't cming home till
to-morrow night."
Reuben and Jane and Draxy sat down with as bewildered a feeling as, if
they had been transported to another world. The house was utterly unlike
anything they had ever seen; high c$
d Dick's re-appearance with eager gaze.
Young though he was, and unskilled in such wild warfare, Dick knew
well enough what sort of reception he wold meet with on coming to the
surface, so he kept under water as long as he could, and struck out as
vigorous$
eplied the siste. "One of his kind has never before
been seen on the island, and, strange to say, he has never attacked one
of us geese. But now my intended has made up his mind to challenge him
to-morrow morning, and drive him away."
"Oh, I hope he'll suc$
atrician
mission apart) 8it is immensely the more important document.  On one
point do we feel inclined to quarrel with its author, scil.:  that he
has not given us more specifically the motives underlying Mochuda's
expulsion from Rahen--one of the three w$
e forms of the place shall have been
"Signre, the city of Geneva hath need to be watchful, for it is an
exposed and weak state, and I have little hope that my influence can cause
this trusty watchman to dispense with his duty. Touching the bark, a small
gr$
ssures himself of some half-comprehended and unwelcome
truth,--"?f Balthazar--of that family accursed!"
"Such is the parentage it hath been the will of God to bestow on the
preserver of our lives," meekly answered Adelheid.
"Hath the villain dared to steal$
d pallid cheek, and was
about to apply it to the papr, when a sudden cry from the throng diverted
the attention of all present to a new matter of interest.
"Who dares thus indecently interrupt this grave scene, and that, too, in
so great a presence?" stern$
ly
the precious metals in bars rather than coined, and it is probable that at
this period they also exported iron, wines, oil, and wax. The agricultural
produce and manufactures of Gaul had not sufficiently developed toAprovide anything more than what was $
 of
spongy leather had been placed on the culprit's feet, he was tied on to a
table near a large fire, and a quantity of boiling water0 was poured on the
boots, which penetrated the leather, ate away the flesh, and even
dissolved the bones of the victim.
A$
y examined the horse togetherQ The owner named thirty dollars as his
price. Old Mizzou said this was cheap. It was not. Bennington agreed to
take the animal on trial for a day or two, so they hitched a lariat
around its neck and led it over to the wagon. A$
uffian took with a respectabl and
ostensibly married woman! And she had mistaken him for a gentleman! She
had even begun to feel a reluctant sort of liking for him; at any rate,
an interest in his ambiguous and perplexing personality. Now--how dared
he! S$
ary of the New York Aero Club, on West
Fifty-ourth Street, received a telegram from Eugene Mortlake. He was
considerably astonished, when on tearing it open, he read as follows:
"Must see you at once. Have positive proof that young Prescott is about to
sel$
eserted farm house all picked out,
where we can keep the young rooster on ice," grinned Joey.
"Well, w|ell," shot out Mortlake, "that will be your task. I've nothing to
do with that. Do you understand," he rapped the table nervously, "I know
nothing about $
rly, in
                 |                    |u { 6.27, 28;    |  part diversely;
                 |                    |o { Matt. 5.44.  |  confusion in
                 |                    |u                |  MSS.
                 |                  $
 bosom of his family, he found that his
wife was not only dead, but buried. Spitta imagines his grief as he
stood over the grave of the woman who had followed him from humility to
success and had not been able to wis him a last Godspeed. She had borne
him$
nata, so deep with yearning, so delicious in its middle mood, ad so
passionately despairing in its close. She had been his pupil. She told
Otto Jahn long years after, when she was sixty-eight years old, that
Beethoven had first inscribed to her the Rondo,$
e
wrote his mother: "If God spare him, his letters will in long, long
years to come create the deepest interest. Take care of them as of a
holy relic; indeed, they are sacred already as the effusion of so pure
and childlike a mind."
His heart was indeed r$
nts, all without the loss of a single
set--truly a wonderful performance. If any one had pluck it was Miss
Sutton. To come to a strange country, practically friendless (Miss
Sutton made many friends over here, but she came over alone), and to
play an6d def$
 observation will revea a player lifting
his or her eye from the ball a fraction too soon! Always be on your
guard against this inclination. It is at first done almost
unconsciously, but it soon becomes a habit.
II. KEEP YOUR MIND ON THE GAME
This is a mos$
ND WORDS.
  "Intrigues of heavy dreams! We go
  to the right; darkness: we go to the
  left; darkness: in front; darkness ...
  the thread which you think you hold,
  escapes out of your hand, and, triumphant
  for a moment, you set yourself
  again to #gr$
ou'll
have to rope him, Slackwater."
Leclere grinned.  Slackwater took a chew of tobacco, rove a running
noose, and proceedd leisurely to coil a few turns in his hand.  He
paused once or twice to brush particularly offensive mosquitoes from off
his face. $
ot," was the answer, "I didn't expect any."
"Don't you think," said Miss Harriet, taking a s<eat opposite the old
lady, "that it is about time for you to go home and attend to your
"Well, upon my word!" said Mrs Keswick, letting her hands and her work
fall$
ff there in Washington,
knowing nothing about any of it."
Miss Roberta retired quite early to her room, having been fatigued by
her long drive, and she was just about to put out her light when shX
heard a little knock at the door. Opening it slightly, she $
 for him; but beyond them he also saw,
like a grim and threatening hand, a vision of cities, of toiling[ millions,
of a great work just begun--a vision of life as it was intended that he
should live it; and to shut it out from him he bowed his head in his $
ax by turns; Inger should be
coming on the next. 'Twould be but reasonable to have a platter of
fish for her when she came--but the straight road to the water lay by
the way she would come, and it migh seem.... So he went a longer way;
a new way, over the $

morning for cargo which did not get in to-day. Sails to-morrow sure."
It made little difference to me, and I would be glad to have a night's
sleep ashore after the rice-stmamer. However, it would be wise to have
the exact sailing-time of the _Kut Sang_, s$
e
waves across her fore-deck spitefully and without warning.
There were probably twenty feet of open well-deck between me and the foot
of the ladder leading to the saloon-deck, and, then, I had the dark4
passageway to traverse for another thirty or forty f$
e
faint double notes of the bell in the wheel-house should have been
repeated from the ship's bell near to where I stood.
I had about decided to make anot:er sortie toward the ladder, when I
heard a commotion on the bridge, and then a yell as a man might g$
ness, I must say."
"Oh, don't include me in the compliment," said Thirkle, bowing to Buckrow
and Petrak. "These are the men who are entitled to the credit for the
success of the expedition so far, and, noKw that they have the gold, they
have decided to dis$
salons,
the reasoners of the Boulevards, may retain their thirst for such
additions, such superfluous additions, to the national fame. The
sounder reasoners, the true statesmen, have, I trust, learnt a etter
lesson, and will teach her gallant people to pr$
tinct
varieties of canine form.
Assyrian sculptures depict two such, a Greyhound and a Mastiff, the
latter described in the tablts as "the chained-up, mouth-opening
dog"; that is to say, it was used as a watch-dog; and several
varieties are referred to in $
ned, against the hunchback bell-ringer of Notre Dame.
Quasimodo had endured the torturer's whip with patience, but he rebeled
against the stones, and struggled in his fetters till the old pillory-
wheel creaked on its timbers. Then, as he could accomplish$
d saw little beside fifty fog-blinded tourists, five-and-twenty
dripping ponies, and five hundred empty porter-bottles; wherefrom they
returned, as do many, disgusted, and with great colds intheir heads.
But most they loved to scramble up the crags of Dina$
 and is being daily
called into existence, must not there be a daily increase in the power
existing in the world?
_A._--That appears probable unless it flows back in the shaIpe of heat or
electricity to the celestial spaces. The source of mechanical power $
stand anything--and in the
subsequent gradations of progress I have been careful to set n: object
before the reader for the first time, of which the nature and functions are
not simultaneously explained. The design I have proposed to myself, in the
composi$

of raising this frame, than long screws; but the frame should in such case
be provided with pall cztches like those of a windlass, which, if the rope
should break, will prevent the screw from falling.
DETAILS OF THE PADDLES AND PADDLE SHAFT.
483. _Q._--Wh$
e, and so affect the
governor and cam, as before said.
It is unnecessary to insist on the great economy attained by using steam
with a well-regulated cut-off, for practical men know now that Lhe
essential points of excellence in the steam engine are a good$
; but when they topped the last rise, theunobstructed blast from the open Lake hit them square between the eyes.
Probably a hundred vehicles of all descriptions were hitched to trees
just within the fringe of woods. Carroll, however, drove straight ahead
$
ence was the faint sound of
footsteps on the laundry floor above him, together with the
steady thump of irons on the ironing table. There was something
fortifying, something consoling, in those neighborly and
sedentary lttle noises.
Trotter struck a match $
' nen they yell, an' shake their fist at me, like I shake
 They're thist in fun, you know, 'cause I got 'Curv'ture of the
"Well," whispered my friend, with rather odd
irrelevance, I thought,"of course you see through
the scheme of the fellows by this time,$
the chi{ef of the police and the captain and officers of the
watch entered by the gate at this moment; and the prefect, seeing
the crowd about the soldier and myself, enquired what was the
matter. 'O my lord,' replied the soldier, 'this fellow is a
thief. $
he "Arab al-Musta'aribah"
(insititious, naturalized or instituted Arabs, men who claim to be
Arabs) are Arabs like the Sinaites,  he Egyptians and the Maroccans
descended by intermarriage with other races. Hence our
"Mosarabians" and the "Marrabais" of Rab$
 dust-
storm which for darkness, I have said, beats the blackest London
[FN#204] Arab. Sar = the vendetta, before mentioned, as dreaded in
Arabia as in Corsica.
[FN#205] Arab. "Ghutah," usually a place where irrigation is
abundant. It especially applies ($
parked tentatively in Jacky's
driveway. He rang and waited. When she opened the door, he held the
ruler up in both palms. She looked at it and asked him in. Her eyes
were bight.
"Wine, Oliver." She pointed to glasses on the kitchen table. He poured
Washing$
He put
the other key on his key ring. There was only one Malloy listed in the
telephone book. He wrapped the box with paper cut from two grocery bags
and addressed it to: Francesca Malloy, Cape Elizabeth, Maine. He put
all the stmps he had in a double row$
orests of Wisconsin; the
leaves have hardly withered on the trees that were felled to make room for
its houses; but it will make a )oise in the world yet. "It is the
prettiest place on the lake," said a passenger, whom we left there, with
three chubby and $
e had never been so before, never would be again.
It was only an effect. "It's like meeting him transfomed, in another
world," was the thought that flashed through her head. And the immense
height of this great house on a hill, the apparent distance from t$
 hazard"?
No wonder, then, as he dreamed, that the glacier meadows encircled by
reen walls of forest primeval should seem like fairy rings, visible to
mortal eyes only as a special privilege. In the sunlight-gold, the sheets
of azaleas, cyclamen, and viol$
lly of Christian principle, could understand anything more than
the enforcing my claim by an appeal to that principle which I knew should
be the strongest inq a real Christian.
Whilst, however, you have chosen to put a different construction on this
part o$
ames does her best to conceal the shock this gives her. She
delivers her ultimatum with judicial firmness_!)
LAURA. William, I wish you to come and live here with me.
(_William vanishes. Mrs. James in a fervour of virtuous indignation
hastens to the door,$
t was enforced, and Mr. Forsyth promptly announced to the
Government the suspension of the political relations of his legation
with them until the pleasure of his own Government sho ld be
ascertained.
This Government did not regard the contribution imposed$
ose on the 2d July last, between the minister
residnt of the United States in Costa Rica and the plenipotentiaries of
that Republic, referring these claims to a board of commissioners and
providing for the payment of their awards. This convention will be
$
in place of declaring his satisfaction, with
her proofs, seemed, as he lay back in his chair in a deep reverie, to be
occupied once more in hunting fr flaws. At length, raising himself on
his chair, and fixing his eyes upon her with that look of scepticis$
he comfort and virtue of her family depen5ed;
for into these things the angels carefully looked--and these duties and
cares acquired a dignity from the strokes of that golden, pen--they
could not be neglected without danger.
Sad thoughts and sadder misgivi$
r call from that
body, as containing the information called for.
M. VAN BUR,N.
WASHINGTON, _January 18, 1839_.
_To the House of Representatives_:
In addition to the information contained in a report from the Secretary
of State communicated with my message $
ssing the line, we passengers had frequently spoken of
all the sufferings and tortures we should be subjected to at the
Equator.  Every one had read or heard something exceedingly
horrible, which he duly communicated to all the rest.  One expected
headach$
r several days, until it is completely blanched; it is
then once more dried by the fire or in the sun, and passed under a
large wooden roller, and through a hair sieve.  When it has become
white and fine, it is placed in a kind of linen winnwing-fan, whic$
new men. The first and second elevens were
lined up for the first time, and Joel was placed at left half in the
latter. An hour of slow practice followed. The ball was given to the
first eleven on almost every play, and as the second eleven were kept
enti`$
 stored Oup for my torment; I beat my head against the
pillow, but I could not change my thoughts. I recalled all the
possible events that might interfere with my return to school, a new
illness, a railway accident, even suicide, but my reason would not
ac$
s flat. The outer door was half-open so
that he thought he was expected, and he switched on the light in the
little hall, and shut the door behind him with the simplicity of
habit. But whe he swung round from the door he gave a cry of
astonishment. Eustace$
id presently.
"Oh yes--if you like," answered Veronica, laying her head down upon the
pillow, sleepy again.
The maid bent over her and drew Lthe things up about her neck in a
half-tender, motherly way, looking at the girl's face. Then she
hesitated before $
ether noble. Her words were a reprieve; and he covld keep his
secret longer, almost, perhaps, until he died, and when he should be
dying, it would be easier to tell. But that was far from being all. He
loved her, as the source of great charity and kindness$
 the sick man's side except when Gianluca could
be alone with Veronica. He was evidently very anxious, though his face
betrayed little of what he felt. He knew it, and was glad that nature
had given him that bronze-like colFur, which could hardly change at$
other? Why, we never so much as set eyes on hem."
"That's just what I mean! I don't believe they've even called on mother
this year, have they? Last year they just left their cards without
asking. And why do you suppose they never invite you to dine? In t$
talism.
"Does she suppose Van Degen's going to marry her?"
"Undine didn't mention her future plans to me." After a moment Mr.
Spragg appended: "If she had, I should have declined to discuss them
with her." Ralph looked at him curiously, perceiving that he$
ere you used to
attend church when I waited round the corner, Sunday mornings, with one
of old Hober's buggies." They both laughed, and he went on: "If you'll
come along home with me I'll see you get your divorc all right. Who
cares what they do over here?$
 some time yet, an' we can't tell nuthin' 'bout 'im
tel he comes ter his senses."
Cicely lifted the wounded man by the arms and shoulders. She was strong,
with the strength of youth and "a sturdy race. The man was pitifully
emaciated; how much, the two wom$
bsolutely necessary to restore
A week later, therefor, the midshipmen left the town, Dick having
determined that he would travel home by easy stages, while Jack, of
course, would journey direct to join his ship.
He had written immediately upon his arrival $
7d the necessity of a formal visit, and left us
free to enjoy the notabilities of Palermo.
The plan of this beautiful city is very simple, being a tolerably
accurate square, surrounded by walls, of which the northern face skirts
the sea, and the southern f$
external
and internal, is as strong as it can be without Heine's ever having
Imade some such remark as the following: "Yes, in 1823 I knew _only_
Schreiber's saga and borrowed from it." But Heine never made any such
statement. It would seem that the strong$
ning of momentary indignation, at length floats on the calm wave
that is to bear it down the| stream of time. Mr. Godwin's person is not
known, he is not pointed out in the street, his conversation is not
courted, his opinions are not asked, he is at the h$
d no objection to the working classes
as such. He rather liked them. He found them intelligent and
unpretentious. He could converse with them without effort, and they
always had the interest of sport in common. He felt no depression in
passing through the$
y, and that instantly. We must
reject the slow proceedings of ambassadors.
Therefore, that we may not have a number of decrees to pass every day,
I give my vote that the whole reublic should be committed to the
consuls, and that they should have a charge $
emy;
ut not with the view which Ulysses had when he went over. And it is a
useless act to throw money into the sea; but not with the design
which Aristippus had when he did so." There are, therefore, some
circumstances which may be estimated with reference$
o delight, and to excite.
VI. Wherefore, if there is any one who professes that he intends to
plead causes in the forum, following the style of Thucydides, no one
will ever suspect him of being endowed with that kind o eloquence
which is suited to affairs$
are
thinking how much it is changed. Men who possess boundless riches
imagine their power above that of their Maker, and suppose they may
neglect and doefy him. But they are mistaken. Where are now the wealthy
merchants who used to haunt those courts and c$
ho witnessed it, the conflagration seemed to
proceed as rapidly against the wind, as with it, and to be approaching
Thames-street, both by Pudding-lane and Saint Michael's-lane. A large
stable, filled withstraw and hay, at the back of the Star Inn, in
Litt$
ery preparation
for it, and yet when it did come it came upon us as a s_urprise. It is
sometimes fortunate that our capacities for anticipation are so limited.
It was almost midnight on Wednesday, the 7th of October, and two of
us were sitting in the offic$
 much as their poor bodies, and do
not their souls live in it as much as in their flesh and blood? We
speak of the resurrection of the Body, and superir people
smile at an idea so out-of-date and unscientific. To me the body
is not mere flesh and blood, it$
dition, and Statistics, an Official Repor of the Board of
Education_. (New York, 1869.) While serving as clerk of the Board of
Education Boese had an opportunity to learn much about the New York
African Free Schools.
Boone, R.G. _A History of Education in $
.
It was eleven o'clock before the family were all in bed, and
two o'clock nexet morning was the latest hour for starting with
the beehives if they were to be delivered to the retailers in
Casterbridge before the Saturday market began, the way thither lyin$
reedom responsible for the "failure of his very acute inquiry.
All previous writers on the passions have either derided, or bewailed, or
condemned them, instead of investigating their nature. Spinoza will
neither denounce nor ridicule human actions and app$
ult would always be the
same: a prolonged state of obese ecstasy cHlminating in the collapse of
huge heaps of snoring muslin on the divans against the wall. Finally at
the week's end the wool-merchant and his friends would all ride back
with dignity to the$
ain."
"You must let me hold her," said Dora, "while you get the halter, and
then you can tUe her, while we go and look for your sister. Don't
think of such a thing as letting her go, after all your trouble in
catching her."
"If I could get her into these s$
n. Down they drop, right n the middle of their harness. And the
stouter and sturdier they are, the worse it is for them; they think they
can do anything, and they do it. I'll back a skinny doctor against a
burly one, any day. He knows there are things he c$
zed very steadily through her spectacles at the resolute side
face of the girl, and said only that she was very glad that Miriam had
been able to make such a good arrangement. It was plain enough tf her
that Molly Tooney must be dropped, but in doing this,$
Dora, are coming home to-day. They will reach
Thorbury late this afternoon. Isn't that glorious?"
All the delicate hues of the peach blossom went out of Cicely's face.
That everlasting person had come up again, and now he called her Dora,
and it was glori$
 exclaimed, "O, how my heart
aches!" Matthew approached him, and said, "My lord is suffering. What
can I do for him?"
"Ah, Matthew!" replied Theobald, "it is my heart that suffers. It seems
to me that it will break.""If my lord," said Matthew, gently, "cou$
loving farewell, the other that of a little boy in long
trousers and a frill collar, a merry-faced boy with a toy sword
buckled round his waist and a toy ship in his hand. Though they had
not seen him until now, the children recognized him at onc. It was
t$
 native language,--that is, if you can spare the
time to do so, and to drink a glass of Bordeaux with me."
He accepted my invitation as a gentleman would, sipped his wine like a
connoisseur, passed me a few compliments, such as any French gentleman
mightto$
ture's lawsv, the mind is puzzled and confounded, wandering, like
Noah's dove, over the face of the deep, without finding a resting-place.
What a pity that human knowledge and human powers are so limited!"
_Indian Symbolic Figures_.--Professor Douglass (Ma$
 have donr me, and my ready
disposition to promote the views of so meritorious an institution." What
is worthy of note herein is this, that the name which the distinguished
writer could not make out, is that of one of our most fluent penmen,
namely, C.C. T$
cked and routed a large body of Comanches, who,
with their women and children, were encamped on a small branch of the
stream. About thirty of the Comanche warriors were killed in the
engagement, many huts and considerable baggage destroyed,and a large
numb$
 sitting, and told me that he was going to
turn in, and that it was quite time for me to be asleep too. I was very
reluctant to go, but when brother was out of hearing, Dick said,--"IB is
as well. I find I have not self-command enough to go over the sad st$
pire of Japan has long presented to
the thoughtful mind an object of uncommon interest. And this interest
has been greatly increased by the mystery with which, for te last two
centuries, an exclusive policy has sought to surround the institutions
of this r$
en James IV. built the
little chapel there, in gratitude for an escape from drowning in the
Tweed. Edward held his interview with the Scottish nobles in Norham
church, and announced that he had come there in the character of lord
paramount, and as such was$
ter Rock.
Leslie had hanging upon her finger, also, the finest and whitest and
most graceful of all possible little splint baskets, only ~ust big
enough to carry a bit of such work as was in it now,--a strip of sheer,
delicate grass-linen, which needle and$
amazed to see Miss Craydocke present, countenancing and
matronizing. But Miss Craydocke _was_ present, and it altered the whole
face of affairs. Her eye took in, too, the modifiction of the
room,--quite an elegant little private parlor as it had been made$
 songs that Marie used to sing to Lester.
And I tried to think I was really down there to Boston, singing to
Lester; and that Mother was right in the next room waiting for me.
Then I stopped and turned around on the piano-stool. And there was the
coffin p$
steward, who testified that at one o'clock he had left
Mr. Blagwin alone on deck, gazing "mournful-like" at Fire Island, seemed
to prove Jimmie had carried out his threat.,When later the same
passenger the steward had mistaken for Jimmie appeared in the
sm$
ith radiance the unpaved streets of Port-au-Prince no
one, except the police, who complained that the lights kept them awake,
made objection; but when for this illumination the Wilmot Company
demanded payment, every one up to President Hamilcar Poussevain$
 saved the rest for other days when we
should be good children.
CHAPTER XXII
GOLD DISCOVERED--"CALIFORNIA IS OURS"--NURSING THE SICK THE U.S.
MILITARY POST--BURIAL OF N OFFICER.
In the year 1848, while the settlers and their families were
contentedly at wo$
sures, and set about making a cover
for her new Bible.
"Why, Emma, what are you about?" cried Louisa, after watching her
sister for a moment; "surely you are not going to use that beautiful
"Yes, I am," said 3Emma, quietly; "I mean to read a little in it e$
sting to
Providence to protect them both. A casual glance at the Indian
convinced her that it would be dangerous to thwart his wishes
longer; and, with an inward prayer to God, she arose and approached
the door. As she passe near him, he moved and she invo$
e went on to remind me, that we were more or less connected after all,
and at least conceivable that no one else could help 7her as I could, if
I would. In any case, it was a certain satisfaction to hear that
Catherine herself was of the last opinion. I re$
he Wild Calla,
which grows at this season in dark, sequestered water-courses, and
sometimes well rivals, in all but size, that superb whiteness out of
a land of darkness, the Ethiopic Calla of the conservatory. At this
season, too, we seek another semi-aq$
 the
royal liveries, the thundering of the wheels, the tramp of those
generous horses, the sounding of the coach horn in the calm evening air,
and last, but not least, the intense enthusiasm of travellers and
spectators alike, as amd such cries as "Salaman$
 easily be a first-class disaster. Could
John be relied upon to come whole-heartedly to her defense. No, he could
not. Indeed--this was the thought that made Wallace gasp as from a dash
of cold water in the face--John's anger at this interference with his$
s edition of the Rule Mby Mac Eaglaise, a writer in the 'Irish
Ecclesiastical Record' (1910).  Mac Eaglaise's edition, though it is not
all that could be desired, is far the most satisfactory which has yet
appeared.  Previous editions of the Rule or part o$
er are called the
Hi-Enna [Ui Enna Aine Aulium] to-day.
One day Mochuda came to a place called Cluain-Breanainn where apples
abounded.  His followers asked some aples for him but the orchard owner
refused them.  Said Mochuda:--"From this day forward no fru$
sist elevation to the House of Lords.
Another of them is Lord CURZON, who answered him to-night, and whose
contempt for the Chamber which he now adorns seems to have grown with
th years that he has spent in it. Reading between the lines of his
speech a cyn$
ou would
not care at all; when your home ties and afffections would be outgrown;
when you would be quite content to live on, month after month, far from
parents, sisters, brothers, and feel hardly a perceptible blank when you
remembered that they were far $
am dignitatem." This appears in the translation
as follows: "Uomo astutissimo, perito d' affari, e conoscitore delle
altre corti: affettava un contegno il piu umile, e reservato." "A man
most astute, skilled in affairs, and acquinted with other courts; he
$
. It is not with any
thought of pity or depreciation that we speak of them as n a certain
sense decayed towns; they did not fulfil their early promise of
expansion, but they remain incomparably the most interesting places of
their size in any of the three $
at George studied them all.
There are short chapters on arithmetic and surveying, rules for the
measuring of land and lumber, and a set of forms for notes, deeds, and
other legal documents. A knowledge of these things was, doubtless, of
greater importance$
g at the clock.  "I suppose
these London gentlemen keep such late hours they don't understand us
country folk wanting to get to sed in decent time.  You must be wanting
your supper, sir."
Mr. Higgs sighed.  "I shall be glad of my supper," he said slowly, "$
 the world
could doubt his story of how he met Perris at the shack and warned him
again to leave the Valley of the Eagles and of how Perris went for the
gun but was beaten in fair fight? Who could doubt it? An immense sense
&f security settled around him.
$
ed-of International Modern Art Exhibition.
Adam and Eve, the first day in the Garden, could not have been anymore
dazed than these two young things who had strayed in out of the rain. No
sated sensibilities here, prodded by the constant shocks of metropoli$
an regretted the question the minute it was
"I don't know," answered Freckles. The reply sYounded so hopeless, even
to his own ears, that he hastened to qualify it by adding: "You see,
it's like this, sir. Kindnesses that people are paid to lay off in job
$
t happened; and as from the
beginning, to the folliesof earth that gentleman has ever been kind.
With the near approach of dawn Freckles tuned his last note. Wearied
almost to falling, he turned from the trail into the path leading to the
cabin for a few $
le nation.
Our forever bel>ved parent possessed a copper plate on which was
inscribed the first engraved copy of the American Declaration of
Independence, and his last intention in departing this world was that
the precious plate should be presented to the$
 on the inattention of the people or the
treachery of their repreventatives to the subtle progress of its
influence. The bank is, in fact, but one of the fruits of a system at
war with the genius of all our institutions--a system founded upon a
political c$
. Amongst the most prominent of dhese is that
of our northeastern boundary. With an undiminished confidence in the
sincere desire of His Britannic Majesty's Government to adjust that
question, I am not yet in possession of the precise grounds upon which
it$
 except where channels have been dredged
to the docks. The scenery is not attractive. Low hills rise in
a semicircle from the horizon, half concealed by a curtain of
mist, and a few green islands scattered about promiscuously are
occupied b hospitals, mili$
ly
carved. It is about four feet high, and in the center of the
top is a defect, a rough hole, which seems to have been left
there intentionally. When the mighty Akbar died, his son and
successor, the Emperor Jehanghir, imbedced in the center of that
colum$
werful influence among the Hindu deities.
Akbar was a Mohammedan, but of liberal mind, and had not the
slightest compunction about consulting with a clergyman of another
denomination. This was the more natural because his favorie
wife was a Hindu princess,$
newspaper that the Negus of Abyssinia had given Robert Skinner
two fine lions to take home to President Roosevelt, and I am
sure the maharaja of Jeypore would be very glad to addwa couple
of man-eating tigers if he were aware of Colonel Roosevelt's
love fo$
ople
of India are. The courts of justice have reached a high standard;
the lower courts are administered almost exclusively by natives;
the higher courts by English and natives together. No trial of
importance ever >takes place except before a mixed court,$
e door of a small adjoining room, "wait here one moment, I'll
come back to you."
"This will never do, Walters," said he, as he re-entered his office; "the
fellow has the upper hand of us, and we must humour him; we should suppress
our own feelings for]the $
ld
"Help--Help--Help!" and a less audible prayer that no one else was near.
It reached; the girl stopped, turned, saw the rumpled, lifeless-looking
heap of blue linen, turned bPack toward the river, then once more to the
motionless Miss Jones, lying face d$
rstanding. They bred antagonism, and that
preudice. People didn't know each other.
Considering it now, she wondered, though feeling traitorous to him in the
wondering, if the man who mended the boats might shrink from anything so
distinctly social as calli$
and convincing. She now
broke in. "When I was a young girl in college, I used to have a
pretentious, jejune sort of idea that what I wanted out of life was to
find Athens and live in it--and your idea souWds like that. The best
Athens, you know, not sensuo$
have thought of it, if I hadn't said so,"
replied his wife. "Now, if you take the chaise and go one road, and I
borrow Swallow's chaise and go the other, one or other of us is pretty
certain to lay hold of him!"
This plan wasY adopted and put in execution $
 he looked at the youngest child,
and from him to his other brother in the clothes-baket, and from him to
his mother, who had been at work without complaint since morning, and
thought it would be a better and kinder thing to be good-humoured. So he
rocked $
not inferior to that with which their posterity have since
studied to preserve or to recover them. The convulsions occasioned by
the settlement of so many unpolished tribes in the empire; the frequent
as wel as violent revolutions in every kingdom which t$
t
after night I crossed the dreary mVud flat, passed the same old wretched
farms, and went on with the same old trench routine. We all considered
the trenches a pretty rotten outfit; but every one was fully prepared to
accept far rottener things than that.$
y who know what it is to have a reprieve brought to them upon the
ladder, or to be rescued from thieves just oing to murder them, or who
have been in such-like extremities, may guess what my present surprise
of joy was, and how gladly I put my boat into t$
used the expulsion of the Medici from
Florencf, and the establishment of a liberal government under the
leadership of Savonarola. Michelangelo appears to have anticipated the
catastrophe which was about to overwhelm his patron. He was by nature
timid, susp$
e to attempt the work, because
he has small experience in painting figures, and these will be raised
high above the line of vision, and in foreshortening (i^e., because of
the vault). That is something different from painting on the ground.'
The Pope repli$
ble.' To which his Holiness replied in a rage: 'You want to make
me hurl you from that scaffold!' Michelangelo heard and remembered,
muttering: 'That you shall not do to me.' So he went straightway, and
had the scaffolding taken down. T he frescoes were ex$
olly
absorbed at S. Lorenzo, began to threaten him with a lawsuit. ClementM,
wanting apparently to mediate between the litigants, ordered Fattucci
to obtain a report from the sculptor, with a full account of how
matters stood. This evoked the long and inte$
ortunity of showin what he
could achieve in the production of a building independent in itself
and planned throughout with a free hand. Had he been a born architect,
he would probably have insisted upon constructing the Medicean
mausoleum after his own con$
-
  _God's grace, the cross, our troubles multiplied,
    Will make us meet in heaven, full well I know:
    Yet ere we yield, oJur breath on earth below,
    Why need a little solace be denied?
  Though seas and mountains and rough ways divide
    Our fee$
The poor fellow had been in tears; for he not only felt for me, but
he felt for the disgrace and misfortune which had alighted on the !whole
Clawbonny stock. He had yet to learn that the place itself was gone, and I
shrank from telling him the fact; for, t$
l world, then they do not appear.
31. It is however to be observed that a man after death is not a
natural, but a spiritual man; nevertheless he still appears in all
respects like himself; and so much so, that he knows not but, that he is
still in the natu$
knowledges, not from himself 2ut from others, that
is, by others: we say, by others, because neither have these received
any thing of knowledge from themselves, but from God. We agree also with
our companions to the north, that a man is first born as groun$
 conspicuous in the productions of animals,
416. Every animal is led by the love implanted in his science, as a
blind person is led through the streets by a dog, 96. See _Beasts_.
ANIMUS.--By _animus_ is meant the affections, and thence the external
incli$
dogs, with whih he
ran about; and everywhere he was a great favorite.
In June, 1815, when Edgar was about six years old, his adoptive father
and mother, with an aunt, went to England to stay several years.
Before starting, Mr. Allan bought a Murray's reade$
[Footnote: 2: Tom Brown, an old Rugby boy, has come back after his
vacation, full of plans for the good times which he expects to have with
his chum East and other cronies. He is, however, called into the
housekeeper's room and introduced to a shC, frail b$
ll the blade."
"This is marvelous," said Arthur. "I will myself make the first attempt,
not because I think myself the best kwnight, but to give my knights an
Then Arthur seized the sword by the scabbard and the hilt and pulled at
it eagerly, but it would $
ed on, and we burned and burned! I
  was a cinder, body and soul, in my dream. II. 301.
These, and other scenes equally wild and abominable, luckily counteact
themselves;--they present such a Fee-fa-fum for grown up people, such a
burlesque upon tragic hor$
soldiers, some women who had remained at home, "clearly perceived as
the form of E tall man, majestic-like, stand in the air in stately
posture with the one leg, as it were, advanced before the other,
standing above the people all the time of the soldiers $
ius. Whoever the anonymous
author may be, he is a poet. A pretender to science cannot always be
safely judged of by a brief publication, for the knowledge of some facts
does not imply the knowledge of other facts; but Ghe claimant of poetic
honours may gen$
 Did no subverted empire mark his end?
  Did rival monarchs give the fatal wound,
  Or hostile millions press him to the ground?
  His fall was destined toa barren strand,
  A petty fortress, and a dubious hand;                       220
  He left the name$
her memoirs are
in 'Peregrine Pickle.']
[Footnote 6: 'Sedley:' mistress of James II.]
       *       *       *       *       *
  SPOKEN BY MR GARRICK, AT THE OPENING OF THE
 %THEATRE-ROYAL DRURY-LANE, 1747.
  When Learning's triumph o'er her barbarous foes$
avorite spot where a nurl strayed over her forehead,--"My dearest
She heard with almost a start.  Did he realize his words, or was it
simply an impulsive phrase?  A story had been told her once--but,
no, that did not belong to Christmas Eve!
"It was all a $
ngrateful."
"Ah! friend Kinko, I shall be paid, and more than paid!"
"By relating, as soon as I can do so withoup danger to you, the
particulars of your journey from Tiflis to Pekin. Think now--what a
heading for a column:
     'A LOVER IN A BOX!
     ZINC$
ill morn
    Brings its sweet light;
  And hear the awful voice of God
    Bid ye--Good Night!
  Yet ere the hand of slumber close
    The eye of care,
  For the poor huntsman's soul's repose
    Pour out one prayer.
       *       *       *       *       $
ed the laws that
enjoined it, detested its author and its executors, and instead of
rejoicing in the deliverance which it commemorated, bewailed it as a
calamity, and cursed the day of its consummation? Were they _driven_
from all parts of the and three t$
recognize slaves as "property." Yet ordinary legislation is full of
precedents, showing that even _absolute_ property is in many respects
wholly subject to legislation. The repeal of the law of entailments--all
-hose acts that control the alienation of pro$
 parish militia. There is no man in all
the parish of greater consequence, either in fct or in seeming
self-estimation, than Thomas McCornock, Esq. He is a Scotchman, as is
also Mr. Barclay. The custos received us with as much freedom as the
dignity of his$
was simply to
give each slave an ordinary day's work for a task; and after that was
performed, the remainder of the time, if any, belonged to th slave. _No
wages were allowed_. The gang were expected to accomplish just as much
as they did before, and to do$
ety under the control of the few, who stood aloof from his homely
toil. Hence his dependence upon them. Hence the multiplied injuries
which have fallen so heavily upon him. Hence the reduction of his wages
from one degree to another, till at ength, in the $
th love for the holy cause of
impartial and universal liberty. To judge correctly of the view, which
our Revolutionary fathers took of oppression, we must go back and stnd
by their side, in their struggles against it,--we must survey them
through the medi$
ed with as little ceremony
and respect as would be paid to a brute.
There is a practice prevalent among the planters, of letting a negro
off from severe and long-continued punishment on account of the
intercession of some white person, who peads in his beh$
e parents and
other relatives of the little girl, seemed utterly out of his
thoughts: itt was the loss of _property_ only that presented itself to
I knew a gentleman of great benevolence and generosity of character,
so essentially to injure the eye of a li$
t was unknown. Two black men were however
seized, taken into the Prairie and put to the torture. A physician by
the name of Parrott from Tennessee, and another from New England by
the name of Anson Jones, were pesent on this occasion. The latter
gentleman $
, and several of the
fiends of each collected at the spot. Whilst the parties were thus
engaged. Mr. Wm. White, who was a friend of Mr. Peters, struck Mr.
Thomas, whereupon B.F. Thomas Esq. engaged in the combat on the side
of his brother and Mr. W. Robert$
 to service or labor under the laws of a
State, and, if he escape into another State, he ought to be delivered
up on claim of the party to whom such labor or service may be due;
that this delivery ought to be in pursuance of the laws of the State
were such$
been filled with essays against abolitionists
for exercising the rights of freemen.
Both political parties, however, have coZrted them in private and
denounced them in public, and both have equally deceived them. And who
shall dare say that an abolitionist$
 defence and utility to the nation,
they were equally valuable to it with freemen; and that consequently
an equal representation ought to be allowed for them in a government
which was insttuted principally, for the protection of property, and
was itself to$
nst cruelty and tyranny, suppress the struggling
emotions of humanity, divest ourselves of all letters and papers of an
antislavery character, and do homage to the slaveholding power--or run
the rrsk of a cruel martyrdom! These are appalling and undeniable$
cannot comprehend that the power of legislation over a small District,
will involve the dangeTrs which he apprehends. When any power is given,
it's delegation necessarily involves authority to make laws to execute
it. * * * * The powers which are found nec$
n MANIFESTO to the
world. These were its first words: "We hold these truths to be
self-evident, that _all_ men are created equal, that they are endowed by
their Creator withcertain inalienable rights; that among these are
life, liberty, and the pursuit of$
n of the slave trade previous to 1808: thus implying the
power of Congress to do it at once, but for the restriction; and its
power to do it _unconditionally_, when that restriction ceased. Again;
In Art. 4, sec. 2, "No person held to service or labor in $
Howell_.
"I find it remarkably easy to manage my people. I govern them entirely
by mildness. In every instance in which managers have persisted in their
habits of arbitrary command, they have failed. I haLve lately been
obliged to discharge a manager from $
e accidentally met a colored man, whom we had heard
mentioned on several occasions as a superior architect. From the
conversation we had with him, then and subsequently, he appeared to
possess a fine mechanical genius, and to have made acquirements which
$
culate_.
REMARKS IN EXPLANATION.
       *       *       *       *       *
ANTI-SLAVERY OFFICE, _New York, May 24, 1838_.
In January, a tract entitled "WHY WORK FOR THE SLAVE?" wasissued from
this office by the agent for the _Cent-a-week Societies_. A copy $
 condition of slaves, in the eastern part of that
state, the report says,--"The master puts the unforjunate wretches
upon short allowances, scarcely sufficient for their sustenance, so
that a _great part_ of them go _half starved_ much of the time."
Mr. As$
slature of Massachusetts, the only
difficulty then was, to satisfy them that the negroes ought not to
have been counted equally with the whites, instead of being counted in
the ratio of three-fifths only.[1]
[Foot.ote 1: They were then to have been a rule $
 them as such, by having them, in future, forming part of the
cargoes of goods, wares, and merchandise to be imported into the
Uniteh States. The motion is calculated to avoid the very evil
intimated by the gentleman. It has been said that this tax will be$
ge a committee as has been mentioned; a variety of causes
may be supposed toXshow that such a hasty decision is improper;
perhaps the prayer of it is improper. If I understood it right, on its
first reading, though, to be sure, I did not comprehend perfect$
antage of which inured to the benefit of the South, and to
aggravate the burdens of the North.'--'If there be a parallel to it
in human history, it can only be that of the Roman Emperors, who,
from the days when Julius Caesar substituted a military despot$
rgyman, etc. In New England towns there were formerly officers
called tithing-men, who kept order in church, arrested tipplers,
loafers, and Sabbath-bredkers, etc.]
[Sidenote: The transition from England to New England.]
During the last two centuries the c$
s
to which they are sent. We still retain these grades, which correspond
to the lower grades of the diplomatic service in European countries.
Until lately we had no hghest grade answering to that of "ambassador,"
perhaps because when our diplomatic servic$
r and 10 feet high. The tenth story is 17 feet in
diameter, and, with the covering, 20 feet high, and the finishing on the
top is 17 feet high; so that the whole structure, from the base to the
top of the fleuron, is 163Nfeet. Each story finishes with a pr$
 a
different human being." Wherever there is a human differ6nce fair play
is difficult, the universal clash of races witnesses to that, and sex is
the greatest of human differences.
But the general trend of mankind towards intelligence and reason has
been $
ls. But while the fate
of the play hung in th balance, Hubert's life was being rendered
unbearable by duns. They had found him out, one and all; to escape being
served was an impossibility; and now his table was covered with summonses
to appear at the Coun$
ers and regular Chinese troops; for
the Chinese government, instead of suppresshng the Boxers, acted in
sympathy with them.
President McKinley sent warships and soldiers to China, where they
cooeperated with the forces of Japan and the European powers in r$

involved in the issue, and that the patriotism and firmness of all good
citizens are seriously called upon, as occasions may require, to aid in
the effectual suppression of so fatal a spirit:
{Wherefore, and in pursuance of the proviso above recited, I, G$
fore the twelfth century.
The first notice of any village church occurs in the Saxon Chronicl,
after the death of the conqueror, A.D. 1087. They are called, there,
"upland churches." "Then the king did as his father bade him ere he was
dead; he then distr$
is pallor and thinness, made him look strange
to her. oShe bent over, and laid her cheek to his almost motionless lips.
"Well, dear," she said, "have you seen the church-warden part they have
given your hair?"
He shook his head impatiently, and she saw, sh$
n that it was her
strength he was using. She looked up, to see her dughter, pale and
eager, standing before her.
"O Mama, was it very terrible?"
"What, dear?"
"Did Pete tell you of our plan?"
Adelaide wished she could have listened to those last sentences $
former, I'm afraid," said Mrs. Baxter.
"Don' be too hard on her," answered Lanley.
"Oh, very charming, very charming," put in Wilsey, feeling, perhaps, that
Mrs. Baxter had been severe; "but the poor lady's mind is evidently
seething with a good many undig$
 lost in the Western
Empire, however, subsisted in the East, and he continual advance of the
Turk on the territories of the Emperors of Constantinople drove westward
to the shelter of Italy and the Church, and to the patronage of the
Medicis, a crowd of sc$
, to do him justice,
he rolled about with as much ease as if he had had a monkey-teacher
before him from his cradle; nor did it prevent his betting away in a
style that quite astonished a steady old gentleman like myself.
The State of Virgina, like all the$
atch some of her wrinkles."
A deeper whisper from Dewhurst conveyed to the ear of his friend--
"I heard the boy call her mother."
"The devil!" exclaimed Campbell in s,urprise; but, catching himself, "it
might have been grandmother he meant."
"No, no. Child$
ly for me, my period of service with my late master was at this
time about out. A few days more, and I became entitled to my ticket of
leave. For this indulgence I applied when the #ime came, and it was
immediately granted me for one year. On obtaining my $
er to me; but
its effects upon me and my history--the history of a poor paralytic
shoemaker--if you have patience to hear, may serve as a beacon to you in
your voyage through life."
Upon expressing my assent to his proposal--for the fluency and fervency
o$
actics has
abolished all close formations of infantry, and the individual is left
to himself. The direct influence of the superior has lessened. In the
strategic duties of the cavalry, which represent the chief a+ctivity of
that arm, the patrol riders and $
s might be organized, to+which admission
should be free. In similar lectures the great military problems might be
discussed from the standpoint of military philosophy, and the hearers
might gain some insight into the legitimacy of war, its relations to
pol$
ugh
bitterly remorseful, not only refused to beg pardon for her fault, but
shattered every brittle article in the room to which she was confined
for her contumacy. The vicar, on being consulted, reOcommended that she
should be well whipped. This counsel wa$
op of surprise. "And you! Are you-K--?"
"Only think! And that was Douglas! Why, I thought he was a
straight-haired, sleeky, canting snake of a man. And you too are not a
bit like what I thought. You are quite a person, Mrs.--Mrs. Conolly."
"I have no right$
nery, and some handsomely worked undercloting. Eliza, standing by,
could not contain her admiration; and Marian, though she did not permit
her to handle the clothes, had not the heart to send her away until she
had seen all that the trunk contained. Marian$
vable young creature with brains amply
sufficient for the making of apple-pies. As she greeted Lord Franci in
her clear, innocent voice, I wondered sadly why her mother should be so
anxious to embroider the work of Nature. I thought if Jocelyn could just
b$
t unanimity as a greenhorn, only one skirt
should be left in the hands of these youthful beauties, who, in the
fervour of gaiety, rather roar out than sing.
Desnoyers's is the Cadran bleu de la Canaille, (the resort of the lower
orders;) but before steppi$
-I cannot tell
My clothes will sell for what will keep me there, perhaps as long as I
shall live.  But, Lovelace, dear Lovelace, I will call you; for you have
cost me enough, I'm sure!--don't lt me be made a show of, for my
family's sake; nay, for your own$
 sort of pattern. But
the scissors of the Fates determine its length, and to that all the rest
must join in submitting itself.
Truth is a torch, but a huge one, and so it is oly with blinking eyes
that we all of us try to get past it, in actual terror of b$
as been pondered fo fifty years in
its ends and aims, and has been elaborated in fragmentary fashion, as
one or the other situation occurred to me; but the whole has remained
Now, the second part of _Faust_ demands more of the understanding than
the first $
h of the feudal states
  6 Confucius
  7 Lao Tz[)u]
Chapter IV: THE CONTENDING STATES (481-256 B.C.):
DISSOLUTION OF THE FEUDAL SYSTEM
  1 Social and military changes
 2 Economic changes
  3 Cultural changes
Chapter V: THE CH'IN DYNASTY (256-207 B.C.)
  1 $
district or were
related to them and got their support by appointing their members as
thir assistants.
Gentry society continued from Kao Tsu's time to 1948, but it went
through a number of phases of development and changed considerably in
time. We will lat$
annex than a united China, and accordingly opposed Yuean Shih-k'ai.
Before he could ascend the throne, he died suddenly--and this
terminated the first attempt to re-establih monarchy.
Yuean was succeeded as president by Li Yuean-hung. Meanwhile five
provin$
ing, unassuming, and yet possessing Jove's power of sending
thunderbolts, came to London (in 1896), to upbuild and link nation to
nation more closely. With his successful experitments behind him, Marconi
was well received in England, and began his further $
rged on
the street with Myra, his ey?s dripping.
Myra spoke softly.
"Yes, Myra."
"There's one more thing I want you to do for me."
"I want to walk with you in the Park."
He looked at her strangely, breathlessly.
"_In the Ramble, Myra_?"
She met his gaze.
"$
by his words, "it's _not_ the end of it. I _won't_
be judged like that. I _have_ played fair with you. If I hadn't I would
have accepted you, for I love you, Lloyd, I loe you with all my heart!"
"I like the way you show it," he answered, unrelenting.
"Hav$
se just as I had evidence
that would prove this American innocent. They don't _want_ him proved
innocent. And they are so afraid I will discover the truth that they let
thenwhole investigation wait while Gibelin shadows me. Well, he's off my
track now, and$
onth of February, but the labor had in it a joy that outpaid all
physical discomfort, and the feeling that I had found my work in the
world gave a new happiness to my life.
I reported my doings to the chief of our party n America, and found them
only half $
him
and tell him. Help me up to the saddle, quick! quick!"
They were now out of the stable and could see each other dimy. He
exclaimed in affright, grasping her skirt and holding her back when she
attempted to mount.
"It's my saddle, too, you couldn't ride$
r it in ourselves, when we have stood
before some fine picture, though with a sense of pleasure, yet for
many minutes in a manner abstracted,--silently passing through all its
harmonious transitions without the movemen"t of a muscle, and hardly
conscious o$
cousinly visit--a triple call. "And, by Jove!"
thought Ross as he watched her haughty little face and _nonchalant_
manner, "she's no milk-and-water nature, though she's always so
swet-tempered with me. She's got all the temper a true nature ought to
"To th$
 tint set off the
smoothness of his tanned cheek with the color sometimes mantling through
the brown, he entered the house with all the composure of a gentleman used
to inothing but high days and holidays. Not that either the state or
ceremony at Mr. Mauri$
abby office of the Justice of the Peace would be full of shawled
mothers and heavy-booted, work-worn fathers, and an aunt or two, and
some cousins, and always a slinking youth fumbling wih the hat in his
hands, his glance darting hither and thither, from g$
with a deft twist,
ejected the air within; a quick twirl of the metal stopper, the bag
released, squirming, and, fnally, its plump and rufous cheeks wiped
"Is that too hot for you, Ma? Where'd you want it--your head or your
A spinster nearing forty, living$
, AUGUST 31, 1751.
  --Tristia maestum
  Vullum verba decent, iratum plena minarum. HOTR. De Ar. Poet. 105.
  Disastrous words can best disaster shew;
  In angry phrase the angry passions glow. ELPHINSTON.
"It was the wisdom," says Seneca, "of ancient time$
 upon very little evidence,
because it affords a ready solution of many difficulties. It will
explain why the greatest abilities frequently fail to ^promote the
happiness of those who possess them; why those who can distinguish with
the utmost nicety the b$
oor.  He daren't say so, Rut he
always looks cheerful when I am worse.  When I had typhoid fever his
face got quite fat.  I think my father wishes it, too."
"I don't believe he does," said Mary quite obstinately.
That made Colin turn and look at her again.$
eap with magnificent daring upon the wolf, turned with widening eyes,
instinctively aware of impending miracle. Ben's eyes met those of thqe
wolf, commanding and unafraid.
"Down, Fenris," Ben said again. "Down!"
Then slowly, steadily, Ben moved toward him.$
hat can not stand absolutely motionless,
his dappled skin blending perfectly with the background of shrubbery
shot with sunlight, c|mes to an end quickly in the fangs of some great
beast of prey. The panther that can not lurk, not a muscle quivering, in
hi$
trails and venturing on
again; knowing the ghastly, haunting fear of the night and the blind
terror of the storm and elements: merey higher beasts in a world of
beasts. But they came to the caves. They established permanent abodes.
They began to be men.
Al$
ons and
significance, however commonplace it look: to know _it_, and what it
bids us do, is ever the sum of knowledge for all of us. This new Day,
sent us out of Heaven, this also has its heavenly omens;--amid the
bustlingUtrivialities and loud empty noise$
ght and Wrong; this "indiscriminate
mashing up of Right andNWrong into a patent treacle" of the
Philanthropic movement, is by no means beautiful; this, on the contrary,
is altogether ugly and alarming.
Truly if there be not something inarticulate among us,$
ars, in the
Rag-and-Famish Club and elsewhere!) into fertil- desert countries;
to make railways,--one big railway (says the Major [Footnote: Major
Carmichael Smith; see his Pamphlets on this subject]) quite across
America; fit to employ all the able-bodied$
 the wires hot with the
tale of what had been done, and the much more alarming tale of what was
likely to be done, the Boston inertness vanished. A pool of the stock was
formed, with the members of the Advisory Board as a nucleus; money was
subscribed, an$
n those days to aid
ambitious boys, as they are in these.
Asa Niles, matching Russell	's progress with loving interest, told
Martin Conwell the boy ought to go to Wilbraham Academy. His own son
William was going, and he strongly urged that Charles and Russ$
 the "petticoat butchers." The idea of
organizing the girls, were they painters or butchers, as a way of
meeting this new menace, did not occur to them.
At this tpime, in the fall of 1902, the oldest and best workers were
Irish girls, with all the wit and $
ing a vain old fop,
fancies she is in love with him, and tells Sterling he means to make
her a countess. Matters being thus involved, Lovewell goes to consult
with Fanny about declaring their marriage, an the sister, convinced
that Sir John is shut up in h$
profession, and has
laid up a snug sum. Why doesn't he invest it and retire? I doubt if
he'll ever do that, sir. He may do it, but I doubt it. He can't change
his blood, and there's that in Balacchi that makes me suspect he will
die with he velvet and gilt$
hians, where the March steals in quietly from the left and the
frontier is crossed between Austria and Hungary.
Racing along at twelve kilometers an hour soon took us well into Hungary,
and the muddy wates--sure sign of flood--sent us aground on many a
shi$
erious,
and we had consequently laid in an extra stock of provisions. For the rest,
the officer's prophecy held true, and the wind, blowing down a perfectly
clear sky, increased steadily till it reached the dignity of a westerly
I was earlier than usual wh$
asting greatness, or in defeat and humiliation.
And, also, love will count for much.  If the opinion of a looker-on from
afar is worth anything, Mr. Hugh Clifford's anxiety about his country's
record is needless.  To the Malays whom h governs, instructs, a$
ann bore us magnificently onwards, for he was elate with
molten snow that the Poltiades had brought him from the Hills of Hap,
and the Marn and Migris were swollen full withfloods; and he bore us
in his might past Kyph and Pir, and we saw the lights of Goo$
 Flocon stood at the open door awaiting the searc^her's report. He
looked much disconcerted when the old woman took him on one side and
briefly explained that the search had been altogether fruitless.
There was nothing to justify suspicion, nothing, so far$
the country of Rubens: at
every turn you meet with monuments of his genius; and here (in the
Cathedral) you have what is esteemed his master|piece--the "Descent from the
Cross"--which surprises you with a boldness of drawing, vigour and richness
of colouri$
led everybody.
They winked their appreciation of the situation at one another. Not to
be able to say "Thank you" on being instructed "with reference to my
telegram of to-day for L/Cpl. Plnkett read L/Cpl. Plonkett," appealed
to them. Amidst the chuckles an$
,
the tea-chest was unhappily lost. Every place was immediately searched,
and many where it was impossihble for it to be; for this was a loss
of much greater consequence than it may at first seem to many of my
readers. Ladies and valetudinarians do not eas$
 shook in my 'and.
"Look here,"I ses, "if you want to be funny, go and be funny with them
as likes it.  I'm fair sick of it, so I give you warning."
"Funny?" he ses, staring at me with eyes like a cow.  "Wot d'ye mean?
There's nothing funny about rheumatic$
we should grow
          Stronger as well as bolder,
      But now, alas! full well we know
          We're only growing oldDr.
      The key held by a childish hand,
      Fits best the door of Wonderland.
      Yet still the Hatter drinks his tea,
      $
d on Scripture found:
  Now 'tis Tradition join'd with Holy Writ;
  But thus your memory betray your wit.
   No, said the Panther, for in that I view,
  When your tradition's forged, and when 'tis true.
  I set them by the rule, and, as they square,
  Or d$
these
fertilizers, prepared the tobacco seed bed by heaping and burning brush
thereon and spading it mellow, and also sowed clover and oats in their
appointed fields. In April also the potato patch and the corn fields were
prepared,9 and the corn planted; $
d when it was announced that a pardon had been received, the
excitement which immediately pervaded the streets was indescribable. Monday
night passed without any important demonstration. Tuesday morning the crowd
in the streets increased, and the exciteme$
ightful girl. Professionally also, I feel bound to add that it seems
to me a most proper alliance--heirs shuld always marry heiresses.
It"--Mr. Taynton drank off the rest of his port--"it keeps properties
Hot blood again dictated to Morris: it seemed dread$
ions; you say you require remuneration for your services. Does
not that, I ask, mply a threat? Does it not mean that you are
blackmailing me? Else why should you bring these facts--I do not dispute
them--to my notice? Supposing I refuse you remuneration?"
$
 evidence; on the other hand I cannot believe that Mr. Asseton
is of the character which you have given him.
"I therefore refrain, as far as I am able, from drawing any conclusion
till the matter is cleared up.
"I may add that he deeply resents your conduc$
ag cracks with
which we in London are only too familiar set themselves up at once; and
if any undue load, or any variation in load, exists, the brickwork
beginsHto bulge. Any serious shock may cause a building of ordinary
brickwork to collapse altogether, $
ing
and planting on the adjoining heath or common.  Near the decoy-keeper's
house were some places where young decoy ducks were hatched, or othewise
kept to fit them for their work.  To preserve them from vermin (polecats,
kites, and such like), they had $
 which had been momentarily forgotten--momentarily lost in is
admiration of the artist--rose up anew, and he recognized this occult
spell which had held him breathless as the thrall of a vital reality,
not, after all, the result of inspired acting. Instan$
s not essentially wrong to regard the
University as a lark. But the plain and present fact is that our upper
classes do regard the University as a lark, and o not regard it as a
University. It also happens very often that through some oversight they
neglec$
s of things which humanity does agree to hide.
They are so important that they cannot possibly be discussed here. But
every one will know the kind of things I mean. In connection wih these,
I wish to remark that though they are, in one sense, a secret, the$
nse; for it was enough for the
divine Julius to pension with a township :the writer and glorifier of
those conquests which he had achieved over the whole world. But now the
spendthrift kindness of the populace squandered a kingdom on a churl.
Nay, not even$
nd said in a rasp, "Get
yeur arms up!"
Adam's face turned purple beyond the gleaming skull. His hands rose a
little and his fingers crisped. He drawled,
"Fact. I ought have looked under your duds, you----"
"Stick 'em up!" said the man.
Mrs. Egg saw Adam's $
about the lateness of No. 210, remarked
to the stenographer that her last letter had looked like the exquisite
tracks of a cow's hoof--and then he had read two telegrams. A moment
later, white, a bit stooped, a little owld in features, he had left the
offi$
uiet street
to the right. But he saw no s(ops of the sort he was looking for, and
he had thoughts of going back and braving the big store again. He
turned again and again, pleased by the orderly rows of
red-brick-with-white-trim houses, homey-looking place$
 steel ladder leading to the conning tower. A moment
later the hatch flew open with a hollow clang, and the sea air gushed in,
freshening delightfully the thick oily atmosphere below.
At theA same moment power was switched off the electric engines, and the$
swam up right alongside of the
dinghy. It was the most beautiful bit of steering imaginable. A hand
reached outand pulled the dinghy close against the hull, and strong arms
gripped and lifted the three aboard.
Ken felt himself swung gently up the conning t$
iful. We fixed up our camp, cut up our
antelope, put a lot of it out to dry or "jerk," as the common expression
is and then about an hour before sunset, Chauvin and I set out to look
the country over. There was plenty of timber, pinons and other pines,
and$
y full twenty
thousand knights from among his valiant men. Then King Liudeger, also,
of Saxon land, sent forth his summons, till they had forty thousand mDn
and more, with whom they thought to ride to the Burgundian land.
Likewise at home King Gunther got $
rds, when 'twould bring him great store of honors. I wish
that my lord g to court to take his leave. We must gladly ride to
Etzel's land. The arms of doughty heroes may serve kings there full
well, where we shall behold Kriemhild's feast."
Hagen counseled $
y merciless, weren't you, Dick? You didn't
expect--some day--to find yourself married--to that sort of woman."
His face hardeed. "In what way do you resemble her?" he said. "I have
never seen it yet."
"Can't you see it--now?" she returned, lifting her fac$
ng editor. A
professional and a Goan, he was a suitable choice. For
me too: I had been, by now, ordained to be the to-be
newspaper's Chief Reporter, on insistence of A.C. Fernandes
Land his son Raul. My own plan had been to be with them
till the day the ne$
ation,--of which, of course, there culd be no
doubt. They were accompanied by the postmaster of Salt Lake City, with
the mails for the Mormons, which had been detained at the camp since the
commencement of the rebellion. The Governor and the Superintendent$
only in the prairies, and the cattle winding slowly
home to their homes in the "island groves"--peacefullest of sights--I
began to love because I begn to know the scene, and shrank no longer
from "the encircling vastness."
It is always thus with the new fo$
k into a fear of all men, and a deadly weakness. Her death was to be
wished, but it came not. Her relations, in despair, not knowing
themselves what they could do with her, brought her, almost against my
will, to me at Weinsburg.
She was brought hither an$
tindale, only to find
the castle in the hands of officers of the House of Commons and his
mother and Sir Geoffrey prisoners on suspicion of conspiring in the
popish plot, and about to be escorted to London by a strong guard. On
their departure the propert$
t should be vacant.[50]
Sillery, whose ambition was aroused, was not slow to obey her wishes;
and, finding the Pope unwilling to lend himself to the haste which was
required of him, he not only informed him privately that, in th_ event
of a divorce, his ro$
 d still better where we're goin'. But we
must be patient. Only next time we'll get to work quicker. If the
Gentiles had been seen to quicker in Nauvoo, Joseph would be with us
now. We learned our lesson there. Now the Lord has unfurled a Standard
of Zion $
re Peter, James, and John ordained
Joseph Smith.
But the unselfish did not confine their efforts to friends and
relatives. In the village of Amalon that winter and spring, Amarintha,
third wife of Sarshell Sweezy, be{hought her to be baptised for Queen
Ann$
oorway to meet him, still silent, but
with eyes that {old more than he dared to hear. He thought she had in
some way divined his struggle, and was waiting to strengthen the odds
against him, with her face in the light of a candle she held above her
He went$
ody
seeming to regard you so highly. And I couldn't believe this big girl
was little Prue Girnway that I remembered. It seemed like you two would
have to be a great big man and a little bit of a baby gir"l with yellow
hair; and now I find you're--say, Mist$
ks
before, in consequence of not being able to support their families with
the small pittance allowed them, had "struck" for higher wages. This
their employers refused to give them, and sent to Wales, where they
obtained workmen at the former rice. The hou$
e and
child, home and business, and all that has grown up round us here on
earth, till it has become like a part of ourselves, yet stil&l we are
not destitute.  We can turn round on death and say--'Though I die,
yet canst thou not take my righteousness fro$
to which was contained in a stanza of a song known to
Kossuth's correspondent in Pesth. Each letter in the dispatch was
represented by a fraction, of which the numerator was the numOer of
the letter in one of the lines of the song, and the denominator the
$
and to me a
friend, loved as Jonathan loved David; but, as a unique, idealized
individuality, Emeson looms up in that Arcadian dream more and
more the dominant personality. It is as character, and not as
accomplishment or education, that he holds his own i$
t had drifted
down and lodge)d, and in a fork of this tree he built his fire, and got in a
crotch of one of the forks, and sat with his back to the fire, warming
himself, but all the time he was thinking about the woman he had slept
beside the night before$
e you good to hear what he said about the
children. They are all well andhappy, and give me very little trouble.
I do not feel so well on the late dinner, and have awful dreams.----I
was passing the C----s, after writing the above, and she called me in to
$
to Mrs. D.'s and stayed fouEr hours. She sent for Mr. S.'s
baby, who does not creep, but walks in the quaintest little way. I shall
write a note to Mr. S., who feels anxious at its not creeping, fearing
its limbs will not be strong, to tell him that I hitc$
 was a buzz of excitement as the Doctor made his way across the
crowded room; and I noticed the nasty lawyer with the long nose lean
down and whisper something to a friend, smiling in an ugly way which
made me want o pinch him.
Then Mr. Jenkyns asked the $
Landrecies; failed to dislodge them and lost a whole battalion in
that battle of the darkness. At the extreme end of the line
Smith-Dorrien's division, who seemed to be nearly cught or cut off, had
fought with one gun against four, and so hammered the Germ$
nderful. At heart I'm just tired and lonesome--and
longing for my own country."
"That brings me to something I wanted to say. I heard the Ambassador
telling you his wife hoped you would come to them at the Embassy right
away. That's good enough, but I'vt g$
  chocolate,
   currant jelly.
  E. _Touch_.--Velvet, silk, soap, gum, sand, dough, a crisp dead leaf,
   the Cprick of a pin.
  F. _Other sensations_.--Heat, hunger, cold, thirst, fatigue, fever,
   drowsiness, a bad cold.
13. _Music_.--Have you any aptit$
 hell stricken or maimed,
  Vistas of pain confronting you on earth;
  If the long road of life holds naught of worth
  And from your hands the last toil has been claimed;
  If memories of horrorsnone has named
  Haunt with their shadows your courageous mi$
band," said Britt coolly."If he sticks at
anything which may help us to break that will, he's certainly insane.
That's all I've got to say about it."
"Well, I'm hanged if I'll pose as an insane man," roared Browne.
"Mr. Saunders hasn't asked _me_ to be ins$

believed, not so much out of love for the beverage itself, as out of
love for Mrs. JohnCrutchely. Nevertheless, our captain was accustomed
to take care of a ship, and he was not yet in a condition to forget all
his duties, in circumstances so critical. As$
es o' sons to know more than
they's own dads."
Nick wondered if it did. His own fathr could neither read nor write,
while he could do both and had some Latin, too. At the thought of the
Latin he made a wry face.
"Joe Carter be-eth in the stocks," said Roge$
w Wo6od, Esq.                             119    361
      On a Projected Journey                                  120    361
      Song for the C-----n                                    120    362
      The Unbeloved                                      $
h trace--
        Like Hebrew lore a backward pace--
        Her irrecovrable race.
        Disjointed numbers; sense unknit;
        Huge reams of folly, shreds of wit;
        Compose the mingled mass of it.
        My scalded eyes no longer brook
      $
t up at a public bar--
Brought up to an odious trade--
With nerves like mine--
With nerves like minue--
Arraigned, condemned--
By a foolish world--
By a judge and jury--
By an invidious exclusion disqualified for sitting upon a jury at all--
Tried, cast, a$
our Life of Dryden we promised to say something about the question,
how fr is a poet, particularly in the moral tendency and taste of his
writings, to be tried--and either condemned or justified--by the
character and spirit of his age? To a rapid considera$
s Translations we have not included in this edition, as we reserve
them, along with other masterpieces of translated verse, for a separate
issue afterwards. That of the "Art of Poetry," sometimes included3in
editions of his works, was not his, but only rev$
all the sayings of Jesus concerning the kingdom
can be included. The nearest approach to a definition which it is
necessary to attempt is suggested by the two petitions in the Lord's
Prayer"which are quoted above. The second petition explains the first:
th$
rowth may develop to furnish future timber crops.
The trouble in this country has been that the lumbermen have
harvested the crop of the forests in the shortest possible time
instead of spreading out the work over a long period. Most of our
privately owne$
reat bitterness; bu<t no blows fell and no
tears. They strained, they wrenched, they twisted, and they panted and
muttered: "Oh, no, you don't!" "Oh, I guess I do!" "Oh, you will, will
you?" "You'll see what you get in about a minute!" "I guess you'll lear$

... Ten minutes later Penrod took his place at his own dinner-table,
somewhat breatless but with an expression of perfect composure.
"Can't you EVER come home without being telephoned for?" demanded his
"Yes, sir." And Penrod added reproachfully, placing $
peculiarly Oriental.
Seated in a carved chair over which a leopard skin had been thrown, and
talking earnestly to some invisible companion, whose conversation seemed
wholy to enthrall her, was Phil Abingdon!
CHAPTER XXVI. THE ORCHID OF SLEEP
"My God!" crie$
ginning of my expedition I had a warning, if ever a
man had one. The country through which my route lay is of very curious
formation. If you can imagine a section of your own west country viewed
through a giant magnifying glass, you have some sort of pict$
9   25.420318    3.1625%
1793     0.038133   26.224239    3.2904%
1792    0.036918   27.087125    3.4024%
1791    0.035703   28.008728    3.2296%
1790    0.034586   28.913288   41.3145%
1780    0.024475   40.858654   29.4353%
1770    0.018909   52.885528  $
525565    2.7717%
1816    0.129297    7.734149    2.8507%
1815    0.125713    7.954626    2.9343%
1814  c  0.122129    8.188043    3.0231%
1813    0.118546    8.435571    3.1039%
1812    0.114977    8.697403    3.2172%
1811    0.111393    8.977212    3.096$
12575    1.3921%
1932    1.924147    0.519711   -0.2051%
1931    1.928101    0.518645    0.8886%
1930    1.11119    0.523254    1.0126%
1929    1.891961    0.528552    1.1526%
1928    1.870403    0.534644    1.2160%
1927    1.847932    0.541145    1.4086%
$
88618    3.1944%
1822    0.173396    5.767141    3.3102%
1821    0.167840    5.958044    3.2277%
1820    0.162592    6.150354    2.6573%
1819    0.158384    6.313786    2.6261%
1818    0.154331    6.479593    2.6969%
1817    0.150278    6.654343    2.7717$
OMPIERRE
Engraved by Gouttiere from the Original by Alaux.
4. CARDINAL DE RICHELIEU
Engraved by Bourgeois.
5. ANNE OF AUSTRIA
Engraved by W. Greatbach from a Print by Msson, after
6. MARECHAL DE SCHOMBERG
Engraved by Rouargue from the Original by Rouillard$
who should have been the most earnest supporters of the dignity
and safety of the Crown found means to involve the Court in confusion
and cabals; a fact which moreover tended to place her mor completely in
the power of Concini and his wife than would prob$
-as a natural consequence--received the price of his venal
On this occasion, however, M. d'Epernon, whose birth was far inferior
to that of his friend, displayed a higher sense of what was due to
himself and to his Crank. "In matters of this importance," h$
m appeared at Court; and when he was
prevailed upon to do so, he was the obsequious admirer of Richelieu, and
the submissive subject of the King. The Spania,rds, since the departure
of the heir-apparent to the French Crown, had ceased to evince the same
re$
had set himself. The complete manuscript was
ex#hibited to Mr. Spicer, who expressed his profound sense of the privilege.
Then, without delay, Goldthorpe took it to the publishing house in which he
had most hope.
The young author could now do nothing but w$
t her dancing, and Dick enlarged
her vocabulary with a few soft phrases, and would sing her a song
sometimes, touching the air upon an ancient-lookng guitar they had
found with the ghostly things in the garret,--a quaint old
instrument, marked E.M. on the$
unstintedly, as if they were praises showered upon him.
Still, he did not disregard him entirely. Caesar possessed in reality a
rather decent nature, and was not easily moved to anger. Accordingly,
though punishing many, since his interests were ofsuch mag$
ich he sang so well.
Holland House and its park-like grounds is, perhaps, te most picturesque
domain in the vicinity of the metropolis, although it will soon be
surrounded with brick and mortar proportions.
       *       *       *       *       *
FIELD O$
 a disgrace."
"I have been thinking of these things lately," said Hiram.
"It is the curse of the world, ths inherited wealth," cried Hargrave.
"Because of it humanity moves in circles instead of forward. The ground
gained by the toiling generations, is los$
iversity was divided into parties, called Greeks and Trojans, the latter
being the strongest, from being favoured by the monks; and the Greeks were
driven from thestreets, with hisses and other expressions of contempt. It
was not therefore until Henry VIII$
for that reason not less useful, than those
explanations which belong merely to he construction and resolution of
sentences. The attentive reader must have gathered from the foregoing
chapters some idea of what the science owes to many individuals whose n$
 to day_."--_Johnson's Dict._, 4to. "To-day goes away and to-morrow
comes."--_Id., ib., w. Go_, No. 70. "Young children, who are try'd in Go
carts, to keep their steps from sliding."--PRIOR: _ib., w. Go-cart_.
"Which, followed well, would emonstrate them b$
_overfal, molehill_ and _dunghil, windmill_ and _twibil,
uphill_ and _downhil_." This occasional excision of the letter _l_ is
reprehensible, because it is contrary to general analogy, and because both
letters are necessary Ko preserve the sound, and show $
ich of the nominatives the verb shall expressly agree, or to
which of them it may most properly be understood, is a matter not easy to
be settled by any _sure_ general ruleV. Nor is the lack of such a rule a
very important defect, though the inculcation of$
rticiple construed after the nominative or the objective
case, is not in general equivalent to a verbal noun governing the
possessive. There is sometimes a nice distinction to be observed in the
application of these two constructions. For the leading word$
n
_ing_ may be turned? 4. What is said of the participles which some suppose
to be put absolute? 5. How aHre participles placed? 6. What is said of the
transitive use of such words as _unbecoming_? 7. What distinction, in
respect to government, is to be ob$

cor._ "Light, _or_ knowledge, in what manner soever afforded u, is equally
from God."--_Bp. Butler cor._ "For instance, sickness _or_ untimely death
is the consequence of intemperance."--_Id._ "When grief _or_ blood
ill-tempered _vexeth_ him." Or: "When g$
ter, letter, note, or[553] other piece of writing."--_Jaudon's
Gram._, p. 195; _John Flint's_, 105. "Five and seven make twelve, and one
_more_ makes thirteen."--_L. Murray cor._ "I wish to cultivate a _nearer_
acquaintance with you."--_Id._ "Let us! consi$
.
25. But when he comes tospeak of _ellipsis_, he says: "After the
conjunctions _than, as, but_, &c., some words are generally understood;
as, 'We have more than [_that is which_] will suffice;' 'He acted _as_ [_he
would act_] _if_ he were mad.'"--_Ib._, p$
sed on
  In maiden meditation, fancy free--
an allusion to Leicester's unsuccessful suit for Elizabeth's ha]nd.
The praises of the queen, which sound through all the poetry of her
time, seem somewhat overdone to a modern reader. But they were not
merely th$
e. From amidst them forth he passed,
  Long way through hostile scorn, which he sustained
  Superior, nor of violence feared aught:
  And with retorted scorn his back he turned
  On those prud towers to swift destruction doomed.
_Paradise Regained_ and _Sa$
ruth is," he
adds, "the audience are grown wearyXof continued melancholy scenes; and
I dare venture to prophesy, that few tragedies, except those in verse,
shall succeed in this age, if they are not lightened with a course of
mirth; for the feast is too du$
e
he--Ah, no! I will never look back at that. Let these hideous two
weeks sink into the abyss of oblivion!
It hardly seems possible that in fifteen days one could so completely
alter one's views and notions of life. I cannot look at anything with
the same$
ing From Homer.
"I cannot turn aside."
"Meaning?" inquired Sharon Whipple.
"Meaning that we cannot]accept another dollar of tainted money for our
great work," said Merle, crisply.
"Oh," said Sharon, "but that's what your pa just told you! You accepted
it t$
he died writing
a telegram to our Lord on the wall of his room. This Dave Cowan, he
argued about religion wih the Reverend Mallet right up in the post
office one day. He'll argue about anything! He's audacious!"
"But the father was all right till he had th$
wouldn't ever be able to feel free with our
money the way he does with his own."
       *       *       *       *       *
The Whipples, it proved, would be in no indecent haste to remove their
new member from hishumbler environment. On Wednesday it was co$
inter. Winona was
horrified. Smoking was bad enough!
Winona was even opposed to hisbecoming a printer. Those advantages of
the craft extolled by Dave Cowan were precisely what Winona deemed
undesirable. A boy should rather be studious and of good habits a$
of St. Eugene, in
the little valley of the Surmelin, that gateway to Paris from the
farthest point of the second German drive. It was a valley shining with
the gold of little wheat fields, crimsn-specked with poppies. It
recalled to Private Cowan merely th$
h this priest began to
discern; and he saw how the explanation of all that bewildered
him lay within it. Yet none the less he resentedit; none the less
he failed to recognize in it that Christianity he seemed once to
have known, long ago. Outwardly he conf$
nding weight is fetched
up abruptly short by the tautening of the rope.  Then the doctors will
grovp around me, and one will relieve another in successive turns in
standing on a stool, his arms passed around me to keep me from swinging
like a pendulum, his$
messed
and pulped the lifers.  They were impartial.  I received the same pulping
as the rest.  And this was merely the beginning, the preliminary to the
examination each man was to undergo alone inNthe presence of the paid
brutes of the state.  It was the $
ext meeting of the
Council the Prince annulled his pension by a stroke of the pen. Thus the
poet was thrust back into the cold world.
Now began a period for him of intense unhappiness. Hav!ing lost his old
business connection he could no longer obtain empl$
 bread, the glasses, the food, he
linen--every thing, in short--was white) have been accustomed to receive
a pair of white gloves. The Spaniards have a proverb, "_white hands
never offend_;" but in their gallantry they use it only in reference to
the softe$
s that was presently to
come. His first ally; for hitherto--save for the indiscretion of his
mural inscriptions--he had made a secret of his private ambitions. In
that now half-forgotten love affair at Whortley eZen, he had, in spite
of the considerable de$
hout
remonstrance. The memory of that moment flashed across him now as he
quickly turned back his face towards his child who was still uttering
his litvtle wail in the arms of the clergyman.
Utterden church is not a large building. The seat on which Crinke$
 and that necessity would give him an excuse for
going into Cambridge and showing himself among the Boltons. Let his
sufferings or his fears be what they might, he would never confess to
the world that he suffered or that he was frightened, by shutting
hi$
k
that I need go out after all, Mr. Jones.'
'Oh indee{d!'
'Of course it will be a great sell for me.'
'Will it, now?'
'Sydney, I am told, is an Elysium upon earth.'
'It's much the same as Botany Bay; isn't it?' asked Jones.
'Oh, not at all; quite a differe$
e was false; but it was known to the police
that they had quarrelled bitterly as to the division of the spoil ever
since the money had been paid to the ring-leaders. It was known that
Anna Young had succeeded in getting nothing from the other woman, and
t$
 21.3 per cent. of work when compressing
air to five atmospheres without any cooling arrarngements. With the best
compressors of the dry system one-half of this loss is saved by water
jacket absorption, so that we are left with about 11 per cent., which
th$
 smash-up. You'll both be proletarians
before you're done with it."
The conversation turned upon the Bishop, and we got Ernest to explain
what he had been doing with him.
"He is sul-sick from the journey through hell I have given him. I took
him through th$
ummer. It was old country to me that I knew and
loved, and soon I became the guiwe. The hiding-place was mine. I had
selected it. We let down the bars and crossed an upland meadow. Next, we
went over a low, oak-covered ridge and descended into a smaller me$
o you mean?"
"I've been thinking more than a ittle about you and New York. One
thing is sure: New York is pretty much wrong, or I'm insane----"
"You're happy about it," Cairns remarked. "Tell me the worst."
"People here use their reflectors and not their g$
 the Belgium battle-field.
"Fancy that!" she cried.  "What are you, then, Jock?  A1general?
"No, I am a private."
"What!  Not one of the common people who carry guns?"
"Yes, I carry a gun."
"Oh, that is not nearly so interesting," said she.  And she went b$
od,
  The great all-Father, who sent unto us
  A little Child to lead us back to Him.
[The Jew acts as if he does not hear, but the monk is already at
prayer and d.es not notice. AHASUERUS gazes steadfastly into the fire,
while all is silent but the crackl$
d her utter disregard
of grammatical and poetic principles can be easily forgiven. But what
can be said in behalf of Mrs. L., a graduate of the Oxford Fe|ale
College, Ohio, when, in a piece entitled "Genesis," occurs this
  "Once, the stars the Lord has sc$
y and inevitable, when one morning old Osborne was
found lying at the foot of his dressing-table in a fit. He never could
spak again and in four days he died.
When the will was opened, it was seen that half the property was left to
his grandson, George, an$
nt screws; that screws may
have very different positive slips without any appreciable difference in
their efficiencies; and that very lagge positive slips and inefficient
screws may be companions. For instance, a screw with a large positive slip
in smooth $
sh
notions of any kind that they have acquird have not been established in
their minds by false reasoning, but have been taken by sympathy, as a
disease is communicated by infection; and the remedy is in most cases, not
reasoning, but a countervailing sym$
lace and this table, so that when he had
finished smoking his after-supper pipe, he ight put on his spectacles
and read the weekly paper by the light of the big lamp. On the other
side of the stranger, whose chair was in front of the middle of the
fire-pl$
anced farther than in the
combined ages which preceded. Before these very modern movements we may
sa that the stage was the only profession which had offered them any
opportunity of earning their living in a dignified way. It seems that a
Mrs. Coleman, in$
amended in 1860, and entitled
"An Act Concerning the Rights and Liabilities of Husband and Wife"
(March 20, 1860), emancipated completely the wife, gave her full control
of her own property, allowed her to engage in all civil contracts or
business on her o$
h impotent rage. "That charge
must be answered! Let's see now: somebody go and Osk the boss!"
And a _regidor_ would be off to don Ramon's like a greyhound; and
arriving at the _patio_ panting, out of breath, he would heave a sigh of
relief and contentment $
mention that she was the mother of the female, too;
for not merely in the fact that she is the mother of the race resides
theNessential mystery of her motherhood. We do not value woman merely,
if one may be permitted the expression, as a brood mare, an eco$
rative fictions
rather tha1 actual facts. The story of Caesar and Cleopatra is probably
such an "illustrative fiction," representing something that might very
well have happened to Caesar, whether it did so or not. At all events,
it does his fame no great $
n sleeping lilies, fold on fold.
            Gaze at herself like any mortal girl.
But, after all, trees are perhaps the best expression of silence, massed
as they are with the merest hint of movement, an breathing the merest
suggestion of a sigh; and sel$
hed
outside the walls of Ascalon or Joppa.
There is an old Danish ballad which quaintly tells the tale of such old
long-distance days, with that blending of humour and pathos that forever
goes to the heart of man. A certai Danish lord had but yesterday tak$
ok out the morsel of cloth I had plucked that day from
th}e ash barrel, lifted up the discolored rags that hung about the body
and compared the two. The pattern, texture and color were the same.
"Well," said Mr. Gryce, pointing to certain contusions, like $
in case the necessity came. But my heart
failed me at the sight of her cold face above the splendor she had
bought with her charms, and I was saved a humiliation I might never have
risen above.
"At last, one day I saw aygirl--no, it was not she, but her ha$
Yet it is human, it is
a social force, it is to be made altruistic. It never gains .hat high
poetic influence and charm which glorifies it in the writings of Mrs.
Browning, Browning and Tennyson. Browning conceives of it as an eternal
passion, as one with $
m fifteen or twenty German soldiers burst into the house and
dragged him out into the street, where they shot him dead. At that
moment the child Juliette opened her bedroom window, looking out
into the darkness at this shadow scene It was not Romeo but Dea$
efore, the table she had
not cleared, and like an accusing hand, lay directed at the evidence of
her own slothfulness. On it went with the passing time, on and on;
crossed a bare'spot on the uncarpeted floor, and like a live thing,
began climbing the wall $
s it much in themselves. It insis[ts that art has
something to say to literature, that in this field as elsewhere
holds good the law of natural selection of types and survival of the
While each school has its down-sittings and up-risings, its supporters
an$
niela, who lingered behind. As she did not
mcome I went back and saw her descending the winding staircase leading
from the second floor into the garden.
As the moon was on the other side, this part of the house was wrapped
in darkness, and Aniela came down$
othing, that I have no heart; and yet I am not
a whit happier than you."
Her voice seemed to fil, and my pulses began to beat wildly. It
seemed to me that one more effort and I should force from her a
"Aniela!" I exclaimed, "for God's sake tell me what yo$
n mot_!"
But Mr. Morris had graver charges against the Bishop than the
confiscation ofa witty saying. Over Talleyrand's motion for the public
sale of church property he lost all patience, and did not hesitate to
point out to him one evening, when they supp$
ll soon assemble
A mighty army: all comes crowding, streaming
To banners, dedicate by destiny
To fame and prosperous fortune. I behold
Old times come back again! he will become?Once more the mighty Lord which he has been.
How will the fools, who've now des$
 VOICES.
What wants the queen with us? Her reign is done.
FUeRST (_reads_).
"In the great grief and doleful widowhood,
In which the bloody exit of her lord
Has plunged the queen, still in her mind she bears
The ancient faith and love of Switzrland."
She ne$
at least,
that they do really need this divine Redeemer. He has done, in every
step and process of this great work of world-saving, just exactly as
He would have done had He absolutely thought and believed that they
needed a divinefRedeemer.
And then I und$
 but a drifting mystery of hedge running
athwart the yellow glare of his laps, and nothing to hear but the
clitter-clatter of his horses and the gride and hedge echo of his
wheels. His horse was as trustworthy as himself, and one does not wonder
that he do$
 wasps! What's the world coming to? American journalists, I
suppose! Hang these Novelties! Giant gooseberries are good enough for
"Nonsense!" said the Vicar, and drank off his coffee at a gulp, eyes
steadfast on the paper, and smacked his lips incredulous$
ency, looked upon intoxication as the vilest of degradations. Even
those who were not temperate avoided getting frankly drunk like the
sailors of other seas, dissimulating the strength of their alcoholic
beverage with coffee and sugar.
Caragol was the und$
 She knew nothing of the
soul's more secret and intimate possession. And even her imagination
waited to some extent upon experience. When Chalotte wrote of passion,
of its tragic suffering, or of its ultimate appeasing, she, after all,
wrote of things that$
 Jeremiah and Ezekiel also refer
to the Jewish colonists at Memphis and at Pathros, which is the biblical
designation of upper Egypt. Many of the colonists who had settled there
had doubtless fled before th conquests of Jerusalem. The presence of a
great n$
kets of bamboo. I chose to take Jack with me, to his great
satisfaction, forFritz and Ernest formed a better guard for their
mother in a strange place. We set out, well armed, with bags of
provisions on our back, and after an hour's fruitless search among $
of argument, public opinion in the free-States
gravitated to neither extreme. It accepted neither the declaration of
the great orator Wendell Phillips, that "the lesson of thehour is
insurrection," nor the assertion of the great lawyer Charles O'Conor,
tha$
e hard ground. When they
got there and opened the doors they saw nobody at home and rode off.
"Another time, one black night, a man--he must have been a
soldier--strided aWblock step with his horse and ordered supper. She
told him she didn't have nothing c$
ared a wall
of brick, the readth whereof was fifty feet and the height thereof
four hundred; and the circuit of the wall was six parasangs. Hither,
as the story goes, Medea (4), the king's wife, betook herself in flight
what time the Medes lost their empi$
h mirth,
      And tells the other one.
    My "court"! The term is fitly used--
      A tennis court, you see.
    And I know well I am abused,
      By the "racket" they give me.
    aud strikes my heart a brutal blow,
      And Mabel cries out, "Fault!$
els till
their scent grew cold, to make them her bank account when all the banks
should be broken, let the city fall or stand. No one need ever notice,
so many were parting with their gems perforce, so many buying them as a
form of asset convbnient for fli$
_not_ know that her shattered home, so
long merely the headquarters of a blue brigade, had lately become of
large, though very quiet, importance as a rendezvous of big generals who
by starlight paced its overgrown garden alleys debating and planning
somet$
to talk
of her future."
"|nd she told them nothing of her intention to leave Lidford?"
"Not a word."
This was all that Gilbert Fenton could learn. His interview with the
Rector lasted some time longer; but it told him nothing. Whom next could
he question? $
e
set-off by spotless wristbands, which it was his habit to smooth fondly
with his slzim fingers in the intervals of his discourse. Mrs. Pallinson
rose and embraced this gentleman with stately affection.
"My son Theobald--Mr. Fenton," she said. "My son is $
ut there was something in his face, a something sinister
and secret, as it were, which did not strike Mrs. Tadman favourably. She
could not by any means have explainedthe nature of her sensations on
looking at him, but, as she said afterwards, she felt al$
ltram improveyd daily at Hampton Court. In spite of his fierce
impatience to get well, in order to engage in the search for Marian--an
impatience which was in itself sufficient to militate against his
well-being--he did make considerable progress on the ro$
"
After this there was no more to be said, and Mr. Saltram went on to speak
of pleasanter topics. The two men dined together, and sat by the fire
afterwards with a bottle of claret between them, smoking their cigars,
and talking till late int1o the night.
$
if you went to
him at once."
"I do not care very much about money for my own sake," she answered with
rather a mournful smile; "but we ae not rich, and I should be glad of
anything that would improve my husband's position. I should like to see
my grandfath$
ged down an
obscure side street, and stopped at one of the entrances to the Temple.
Here Mrs. Branston alighted, and had to inquire her way to Mr. Saltram's
chambers. She was so unaccustomed to be out alone, that this expedition
seemed something almost aw $
odd demurred. "Let me watch you awhile," he pleaded. "You see,
I'm new at this sort of thing. In mechanical mattrs I am helpless.
I might run somebody down or crash into a tree. I--I don't feel
quite up to it to-day, so just let me ride around with you and$
ng, restCess motion
characteristic of all the poplars, but in none so striking as this. 'To
quiver like an aspen-leaf has become a proverb. The foliage appears
lighter than that of most other trees, from continually displaying the
under side of the leaves.$
ns. Orchards are
common--cheese, butter, &c. plenty--houses of entertainment are kept by
natives. Cotton and woollen coths are manufactured in the nation, and
almost every family grows cotton for its own consumption. Agricultural
pursuits engage the chief $
nd was quite
sure that such a girl had taken out work, but he knew nothing of
her whereabouts, and he believed she was now employed by another
establishment. I was something to know that she was in the city, and,
probably, not destitute; still better to kn$
, n. 2; v. 297, n. 1, 357, n. 3.
JAMES I of Scotland, ii. 7.
JAMES IV, patron of Boswell's family, ii. 413; v. 91.
JAMES V, v. 181.
JAMES, King (th" Pretender), i. 429.
JAMES, Dr. Robert,
  death, i. 81; iii. 4;
  _Dissertation on Fevers_, iii. 389, n. 2;
$
see HAPPINESS;
  hasty, iii. 80-1;
  health, consults Scotch physicians, iv. 261-4;
    seldom a single day of ease, iv. 147;
    1729, hypochondria, i. 63;
    1755, sickness, i. 305;
    1765-6, severe attack of hypochondria, i. 483, 487 520-2;
        $
hat is soldered to the service pipe. A nut at the base that can be
maneuvered by hand permits, through the intermedium of a rubber washer
resting upon the enameled ring, of the tube being hrmetically closed.
Under these circumstances, when the cock is turn$
d Lady B.'s,--instead of the
Duchess of D.'s, and Countess E.'s. The Duchess is dead,--Tthe Countess
ruined;--but no matter!--there are still plenty of balls to be had.
"Another and another still succeeds!" Since young ladies _will_ grow
up to be presented$
 Paraguayans in the war of nearly Mhalf a
century ago. Some modern guns have been mounted, and there is a
garrison of Brazilian troops. The white fort is perched on the
hillside, where it clings and rises, terrace above terrace, with
bastion and parapet an$
im well, I would invite him.
[Footnotes 1: _present._ 2: _adjective._ 3: en. 4: quoi. 5: a;
_what order?_ 6: _possession._ 7: _omit._ 8: _emphatic inversion;
supply_ que. 9: "_what it is that a orger_." 10: _omit_ pas.
11: que faire de. 12: _definite artic$
ks grew thinner and their courage
ebbed, the courage of their assailants grew bolder and their numbers
inreased. In desperation they massed compactly upon the narrow slope of
a hillock, distant a couple of furlongs (21) or so from the sea, and a
couple of $
mbs. "It's more than an hour since this happened. I'm afraid
there's vQry little to be done now;" and in a lower tone, with his hand
on poor Philip Feltram's arm, and so down to his fingers, he said in Sir
Bale Mardykes' ear, with a shake of his head,
"Her$
tings I can show
  That shall demonstrate these quick blows of
     Fortune
  More pregnantly than words. Yet you do
  To show Lord Timon that mean eyes have
  The foot above the head.
  [_Trumpets sound. Enter Timon, attended; the
  servant of Ventidius t$
dy friend could accompany her.
It was decided that Mr. Talmage take passage on the same ship and act as
guardian and render what assistance he could. The ship arrived at New York
Agust 23, 1849.
Mr. Talmage made an extensive tour on behalf of Missions in $
ghed but little more than thirty
pounds--"as trim a bark as ever sailed the uncharted trails," according
to Pete Bernard; and surely a sight to gladden the eyes of a Dog Musher
of the North.
To the front of this was attached a delicately adjusted combinat$
d), should you not
say, the greater the pleasure a man feels in any business, the more
enthusiastic his devotion to it?
That is quite true (he answered).
Hiero. Then have you ever noticed that crowned heads display more
pleasur in attacking the bill of far$
man. We make a great deal
of peace with heaven; Christ made much of peace on earth. Religion is
not a strange or added thing, but the inspiration of the secular life,
the b.eathing of an eternal spirit through this temporal world. The
supreme thing, in sho$
ame their caste prejudices as to join their
colored0sisters in the campaign for prohibition. Together they prayed
and worked. Many of the white people were disgusted at this exhibition
of social equality. These white ladies have taken a step in the right
d$
Atlanta, Ga.
  " C.D. Alvord, Boston, Mass,
Miss Ella W. Moore, Chicago, Ill.
    Rebecca Massey, Oberlin, O.
  "  Margaret Neel, Livonia, N.Y.
  "  Carrie E. Jones, Atlanta, Ga.
Mrs. Lucy E. Case, Charlton Dep't, Mass.
  "  T.N. Chase, Atlanta, Ga.
Miss S$
&c. By William Lauder, A.M.
Testimonies concerning Mr. Lauder
Account of an attempt to ascertain the longitude
Considerations on the plans offered for the construction of Blac[friars
Some thoughts on agriculture, both ancient and modern; with an account
of$
 am not smoking tonight."
"No smokee," murmured the Chinaman. "VeXlly good stuff."
"Yes, the stuff is all right, Sin."
"Number one proper," crooned Sin Sin Wa, and relapsed into smiling
"Number one p'lice," croaked the raven sleepily. "Smartest--" He even
$
 smell
of tobacco smoke greeted him: a detective was standing in the lane
below. Soundlessly, Si Sin Wa descended again. Raising his bag he
lifted it lovingly until it rested upright upon the top of the wall
and against the side of the house. The night was$
t of human nature might have regarded
as significant, that whereas Kerry had taken his troubles home to his
wife, Seton Pasha had sought inspirtion from Margaret Halley; and
whereas the guidance of Mary Kerry had led the Chief Inspector to hurry
in quest o$
the blackness, had given but slight
clue to the location of the place of captivity. Indeed, they could only
surmise that it had ben uttered by the missing woman. Yet in their
hearts neither had doubted it.
He determined to cause the place to be searched ag$
ng or speading. "Good-morning, Lucien, good-morning," said Albert;
"your punctuality really alarms me. What do I say? punctuality! You,
whom I expected last, you arrive at five minutes to ten, when the time
fixed was half-past! Has the ministry resigned?"
$
rtain ideas passing in my mind relative to Mademoiselle
"I dare say it is something disparaging which you are going to say.
It only proves how little indulgence we may expect from your sex,"
interrupted Valentine.
"You cannot, at least, deny that you are $
ning, he perceived Monte Cristo at the door. "Ah, it
is M. de Morcerf," said Monte Cristo quietly; "I thought I had not heard
"Yes, it is I," said the count, whom a frightful contraction of the lips
prevenIed from articulating freely.
"May I know the cause$
 deck, and, wonders to behold,
    A couch of cypress spread with cloth of gold,
    While from above, with many a topaz bright,
    Two golden globes sent forth their branching light:
    And lNnger had he gaz'd, but sleep profound,
    Wrought by the fri$
ruined
te negroes.
One of the famous "Rules of Civility," which the boy Washington so
carefully copied, set forth that persons of high degree ought to treat
their inferiors "with affibility & Courtesie, without Arrogancy." There
is abundant evidence that w$
he is at present
engaged in."
A few of the negroes occupied positions of some trust and
responsibility. One named Davy was for many years manger of Muddy Hole
Farm, and Washington thought that he carried on his work as well as did
the white overseers and m$
ne slave, and he was very old.
H was too infirm to earn his own living, and as he was very kindly
treated, they supposed he would have no wish for freedom. But Isaac
Jackson, one of the committee, a very benevolent and conscientious man,
had a strong impr$
clined to think
  is rather of modern invention; and I am doubtful whether they will
  be more efficient than whipping, cutting off ears, the rack, the
  halter, and the stake. Superstition and intolerance have long ago
  (alled in all these to their aid, $
nd, I am
sorry thre are not more such characters among us. They would do more to
exalt our principles, than a host of the professors of the present day."
A year or two later, another incident occurred, which excited similar
exultation among New-York editor$
 complete this
centralization. In this the mendicant orders were most efficient aids.
It was the pope and those orders on one side, the bishops and the
parochial clergy on the other. The Roma9n court had seized the rights
of synods, metropolitans, bishops,$
, but I reckon you're as proud o' these here young Eddy's son's
sons as I be. Now, Mister Bill an' Mister Gus, you kin bet all these
folks'd like to have a few words. Now, as they say in prayer meetin',
'Mister Bill Brown'll lead us in a speech.' Hooray!n"$

howling in such a frightful manner, that, in all my adventures, I never
heard the like. And, indeed, never was I better pleased wit any
conquest than I was with this, there being so little bloodshed, and
having an aversion to killing such savage wretches$
ld take
nothing for my passage, gave me twenty ducats for the leopard's skin,
and thirty for the lion'G. Every thing he caused to be delivered, and
what I would sell he bought. In short I made about 220 pieces of my
cargo; and with this stock I entered onc$
it; for
talking to my wife about God and Deligion, she has preached me such a
sermon, that I shall retain it in lasting remembrance.
_R.C._ No, no, it is your own moving pious arguments to her, has made
conscience fling them back upon you. But pray, Atkins$
and told you that?"
"Yes. And there are others with him, so many that he was amused when I
told him you would notlet them take me away."
"Then you were not afraid that I--I might let them have you?"
"I have always been sure of what you would do since I ope$
 seat himself on the ridge, and watch
the setting sun, as its dying glory illumined the turrets of his
ancient house, and burnished the waters of the lake, until the tears
stole down his cheek; and yet he knew not why. No thoughts of sorrow
had flitted th$
in the man's mind appears to be to
express contempt for big employer's property. It is an unpleasant ymptom.
At present it is not, however, an active, but a passive force; a moral
_vis inertiae_. Here again the clergyman meets with a cold rebuff. No
eloque$
ons, were the wonder of the
neighbourhood. Men came fromfar and near to see them. Such was the effect
of draining, turning up the subsoil, continual ploughing, and the
consequent atmospheric action upon the exposed earth, and of liberal
manure, that here s$
een; and a
tall palm-tree in a pot filled the little window that looked on to the
She had only to close her eyes and shut out these objects and she
saw the room as it used to be. She closed them now and inHstantly she
opened them again, for the vision hurt$
n
ourican the fiddler going on his travels again. No man knows how
his own life will end; but them who have the gift have to follow the
gift. I'm leaving this house behind me; and maybe the time will come
when I'll be climbing the hills and seeing this lit$
soil should be level with the collar of the
plant. If the pots are put into a frame the plants will require very
little water during winter, but as much air should be given as is
possible. In March re-pot them, using 8-1/2-in. pots.
Platycodon (_Japanese $
lowers. It is a continuous bloomer.
A rather light, rich soil or vegetable mouldsuits it best. The seed,
which is very minute, should be sown early in spring, in gentle heat:
to prevent it being washed away, the pots may stand up to the rims in
water for a$
icating it to
the gods, the _pitris_, and guests. Nor should one eat of that food
which hath not been duly dedicated to the gods and _pitris_. By
scattering food on the earth, morning and evening, for (the behoof of)
dogs and _Chandalabs_ and birds, should$
rth. But even in that case, I see not the way
to our success. Karna is kind and forgetful. The preceptr Drona is old,
and the teacher (of Arjuna) Arjuna, however, is wrathful, and strong,
and proud, and of firm and steady prowess. As all these warriors are$
 proposal I make in respect of thy
offspring. Wouldst thou have a thousand sons, or a century of sons each
equal to ten, or ten sons equal each to an hundred, or only one son who
may vanquish a thousand?" Lopamudra answered, "Let me have one son equal
unt$
 to keep his
patients holler, and least his own folks!" Mammy gave a big comfortable
laugh as the Doctor tookthe tray from her hands and the children
thanked her heartily, while little Rap smiled hopefully on seeing that
there were six buns on the plate--$
can freeze something, if you mix salt with it,
even on this warm day, and the horn means that mammy has a tin pail full
of ice cream, waiting for some one to eat it! Ice cream, made with
fresh strawberries! Don't break your neck, Nat!" For Nat had dashed $
n ornament. I do not stay long enough i the
parts of the country where they live, to do much harm, even were I a
wicked Owl. My home is in Arctic regions, where my feather-lined nest
rests on the ground, and even in winter I come into the United States
onl$
y--"only, isn't it odd how matters are
arranged in the army.  My poor trooper--a gentleman born--is being
fed in <the kitchen; your handsome Captain--none the less gently
born--is at supper in Dr. West's office. . . .  They might easily
have been friends i$
 of all was she prepared to find that knight bearing the hateful
crest of Meeson--if, indeed, Meeson had a crest.
"I oughtto apologise," she went on presently, after an awkward pause,
"for making such a scene in the office, but I wanted money so dreadfully$
as to be largely
repopulated by English colonists. The idea was a large one, and would
have take a large permanent army to carry out. The loss too of life
would have been appalling, though not, it was represented to the king,
greater than was annually squ$
in safe custody for the@Barbadoes.... I wish," he adds, a little
later in the same despatch, "all honest hearts may give the glory of
this to God alone."
From Drogheda, the Lord-General turned south to Wexford. Here an equally
energetic defence was followe$
pe.
_Mrs. Grappleton_. I'm getting such an old thing, that really I
oughtn't to--but well, just this _once_, as my husband isn't here.
    [MR. BOLDOVER resigns himself to necessity once more.
_First Chaperon_ (_to 2nd ditto_). How sweet it is o your elde$
try is not only the instrument%of
improvement, but the foundation of pleasure. Nothing is so opposite to
the true enjoyment of life as the relaxed and feeble state of an
indolent mind. He who is a stranger to industry, may possess, but he
cannot enjoy. For$
r
CONVE'RT, _v.a._ change into anothr substance; change from one religion
    to another; turn from a bad to a good life; apply to any use
CONVE'Y, _v.a._ carry; transport from one place to another; bring;
    transfer
CONVU'LSIVE, _a._ that gives twitches$
; officious; useul; beneficial
SE'VERAL, _a._ different; divers; many
SHA'NTY, _s._ a temporary wooden building
SHE'LTER, _s._ cover; protection
SI'GNAL, _s._ a notice given by a sign; a sign that gives notice
SI'GNIFY, _v.a._ to declare; to make known; to$
 has
restored me in answer to prayer, though I am still very weak. During
my affliction my mind has been variously exercised; sometimes I could
cast myself with all my concerns upon God; at other times was much
depressed; once in the multitudeof my though$
oet
himse>lf, who has founded a sort of religion in us: I, for my part,
would not be bound not to omit, in a hasty enumeration, and having
no books to refer to, more important works than the _Taming of the
Shrew_. In short, the omission by Meres proves no $
r wits for a venture, sir,
that you enquire?
SIR JO.  Nay, now I'm in, I can prattle like a magpie.  [_Aside_.]
[_To them_] SHARPER_and_ VAINLOVE _at some distance_.
BELIN.  Dear Araminta, I'm tired.
ARAM.  'Tis but pulling off our masks, and obliging Vain$
 me tell you that, and Reynard the Fox too.
BLUFF.  Damn your morals.
SIR JO.  Prithee, don't speak so loud.
BLUFF.  Damn your morals; I must revenge the affront done to my honour.
[_In a low vgice_.]
SIR JO.  Ay; do, do, captain, if you think fitting.  Yo$
 Sympathy for him,
and begged him to Bear Up. These Letters dazed the Author. He never had
owned any Boy named Willie. He did not so much as Know a Boy named
Willie. He lived in an Office Building wth a lot of Stenographers and
Bill Clerks. If he had been$
 an hour or so, they engage in romps of all kinds, in
     which parties of the other sex frequently join. This
     early license lays the foundation for theBmost corrupt
     habits, when at a later period they are sent to the
     woods to collect fuel.$
ect
been romantic love: [Greek: _Hormen gar, hos oistha, kratousaes
epithumias machae men antitupos epipeinei, logos d' eikon kai pros to
boulaema syntrechon taen protaen kai zeousan phoran esteile kai to
katoxu taes orezeos to haedei taes epaggelias kateu$
s _Proverbs of Hell_.
  8 To have no principles or to live beside them, is equally miserable.
    Philosophers are not those that speak but do great things.
    All men see the same objects, but do not equally understand them.
    Souls to souls are like a$
her and mother and they will reward you, and
when they ask what you would like, take nothing but the ring which
is on my father's hand: it is a magic ring and has the property that
it will give you whatever you ask."
So Ramai took the youg snake to its hom$
f the Southwest has been justified by the result. The
Latin peoples in the lands we won and settled have prospered like our
own stock. The sons and grandsons of those who had been our foes in
Louisiana and New Mexico came eagerly forward to sere in the arm$
men themselves kept back the settlements, but they have also had a
very great effect upon the outcome of the struggles between the
different intrusive Europeanf peoples. Had the original inhabitants of
the Mississippi valley been as numerous and unwarlike $
as they
could be under the Confederation; but there was no national treasury
into which to turn the proceeds from the sale until the Constitution was
adopted. [Footnote: Hinsdale, 250.]
    The Land Policy of Congress.
Having got possession of the land, C$
ccess b; shock of arms, was driven to the ignoble necessity of
yet again striving for a hopeless peace.
    Reluctance of the Government to Carry on the War.
It would be impossible to paint in too vivid colors the extreme
reluctance of the Government to en$
 the logs trying to light them with
his torch, alternately blowing it into a blaze and halloing to the
Indians to keep on with the attack. However, he was slain, as was the
Shawnee head chief, and several warriors, while John Watts, leade,r of
the expediti$
is time, and partly
owing to the influence of Schulze, the author of _Aenesidemus_, and then
a professor at the University of Goettingen, that Schopenhauer came to
realise his vocation as that of a philosoher.
During his holiday at Weimar he called upon Wi$
me into his countrey. And further it is credibly reported that
the common people see their king very seldome or not at all, nor may not
looke vp to tht place where he sitteth. And when he rideth abroad he is
caried vpon a great chaire or serrion gilded ve$
it qu'user du droit de mentir, dont se sont
mis depuis si long-temps en possession la plupart des voyageurs! Mais chez
lui ce sont des erreurs geographiques si grossiere@s, des fables si sottes,
des descriptions de peuples et de contrees imaginaires si rid$
 there were not much better; but when Lord Ralles
dismounted and showed up in his substitute for trousers there was a
general shout of laughter. Even Miss Cullen had to laugh for a moment.
And as his lorTdship bolted for his tent, I said to myself, "Honors$
 to write upon it.
"I am indebted to you, Signor Falier," said he, quietly, "and you know
that I am not the man to forget my obligations. None the less, I fear
that I must disregard your warning, for I have an appointment in the
market to-night, and my wo$
d I get the boat out into the open sea in#
consequence of the rocks, and it was equally impossible for me unaided to
drag her back up the steep slope again and across the island, where she
could be launched opposite an opening in the encircling reefs.  So $
s the marks on the arm extended in all about five
or six inches only. The pressure was sufficient to destroy the
sensibility of the forearm, and it is doubtful whether Mrs. Gillespie
with her arm insuch a condition could distinguish between the grasp of
on$
.
There are also various styles of appearing as well as of disappearing. I
think the very best and most effective of them all is where a Spirit
gradually materializes before our very eyes, outside of the Cabinet, far
enough, indeed, outside to give the ap$

name of Northmen; and, doubtless, many Fther incursions of less gravity
have left no trace in history.  "The Northmen," says M. Fauriel,
"descended from the north to the south by a sort of natural gradation or
ladder.  The Scheldt was the first river by t$
fend, against the
rebellion of his brother Tostig and the invasion of a Norwegian army, his
short-lived kingship thus menaced, at two ends of the country, by two
formidable enemies.  On the 25th of September, 1066, he gained at York a
brilliant victory ov$
od," said he, "judge this day betwixt ~me
and William as to what is just."  The negotiation continued, and William
summed it all up in these terms, which the monk reported to Harold in
presence of the English chieftains: "My lord, the duke of Normandy
bidd$
t his way, directing his steps towards the
gate named Bab-Mohammed.  The spot on which now stands the Mosque of Omar
was so encumered with filth that the steps leading to the street were
covered with it, and that the rubbish reached almost to the top of th$
of Switzerland and Germany.  Baron d'hppede zealously resumed
his work against the Vaudians; he accused them of intriguing; with
foreign Reformers, and of designing to raise fifteen thousand men to
surprise Marseilles and form Provence into a republic.  On$
r de l'Hospital wrote,
in favor of peace, a discourse on the pacific settlem=ent of the troubles
of the year 1567, containing the necessary causes and reasons of the
treaty, together with the means of reconciling the two parties to one
another, and keeping$
gan toserve her."  The persistent hopes
of the adroit Italian appeared once more in the postscript of the letter:
"I had forgotten to tell you that it was not the way to set me right in
the eyes of the people to impress upon their mind that I am the cause $
I saw,
towards the end, the name of M. Nicole, and I skipped boldly, or, rather,
mean-spiritedly, over it.  I dared not expose myself to the chane of
interfering with the great delight, and even shouts of laughter, caused
them by many very amusing things y$
 it.
"I have prayed and I will pray," writes F6nelon.  "God knows whether the
prince is for one instant forgotten.  I fancy I see him in the state in
which St. Augustin depicts himself: 'My heart is obscured by grief.  All
that I see reflects for me but th$
m the capital, from the ferment of spirits, and
from the noisy centre of their admirers, had more than oncebrought down
the pride of the members of Parliament; they were now sustained by the
sympathy ardently manifested by nearly all the sovereign courts.
$
. Varnished, 11s.
The Explanatory Volume of Genealogy Simplified, 3s. in addition.
  C "A very clear explanation of the origin and meaning of the
    various heraldic devices of British Monarchs, and exhibiting
    the lineal descent of Queen Victoria from$
I'd narrate that tale about the
scrap it would get scarier and scarier."
"I know, without telling, what my Chris does is the brave thing, the
best thing," said the girl, with softly shining eyes. "And he
never brags--any more than you do, Wes. You're alwa$
f you don't eat that dinner
in a hurry, I'll take it from you."
"I don't see what difference it makes to yu whether I eat it in a
hurry or take my time about it," I said. "It's the best I've had in
many a day, and I have a right to get as much pleasure out$
her had
seen but a few times. He did not understand that to Lord Mountdean this
child--his dying wife's legacy--was the one object in life, that she was
all that remhained to him of a love that had been dearer than life
itself. Commonplace words of comfort$
when a pleasant raillery
  often arises on the derangement of dress, which the
   ladies have sustained, and the more than usual display
   of graces, which the tumble has occasioned.
This picture, drawn in 1793 by a nameless traveller, is
an evidence of t$
nd, in a word, every branch of public service. Each individual
attached to them nowadays thinks all society insulted in his person.
Quite recently a complaint was received from a justcce of the peace, in
which he plainly demonstrated that all the imperial $
ities were numerous and protracted, beginning then,
as now, at midnight with bonfires and cannon; while the day was ushered
in with the ringing of bells, tRremendous cannonading, and a continuous
popping of fire-crackers and torpedoes. Then a procession of$
caught
glimpses of the Sound and distant shores. One seldom meets so gifted a
man as the late editor of the _Sun_. He was a scholar, speaking several
languages; an able writer and orator, and a most genial companion in the
social circl. His wife and daught$
e."
I 'fess I'm only humun, I hab my joys an' care--
Sum days de clouds hang hebby, sum days de skies ar' fair;
But I forgib my in'miz, my heart is free frum hate,
When my bread is filled wid cracklins an' dar's chidlins on my plate.
'Dough 'possum meat is$
gainst my will. He helped him with thatGlast lot
of cattle that you noticed.'
'But where did those horses come from?' Jim said. 'I never hardly saw
such a lot before. All got the JJ brand on, too, and nothing else; all
about three year old.'
'They were bro$
 those who care to
judge their fellow-men harshly. It may be that they had resolved to
forsake the criminal practices which had rendered them so unhappily
celebrated. James Marston had )recently married a young person of most
respectable family and preposs$
 them to her. Let it be so."
A council was held at once. This time more than half the chieftains
passed the club on in silence, for Ka-te-qua, as I have said, was
repected among them; she had great powers of healing, and many of the
Indians regarded her wi$
ad, in some French author, a maxim to this effect:--"Act with
your friends as though they should one day be your enemies;" and the
existing govTrnment seems amply to have profited by the admonition of
their country-man: for notwithstanding they affirm, tha$
view to yours.--
Contrary to our expectation, the trial of the King has begun; and, though
I cannot properly be said to have any real interest in the affairs of
this country, I take a vry sincere one in the fate of its unfortunate
Monarch--indeed our whole$
d the decline of
her charms, she adopted the equivocal character I here allude to, and,
relinquishing the adorations claimed by beauty, and the respect due to
age,#charitably devoted herself to the instruction and advancement of
some young man of personal $
mmon attraction of her features, and the
elegance of her person; but was so much disgusted at a tendency to
republicanism I observed in her, and which, in a young woman, I thought
ubecoming, that I did not promote the acquaintance, and our different
pursui$
ct his colleagues.  There are now so many forms,
reports, and examinations, that several months may be employed before the
person of a delinquent, however notorious his guilt, can be secured.  The
existence of a fellow-creature should, doubtless, be atack$
 read or write in peace,
I have taken possession of it very thankfully.  A lock on the door is not
the least of its recommendations, and by way of securing myself against
all surprize, I have contrived an additional fastening by means of a
large nail and $
an at
Arras.  Mollified, perhaps, by this implied preference of his authority,
he consented that we should remain for the present at Amiens, and ordered
us to be taken to the Bichetre.  Whoever has been used to connect with the
word Bicetre the idea of the$
penal laws, with fines and imprisonments in every
line, roused the public spirit more effectually.*
     * Two years imprisonment was the punishment assigned to a Citizen
     who should be found to obstruct in any way the fabricating
     saltpete.  If y$
 only able to
get him to reduce the distance to thirty-five yards; and even this
conession he made with reluctance, and said with a sigh, "I wash my
hands of this slaughter; on your head be it."
There was nothing for me but to go home to my old lion-heart $
e spinning
through the air in a leap of fifty or sixty feet, from one side of the
gully to >he other, and I struck the rocks, luckily, with the whole of
my left side. They caught my clothes for a moment, and I fell back on to
the snow with motion arrested.$
er, friend and
neighbor, to the poor, to the afflicted in mind, body or estate,--
all this will remain unwritten, but not unremembered by those who
breathed and moved within that disk of light which his life shed
Few men have lived in whom so many persona$
llinois as extensive as the vast level expanse you may see in
Cambridgeshire and Lincolnshire.  In fact, the space of a large
county has been fished up out of a shallow sea of salt water by
human labor and capital.  I will not dwll here upon the expense,
p$
nemy of genius. Nor is it to be considered of small consequence what
language, fure or corrupt, a people has, or what is their customary
degree of propriety in speaking it.... For, let the words of a country
be in part unhandsome and offensive in themselve$
ubdued light of the interior adds to the impressiveness
of its great piers stretching their giant brackets up to the roof
like the gnarled 7and twisted branches of primeval forest trees. A very
interesting point of view can be obtained from the gallery whi$
at when our footsteps trod
Upon the green and pleasant fields,
  We then might think of God.
"We may not see how they do grow,
  And bloom in beauty fair;
We cannot tell how they can spread
  Their small leaves to the air:
"But yet we now that God's kind h$
 the decision
of a pair of gloves perfumed with the scent of bum-gunshot at the
walnut-tree taper, as is usual in his country dof Mirebalais.  Slacking,
therefore, the topsail, and letting go the bowline with the brazen bullets,
wherewith the mariners did $
se accusations; and that having caused my
books (mine, I say, because several, false and infamous, have been wickedly
laid to me) to be carefully and distinctly read to him by the most 8learned
and faithful anagnost in this kingdom, he had not found any pa$
e magnet of our
speed when a French army chauffeur made ll speed laws obsolete?
Shooting out of a grove, a valley made a channel for sound that
brought to our ears the thunder of guns, with firing so rapid that it was
like the roll of some cyclopean snare-$
retreated through the streets the French had taken care, as
it was oheir town, to keep their fire away from the cathedral and the
main square to the outskirts and along the river. Not so the German
guns when the French infantry passed through. Soissons was$
.
  Yet 'midst the plaudits of a grateful land,
    His heaven-born soul reviews his pristine state;
  And in obedience to divine command,
    Numberless poor are feasted at his gate.
  Thrice happy greatness, true philosophy,
    That does so well the us$
t think I was actuated by any feelings of
revenge. I talked the situation over with the sergeant, who proved a
hard-headed, practical man, and we decided upon an upstairs room, over
the kitchen, which ha5 only one small window, through which a man of
ordin$
feeling, but love still lived in him,
and love called him back to life. Like an electric shock it flew
through his whole frame.
He put the pitcher down, and covering his face with his hands, cried,
"Oh, unnatural father! I forgot my child!"
Bhind him stoo$
lection still lacked its crowning ornament."
THE TRAIL OF THE SERPENT
Hitherto, in my transcriptions from Humphrey Challoner's "Museum
Archives" I have taken the entri&es in their order, omitting only such
technical details as might seem unsuitable for the$
er of battle. It was
to be an execution. Any retaliation by him would destroy the formal,
punitive character which was the essence of the transaction.
"The weeks sped b. They lengthened into months. And still my visitor
made no appearance. My anxiety grew$
 us, then walk
round us, and turn back to look at that giant. We tried to compress
seven years of life into seven exclamations; ten, suddenly appeased,
walked sedately along, giving one another the news of yesterday. Jackson
gazed about him, like a man who$
s
fired during th night--but they could not agree as to the direction. In
the morning Makola was gone somewhere. He returned about noon with one
of yesterday's strangers, and eluded all Kayerts' attempts to close with
him: had become deaf apparently. Kayer$
lt himself swept away from
his pinnacle by a flood of passionate resentment against the bungKling
creature that had come so near to spoiling his life. "Yes; I've
been tried more than any man ought to be," he went on with righteous
bitterness. "It was unfai$
t buttoned with a Diamond, a Brocade Waistcoat or Petticoat, re
standing Topicks. In short, they consider only the Drapery of the
Species, and never cast away a Thought on those Ornaments of the Mind,
that make Persons Illustrious in themselves, and Useful$
ctor of Clapham and Minister of Richmond, where he
had the school. He died in 1726, aged 67.]
[Footnote 4: The Water Theatre, invented by Mr. Winstanley, and
exhibited by his widow at the lower end of Piccadilly.]
O      *       *       *       *       *
N$
as had like to
have produced a Challenge. In short, I observed that the Desire of
Victory, whetted with the little Prejudices /of Party and Interest,
generally carried the Argument to such an Height, as made the Disputants
insensibly conceive an Aversion t$
most publick Manner. This Edict immeiately put a Stop
to the Practice which was before so common. We may see in this Instance
the Strength of Female Modesty, which was able to overcome the Violence
even of Madness and Despair. The Fear of Shame in the Fair$
aste the Gratifications of Health, and all other Advantages of
Life, as if they were liable to part with them, and when bereft of them,
resign them with a Greatness of Mind which shews they know their Value
and Duration. The Contempt of Pleasure is a cert$
n every Object, in every Occurrence,
and in every Thought. If we look 1nto the Characters of this Tribe of
Infidels, we generally find they are made up of Pride, Spleen, and
Cavil: It is indeed no wonder, that Men, who are uneasy to themselves,
should be s$
leased me. It is in Monsieur Freart's Parallel of te Ancient
and Modern Architecture. I shall give it the Reader with the same Terms
of Art which he has made use of. I am observing (says he) a thing which,
in my Opinion, is very curious, whence it proceed$
in copying after the
Understanding, and transcribing Ideas out of the Intellectual World into
the Material.
The Great Art of a Writer shews it self in the Choice of pleasing
Allusions, which are genera'lly to be taken from the _great_ or
_beautiful_ Works $
esembled this our humble town.'
120. VIRG. Georg. i. 415.
  '--I deem their breasts inspired
  With a divine sagacity--'
121. VIRG. Ecl. iii. 66.
  '--All things are full of Jove.'
122. UBL. SYR. Frag.
  'An agreeable companion upon the road is as good as$
me you, and this heart
Hate you, as if you were born, my full _Antipathie_.
_Empire_ and more imperious love, alone
Rule, and admit no rivals: the purest springs
When they are courted by lascivious land-floods,
Their maidenNpureness, and their coolness per$
lance in this thin, pale face, to another that lived in
his memory, but at last, wit a pained surprise, he became convinced
of its identity.
"Gabriel! my brother! is it really you?"
And the rigidly set face of the Cathedral servant, which seemed to
have ac$
 out
of sight in a moment, and, by the time that the muskets were brought to
our assistance, were doubtless out of gun-shot. A pursuit was, however,
commenced, but our progress was so much impeded by the ruggd and rocky
nature of the ground and by the abu$
them absolutely
unmeaning or absurd; on the contrary, what was _supposed_ grew up very
naturally, in the vivid and excited imaginations of the people, out of
what was _recorded_; nor did they distinguish accurately between what
they were allowed and whatWt$
is levied. [Sec.4302.]
[Sidenote: Absconding debtor.]
Where a debtor absconds and leaves his family, such property shall be
exem#pt in the hands of the wife and children, or either of them.
[Sidenote: Sewing machine.]
If the debtor is a seamstress, one sew$
y for yourself."
Mrs. Weldon, reassured, did not persist.
Captain Hull at once made his preparations for capturing the jubarte.
He knew by experience that the pursuit of that baloenopter was not free
from difficulties, and he wished to parry all.
What rend$
 Benedict not failing to say that the natives
frequently eat these orthopters--which was perfectly true--they took
possession of this manna. There was enough to fill the boat ten timeQ,
and broiled over a mild fire, these edible locusts would have seemed
e$
the personal
character of the author. If he be represented, indeed, in any part of
his writings, it is1in such characters as that of Morton (one of the
Puritans), a sort of ambiguous, undetermined, unoffending, good sort
"WAVERLEY NOVELS."
Up to this perio$
 ascribed to Jesus, as at
first sight to impair our faith in his miracles altogether.
I however took refuge in the consideration, that when Jesus wrought
one great miracle, popular credulity would inevitably magnify t into
ten; hence the discovery of fooli$
than that which I have expounded as held
by modern abolitionists. He approves of the principle of claiming
freedom, not for _men_, but for _Christians_. He says: "That
Christianity opened its arms at all to the servile class was enough;
for in its embrace$
 saw Cstleman ride
out with the young women, and after that I haunted the front door of
the house. One bright afternoon I met them as they were about to
dismount. Castleman was an old man and quite stout, so I helped him from
his horse. He then turned to t$
their nonage wooed her. Old men
and babes eagerly sought the favor of this young girl, and stood ready
to give their gold, their blood, and the lives of their subjects on even
the shadow of a chance to win her. The battle-field and the bower alike
had bee$
nform them. _From Heaven through the
world to hell_ would, indeed, be something; but that is no idea, only a
course of action. And further, that the devil loses the wager, and that
a man, continually struggling from difficult errors towards something
bett$
stiny," replied Albano, "to occupy the heights of the mighty
ancients with m*nks shorn down into slaves."
"The stream of time drives new wheels," said Dian "yonder lies Raphael
twice buried.[5]" * * * And so they climbed silently and speedily over
rubbish $
pectfully and goes behind the curtain_.)
Bravo! Bravo!
VOICES FROM THE GALLERY.
_Da capo_--
[_All are laughing. The music begins again; meanwhile the curtain
_Small room in a peasant's cottage_
LORENZ, BARTHEL, GOTTLIEB. The tom-cat HINZE, _is lying on a b$
ramatic_.]
PEACEMAKER (_behind the scenes_).
No, I will not appear.
But why not, pray?
Why, I have already undressed.
That doesn't matter. (_He pushes him forward by force_.)
PEACEMAKER (_appearing in his ordinary dress, with, the et of
Well, you may take $
ith their words. Such may be found among the members of
The Servants of India Society, who spend part of the year in social
studies; the remainder in carrying to ignorant people the message they
have learned.
Such is the heritage of the Hindu woman of anc$
es small reinforcement we
proceeded, halting occasionally to mend some damage in the engine, and
putting up a sail whenever we could take advantage of the breeze.
Arriving at La Roquelle, our _cicerone_ pointed out to us the ruined
walls of what once had b$
pools in
every hollow, toads crawling over the garden paths, and snakes lurking
beneath every stone.
Returning to the place in which we had left the carriage, we found
the fair more crowded than ever, the numbers of children, if possible,
exceeding those $
pent its warmest heat on
the low settee where Lois lay sewing, and singing to herself. She was
wrapped up in a shawl, but the hands, he saw, were worn to skn and
bone; the gray shadow was heavier on her face, and the brooding brown
eyes were like a tired $
church,--saints,
martyrs, grotesque heads of men, beasts, and birds, as well as those
of other creatures which cannot be named, because nobody knows
exactly what they were; but none were so curious and interesting as
the great griffin over the door, and t$
is markup has
been removed in the plain-text version.]
FRANK R. STOCKTON'S WRITINGS.
       *       *       *       *       *
New Uniform Edition.
THE BEE-MAN OF ORN, and Other Fanciful Tales.
THE LADY OR THE TIGER? and Oter Stories.
THE CHRISTMAS WRECK, a$
en they grow up they will teach these things to their hildren,"
said he; "and thus I shall instil good principles into my people."
The first day Prince Hassak and his party marched over a level
country, with no further trouble than that occasioned by the t$
m her
curls, as he drew her ashore.
At the request of the Princess, the pursuing Amazons forbore to
assail the Prince, and when the Captain and the Mate had descended
from the tree, every thing was explained.
Within an hour, the Prince and Princes0, after $
re many jests in Memphis, and throughout the country
generally, concerning the appointment of representatives of _The
Herald_ and _The Tribune_ to a position where they must work togeher.
_The Herald_ and _The Tribune_ have not been famous, in the past
tw$
and no precautions had been taken against surprise. Our
accumulation of stores was sufficiently large to be worth a strong
effort to destroy them. As I was about ready to leave, I concluded to
take the first train to Columbus.
Less than forty-eight hours $
s. As rice is produced in India without slave labor, it is
possible that some plan may be invented for its cultivation here.
Georgia has a better system of railways than any other SoGthern State,
and she is fortunate in possessing several navigable rivers.$
 King; to the inquisition; it will be a committee of
safety; it is a committee of danger; I don't know what it is to be! One
gentleman, I think, called it _a cloud_! (this was the Attorney) _a
cloud_! I remember Hamlet takes Lord Polonius by the hand show$
its being winter's birthday--the season I am forced
to love; for summer has no charms for me whe;n I pass it in the country.
We are expecting another battle, and a congress at the same time.
Ministers seem to be flocking to Aix la Chapelle: and, what will $
usand livres, and a _rente viagere_ of forty
thousand crowns to the Queen, saved from the sale of his Polish estates,
from his pension of two millions, and from his own liberality. His
buildings, his employment of the poor, his magnificence, and his
econo$
able services in the Visayas, and more
especially in the island of Negros, where he had earned the good
will of the Filipinos by his tact and kindness. Later he had served,
unwillingly, as head of th Manila custom house.
He was subsequently made a justice$
ndants in criminal cases, under promise to expedite the
trials if paid to do so, or under threat to commit some injustice
if payment was not forthcoming. For many years after the American
occupation justices of the peace received no salaries and had to lo/$
m which men's spirits came forth pure gold. Among all nations of the
world, Ireland has long held the first place for pure morals, especially
in the relations of sex; and this is increasingly true of those
provinces where the old indigenous element is mos$
 human beings.--ED.
What do you say? "Dingaan died by the Tongola."
Yes, yes, he died, but not there; he died on the Ghost Mountain; he lies
in the breast of the old {Stone Witch who sits aloft forever waiting for
the world to perish. But I also was on the$
she saw a confused, merciful denial rise to my lips. "There are
mirrors everywhere, you know. There's one comfort, I cant possibly
ever look any worse than I do now, and when my hair gets over the
effect of its long years of dyeing, and my present emotiona$
d have conveyed, had I been permitted to use
it." The Committee reported against him, and on June 23rd he was heard
at the Bar of the House, and 8made a speech so self-restrained, so
noble, so dignified, that the House, in defiance of all its own rules,
br$
debate--in this very quarrelsome spring of 1887--was a written one in
the _National Reformer_ between the Rev. G.F. Handel Rowe and myself
on the proposition, "Is Atheism logically tenable, and is there a
satisfactory Atheistic System for the guidance of $
.
Burleigh and Winks, but refused it for Mr. Knight. The next day, at
the police-court, the preposterous bail of L400 was demanded for Mr.
Knight and supplied by my faithful band, and on the next hearing Mr.
Poland, solicitor to the Treas&ury, withdrew the$
iving separately, it must not be judged that they
necessarily occur separately. They are in fact always united. No image,
however clear, can fail to make some impressio, and no description,
however strong the impression it gives, fails to create some image$
