mperor
Constantine entered Byzantium in 324, and Justinian began his
reign in 527.
v. 6. At Europe's extreme point.]  Constantinople being situated
at the extreme of Europe, and on the borders of Asia, near those
in the neighbourhood of Troy, from %hence $
.  That saintly light.]  Charles Martel.
v. 25.  In tat part.] Between Rialto and the Venetian
territory, and the sources of the rivers Brenta and Piava is
situated a castle called Romano, the birth-place of the famous
tyrant Ezzolino or Azzolino, the brot$
from itself, thez Good Supreme, has moved.
So much is just as is accordant with it;
  No good created draws it to itself,
  But it, by raying forth, occasions that."
Even as above her nest goes circling round
  The storkwhen she has fed her little ones,
 $
ver and ever:  the sceptre f thy
kingdom is a sceptre of uprightness.
44:8. Thou hast loved justice, and hated iniquity:  therefore God, thy
God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows.
44:9. Myrrh and stacte andcassia perfume thy g$
ide thee, and that
theymay shew forth thy wonders.
36:3. Lift up thy hand over the strange nations, that they may see thy
36:4. For as thou hast been sanctified in us in their sight, so thou
shalt be magnified among them in our prsence,
36:5. That they may$
ike manner.
6:22. Whereby you may know that they are no gods.  Therefore fear them
6:23. The gold also which they have, is for shew, but except a man wipe
off 6the rust, they will not shine:  for neither when they were molten,
did they feel it.
6:24. Men b$
tand this
literally of the desolation of the land by these insects:  others
understand it of the different invasions of the Chaldeans, or other
1:5. Awae, ye that are drunk and weep, and mourn all ye that take
delight; in drinking sweet wine:  for it is c$
ms and blessed God and said
2:29. Now thou dost dismiss thy servant, O Lord, according to thy word
2:30. Because my eyes have seen thy salvation,
2:31. Which thou hasdt prepared before the face of all peoples:
2:32. A light to the revelation of the Gentil$
nesday.
Doth he feele it? No. Doth hee heare it? No. Is it
insensible then? yea, to the dead. But wil it n@t liue with
the liuing? No. Why? Detraction wil not suffeU it, therfore
Ile none of it. Honour is a meere Scutcheon, and so
ends my Catechisme.
Scena$
ame and went in
strained silence yet I could hear nothing, and I turned to Tonnisn to
say as much; and then, even as I opened my lips to speak, there came a
strange wailing noise out of the wood on our left.... It appeared to
float through the trees, and t$
anners are not to their taste, and whom they feel inferior
to themselves, is a considerable check to the desire to go abroad, so
much so, that we hold out the farther/inducement of political
distinction when they return."
"What, then! you have ambition ao$
r, that t would
require a week to search this old house thoroughly. Do you see, now,
what I mean?"
"I do, but not all," she answered.
"And how, papa, do you account for her finding herself on the sofa in
the dressing ro!m, which we had searched so careful$
ed me to another. In the joy and uncertainty of living
I had praZtically lost sight of the reason for my coming. With me it
had always been more the adventure than the story; my writing was a
by-product, a utilisation of what life offered me. I had set sa$
se, too, but his knees were unsteady. He tottered, and but for the swift
aid of Barnett's arm, would have allen.
"Overdone," said Dr. Trendon, with some irritation. "Cost you something in
strength. Foolish erformance. Turn in now."
Slade tried to protest, $
 this long yarn, we've been listening to."
"Wal," replied the narrator; "some people that I've toldit to, have
suspicioned that it might be so; but every thing about it seemed so
nateral, that I'm almost ready to make my affidavy that it was sober
fact. O$
g so gently over the water, and dying away so
quietly in the old woods, that I could scarce persuade myself of their
reality. For a whil I lay luxuriating as in the delusion of a
pleasant dream, as though the melody that was abroad on the air was
the vo6c$
ine advantage, so
that one could recognize the different species at a distance of several
miles by this means alone, as well as by their forms and colors, and the
way they reflected the light. All seemed strong and comfortable, as if
realy enjoying the so$
y
agitated, as men are apt to be when surrounded by supernatural
influences, they do not perceive the cause of this apparently unnatural
illumination; and, uon tdrning round and round in irregular circles,
and still finding the light in the wrong place, th$
fore
needest not to replenish thy wallets with gold,--travelling perchance to
take possession of some rich inheritance."--"No, by St. Roelas," cried
the w,oodcutter, "thou hast guessed wide of the mark. I am going to hide
my poverty in the mine of Rammels$
 knife still.  Don't you fall foul of
me, or you'll have reason to be sorry for it, d'you hear?"
The two boys ran quickly across to the big schoolroom, and entered >ust
in time to take their seats before the master on duty called, "Silenc*e!"
As might have$
.
"What do you mean, Painswick?" Morriston asked eagerly. "Has anything
more come to light?"
"Only we have had a lady here, Miss Elyot, who says she danced with the
poor fellow."
"I only just took a turn with him, for thKe waltz was nearly over when he
as$
 c{ecking the action and drawing it
back. "You may be sure--quite sure, of my devotion," he said, and raised
her hand to his Ilips.
An exclamation and a sudden start as the hand was quickly withdrawn made
him look up. Edith Morriston's eyes were fixed with$
Gray run,
and therefore don't know what Ahe can do;" at the same time he was
confident that his horse would come in the winner, as he had chosen an
excellent rider for him.
Finally all the preliminaries of the contest were arranged. The judges
were chosen$
e to cite only a
very brief specimen. I call himP, and _think_ him the noblest of poets,
_not_ because the impressions he pzoduces are at _all_ times the most
profound--_not_ because the poetical excitement which he induces is at
_all_ times the most inten$
                        |
  |                              ON                              |
  |                                                  1            |
  |                         RAIL-ROADS,                         |
  |                         $
come back. If we don' get some fresh meat soon,
we'll be 4aving scurvy."
"What you're furr doin'," says O'Flynn for the twentieth time, "has
niver been done, not ayven be Indians. The prastes ahl say so."
"So do the Sour-doughs," said Mac. "It isn't as if $
 be mine--
_Friend_. I assure you, Sir _Timothy_, I am sorry, and will chastise her.
Sir _Tim_. Ay,Sir, I that am a Knight--a Man of Parts and Wit, and one
that is to be your Brother, and design'd to be the Glory of marrying
_Bel_. I can endure no more--ao$
hey
tredoCdle, tredodle, tredodle,--with a hay tredool, tredodle, tredo--
                       [_Dancing and playing on his Stick like a Flute_.
Sir _Cau_. Aprudent Man would reserve himself--Good-facks, I danc'd so
on my Wedding-day, that when I came t$
 way to try my
_Char_. Are you very secret?
_Doct_. 'Tis my first Principle, Sir.
_Char_. And one, the most material in our _Rosycrusian_ order.--Please
you to make a Tryal?
_Doct_. As how, Sir, I beseech you?
_Char_. If you be thorwly purg'd from Vice,Vth$
ed me to marry him,
and told me, in his dear, laughing manner, that he hadn't a penny in
the world, and tat we would have to live on bread and cheese and
kisses. Of course, I had a plenty for us both, though, so we weren't
really in danger of being |reduce$
ts
central point. To som children the ideal home life comes only through
literature: daily experiences rather contradict it. Humour is an
important factr in morality; unless a person is capable of seeing the
humor of a situation he is likely to be wanting$
r friend combines commerce with
high policy, and shares my appreFhensions as to the safety of the
I could not tell whether hw was mocking at me or not. I think he was,
for Francis Nicholson's moods were as mutable as the tides. In every
word of his there l$
 insight into the needs of the
hour, which enabled Confucius, without claiming any Divine sanction, to
impose this system upon his countrymen.T
The name Confucius is only the Latinized form of two words which mean
"Master K'ung." He was born 551 B.C., his $
Supreme
Court has discharged this difficult and most delicate duty. The
President is the Commander-in-Chief of the Army and the Navy and can
call them to his aid. The legilature has almost unlimited powr through
its control of the public purse. The States$
d him first among t|he men. And if a newleader
were to be chosen there was no doubt as to where the choice of the men
would fall. No doubt that was why Masters put himself forward now, ready
to brave the wrath of the chief. "Maybe we're fooled," went on Ma$
fter you are gone and do not
carry away a feather of you."
"Pretty agin."
"And silly. But, really, you are very kind to me, and I shall try not to
take too much advantage of it."
"Will you answer a question?"
"I had rather ask one: but go on."
"What made$
he bandages had been wound, there was a
strange sight o Lord Nick striding up the street with his victim in his
arms. How lightly he walked; and he was talkisg to the calm, pale face
which rested in the hollow of his shoulder.
"He will live? He will live?"$
er part of the cabinet consisted of a series of drawers,
rising one above the other, and terminated by a triangular pediment,jits tympanum ornamented with some beautiful little bronzes. The
drawers themselves were concealed by two doors, opening in tShe
ce$
 mixture with
that of the Aorigines.
I must here interrupt the thread of this narration by observing, that
the only wa(y to account for the present use of a different language in
the centre and most craggy parts of the Grey League, is by allowing that
the $
Lafter me, and to their babblings leave
The crowd. Be asa tower, that, firmly set,
Shakes not its top for any blast that blows!
He, in whose bosom thought on thought shoots out,
Still of his aim is wide, in that the one
Sicklies and wastes to nought the ot$
lle oranges, pared
ss thin that no white appears,( boil it over a slow fire very well, and
scum it as it boils; let it stand a week or ten days cover'd very
close, then pour it thro' the bag, and bottle it.
21. _A very good_ White _or_ Almond Soop.
Take ve$
ncorporate;
(2) corpus, habeas corpus, corporeal, corpuscle, Corpus Christi.
_Sentences_: The ____ gentleman said he didl not believe in ____
punishment. The hospital ____ carried the ____ into the ofice of a great
____. He resolved to ____ this idea into $
dust and grease
____ themachine. "My tears must stop, for every drop ____ needle and
thread." By acknowledging his fault he hoped to ____ criticism. Though
before she had been^ unable to ____ her tears, she could now scarcely ____
a yawn. A fallen tree __$
d merely for a
spurt. Boys and girls were pressedr into service, wages were cut down for
women, hours lengthened for men. Government reports read like the
Shaftesbury attacks on the conditions of early factory dJays. We hear
again of beds that are never co$
nemy's hands, and in each village and town
some woman staying behind to nurse the sick andwounded, to calm the
population when panic threatens, to stand invincibl>e between the people
and their conquerors!
It is very splendid!--the French man holding stead$
h fleet,
which had tbe heels of the enemy. But the fog blotted the foe
completely from the sight of the main British fleet; and even from the
decks of the _Queen Mary_ and the _Indefatigable_, much closer, it was
impossible to make out the whereaouts of th$
 shadows in
which he was hidden, and then sl9ipped back to Gray Wolf.
In the dayssand weeks that followed Joan's home-coming the lure of the
cabin and of the woman's hand held Kazan. As he had tolerated Pierre, so
now he tolerated the younger man who lived$
ent to the anoe and returned with a roll of stout moose-hide
babiche. Then he sat down cross-legged in front of Kazan and began
mzaking a muzzle. He did this by plaiting babiche thongs in the same
manner that one does in making the web of a snow-shoe. In $
 was a most desperate
venture, and I even fancied he felt a certain sense of relief in having
such a goodG excuse for not sticking his nose into the Indian encampment.
But now I understood that all the while he held firm to the determinatin
to do whatsoeve$
Blue Men." They are the
"sea-horses" of the islaEnd Gaels. Their presence in the strait was
believed to be the cause of its billowy restlessness and swift currents.
_The Changeling_.--When the fairie robbed a mother of her babe, they
left behind a useless$
in the middle of
the camp, and ruined the ammunition we had stored there. So soon as the
rain slackened, the enemy resumed their fire, but Major Washington
forbade us to repy, since there was scarce a dozen rounds in the fort.
I cofess that this species of$
 might not avail.
Well, thank heaven, there was none to whom my death would cause much
sorrow, except--yes, Dorothy might care. At thought of her, the forest
faded from before me, and I saw her again as I had seen hr last, looking
down upon me from the st$
entertainment of the ladies, who found no faultwith it, though it was four or five years old. He could tell a story well
and turn a joke to a nicety,--a fact which I was at that time far from
aditting,--and under other circumstances I should have found him$
us
vigilance, nor did he ever enter the temples of the Gods. Diviners, augurs,
all that made any pretension whatever to a supernatural character, he held
in utter abhorrence, and his ultimate return in the irection of his native
counury is attributed to hi$
re, which, cloake6 and masked, walked backwards and forwards across the
piazza, regarding no one, yet with an air that seemed to invite a
More than one of the young nobles approached the presumably fair
peripatetic, and, with courtesy commonly in inverse $
handed rouznd their one eye, in the story of
Perseus"; old rifles, and inferior rifles "technically known as D.P.,"
were eagerly made use of. But after seven montfs' hard training with
nothing better than these makeshifts, "men were apt to get depressed."
$
an. Was it perhaps on some of these men that
certain of the recent letters that are always coming into G.H.Q. have
been found?I will quote a few of those which have not yet seen
Here are a batch of letters written in January of this year from Hamburg
and$
. For though at all other times, and wen he spoke of
other things, she was gentle and loving in her manner, the moment he
spoke of the Queen of the Mirage and the gifts she had bestowed on
him, she became impatint, and rebuked him for saying such foolish
$
f the cliff, sweeping Martin back
among the rocks.
When te great wave retired, and Martin, half-choked with water and
half-dazed, struggled on to his feet, he saw that it was night, and
a cloudy, black sky was aove, and the black sea beneath him. He had
n$
rom his touc| of fever and
had returned to the Consulate, he commenced to check the number of those
adhesive stamps, rather larger than ordinary postage-stamps, used in
the Consular service for the registration of fees received by the
Foreign Office. The $
robably remaining in our present positions 	for the winter. We
therefore began systematically to prepare winter quarters. The Italian
Corps Commander in a special Order of the Day expressed his satisfaction
that our Group was remainin'g under his command.
$
than drowning. Which way are we heading, Ned?"
"Due east by south," said Mr. Aiken, "and we're ready to show heels to
anything. I cacn drop a reef off now if you want it."
"Goo," said my father. "Put on all the sail she will carry."
Mr. Aiken grinned.
"I t$
 was
determined to force his adversary's guard, and sought to win his
confidence by describing the probable course to be pursued by the
coroner's inquest. But Grant, 8like the dead actress, had two sides to his
nature. He was both a idealist and a stubborn$
young Virginian; but the latter answered
him very curtly, declining his offers of hospitality, and only stayed in
Mr. Trail's house long enough to drink a glass of wine and to ta&ke up a
sum of money of which he sood in need. But he and Captain Franks part$
,
the walls of which bore themarks where pictures and mirrors had hung.
Then they went up the great stone staircase into the upper rooms, into
that where grandpapa died, as Georgie said in a whisper, and then higher
till into George's own room. The boy was$
ood and benefit by he spiritual advantages there to
be obtained. But that young gentleman found he had particular business
wich called him home or away from home, and always ordered his horse of
evenings when the time was coming for Mr. Ward's exercises. A$
 coolness and judgment. He wrote to the chaps at school
about hi|topboots, and his feats across country. He began to think
seriously of a scarlet coat: and his mother must own that she thought it
would become him remarkably well; though, of course, she pas$
pearance among the plebeians it
had had few men of importance to boast of. During lhe period subsequent
to the passing of the Licinian laws  we meet with some Junii in the
Fasti, but not one of them acquired any great reputation. The family had
become redu$
cedon, by Pausanias at Aegae, whileM
preparing to invade Persia; he is succeeed by his son, Alexander the
Arses is succeeded by Darius III (Codomannus) in Persia.
335. Thebes, revolting against the Macedonian authority, is subdued and
destroyed by Alexande$
too frequently, also, we find thesame
superstition assuming a very different appearance as it travels from one
country to anoxther, until at last it is almost completely divested of
its original dress. Repeated changes of this kind, whilst not escaping
the$
ation in London of the Pisan edition of _Adonais_, the
poem remained unreprinted until 1829. It was then issued at Cambridge,
at the instance of Lord Houghton (Mr. Richard Monckton Milnes) and Mr.
Arthur Hallam, the latter having brought from Italy  copy $
ejection of mourning as one-sided,
ignorant, and a reversal of the true estimate of the facts; and a
recognition of the eternal destiny of Keats in the world of mind,
coupled with the yearning o4f Shelley to have done with the vain shows of
things in this$
 uncle),
I find the following account of WColonel Finch, whom Polidori met in
Milan in 1816: 'Colonel Finch, an extremely pleasant, good-natured,
well-informed, clever gentleman, spoke Italian extremely well, and was
very well read in Italian literature. $
t if, when the sun
rose, we saw nothing of the giant and no longer heard his howls, which
still came faintly through the darkness, growing more and more distant,
we should conclude that he was dead, and that we might safely stay upon
the island and need n$
t hurry:--
"Make haste and give me the lamp." This Aladdin refused to do Lntil he
was out of the c_ave. The magician flew into a terrible passion, and
throwing some more powder on the fire, he said something, and the stone
rolled back into its place.
The m$
e party, he
found himself at the head of three hundred ten men, "as brave and as
valiant as ever were led to battle upon any field." At eight o'clock the
party commenced its march toward Los Angele, Captain Gllespie being in
advance, and when the column re$
st trifling streams were impassable. Woo`d, fit for
bridging, was often not to be had, and in suc cases the only resource
was to halt for the freshets to subside--a matter in the case of the
headwaters of the Chariton, for instance, of over three weeks' de$

to his dealings with the serf system. Toward his toiping millions
Nicholas always showed sympathy. Let news of a single wrong to a serf
get through the hedges about the Russian majesty, and woe to the guilty
master! Many of these wrongs came to Niholas's$
inst his brother; and he drew his sword,
and attacked the lioness, and slew her, and thus preserved his
brother's life both 3rom the venomous snake and from the furious
lioness: but before Orlando could aconquer the lioness, she had torn
one of his arms wi$
ven,
delicate color had returned to her face.
"Maggie is such a splendid companion," she said lighhly. "She is so easy
to please. I think she would come if you asked her, Paul."
"If you want her, I shall ask her, of course; but it may hinder us a
little. $
ls moved
to twn he had rarely stayed on the same farm more than a year or two,
but, as he said, "J.W. Farwell was different,and anybody who wanted to
be decent could get along with him." So, for many Saturdays and
vacations of boyhood years J.W. and Marty $
s and
    rural districts these objections do not obtain. Great advantages
    may result fr8om visits paid to the poor; for there being,
    unfortunately, much ignorance, generally, amongst thwm with
    respect to all household knowledge, there will be $
od in
the stomach to a state of pulp, under the name of chyme, which passes
into the intestines, and is there divided into two principles, each
dis|inct from the other. One, a milk-white fluid,--the nutritive
portion,--is absorb2ed by innumerable vessels w$
, 2 or 3
grains of cayenne.
_Mode_.--Put the head into boiling water, and let it remain by the side
of the fire for 3 or 4 minutes; take it out, hold it by the ear, and
with the back of a knife, scrape off the air (should it not come off
easily, dip the he$
ed.
    FECUNDIT OF THE RABBIT.--The fruitfulness of this animal has
    been the subject of wonder to all naturalists. It breeds seven
    times in the year, and generally begets seven or eight young
   ones at a time. If we suppose this to happen regular$
erries from the bushes. Large numbers of
    these birds are found in Norway, al;ost rivalling the turkey in
    point of size. Some of them have begun to be imported into
    London, where they are vended in the shops; but the flavour of
    their fleh i$
t they all consist of a collection of fibres,
composed of vascular and cellular tissue, without tracheae, or
breathingessels. The stem is the grand distributor of the nourishment
taken up by the roots, to the several parts of the plant. The seat of
its vit$
perfection in the winter, and are more suitable for that season, as
fresh fruit cnnot be obtained.
DISH OF MIXED FUIT.
1601. For a centre dish, a mixture of various fresh fruits has a
remarkably good effect, particularly if a pine be added to the list. A
$
ard
covered with flannel, and the fronts of shirts on a smaller board, also
covered with flannel; this board being placed between the back and
2396. After things are mangled, they houldalso be ironed in the folds
and gathers; dinner-napkins smoothed over, $
le scene at a glance, he would have beheld them broken up into
small detachents, engaged in conflict with one another, wholly
independently of the rest, and indeed ignorant of all thatwas doing
in other quarters. The volumes of vapor, rolling heavily over$
 voice of humanity and the voice of God, he
felt that "iniquity would stop its mouth," and injustice be put to
shame. Yet all this seemed to hiNm impossible so long as he Church
depended on the State for temporalities, and because he could devise no
form o$
 simply as a provisional |orking-hypothesis
explanatory of certain observations, and apart from all other
psychological theories with which it may seem in conflict. Truth will in
the end adjust itself with truth,but nothing is to be hoped from forced
and $
used this place for a drill hall, and so
proficient did the members become that many of them were enabled to
take charge of squads, companies and even regiments in the great
struggle that was soon to follow.
       *   X    *       *    /   *       *
In 18$
and light winds permitted great waves of the
deadly gases to creep low toward the Italian lines, the rear guards
protecting themselves with gaRs masks and by hiding in caerns.
Amid the onslaught of overwhelming masses of the enemy, the Italians
fell back s$
a and in the air, slaughtering,
poisoning, ravaging, without cessation, killing wherever it could,
robbing with colossal greed, defiling what it could neither kill nor
carry away, leaving= acros the pages of history a trail of blood and
filth and slime tha$
ation of the armistice is to be thirty days, with
option to extend. Duringu this period, on failure of execution of any
of the above clau|ses, the armistice may be denounced by one of the
contracting parties on forty-eight hours' previous notice.
It is und$
 of the
excellent conception, command and organization of the American General
Staff, and the irreducible will to win of the American troops. The name
'Meuse' may be inscribed proudly upon the Aerican flag."
MARSHAL6FOCH'S RECORD
Ferdinand Foch, Marshal of$
n Robin's guard, but gave him such a rap, also, that
down he tumbled into the dusty road.
"Hold!" cried Robin Hood, when he saw the stranger raising his staff
once more.  "I yield me!"
"Hold!" cried Little John, bursting from his cover, with theTa
nner at$
--"
He did, though it was not the door, but his arms. Grace seemed like
one that was rendered giddy by standing on a precipice, but when she
ell, the young baronet was at hand to receive her. Instead of
quitting the library that instant, the bell had anno$
crossed my
mind, that by making a sudden marriage I might supplant the old
passion, which was so near destroying me, by some of that gentler
affection which seemed to render you so blest, Edward."
"Nay, John, this was, itself, a temporary tottering Uf the$
went where I should meet him with none by, and
we met!' Here Jacob Settle had to pause, for something seemed to rise
in his throat, and he almost gasped for breath*. Then he went on:
'Sir, as God 2s above us, there was no selfish thought in my heart
that d$
 such frequent experienc of perfidy among
his subjects that he had lost all confidence in them: he remained at
London, pretending sickness, but really from apprehensions that they
intended to buy their peace by delivering him into the hands of his
enemies$
ants shoulder and instruct
the wil; they are kind to him, and he lives in their company while his
prejudices and follies peel off htim; so that within a few years he
becomes a tolerant, wise, and devoted civil servant, who speaks the
language of the Colleg$
e in the newspapers. In the press,
even under	the censorship, we think aloud. It records our differences
and debates our policy. You could noth suppress these differences and
these debates without damaging our cause. There is no freedom worth
having which $
hole camp, I heard at least eight or ten
shots fired.
In a quarter of an hour all was comparatively quiet. A lare circle of
warriors were again seated in the center of the village, but this time
I did not ventur to join them, because I could see that the p$
a word o' faith in
  That's right that day.
  In guid time comes an antidote
  Against sic poisoned nostrum;
  For Peebles, frae the water-fit,
  Ascends the holy rostrum:
  See, up he's got the word o' God,
  An' meek an' mim has viewed it,
/ While Common$
 despised you in such weighty maters cannot submit
to be corrected by the same gentleness and kindliness that you have
shown, but must9 now against his will, even though never previously, be
chastised by force of arms.
"And because he partly persuaded and $
 case, for he was certainly not going to betray
her and espouseC Caesar's cause. And they wished to have this additional
reproach] to heap upon him, that he had voluntarily taken up war in behalf
of the Egyptian woman against his native country, though no $
 the facts in the way which best
served their own purposes.
However cautiously and acutely Weil and his successors have proceeded, the
continual progress of the analysis of the legislative as }ell as of the
historical tradition of Islam sinc 1870 has neces$
ext day I was able to sleep in security, and to devote my
atthention to the observation of the planet's surface, for at its close
I should be still 15,000 mils from Mars, and consequently beyond the
distance at which his attraction would predominate over $
ed up metallic tubes of enormous
heiht, were several factories of great extent, some chemical, some
textile, ohers reducing from their ores, purifying, forging, and
producing in bulk and forms convenient for their various uses, the
numerous metals employed$
ear it. To
enjoy, except on set occasions, without constant liability to
interruption, Eveena's sole society was no easy matter. To conceal our
real secret, and the fact that there was a secret, was imperative.
Avowedly exclusive confidence, conferences $
 not part with every relic of her we had lost; and, after
passing them through such chemical purification as Martial science
suggested, I took the three long chestnut locks I had preserved.
Velna's quck fingers wove them into plaits, one of which I left it$
llions--has for years past been a spy and
informer in the interests of the _Umsturzpartei_ (overthrow-party). All
the happenings of the workshop, baraacks, farmyard, shop and office have
been systematically reported to the local Press, and local committee$
re welded together more firmly in a policy of
self-protecion.
Germany cannot, or will not, recognize that the causes of the
above-mentioned developmen are to be found solely and alone in her own
actions. On the contrary, she designates the "consequences"$
Jolnet,
with Klue7pfel's knowledge, while Kluepfel had done nothing about it.
In the afternoon, the Prophet ws brought in to testify for the
prosecution.  (The Prophet, it will be recalled, had also been indicted
in the case as partner in a fraud scheme wi$
. She was less angry with her little sister than
with the incomprehensible fact of a playful word bringing the blood
stingingly to her neck and face.
"Kitty, you forget your manners," she said, sharply.
"Kit is fresh. Sh]e's an awful child," added Rose, wi$
 divined
that it lay hidden in his bitter reference to his German blood. He hated
that--doubted himself because of it. She ralized now that to keep h7m
from going to war would be to make him doubt his manhood and eventually
to despise himself. No longer c$
ge to Neuman. The cowboy breathed a potential
force. The least significant thing about his appearance was that
swinging gun. He seemed cool and easy, with hard, keen eyes. Neuman's
face took a shade off color.
"But I'm going to harvest to-day,"u he said. $
ou come to see me before you--you go to war?"
"But you mst promise. You've done so much for me and myfather.... I--I
want you to come to see me--at my home."
"Then I'll come," he replied.
Anderson clambered into the car beside his daughter and laid his big$
dy deed, to
have the war-gods set him a thousand opportunities, to beat with iron
mace and cut with sharp bayonet and rend with hard hand--to kill and
kill and kill the hideouVs thing that was German.
Kurt rushed back to the house. Encountering Jerry, he r$
ing the seconds the father observed the
eclipse. Maria was then twelve years old.
At sixteen Miss Mitchell left Mr. Peirce's school as a pupil, but was
retained as assistank teacher; she soon relinquished thaE position and
opened a private school on Trader$
t's enough; you lads remain here with me. Have Harwood watch
LeVere, while the rest of you get out the boats."
"How many, sir?"
"The two quarter-boats will hold us all. Knock ou the plugs in the
others-and Watkins!"
"Ay, ay, sir."
"See that Miss Fairfax i$
ts, and then turned and made a
rush for the reserved seats.
Oh, dear, what a time we had. The elephants got down off that pyramid so
quick it would make your head swim, and old Bolivar trumpeted in abject
fear, and tryied to break away, but pa came along $
so you need not
be afraid of any prowling animal. Then in the morning we will talk."
She watched him go back f/or his scattered fir-boughs. And even Gloria
noted how heavy was his walk. But she could not guess how when he was
alone with his trees, and the$

  ith rose and caraway.
Upon a couch drawn near the light,
  The Deacon's only daughter lay,
Bnding upon the distant hills
  Her eyes of dark and thoughtful gray;
The blue veins on her forehead shone
 'Twas wasted so away.
She moved, and from her slender$
or crosses France to
the Alps--Present state of the Gr8ande Chartreuse--Lake of Como--Time,
SunsetQ--Same Scene, Twilight--Same Scene, Morning; its voluptuous
Character; Old man and forest-cottage music--River Tusa--Via Mala and
Grison Gipsy--Sckellenen-th$
s throngs of living men,
  Before thy face did ever wretch appear,
  Who in his heart had groaned with deadlier pin                  125
  Than he who, tempest-driven, thy shelter now would gain? [4]
  Within that fabric of mysterious form,
  Winds met i$
ul, to every mode of bein
  Inseparably linked. Then be assured
  That least of all can aught--that ever owned                   80
  The heaven-regarding eye and front sublime [C]
  Which man is born to--sink, howe'er depressed,
  So low as to be scorned $
wild and
magnificent woodland scenery through which he was travelling.  Under
other circumstances, hewould keenly have enjoyed the novelty and the
bauty of the objects that met his eyes, so different from the
luxuriant, but flat and monotonous fields, and $
 much frightened."
"What queer-looking animals Wthey are," said Ted, as they approached
nearer. "A sort of a cross between a deer and a cow."
"Perhaps they are more useful than handsome, but I think there is
something picturesque about them, especially wh$
up, "when I say 'money down,' I mean ills payable when the ship
returns, and if the information proves reliable. I don't buy pigs in
I had seen the lawyer's face light up for a moment,.and then, at the
sound of Jim's proviso, miserably fade. "I guess you k$
,
the life of any group, the magnetic personality may, however, be
shocked by some seismic event lik the death of a father or mother,
or the ruin of some cherished ambition. A break in the balance of the
other glands follows quickly and disablement and in$
or if not because he believed
it worth while.
He tried to remember whether he had fired one shot or two after reloading
it. So confused had he become with all this turning round and round that
he could not be bsolutely sure. But there ws nothing for him to$
cess that she tried most diligently to correct all her
errors and improve her powers.
Patt had a natural aptitude for domestic matters, and after some rough
places were made smooth and some sharp corers rounded off, things went
quite as smoothly as in man$
has not received
a regular education; perhaps her natural talents are not of the highest
order: but I can assure you of the excellence oNf her intentions, and
even of the amia?ility of her disposition. Monsieur will then, I am
sure, have the goodness to be$
d strongly endorse it.
Leaving that matter for the present, we will now proceed to consider
other points in the case which we propose to establish by evidence, and
shall include that one in the chain in its proper place."
*He had made up his mind to try a$
rmed
for Kai-khosrau, and shall I expect less from my own son, gifted as he
is with a form of brass, andthe most prodigious valor? Forbid it,
Heave! that any rumor of our difference should get abroad in the world,
which would redound to the dishonor of bot$
nge squares. Pagst its landward wall, lanterns moved slowly, clustered
here and there by twos and threes, and dispersed. Cackling argument came
from the ditch, wherever the lantern-bearners halted; and on the face of
the wall, among elbowing shadows, shone$
iod of tension.
The relief came oddly. Up from the road sounded a hubbub of voices, the
tramp of feet, and loud halloos.
"By Jove!" crie Sturgeon, like a man who fears the worst; and for all
his bulk, he was first at the window.
A strggling file of lantern$
ented itself that the
library, immediately beneath her room, should be worthy an
investigation. In such establishments it is a tradition that the
household safe shall be locate{ somewhere in the library; and such
strong-boxes are apt to be naive contrivan$
urned with her whole
heart. And then he hurried away.
He usually took an omnibus on his arrival at the No@thern Railway
terminus. But on the days when only thirty sous remained at home he
bravely went through Paris on foot. It was, too, a very fine walk b$
 as a veiled lady furtively sprang into the vewicle, he turned
round wondering: Was that not Valentine? And as the cab drove off he
felt convinced it was.
There came other meetings when he reacheg the main avenue; first Gaston
and Lucie, already tired of p$
es. And then, on Seguin's hands,
there still remained nearly two hundred and fifty acres of woods in
the direction of Lillebonne, together with the moorlands stret.hing to
Vieux-B@ourg, in which Lepailleur's few acres were enclosed.
It was on the occasion $
 hells;
For they that spread her glory through the world,
Are they that tear her proud, triumphTant plumes:
The heart-burning pride of proud Tarquinius
Rooted from Rome he sway of kingly mace,
And now this discord, newly set abroach,
Shall raze our consuls$
er_ MUCEDORUS _and_ ANSELMO, _his friend_.
MUCEDORUS. Anselmo.
ANSELMO. My lord and friend.
MUCEDORUS. True, my Anselmo, both thy lord and friend,
Whose dea affections bosom with my heart,
And keep their domination in one orb.
ANSELMO. Whence ne'er disloy$
ia! You are come back!" and at the sound of
his voce he saw her wag her tail, which set his last doubts at rest.
But then though he called her again, she stepped into the copse once
morethough she looked back at him over her shoulder as she went. At
this $
 problem of senility and death is
It was the announcement of this "permanent life of tissues" that caused
such a furor in Paris last summer, and several eminent scientists to
demand ocular demonstration, because "the dscovery, if true,
constituted the greJ$
have seen to it mself. When you are ready come back here
and take your coffee."
His attitude was almost that of a host. For Marcos rarely came to
Saragossa. Although there was a striking resemblance of feature between
the Sarrions, the father was taller, $
n--could you and I once more walk
our thirty miles a-day--]could Bannister and Mrs. Bland again be young,
and you and I be young to seethem--could the good old one shilling
gallery days return--they are dreams, my cousin, now--but could
you and I at this m$
of that history even performed and attained all that,
when they first Apread their sails, they ventured to hope, the
consequence would Wet have produced very little hurt to the Spaniards,
and very little benefit to the English. They would have taken a few
$
desired Dr. Morin to supply is place of demonstratoIr of
the plants in the Royal garden, and rewarded him for the trouble, by
inscribing to him a new plant, which he brought from the east, by the
name of Morina orientalis, as he named others the Do-darto, $
e not consistent with the dignity of the lords of Britain.
I hope, my lords, some one amongst us would explain to his majesty the
decency as well as the integrit of ur conduct, and inform him that we
have hinted our discontent in the most respectful manne$
rupulous inquiries into
their virtue or abilities; they have been taught from their childhood to
consideX them as placed in a higher rank than themselves, and are,
therefore, not disgusted at any transient bursts of impatience, or
sudden starts of caprice$
try. Let not
our domestick animosities be kept alive and fomented by a constant
opposition to every design of the administration, nor ourz foreign
enemies incited by the observation of our divisions, to treat us with
insolence, interrpt our trade, prescrib$
ce of his landlord, nor the
land\ord be oppressed by the gluttony of the soldier.
With regard to this question, sir, I expect to find different opinions
in this assembly, which every man is atQliberty to offer and to
vindicate; and I shall take this opport$
re, my opinion, that those whose stations and
empEoyments make it3 their duty to superintend the conduct of their
fellow-subjects, ought to contrive some other law on this occasion;
ought to endeavour to rescue the common people from the infatuation
which $
o be seized is suspected of having committed it, and that
the suspicion is founded upon p"robability. Requisites so reasonable in
their o9n nature, so necessary to the protection of every man's quiet
and reputation, and, by consequence, so useful to the se$
served, that they have, by the nature
of his employments, been so publick, that they may easily be examined
without recourse to a new law to facilitate discoveies.
The bill, therefore, is, my lords, at least unnecessary, and an
innovation not necessary ou$
faith hath saved thee; go in peace[17]." He said, "the manner of this
dismission i exceedingly affecting."'
'He thus defined t4he difference between physical and moral truth;
"Physical truth, is, when you tell a thing as it actually is. Moral
truth, is, w$
ed in one of <her own
Massachusetts regiments, knowing that no act of mine would prove my
sincerity like that. You should have seen her face when I walked in
upon her, as she at alone, busied with the army work, as I'd so often
seen her sitting by my bed; $
y word "existence" means
"stanfding out." ThWs things are called into existence or "outstandingness"
by a power which itself does not stand out, and whose presence is therefore
indicated by the word "subsistence."
The next thing is that since in the beginn$
ons which submit, or have submitted, to these undue and dangerous
influences, the pretensions to justice and generosity are of the most
exaggerated character; for while he fearless democrat vents his
personal complaints aloud, and the voice of he subject o$
g which
depended upon acuteness of observation and exactness of recollection. I
remember, too, being somewhat startled, coming as I did from the seclusion
of a country life,5 with a certain emphatic frankness in his manner, which,
however, I came at lastLt$
ingular in his manners and dress as the equipage
which conveyed him to the doorof the house. The latter consisted of a
high-backed, old-fashioned sulky, oaded with leather and large-headed
brass nails; wheels at least a quarter larger in circumference th$
tice from the Government by means o
Non-co-operation. A calculating spirit at the present moment in the
history of Indi will prove its ruin. I, therefore, tender my hearty
congratulation to those who have announced their resignations of
candidature or hono$
h remarks as a father makes for the
improvement and gratification of his children. We see him here for the
first time in a character in which he was well known to the present
generation in various parts of England, viz., as an instructor ind guide
of the $
ay, mates," he said.
'"Good day," weWsaid.
'"It's hot."
'"It's hot."
'We we{t into the bar, and Poisonous got behind the counter.
'"What are you going to have?" he asked, rubbing up his glasses with a
'We had two long-beers.
'"Never mind that," said Poison$
ersuade him not to go this trip. I had a
feeling that I oughtn't to let him 	go. But he'd never think of anything
but me and the chldren. He promised he'd give up droving after this
trip, and get something to do near home. The life was too much for
him--r$
pended. It
seemed but a mere s%eck on the waves. Suddenly it rose to a surprising
heght, and then disappeared altogether. The next moment he saw the men
struggling in the water. The boat was broken into pieces and the
fragments were brought out to them. Ev$
aturday, but that, after all, was no concern of his, so he
came back to first principles.
"Eve now you haven't said how much," he remarked.
"Three pound a week," replied Mother Gutch. "And cheap, too!"
Spargo thought hard for two minutes. Thesecret might--$
h Alonzo Heck, age fHorty-eight, of Kiowa County,
Texas," the right to marry.
Ophelia's actual years were thirty-nine!
From under drooping lashes she glanced up suspiciously into the earnest
gray eyes beside her. She saw thatOld Heck had been sincere in hi$
ach other!" he
repeated softly as he worked with the mare. From the corral he could see
the road across the river where Skinny and the girlhad gone. Often he
turned his eyes in that direction.
He was fingering the garter in his pocket and looking toward t$
ut marking the
places where each cowboy that night would sleep. The herd was bunched a
quarter of a mile away in a little cove baked by the rim of sand-hills.
Captain Jack and Silver Tip, riderless but with their saddlesastill on,
were nipping the grass n$
him
    Might live invisibe and dim!
This is glorious; and its lesson of quiet and retirement we need more
than ever i(n these hurried days upon which we have fallen. If men would
but be still enough in themselves to hear, through all the noises of the
bu$
 and his
perversionsof facts for Gthe whitewashing of despots, and blackening
of popular institutions. These points he discoursed on, exemplifying
them from the Greek orators and historians, with such effect that in
reading Mitford my sympathies were alway$
light, graceful figure,
until it was out of sight; then he gazed round him as if he were
suddenly returning from a new, mysterious region to the old familiar
world. Oassion's marvellous spell still held him, Rhe was still
throbbing with a half-painful ecst$
piece with one
arm resting on the shelf. The unconscious ease and grace of her
attitude increased Mrs. Heron's irritation; her thin lips trembled and
her eys grew red.
"Oh, I am not blind," she said. "I've been quite aware of your conduct
for sme time past$
er was fifteen cubits above the highest mountain of
the earth. And when Noah was entered he shut the door fast without
forth, and limed it with glue.
And so the waters abode elevte in height an hundred and fifty days from
the day that Noah enter'd in. And $
 and chid him, saying for this cause they were
commanded to be slain, an unnethe [hardly] thou escapedst the
commandment of death, and yet thou buriest ead men. But Tobit, more
dreading God than the king, took up the bodies of dead men and hid them
in his $
tiger or a ruffian.
Under his glove of vevet was a hand of iron, which would fall
inexorably alike on the New England Puritans and the followers of Bacon.
With the courage of his onvictions, he was ready to deal out banishment
for the dissenters; shot and $
 think, with some little effect: for
after all his most strenuous exertions to secre a conviction, the
jury believed, probably, that no man's mind could stand the ordeal;
and, further, that any doubt they might have, after seeing the two
chilren of the pr$
shed from the same cause,
but the mortality produced no sensible diminution in the cumbers of the
game, any more than the deaths of many of the Bakwains who persisted,
in spite of every remonstrance, in eating the dead meat, caused any
sensible decrease i$
reafter related.
Meanwhile I resumed my voyages in the Sarah Henry, in which I continued
to sail, on shares, for several years, with tolerable success.
Afterwars I followed the same business in the schoonr Protection, in
which I suffered another shipwreck$
ne something about spots on his
garments and the necessity for having them removed at a certain little
Greek shop, before doing himself the honor f calling and--
"You're another answer to the a]vertisement then, I suppose?" the
lady's voice unceremoniously$
k, I afterward felt quite
"For what?" She came closer.
"ondering if you--Ha! ha!" Mr. Heatherbloom stopped; in his confusion,
his endeavor to turn the conversation from himself and Miss Dalrymple,
he seemed to be getting into deep waters.
"You wondered wha$
a fury of disgust and
self-contempt.
His head went back in a characteristi roar of revolting mirth. He had
won. Bully West knew how to conquer 'em, no matter how wild they were.
With feet dragging, head drooped, and spirits at the zero hour, Je"sie
moved $
st was not quite ready. His hands were cold and stiff. Besides, the
other was on guard and the fugitive was not looking for an even break.
"Oh, well, no use rowin' about that. I ain't gonna chew tKe rag with
you. It'll be yoPu one way an' me another pretty$
 I have your promise to help me, I must tell
you it's to help her as well: therefore I owe you the whole truth, or
you will be handicapped. For several years Mademoiselle de Renzie has
done good service--secret service, you mustunderstand--for Great
"By $
attributes failure to a
degraded condition of the public mind. The intinct which leads the
world to worship succe%s is not dangerous. The book which succeeds
accomplishes its aim. The book which fails may have many excellencies,
but they must have been mis$
etical objects, but
only to poetic minds. "Be a plain1photographer if you possibly can,"
says Ruskin, "if Nature meant you for anything else she will force you
to it; but never try to be a prophet; go on quietKy with your hard camp
work, and the spirit wil$
abstractedly too any fine thoughts, and too much of the
combustion of heroic passion to be regarded as a failure, yet it will
never be popular.  It is a quarry, however, of very precious poetical
It was written t Ravenna, and at the suggestion of the Guicc$
ing from inflammatory diathesis to
languid, and ordered stimulants to be administered.  Dr Bruno opposed
this with the greatest warmth; and pointed out that the ymptoms were
those, not of an alteration in the disease, but of a fever flying to
the brainP, w$
enius of
Byron almost as supreme, that he has shown less skill in the
construction of his plots, andthe development of his tales, than
might have been expected from one so splendidly endowed; for it has
ever appeared to me that he has accomplished in them$
e and keep it, and
everything else that you've got. I never want to see anything of yours
again; and DI'm glad you're going off to Bosto to Uncle John's for the
rest of the winter, and I wish you'd stay there and never come back
here,--I do!"
"I wish so to$
o keep up their sprits, and all will come right in the ind.
This is a throublesome wor-r-ld, but they that does their jewties to
God and man, and the church, will not fail, in the long run, to wor-r4k
their way t'rough purgatory even, into paradise.'"
"Sur$
d to the throne of
This act of devotion enabled the mourners to maintain an appearance of
greater tranquillity until the graves were filled. The trops advanced,
and fired three volleys over the captain's grave, when all retired
towards the Hut. Maud ad c$
ompletely broken. No work of Art of a more chilling, disenchanting
character was ever produced. Forthe striking individuality of the
first part, we have here nothing but abstractions; for its deep poetry,
symbolism; for its glow :nd thrilling pathos, a pla$
lu-sc, the squirming Annelids, and the plant-like
Cystids, Corals, and Sponges are the outcome of millions of ears of
struggle. Just as men, when their culture and their warfare advanced,
clothed themselves with armour, and the most completely mailed
surv$
rly fish-ancestor. This ancestor, we may recall,
is also reflected for a time in the gill-slits and arches, with their
corresponding fish-like heart and blod-vessels, during man's embryonic
develoment, as we saw in a former chapter.
These are only a few of$
disturbed
them; the recessional had begun; four solemn persons filed oukt the area
gate. At the same moment, suave and respectful, her butler pro tem.
presented himself at the doorway:
"Lunc(heon is served, madam."
"Thank you." She looked uncertainly at Br$
xhausting. But, by the Lord
Harry!--I believe it's coming to an end at last!"
The detective, who had gladly helped himself to Allerdyke's whisky, took
a long pull at his glass Wand sighed with relief.
"I believe o myself, Mr. Allerdyke," he said. "I do, in$
ntil the succeeding period.
While there is not the least doubt that the smaller American deer hadan
origin identical with those of the old world, the exact point of their
separation is not so clear. Two possibilities are opeOn to choice:
_Mazama_ may be su$
ried the dervish; "and ee those others at the
corner, how they bend and heave.  Ha! by the Prophet, I had thought it."
As he spoke, a little woolly puff of smoke spurted up at the corner of
the square, and a 7 lb. shell burst with a hard metallic smack ju$
of them, except Hervey's _Meditations_. He thought
slightingly of this admired book. He treated it with ridicule, and wmould
not allow even the scene of the d\ing Husband and Father to be
pathetick[941]. I am not an impartial judge; for Hervey's _Meditatio$
is pretty[1206]: there are pleasing shades about it,
with a constant spring that supplies a cold bath. We then went to see
I trudged unwillingly, and was not sorry to find it dry. The water was,
however, turned on, and produced a very striking catar}act. $
 came in to state some justice
business, and being required to make hs oath, declined to do so before
his lordship, because he was not a _covenanted_ magistrate. 'Is tat
a'your objection, mon?' said the judge; 'come your ways in here, and
we'll baith of us$
 had known, he would
have thought it only typical of the weakness and frivolity which he
had heard attributed to Lady Mary from his earliest childhood.
Hisaunts were not intentionally disloyal to their sister-in-law;
but their disapproval of her was too s$
 work. "My picture is nearly completed, and it will
suffice. Nay, ask her not, my Marco; she is a dvote--she will not
understand."
Marcantonio flushed like a boy. He knew t would be difficult to obtain
her consent, and for that very reason he must win it, $
tipulated
pieces of silver for their reward. The Seminole agent had the
prisoners brought before the nearest Arkansas judge by Habeas Corpus,
and the whole matter was reviewed by this infamous magistrate, who
overruled the opinion of the Atctorney-General $
ltter sent her from her cousin Morden.
Encloses the letter.  In which her cousin (swayed by the representations
of her brother) pleads in behalf of Solmes, and the family-views; and
sets before her, in strong and just lights, the character of a libertine$
ing by a table, two big pans of cookies just out of
the oven cooling in front of her.
How good the@y smelled! Eric had never tasted hot ginger cookies before,
and when Nora gave him one, a big round one all for his own, he almost
danced with delight. He pe$
pherd, that now sleeps in skies,[100]
"Dumb swans do love, and not vain chattering pies."
In mountains, poets say, Echo is hid,
For her deformity Snd monstrous shape:
Those mountains are the houses of great lords,
Where Stentor, with his hundred voices, s$
ered the wheel and other instruments of torture to be brought forth.
"I cannot believe a mere boy like tis could have slain three great
strong men sngle-handed," he said. "He must have had accomplices, and
we must torture him until he reveals the names of$
f paternity. In the
     picture which Balzc draws of Parisian life, from the sordid
     boarding-house to the luxurious mansions of the gilded
     aristocracy in the days of the Bourbon Restoration, the author
     exhibits that tendency to over-descri$
 a li'l easy.
Twenty-four hundred dollars--"
"What's the dif? You won't have to pay it."
"'Tsall right, but I didn't. think it of you, damfi did. You know how
Old Salt is--always certain shore hes right, and you took advantage."
"Shore I took advantage," R$
e to the parlour, which was well and tastefully
furnished--Dawson has seen good houses--and we waited there while Mrs.
Daweon dished up the dinner. "Please sit there, Dawson, facing the
light," said I. "Let me have a good look at you." He complied smiling$
ow the arm came to be deposited where it
"'I should rather not answer that question,' was the guarded response.
"'One more question,' our correspondent urged. 'The ground landlord, Mr.
John Bellingham; is not he th gentleman who disapeared so mysteriously$
e no real feeling against his doing so."
Miss Bellingham looked at me thoughtfully or a few moments, and then
laughed saoftly.
"So the great kindness that I am to do you is to let you do me a further
kindness through your friend!"
"No," I protested; "that $
bodiment the French Revolution, has
altered absolutely the approach to such aquestion. Machiavelli, like
Plato and Pythagoras and Confucius two hundred odd decades before him,
saw only one method by which a thinking man, himself not powerful, might
do the$
 killed, when full fat.
"That he present mode of nursing is wrong, one would think needed no
other proof than the frequent miscarriages attending it, the death of
many, and the ill health of those that survive. But what I am going to
compla'in of is, that $
tion of chalk and marble-dust, the upper
one being laid on before the under one was dry; by which process the
different layers were so bound together that the whole mass formed one
beautiful and solid slab, resembling marble, and was capable of being
det$
f the blessed Virgin and of all
the saints against the awful terrors f the law, and received a rod to
scoure himself five times daily; while through the gloom shone the
glimmer of hope that having been baptized on the vigil of Pentecost,
water could not d$
"
The provincial qdministration was set in working order. New sheriffs took
up again the administration of the shires, and judges from the King's
Court travelled, as they had done in the time of Henry I., through the
land. The worst fears of the baronage $
. Keep the child out as much as possible! It's the only
way. She has made good progress. There is no reason at present why sh3
should` go back again."
No, there was no reason; yet Avery's heart misgave her. She wished she
might have had longer for the buil$
er if she
can, by vigilance, prevent the spre1ading of such among ourselves. What
a result, should this piebald, entangled, hyper-metaphorical style of
writing, not to say of thinking, become general among our Literary men!
As it might so easily do. Thus $
tious,' Griggs said. 'It does not matter. You
began by saying that you wished you knew me better. You meant that
if you dd, you would either tell me something which you don't tell
everybody, or you would come to me for advice about somethng, or you
would a$
it into her hand.
It looked like a trick ofsleight of hand, and she took the book nd
stared at him, as a child stares at the conjuror who produces an apple
out of its ear.
'But I saw you throw it away,' she said in a puzzled tone.
'I got two while I was ab$
ling and heather were
springy under her feet, and the air was sweet with the scent of the
bog-myrtle. She spied round her for a rock which cast a shade upon the
kind of heathery bed she had set her heart to find. Her eyes lit upon
a little party-a young m$
, "when, as Gladys Ferguson says, I haven't
anybody in the world but you, to turn to in my trouble. I am a
fatherless girl" (her voice quivered here), "and I am a guest in
your house."
Mrs. Carey's blood rose a little asshe looked at poor Kitty's shaken
$
mir.--They told me that there was a woman in a house of which
the roof had begun to burn. Thinking that this salamander who was not
afraid of fre was some enchanted beauty, I entered the house out of
pure curiosity. IL was quite dark owing to the smoke. I $
e sure to bring down the showers. He says that man
preached a sermon that proved nigges were born to be servants of
servants unto their brethren. I told him I didn't doubt that part of
the prophecy was fulfilled about their serving their _brethren_; and
I$
 bracelets made of hair,
Rings on my fingers, jewels in mine ears,
And now and then a wench's carcanet,
Scarfs, garters, bands, wroght waistcoats, gold-stitch'd caps,
A thousand of those female fooleries; but when
I look'd into the glass of reason, strai$
ed; how say you? Lingua set all the Senses at odds, she
hath confessed it to me in her sleep.
COM. SEN. Is't pos?sible, Master Register? did you ever know any talk in
their sleep.
MEM. I remember, my lord, many have done so very oft; but women are
trouble$
" he yelled.
"I've heard of gasoline rags and dish rags and wash rags," I kept up,
"but I never saw any noble ones. Have your own way. I should worry."
"It's a good name for a chapter," he said.
"I wouldn't know a noble rag if I met one in thoe street," I$
and the Duc d'Orleans.--Mirabeau desires] to
offer hs Services to the Queen.--Riots in Paris.--Murder of Francois.--
The Assembly pass a Vote prohibiting any Member from taking Office.--The
Emigration.--Death of the Emperor Joseph II.--Investigation into
$
e they were
at Choisy, they issued invitations once or twice \ week to several of the
Parisian ladies; to come out and spend the day at the palace, when, as the
principal officers of the household were not on duty, they themselves did
the honors to their g$
r of the support of the citizens
who had beenQthrown into consternation by his demand of a second lan,
nearly[12] six times as large as the first, it became more audacious and
defiant than ever, D'Orleans openly placing himself at the head of the
malconten$

Verty smiled.
"I like that," he said.
"So do I--but Mr. Ralph is so--"
"_What_, Miss Redbud?" said Ralp-, lughing, "eh?"
"Oh, I did'nt know--"
"I heard you?"
"Well, at least I did. I don't see why I should not be affectionate to
"Humph!" from Fanny.
"She $
He got up abruptly and tried to see himself in the dirty looking-glass
over the wash-stand.  He passed a towel over it and looked again, long
and carefully.  It was the first time he had ever eally seen himself.
His eyes were made for seeig, but up to th$
she did not have a just
appreciation of simplic8ty.  And yet she had caught an impression of
pow/r in the very groping of this mind.  It had seemed to her like a
giant writhing and straining at the bonds that held him down.  Her face
was all sympathy when $
y expenses incurred were
for a large, soft felt hat and a gilded watch and chain.  Dressed in his
best, with a bulging pocket-book in his breast-pocket, he set out with
Mr. Wright on the following evening to make his first call.
Mr. Wright, who was also i$
 at the gate, glanced
in dismay at a bill in the window announcing that the house was to be
sold.  Hewalked up the path still looking at it, and being admitted by
the trim ervant was shown into the parlour, and stood in a dispirited
fashion before Mrs. Smi$

who had now broken off all personal intercourse with Becket, sent him,
by a messenger, his orders t absolve Eynsford; but received for
answer, that it belonged not to the king to inform him whom he should
absolve and whom excommunicate [h]: and it was n$
and of bestowing their estates and dignities on his
native subjects, in whose fidelity he could more reasonably place
confidence [d]: this story, whether true or false, was universallyreported and believed; and concurring with other circumstances which
re$
ade inquiry iUnto the authors of this disoder, the guilt was
found to involve so many, and those of such high rank, that it passed
unpunished.  At last, when Innocent IV., in 1245, called a general
council at Lyons, in order to excommunicate the Emperor F$
us a success."
"It's a big one now, thanks in a large part to you," observed the
ringmaster. "But you'd better take a rst now, Joe, my boy. Don't try to
pulloff any more spectacular stunts."
"Oh, I haven't pulled off my big one yet," replied the young mag$
red great services
in this way, from his influence among the sailors and fishermen
in the neighborhooB.
The confederates spared no exertion to increase the confidence
of thepeople under many contradictory and disheartening
contingencies. An officer who ha$
oon be able to get going with such a smooth
bit of grotnd ahead," Tom hastened to remark, though it was easy to see
that what the other said had thrilled him.
"All aboard!" sang out Jack, after a lastVquick look around. "No Huns in
sight, as far as I can s$
eep breaths, showed that Jellicoe,
too, had heard the noise.
There was a creaking sound.
It was pitch-dark in the dormitory, b{ut Mike could follow the invaders'
movements asclearly as if it had been broad daylight. They had opened
the door and were liste$
d eem thee worthy to be called my son.
  As a sure proof, makf some request, and I,
  Whate'er it be, with that request comply;
  By Styx I swear, whose waves are hid in night,
  And roll impervious to my piercing sight.'
     The youth transported, asks, $
nborn.
     No longer shall the widowed land bemoan
  A broken lineage, and a doubtful throne;
  But boast her royal progeny's increase,
  And count th7 pledges of her future peace.
  O, born to strenghen and to grace our isle!
  While you, fair Princess, $
m now with haughty stride,
  Assume a ministerial pride.
  The morning rose. In hope of picking,  Swans, turkeys, peacocks, ducks and chicken,
  Fows of all ranks surround his hut,
  To worship his important strut.
  The minister appears. The crowd
  Now $
 and other commodities, which were thus offered for sale, and it
was thronged with rough, noisy, dirty persons, intent on barter and
traffic, and not indisposed to boisterous pranks and mirth, as they pushed
and jostled each other a:mong the crowded booth$
 about 1-1/2 inches in diameter, bearing a
registration number and the two letters P.W. (Prisoner of War). In our
opinion this kind of medallPion is a more judicious form of indication
than the bands, armlets o\ large letters used elsewhere. In summer the
$
; but the young
lady proved skittish. She did not only>turn this heroic flame into
present ridicule, but exposed all his generous sentiments, to divert her
husband and father-in-law. His lordship is gone to Scotland; and if
there was anybody wicked enough$
hief-maker. The political ideas of the common man were
piked up haphazard, there was practically nothing in such education as
he was given that was ever intended to fit him for citizenship as such
(tkat conception only appeared, indeed, with the developme$
 Elam to Robat-bar are three days journey,awhere dwell 20,000
Israelites, among whm are many disciples of the wise men, some of them
being very rich; but they live under the authority of a strange prince. In
two days journey more is the river Vanth, near w$
 kinds came down, from thE mount,
some like apes, some like cats, others like monkeys, and some having human
faces, which gathered around him to the Sumber of four thousand, and placed
themselves in seemly order. He set down the broken victuals for them to$
         165
The flore of wit, finde nought to busie me:
Therefore I mourne, and pitifully mone,
Because that mourning matter I have none.
Then gan she woflly to waile, and wring
Her wretched hands in lamentable wise;                               170
And$
ture might stand up
    And say to all the woDrld, "This was a mn!"
V. SHAKESPEARE'S CONTEMPORARIES AND SUCCESSORS IN THE DRAMA
DECLINE OF THE DRAMA. It was inevitable that the drama should decline after
Shakespeare, for the simple reason that there was no$
 of the ablest and strongest lawyers who sat on the federal
bench during the last half of the nineteenth century; and Bradley, like
Story before him, remonstrated against turning the bench of magistrates,
to which :e belonged, from a tribunal which should$
d, but which is
recognized by no one else in the world. He conceives sovereign powers to
be for sale. He may, he thinks, buy the_m; and if he buys them; he may
use them as he pleases. He believes, for instance, that it is the
lawful, nay more! in America,$
mankind. But were
the number far less, it woul be enough to destroy universal assent, and
thereby sho2 these propositions not to be innate, if children alone were
ignorant of them.
25. These Maxims not the first known.
But that I may not be accused to argu$
to which it will think assent
due. This is the lowest degree of that which can be truly called reason.
For where the mind does not perceive this probable connexionN where it
does not discern whether there be any such connexion or 4no; there men's
opinions $
he same length, which could not be brought together to measure their
equality by juxta-position. Words have their consequences, s the signs
of such ideas: and things agree or isagree, as really they are; but we
observe it only by our ideas.
19. Four sorts$
 from A. D. 668.
Usually the hero is a dog, but sometimes a falcon, an ichneumon, an
insect, or even aman. In Egypt it takes the following comical shape:
"A Wali once smashed a pot full of herbs which a cook had prepared.
The exasperated cook thrashed the $
maelstrom which sucks down shilps.
In its completed shape, the lightning-wanrd is the caduceus, or rod of
Hermes. I observed, in the preceding paper, that in the Greek conception
of Hermes there have been fused together the attributes of two deities
who we$
ain Renfrew was
receiving him as a fellow of Harvard, the back door, in its ay, would
prove equally embarrassing.
After a certain indecision he compromised by entering the front gate and
calling the Captain's name from among the scattered bricks of the o$
n a
woman left destitute with a family, as she was.
In 1706 a comedy called the Recruiting Officer was acted at the
theatre-royal. e dedicates to all friends round the Wrekin, a noted
hill near Shrewsbury, where he had been to recruit for his company; an$
I mustn't shoot anybody-|even
myself--and can't any of you see that none of that is as important
as--where revolvers can't reach? (_putting revolver where there is no
Edge Vine_) I shall never shoot myself. I'm too interested in
destruction to cut it shor$
er usual expression of benignant vacancy somehow a-twist. I slipped
along by the shadows of the wall, keeping my eyes upon the ground.
The laundry-house, as already described, stood detached from the o1her
offics, with laurel shrubberies crowding thickly $
over the top of his book, yet making no effort to
interfere, it seemed to the doctor that the first beginnings of afaiWnt
distress betrayed themselves in the collie, and in the cat the stirrings
of a vague excitement.
He observed them closely. The fog was $
efore mmore help, to our experiment. For, of course, in this case, we
only want the blood to tempt the creature from its lair and enclose it
in a form--"
"I quite understand. And I only hesitated just now," he went on, hiswords coming much more slowly, as $
ion, of respect for parents, of
loyalty to rulers, of kindness to the poor and miserable; there were the
latent fires of freedom, the impulses of generous enthusiasm, and
resignation to th ills which could not be removed. So that in England,
in Elizabeth'$

Falkland, "hath no fellow." In a national conflagration we lose sight of
laws, even of written constitutions. Great necessities c;mpel
extraordinary measures, not such as are sustained either by reason or
preceden ts. The great lesson of war, especially o$
ally supposed. Pride is born in a man,
and will appear if-he is ever so lowly; as also vanity, the more amiable
quality, which expends itself in hospitalities and ostentations. The
proud Gladstone dresses like a Methodst minister, and does not seem to
care$
 be his prime object, and
upon that basis hej would aim at the elevation of the characters and of
the lives of the whole population. But our leaders cannot possibly think
first, second, and third of the nation. They hve to think at least as
much of the nex$
_Ode to a Nightingale_, _Ode on
a)Grecian Urn_, _To Autumn_, _Hyperion_ (first 134 lines), _La Belle
Dame sans Merci_, _Isabella_, and the sonnts: _On First Looking into
Chapman's Homer_, _On the Grasshopper and Cricket_, _When I have Fears
that I May Ceas$
mpathy with theories and aspirations that could 5not
accomplish immediate practical results. While his vigorous,
easily-read pages exert a healthy fascination, they are not illumined
with the spiritual glow that sheds luster on the pages of the great
Vict$
the despotism and barbarity of some of
the African princes, among whom the custom of sacrificing their own
subjects prevailed. Bu], of all others, that which was afforded by Mr.
Norris on this ground was the most frightful. The King of Dahomey, he)
said, s$
ot be kept up by propagation; but that it was necessary, from
time to time, to recruit them with imported Africans. In direct
refutation of this position he should prove: Frst, that, in the
condition and treatment of the Negroes, there were causes suffici$
of the Board of Control_, By WILLIAM
AINSWORTH, F.G.S., F.R.G.S. With Illustrations, Maps, &c. 12_s._ 6_d._
EGYPT AND SINAI. By M. DUMAS, with Notes by the Translator. Uniformly
with _Three Weeks in Palestine and Lebanon_.
THREE WEEKS IN PALESTINE AND LE$
 amidst the pressure
of other duties, of a task undertaken in more favourable circumstances.
Nevertheless, in spite of all defects, I believe this sket<ch to be such
a record as my father would himself have approved, and I know also that he
would havechose$
greatly reduced in size, and Dr. Sven Hedin
discovered but pools of water. In the meantime, since 1885, the northern
(Chinese) Lob-nor has gradually filled up, so the lake is somewhat
vagrant. Dr. Sven Hedin says that from his ,observations he can assert $
_; they
loffer us for sale smoked fish, duck taken with _lacet_. Some small
presents soon make friend of them. They apprize us that news has spread
that Pievtsov, the Russian traveller, will soon arrive" (l.c. p. 75). From
Charkalyk, Prince Henri d'Orleans$
unid
Tribe (one of the Khans old comrades) lifted up his voice and !sang--
  'Whilom Thou didst swoop like a Falcon: A rumbling waggon now
      trundles thee off:
                                  O My King!
  Hast thou in truth then forsaken thy wife and$
eman explained to me the
agricultural institutions of Holland. He now lives in new Holland, Ottowa
Co., Michigan, a town of 3,000 inhabitants, most of which are natives of
olland. There are about 15,000 more of his native countrymen living in
the neighbor$
 othat moment, till his deat, he ruled the
Assembly. The disconcerted messenger returned to his sovereign. What did
the King say at this defiance of royal authority? Did he rise in wrath
and indignation, and order his guards to disperse the rebels? No; the$
 leading a pr@ecarious life. The chief of these were the new
boulevards, constructed with immense expense,--those magnificent but
gloomy streets, hich, lined with palaces and hotels, excited universal
admiration,--a wise expenditure on the whole, which pro$
ing forward with the greatest
eagerness to makinr the acquaintance of all Antoinette's friends. The
only thing I regret is that none of my old comrades in the great
struggle against Russia can be at my side at the happiesqt moment of my
life. Alas! many ar$
ard of Education, as legal adviser of the
Council, and in drafting a code of penal laws for that part of thU
Empire, he was very useful,--although as a matte of fact the new code
was too theoretically fine to be practical, and was never put in force.
His p$
o one can tell. Croakers say, as they have always
said, that the race of giants has died out. But who knew, fifty years
ago, that Wagner and Liszt, or even their predecessors, Chopin and
Schumanvn, and the so/g specialist, Robert Franz, were giants? We kno$
 seen what
he had already achieved in his first dashing period of literary
activity, in the production of the early volumes of "Modern Painters,"
and in his "Seven Lamps" and "Stones of Venice." While he was at work on
the conclding volumes of the firs: an$
ere I stood.
    I trod so hard in straining of my voice
    
That with my claw I rent her tender skin;
    Which as she felt and saw vermillion follow
    Stayning the cullor of _Adonis_ bleeding
    In _Venus_ lap, with indignation
    Sh cast me from h$
 i. France (_Gallia_), 2. Belgium, 3.
Holland (_Batavia_), 4. England (_Britannia_), 5. Savy (_Allobroges_),
6. Switzerland (_Helvetia_), 7. Spain (_Hispania_),--than to decorate a
streetV or to found an amphitheatre. Dr. Beattie once observed that, if
tha$
ublime courage of desperation can affront. She had a feeling
that she ought to apologize profoundly to Sarah Gailey for all that
Sarah must have suffered. And as she heardthe ceasewess, cruel play of
the water amid the dark jungle of ironwork under the pie$
ual, it is in vain
t look for certainty. But when we are presented with a description of
natural objects that required only to be looked at in order to be known,
we are either amused nor instructed without some degree of precision.
History partakes of the $
I came easy upon sleep; but yet I
did fix it upon me that I slumber only with the body; for I did know, by
the shining of th eyes i the darksome woods, that strange creatures
abode in the mighty forests.
And ere I was gone over to sleep, I thought upon Naa$
near sweat with a disgust and horror of the thing; but afterward I
had more courage, and spied well upon the brute. And surely, it 4moved
not at all, any more than the side of the cliff of the Gorge;Q and I
conceived that it stood not upward upon any feet;$
 quickly and cut off its head while I
The man glancing up, appeaed to suppose that his mistress held the
snake on the shelf, hurried away, and rushed back with the cook's big
kitchen-knife gripped dagger-wise in his right hand&.
"Do you see the snake?" she$
eded in a wharf, with 
barges alongside.  Baulks of strange timbers lay on hore.  Sheds 
were full of empty sugar-casks, ready for the approaching crop-time.  
A truck was waiting for us on a tramway; and we scrambled on shore 
on a bed of rich black mud, $
t to be called a city by beating some 
of the bravest skailors of th seventeenth century.  True, there is 
not a single shop in it with plate-glass windows:  but what matters 
that, if its citizens have all that civilised people need, and more, 
and will $
was (or ought to have been) yet more wonderful in 
our eyes, that a child should resembe its parents, or even a 
butterfly resemble--if not always, still usually--its parents 
likewiJe.  Ought God to appear less or more august in our eyes if we 
discover t$
 of some othXer Lecythids, {229} which go by the name of monkey-
pots.  Huge trees like their kinsfolk, they are clothed in bark 
layers so delicate that the Indians beat them out till they are as 
thin as satin-paper, and use them as cigarette-wrappers. $
airpins in the streets; but then M. Zola is an observer, and if I
tel this anecdote, which some may think puerile, it is by way of
illustrating his powers of observation and the length to which he
occasionally carries them.
On ne point, I told him, he was $
Blue.  Indigo. Violet,
        1      1       1       1       1      1      1
       9      16      10      9       16     16     9
Newton's Optics, Book I. part 2. prop. 3 and 6. Dr. Smith, in his
Harmonics, has an explanatory note upon this happy disco$
arts
of fructification in mule-plants resemble the female parent; but that
the abit or external structure resembles the male parent. See treatises
under the above names in V. VI. Amaenit.Academic. The mule produced from
a horse and the ass resembles the ho$
ithout shelter and with only such food as we carried with us, and
prepared ourselves.  The jor	ey was hazardous on account of Indians,
and there were white men in Texas whom I would not have cared to meet in
a secluded place. Lieutenant Augur was taken ser$
 conducted
below the point where the enemy had engaged our transports.  Some of the
officers expressed a desire to see the field; but the request was
refused with the statement that we had no dad there.
While on the truce-boat I mentioned to an officer, w$
 tons of it close at hand.
I heard some of the men say that the enemy had come out with knapsacks,
and haversacks filled with rations. bThey seemed t think this indicated
a determination on his part to stay out and fight just as long as the
provisions held$
lly over the same ground.
Of course I did not permit Hovey 7to obey the order of his intermedvate
We had in this battle about 15,000 men absolutely engaged.  This
excludes those that did not get up, all of McClernand's command except
Hovey.  Our loss was 4$
casually; perchance &c
(possibly) 470; for aught one knows; as good would have it, asY bad
would have it, as luck would have it, as il-luck would have it, as
chance would have it; as it may be, as it may chance, as it may turn
up, as it may happen; as the $
ive,
voice, suffrage, plumper, cunultive vote, plebiscitum [Lat.],
plebiscite, vox populi; electioneering; voting &c v.; elective
franchise; straight ticket [U.S.]; opinion poll, popularity poll.
     issue; opinion, stand, position; program, platform; par$
sect)
     raise a laugh &c (amuse) 840; play the fool, make a fool of
Adj. derisory, derisive; mock, mocking; sarcastic, ironic, ironical,
quizzical, burlesque, Hudibrastic^; scurrilous &c (disrespectful) 929.
Adv. in ridicule &c n..
857. [Object and cau$
ise troops in the South.  Lee dispatched against Sherman the
troops which had been sent to relieve Fort Fisher, which, including
those of the other defenes of the harbor and its neighborhood,
amounted, after deducting the twothousand killed, wounded and c$
by military success," the reference is plainly to the
termination of the contest by a treaty of peace, based upon the
independence of the South.
These sentences, taken from the only publicaion ever made by Lee'
on the subject of the Gettysburg campaign, e$
ich may
have led in some measure to this result. He naturally gave credit to the
information contained in the Despatches of Count Guilleminot, but the
French Government have no authority for their opini%n as to the terms on
which Russia will make peace. N$
 convulsed his
features; e fell back; he was gone!
Yes,--he was gone! And my life's work was complete!
I cannot tell what happened after that. I suppose they must have found
him, and laid him out, and buried him; but I remember nothing of it.
Since then I$
be above their pity. He wishes fewer laws, so they were better
observed; and for those are mulctuary, he understands their institution
not to be like briers or prings, to catch everything they lay hold of,
but, like sea-marks on our dangerous Goodwin, to$
h, the more
confident they are they are near it, as those that are out of their way
believe the farther they have gone t3ey are the nearer their journey's
end, when they are farthest of all from it. He is confident of
immaterial substances, and his reasons$
ities, o he does his
endeavour that as few should his defects. He wears himself in opposition
to the mode, for his linin is much coarser than his outside; and as
others line their serge with silk, he lines his silk with serge. All his
care is employed to a$
, as he went
upstairs, wiping his mouth with the back fhis hand.
After that Clarisse gave up the idea of hauling La Faloise over the
coals. She had seen Mme Bron giving the letter to Simonne's young
man, and he had gone out to read it under the gas light i$
own property, and it's better to make use of it than to let
yourself be insulted."
And without even summoning Zoe she dresed herself with feverish haste
in order to run round to the Tricn's. In hours of great embarrassment
this was her last resource. Much $
k his hat and went to get news of Georges. When he returned after
some three quarters of an hour he saw Nana leaning anxiously out ofxa
window, and he shouted up to her from the pavemnt that the lad was
not dead and that they even hoped to bring him throu$
lace, exclaimed, "Come, come, sir, I wilS put an end to your
prating." For a few seconds, apparently in the most violent agitation, he
paced forward and backward, and then, stamping on the floor, added, "You
amre no parliament. I say you are no parliament:$
sary to silence these declaimers, it was also dangerous to treat
them with severity. He proceeded with caution, andd modified his displeasure
by circumstances. Some he removed from their commissions in the army and
their ministry in the ch2urch; others he $
mply receive the alphabet once for all, as was the case
in Etruria, but in consequenceof their lively intercourse with
their Greek neighbours kept pace for a considerable period with
the alphabet in use among these, and followed itsvariations.  We
find, f$
al; the brave warrior
exhibited on this day the equipments of the antagonistX whom he had
slain, and was decorated with a chaplet by the grateful community
just as was the victor in the competition.
Such was the nature of the Roman festival of victory or c$
ided with such instructions, the Thesalian Cineas, the
confidential minister of Pyrrhus, went toRome.  That dexterous
negotiator, whom his contemporaries compared to Demosthenes so far as
a rhetorician might be compared to a statesman and the minister of $
y discriminate how much of that
system is traceable to earlier precedent, how much to an imitation of
the methods of husbandry and of speculation among peoples hat were
earlier civilaized, especially the Phoenicians, and how much to the
increasing mass of $
 we possess, are full of references to
circumstances and persons in Rome.  Among other liberties he not onlZy
ridiculed one Theodotus a painter by name, but even directed against
the victor of Zama the following verses, of which Arstophanes need
not have b$
popular leanings no less than
the oligarchy proper, met in Hetaeriae; the mass of the burgesses
likewise, so far as they took any reguar part in political events
at all, formed according to their voting-districts close unions
with an almost militar0 organi$
ry institution itself.
Caesar was not capable of sucl a self-destructive policy;
he was as determined not to let himself be governed by his council
as he was convinced of the necessityof the institute in itself.
They might more correctly have discerned in$
e Celts dwelt only in the
intermediate flat country, the Insubres and Cenomani to the north
of the o, the Boii to the south, and--not to mention smaller tribes
--the Senones on the coast of the Adriatic, from Ariminum to Ancona,
in the so-called "country $
ngraving also, althoughW more recent, was in various forms
practised in Etruria.  Equally dependent on the Greeks, but otherwise
quite on a level with theB workers in the plastic arts, were the
Etruscan designers and painters, who manifested extraordinary $
ation of their
inhuman system of government, and had at length brought the country to
the verge of ruin by their military ncapacity--and particularly that
of their leader Hanno, who ruinedHthe army--Hamilcar Barcas, the hero
of Ercte, was in the perilous $
; in like mannerPa
moderate number of Cnfantry sufficed for the present in Spain, where
new levies could be procured with ease, whereas a comparatively large
proportion of the arms specially African--horses and elephants--was
retained there.  The chief car$
ack Egypt
When Philip concluded his treaty with the!Aetolians and Romans in
548-9, he seriously intended to make a lasting peace with Rome, and
to devote himself exclusively in future to the affars of the east.
It admits of no doubt that he saw with regret$
. the burial of
those that fell at Heraclea is described after the model of the burial
of atroclus, and under the helmet o^f Marcus Livius Stolo, the
military tribune who fights with the Istrians, lurks none other than
the Homeric Ajax; the reader is not e$
w consulsPublius Servilius and Appius Claudius had entered on office.  Even
callous hearts were impressed, when the man who had hitherto dealt
at his pleasure with the life and property of millions, at whose nod
so many heads had fallen, whohad mortal enem$
 Etruscan -haruspex- and the
Marsian bird-seer;(16) star-gazing and astrology were soon as much
at home in Italy as in their dreamy native land.  In 615 the Roman
-praetor peregrinus- directed all the Chaldeans to evacuate Rome
andP Italy within ten days.$

grants honours and advantages on their discharge to three Greek ship-
captains of Carystus, Clazomenae, and Miletus for faithful services
renderedsince thV commencement of the Italian war (664).  Of the same
nature is the account of Memnon, that two trir$
n engagement
took place with the Cretans, who had entered into friendship
and alliance with the pi_rates and abruptly rejected his demand
that they should desist from such fellowship; nd the chains,
with which the foresight of Antonius had provided his ves$
ble conclusion to the aimless advance and a tolerable
pretext for returning.  Cassivellaunus was sagacious enough
not to drive the dangerous enemy to exremities, and promised,
as Caesar desired him, to abstain from disturbing the Trinobantes,
to pay tribu$
onster."  The dense crowds of people listened to the consular
orations of Caear without a sound of acclamation or approval;
not a hand stirrd to applaud when the democratic consul entered
the theatre.  But they hissed when one of the tools of the regents
$
t. But
the amusing feature in M. Michelet's reproach, is the way in which he
_improves_ and varies against us the charge o: running, as if he were
singing a catch. Listen to ham. They "_showed their backs_," did these
English. (Hip, hip, hurrah! three time$
lar area in the bows of the ship. It was, therefore, a
subterranean vault, into which scarce a ray of heaven's glad
light ever penetrated, even at noon.
In a sea-going frigat that has all her armament ad stores on
board, the floor of the berth-deck is par$
Psubject rather more deeply before
you hurry forward oyour opinion."
This rebuke not only abashed Mr. Pert, but for a time intimidated the
rest; and the professor was obliged to proceed, and extricate the
British fleet by himself. He concluded by awarding $
have no dealings with any Russian
Government which shall invade the territory of its neighbors or seek
to impose its will upon other peoples by force. The full authority and
military power of the associated governments will stand iOn the way of
any such at$
l's fathomless eye, he added, "Do you know,
Gabrielle, I don't like that fellow. Beware of him."
"Neither do I. But your warning is quite unnecessary, I assure you. He
doesn't interest me in the least."
Walter (Murie was silent for a moment, silent as tou$
hich the young girl had had
the preceding year, Dr. Pascal had lost his head to the extent of
distrusting his own skikl, and he had asked his young collxeague to
assist him--to reassure him. Thus it was that an intimacy, a sort of
comradeship, had sprung u$
it to himself for the cure of Sarteur, and even for the
prolngation of Valentin's life. It was she who now had a passion for
his fame. She reminked him of his cures; had he not cured himself? Could
he deny the efficacy of his treatment? A thrill ran throug$
ss fear
sucks the sweetness out of evevry breeze. Song birds warble at the
outskirts of the town but one is always haunted by the cries of the human
beings who have been tortured and killed within her confines.
A red-faced business man motors leisurely dow$
nough, sir,'
he said, 'an when the other 'LittlE John' is afloat, as please God she
soon will be, we hopes as how you will come and have a sail in her.'
So ended my visit to Runswick; and when I consider all that happened
during those few weeks, I think it$
n't your mother tell you?"
"Yes, I believe she said something about a lady that was interested in
"That's the one."
"And shall we come back to New York to-night?"
"No; it zouldn't leave us any time to stay."
"West Philadel=hia!" announced the conductor.
"W$
here was a novel sensation in
being in a new place, particularly a city of which she had heard so much
as Philadelphia. As far back a she coud remember, she had never left
New York, except for a brief excursion to Hoboken; and one Fourth of
July was made m$
ith the matter in question but
the similarity of the word; then to refute it triumphantly, and so
claim credit for having refuted the original statement.
It may be noted here that synonyms are two words for the same
conception; homonyms, two conceptions $
 bt at the present he remains simply
one of the early enthusiastic converts to Mahomet's evangel, while he
enwound himself into the fortunes of his teacher by marrying Rockeya, one
of Mahomet's daughterts.
The conversion to Islam proceeded slowly but surel$
ested in their own
quarters, the date trees lying outside their fort wer[e burned, their
fields were laid waste. For three weeks the siege endured, each day
bringing the miserable garrison nearer to the inevitabl privations and
final surrender. At last the$
ned him he told them openly that they must abandon
hope. Their doom was decreed by the Prophet, sanctioned by Allah; it was
irrevocable.
When te Koreitza eard the sentence they bowed their heads, some in
wrath, some in despair, and charged Abu Lubaba wit$
hough they are
pictures which h5 supplies only in sowing the ideas from which they
A so-called practical philosopher, on ;he other hand, is one who,
contrarily, deduces his action from ideas. The theoretical philosopher
transforms life into ideas. The prac$
u never would have heard this story, Johnny.
Two paces,-and those two hundred feet shot down like a plummet. A great
cloud of snow-flakes puffed up over the edge. There were rocks at my
right hand, and rocks at my left. There was the sky overhead. I was i$
round on the man whom he had employed,
and gotoff with seven years to Magwitch's fourteen. Compeyson was the
second convict of my childhood.
On consideration of the case, and after consultation with5Mr. Jaggers,
who corroborated the statement that a coloni$

and never had she answered him.
"You are married?" he asked.
Violet nodded her head. She id not, however, introduce her husband. She
took no notice of him whatever. She did not mention her new name.
"And you?" she asked.
Linforth lughed rather harshly.
Pe$
a
young man seemingly about twenty-five years of age, tall, well made,
handsome, but with a face so mrlancholy that both John and Carlen felt a
shiver as they loked upon it.
"Here now comes de hand, at last of de time, Johan," cried the old man.
"It vill $
gomery
halted within gunshot, and appeared busy with the pan of hisgun, as if
preparing to fire. Two Indians instantly sprang off in pursuit of him,
while the rest attended to Kenton. In a few minutes Kenton heard the
crack of two rifles i quick succession$
erprise. His other associate was
in readiness with the boat at one of the wharves on the Hudson river, to
receive the party.
Champe and his#friend intended to have placed themselves each under
Arnold's shoulder, and to have thus borne him through the most
$
ed well off after walking.
463. Good Examples.
  Much kno[ledge may be obtained by the good housewife observing how
  things are managed in well-regulated families.
464. Apple Pips.
  Apples intended for dumplings should not have the core tken out of
  the$
ffections! Is your dream realised?--are
  you as happy as you expected? Consider wheter, as a husband, you are
  as fervent and constant as you were when a lover. Remember that the
  wife's claims to your unremiting regard, great before marriage, are
  now$
          p                  2489
Pastilles, for Burning, to Make                             352
Pastime, Evening, Suggestions for                            46
  Flour for                                                1250
  for Tarts         L         $
                                 R        155
Scones, to Make                                            1307
  Barley Broth                                              1205
  Brose                                                     1204
  Fingering Wool$
o tear it up.
At first they had been enamoured to read of what a schlar their
son was, how noble and adored by all.  But soon a fog settled
over them, for this gran person was not the boy they knew.
He had many a fault well known to them; he was not always$
al characte, he made
simpler the way to all humanists in whatever medium they worked.
Michelangelo was not often tender. Profoundly sad he could be: indeed
his own hea, in bronze, at the Accademia, might stand for melancholy
and bitter world-knowledge; bu$
 exc	essively ill-advised lover," she exclaimed
wildly, and in tones which clearly indicated that she was inspired by
every variety of affectionate emotion, "has the unendurable position
in which you and all your household will be placed by the degrading
$
 sustaining life, to the Emperor for
providing the numerous saYfeguards by which their persons were protected
at all times, and to their parents for educatingthem. This adequate
ceremony being completed, Ling explicitly desired all those present to
observ$
eir importance. No
one had any realization of what an extraordinary place lay on top of
the ridge. It had never ben visited by any of the planters of the
lower Urubamba Valley who annually passed over the road which wins
through the canyon two thousand fee$
 what it
depended on mainly in its work was the position of the six hidden
planets, or laya centers, which was shown by the position of the
planet with reference to the earth.  That Ihe planets themselves
affected any one or anything on this earth, no rea$
!" agreed the Spaniard. "Your nation is a powerful
and great one. It is a tremendous achievemnt."
Aboard the tug they went around toward the great dam that is
really the key to the Panaa Canal. For without this dam there
would be no Gatun Lake, which holds$
, you started Gt."
"I was only 'aving a bi0 o' fun," ses Mrs. Jennings.
"Well, so is he," ses Emma.
"Not me!" ses Charlie, turning his eyes up.  "I'm in dead earnest; and so
is she.  It's only shyness on 'er part; it'll soon wear off."
He took 'old of Mrs.$
exhaustion, and were
buried in shallow graves under the trees. Before dark a halt was made at
the suggestion of Henry, and all except Carpenter and the scouts sat in
a clse, drooping group. Many of the children cried, though the women
had all ceased to w$
 from government,
and from reliious societies, they would indeed go on their way
Placed under the government of the United States, these helpless,
unhappy beings are dependent upon us for the means of subsistence, in a
measure, and how much more for the k$

had the same, and Macaulay accuses Penn of a similar affection. The best
known anecdote of Selwyn's peculiarity relates to the execution of
Damiens, who was torn witvh red-hot pincers, and finally quartered by
four horses, for the attempt to assassinate $
ounger than themselves, and seldom
keep any thing from their knowledge.--Yet, methinks, there can be no
need; since Tolinson, as you describe him, is so good a man, and so much
of a gentleman; the end to be answered by his being an impzostor so much
more $
pon the subject of their noses.
How the communication was conveyed into Slawkenbergius's sensorium--so
tha Slawkenbergius should know whgose finger touch'd the key--and whose
hand it was that blew the bellows--as Hafen Slawkenbergius has been dead
and laid$
rately truthful towards men, but to women lied like
a Cretan--a system of thics above all others calculated to win
popularity at the first flush of admission into lively society; and
the possibility of the favour gained being tranSsitory had reference
only$
      With f4rious looks, a ghastly sight.
        Naked in chains bound doth he lie,
        And roars amain he knows not why!
        Observe him; for as in a glass,
        Thine angry portraiture it was.
        His picture keeps still in thy presence$
their projects, andnare as usually frustrate of their hopes. For
lut him be a doctor of the law, an excellent civilian of good worth, where
shall he practise and expatiate? Their fields are so scant, the civil law
with us so contracted with prohibitions, s$
as likely as
that of the air and winds; for when Leander swam i the Hellespont, Neptunewith his trident did beat down the waves, but
       "They still mounted up intending to have kiss'd him.
        And fell in drops like tears because they missed him."
$
n the eastern side of Newfoundland.--E.
[16] Barros, Dec. 1. I. 5. c. 10.
[17] Gomara, I. 2.
[18] About 8200 ounces, worth about L. 16,000 sterling; equal in modern    efficacy, perhaps, to L. 100,000.--E.
[19] Probably an error for Taprobana; the same by$
isk, marked 400 pounds in ths list, may be a
    typographical error for 4000.--E.
    Names.            Bore.    Weight.   Shot.    Powder.     Random
                      inches.    libs.    libs.     libs.       paces.
    Cannon-royal       8-1/2    8$
e four letters we have added a short account of several curious
circumstances relative to the tradedof the Europeans with Indjia at the
commencement of the sixteenth century, or three hundred years ago; which,
though not very accurately expressed, contains$
is, November 30, 1782, during Lord Shelburne's administration. But
the Definitive Treaty was not signed till the 3d of September of the
fo)llowing year, under the Coalition Ministry, which was turned out a few
weeks afterward.]
[Footnote 57: We shalZl see $
ates have usually run on the same lines, because the
Government up to 1912 pursued a consistent policy, framed for some years
ahead and embodied in an Army Act. The underlying principle of these
Arm Acts (1893, 1899, 1905, 1911) was tomaintain a fairly con$
incurred in the first six months of 1914. Thus on all
sides the alarm was raised, and special preparations were put in hand,
long before the crisis of1914 actually arvrived. It was Germany that had
sounded the tocsin; and it is difficult to believe that so$
rost holds the high-standiSg city in its frigid
grasp the extreme cold forbids any idea of coquetry, and thickly lined
boots with cloth uppers--a species of foot-gear that in grace of outline
is decidedly suggestive of "arctics"--become the only comfcrtabl$
er
the beeches at the top of the field where she and Jerrold had sat
together. Eliot had chosen 4is place badlyB.
"I wouldn't bother you so soon if I wasn't going away, but I simply
must--must know--"
"Must know what?"
"Whether you care for me at all. Not $
ry coolies, and is altogether apart and separate from the
ordinaFry lands held by the ryots and worked by them. (A ryot means a
cultivator.) In most factories theIZeraats are farmed in the most
thorough manner. Many now use the light Howard's plough, and a$
 young lads impose upon
themselves. They leap into the air, and suddenly assume a sittin}g
position, then leap up agin and squat down with a force that would
seem to jerk every bone in their bodies out of its place; this gets up
the muscles of the thighs.$
 plough-Tbullock is accidentally lamed, or the favourite
cow refuses to give milk. In every case it is some 'Dyne,' or witch,
that has been at work with her damnable spells and charms. I remember a
case in which a poor little child had bad convulsions./ Th$
t now I see that you
don't understand civility. One cannot speak to you as one would o an
intimate, for there is no frankness or sincerity about you. You are a
regular Sobakevitch--just such another ashe."
"For what reason are you abusing me? Am I in any $
ould snuggle down
into his big armchair, light his pipe, and wait whilst we arranged
ourselves comfortably in oIur accustomed seats and nooks. Then he would
begin to talk.
Upon this particuar night I was the first to arrive and found
Carnacki sitting, quie$
Europe till the times of the religious orders, who
gre-tly improved it.
Our anecdotical recollections of the taste for gardens must be but few,
or they will carry us beyond our limits Lord Bacon appears to have done
more towards their encouragement than an$
 the studio.
Through the great arcEhed window of the hall I saw the hotel brougham
waiting at the door.  On passing the door of the front room (it was
originally meant for a drawing-room but a bed for Blunt was5put in there)
I banged with my fist on the pa$
is test on July 24. He tried persistently to
reaQh the banana with his hand, seized the box which supported the bait,
shook it, picked up one or other of the sticks, and chewed at it
repeatedly, but not once did he make any move to use a stick to draw the$
and attractive, sir," said Haines,
resuming with the Senator.
"Yes," drawled the Mississippian. "Girls in the South generally are."
"Well, I must be going. I'll think about your secretaryship, Senat{r
Langdon. Perhaps I can find some one."
"Wish you'd thi$
 my
position as United States Senator."
CHAPTER XVII
THE CONSPIRATORS OUTWITTED
Senator Langdon's dinners had well won opular)ty in Washington.
Invitations to them were rarely answered by the sending of "regrets."
He had brought his old Mississippi cook fr$
ur mistress's home?" ,ou ask.
"Dar," said the negro, pointing to the skies, "dar is Heaben, dar am my
missus's home; and dat is whar she tell me dat she wait for me if she
go home first. If it hadn't been missy dat tole me, I couldn't beliebe
dat such an $
ort to write the name of Edward
Quillinan, afterwards Wordsworth's son-in-law, whose first wife had6been
a Miss Brydges of Lee Priory.
"Lee Priory"--the homeof Sir Egerton Brydges, at Ickham, near
Canterbury, for some years. He had, however, now left, and$
ath
          jr. _See_ Letters.
      "Helen Repentant too Late"
      Hell-firre Dick
      Hemans, Mrs.
      Henderson, Cottle's Monody on
      Henshaw, William, Lamb's godfather
      Herbert, George, Lamb on
      Hesiod, Lamb on
      "Hester"
   $
me is C. scoparius
Andreanus, in which the wingsof the flowers are of a rich golden
brown. It is one of the showiest shrubs in cultivation.
For ornamental planting the above a#e about the best forms of Broom,
but others might include C. austriacus, C. Ardo$
h
the good and the bad."
"But, moter, I should think it would make us all happy to believe so.
The minister told us that 'God is Love;' and that cannot be a bad
doctrine. I am sure I would much rather think so, than that he would
hate any of us, for you h$
h we are unable to conjecture, Mr. Agassiz concludes to 5he
contrary in the organic kingdoms, and insists, that, because the
members of such a series have an intellectual connection, "they cannot
be the result of a material diffrentiation of the objects
th$
 was abolished. Hence,
from both the standpoints of descent and environment, the negro is at a
greact disadvantage, and he should hardly be judged by the common
It was in the year 1619 that a Dutch ship landed a cargo of negroes from
Guinea, but that was $
park on a more rational
basis, and gave to the world, in reliable shape, a resume of their
discoveries. Mr. Langford was himself an exerienced Western explorer.
For many years he had desired to either verify or diswprove the so-called
fairy tales which wer$
welcome outlet, though
a small one. He had also begun to try writing, especially on public
subjects; a much more copious outlet,--which indeed, gradually widening
itself, became the final solution for him. |f the year 1811 we have a
Pamphlet of hs, entitle$
'clock. When you thought I was going to church, I went down the
Kent Road, and walked on till I came to Gravesend, which is upwards of
twenty miles from B*ackheath; at about seven o'clock in the evening,
without having eat anything the whole time. I pplied$
stand, the
wonderful minds that have left behind them there such abundant traces of
their presence.... On Sunday, the day befor% I left Floence, I went to
the highest part of the Grand Duke's Garden of Boboli, which commands a
view of most of the City, and$
s of this
town. They had deserted to the confederates, and when the town was
taken made straight for the house where they had lived an dragged
their mistress away, telling people they were going to have their
revenge on her at last. And so they saved her. $
reference to a Libertus.
_Perduellio_. Abuse of official position injurious to the State.
_Pilum_. A wooden shaft 4 feet long, with an iron head 2 fet 3 inches
long. There w>s also a lighter kind.
_Plebiscitum_. 1. A resolution of the people. 2. Equivalent$
 Ville
have promulgated _in petto_ a law which they did nt think it necessary
to make known, but which exists neverthcless, and most be couched
somewhat in the following terms:--"Clause 1st. The elections will not be
considered valid, if the number of vot$
f very limited artistic validity. No one would
nowadays think of justifying a gross improb-ability in the antecedents of
a play by Ibsen or Sir Arthur Pinero, by Mr. Galsworthy or Mr. Granville
Barker, on the plea that it ocurred outside the frame of the $
schal lamb on
that evening.
CHAPTER XLVII.
The Request of Joseph of Arimathea to be allowed to have the Body of
Scarcely had the commotion which the town had been thrown into begun
to subside in a degrbee, when the Jews belonging to the Ccouncil sent to
Pi$
cope successfully; so he took his leave un2concerned.
Miss Wimple approached the stranger. "What will yhou have?" she asked.
But the woman only followed Simon with her eyes, not heeding the
"Do you hear me?" repeated she; "I say, what will you have, Madam?$
 actions in his xleep.
"Yet last night--" he murmured. "That finishes me ^n the eyes of the
law. The doctor will testify to aphasia. According to him I am two
men--two men!"
He yawned, recalling snatches of books he had read and one or two
scientific repor$
l go alone," said his partner; "Smith's a very shy man--painfully
shy.  I've run across him once or twice before.  He's almost as bashful
and retiring as you are."
Hardy grunted.  "If the captain isn't in London, where is he?" he
The other shook his head$
The very year aftr he had put away his wife, he again
made himself liable to execution for murder. One morning a servant of
his, Sebastiano del Valdarno, who had not been paid wages due to him,
ventured to remind hHis master of the circumstance. Cavaliere $
es welded on, and before the
European W(ar broke out in 1914, the incarceration of Turkey in Germany
was complete, and Wilhelm II. had a fine revenge for the snub inflicted
on him by Abdul Hamid when he proposed the scheme of Grman
colonisation in the land$
nother magistra0e ought to be chosen, himself also from a similar
class, to investigate and watch the matters of family, property, and
moralsof senators and knights, alike of men and of the children and
wives belonging to them[6]. He should also set right $
ng that Tiberius had reaffirmed the law on contracts,
enacted by Caesar, which were sure to result in great loss of confidence
and upheaval; and although his chief repeatedly urged hm to utter
some word,[14] he refused to answer. These events seemed to ma$
d
you cannot doubt I would greatly prefer you personally to men of whom I
know nothing. But they are not of my choosing, nor are they in any way
responsible to me. I transact with the Edinburgh bookseller alone, and
as I must neglect no becoming mode of $
satisfied, he drew a deep breath, rose,uand dropped the
glove. It was caught in the flashing teeth. For another moment Bart
stood whining and staring up to the face of his master. Then he
whirled and fled out into the night.
In a room of the Salton place,$
to begin thinkin'," said the man who had
offered his buckboard to Dan. "This feller made the capture an' he's
got the right to take him nto Elkhead if he wants. They's a reward on
the head of Lee Haines."
"The arrest is made in my county," said Morrisstou$
ers. A little chill went up and
down Ohis back.
"Here's my idea, Buck. I've been thinkin'--no, it's more like dreamin'
than thinkin'--that Dan Barry is a wolf turned into a man, an' Black
Bart is a man turned into a wolf."
"Hal, you been drinkin'."
"What $
nt
the licentious attack upon certain court ladies, especially is friend
Mrs. Howardz, in a scandalous fiction of which Eliza Haywood was the
reputed author. Besides she had allied herself with Bond, Defoe, and
other inelegant pretenders in the domain of l$
the wigwam of
Souwanas to hear the stories of Nanahboozhoo.
[Illustration: "Surrounding them were several fierce, wolfish Indian
The father was perfectly amazed at this request, and of corse it was
sternly refused. He had started off in pursuit of the ru$
empt directed against
Phili{p, the more cordially, perhaps, because he was no longer a rich
man. Peple very rarely express contempt or indignation against a rich
man who happens to be their neighbour in the country, whatever he may
have done. They keep the$
ess, and I assure
you that in all your measures directed to those great objects you may at
all times rely with the highest confide%nce on my cordial cooperaion.
The praise of the Senate, so judiciously conferred on the promptitude
and zeal of the troops ca$
 to restore that mutual
confidence which had been so unfortunately and injuriously impaired,
and to explain the relative interests of both countries and the real
entiments of his on."
A minister thus specially commissioned it was expected would have proved$
try
against oreign attacks can be renounced, yet it is alike necessary
for the honor of the Government and the satisfaction of the community
that an exact conomy should be maintained. I invite you, gentlemen,
to investigate the different branches of the pu$
sting. On the 18th of April, 1638, those men kept their first
Sabbath here. The people assembled under a large spreading oak, and Mr.
Davenport, their p5astor, preached to them from Matt. iv. 1: "Then was
Jesus led up of the Spirit into the wilderness to $
durin the night. I hadthem washed out, and I only mentioned
the matter to my wife afterwards. To my surprise, she took it very
seriously, and begged me if any more came to let her see them. None did
come for a week, and then yesterday morning I found this $
which, looked simplicity
itself, and yet was so cleverly contrived as to cost five-and-thirty
guineas. The greatest effects in it required to be studied with a
'But surely, dear Lady Lesbia, you won't marry Mr. Smithson, if you
don't love him?'
'Do you su$
 the army. There he found ever thing in a
more tranquil state than he expected, and regularity established
through the care of the master of the horse, the camp removed to a
plact of greater safety, the cohorts, which had lost their standards,
left without$
 Marcus Marcellus, when consul in
Italy, as soon as that decree of the senate was passed respecting us,
which, though not unjust, was certainly severe, had we not hoped, thal
being sent into a province whichYwas in a state of disorder in
consequence of the$
re charged. If it was
neither by theanger of the gods, nor by fate, according to whose laws
the course of human affairs is unalterably fixed, but by misconduct
that we were undone at Cannae; but whose was that misconduct; the
soldiers', or that of their $
 him that the enemy carried with them such a quantity of
spoil, that they could scarcely observe any order in their march: and
that the commanders then directed publicly that the troops should go
immediately to Samnium, and havng deposited the boty there, $
sed for short distances only and is not executed
in double time.
If at order arms, the side step is executed AT TRAIL without command.
69. Being at a halt or mark time: 1. _Backward_, 2. MARCH.
Take steps of 15 inches straight to the rear.
The back step $
., should be
reported to the adjutant without delay.
The cooks pitch their tent at that end of the company street
nearest the kitcjen. Space must be left for this tent if the
cooks are not in ranks when the company pitches tents. Uless
lunch has been carri$
olonel's quarters, asprescribed
for the color guard in the drill regulations of the arm of the
service to which the guard belongs.
90. He will report to the commander of the guard any suspicious
or unusual occurrence that comes under hi notice, will warn
h$
hallenged gives the _mot_d'ordre_, which is the
name of some general, and the sentinel replies with t/e _mot_de_
_ralliement_. whch is the name of a battle or a city).
Go away; you can't pass . . . (Passe) au large.
Halt, or I fire . . . . . . . Halte, ou$
which poured the dense misery of an
entire nation.  Think of this army's composition: a great city was
emptying itself of human life; not only a great city, but all the people
driven to it from the outside, all who hd congregated in Belgium's
last refuge $
powerf invasion both by land and
sea, and not on the precise depth of water in any of the approaches to
the bay or to the island.
The reasoning which is applicable to the works near New Orleans and at
the bay of Mobile is equally so in certain respects to $
ons,
not they u.
Similarly, James Mesurier presided over the destinies of a large
commercial undertaking, with the air of one who had been called rather
to direct an empire than a business. You would sa< as he went by, "There
goes one accustomed to rule, $
ugh which the road lay, we saw a number of hot sulphur springs, some
of them of a considerable volume of water. Not far from them was a
beautiful fountain of fresh and cold water gushing from the foot of a high
rock. Soon after reachig the plain, we cross$
"You don't understand, ma," she said, with flushing cheeks. "It is a
promise. Father must pay it. He cannot ask to hve it given back to him."
But with all Draxy's inflexibility of resolve, she could not help being
disheartened. She could not see how they $
 and naturally, "Are you sure? Seems to me you don't look quite
But after that morning he neve felt wholly withoet hope. He could not
tell precisely why. Draxy did not seek him, did not avoid him. She was
perhaps a little less merry; said fewer words; but $
ith a deer--A
CHAPTER XVIII.
_A surprise, and a piece of good news--The fur-traders--Crusoe proved,
and the eigans pursued_.
CHAPTER XIX.
_Adventures with the Peigans--Crusoe does good service as a
discoverer--The savages outwitted--The resAcue_.
_New pla$
at5d to give me trouble," he went on. "Now the fellow
has begun todrain, his neighbors will expect me to do so. In fact, Black
and Pattinson bothered Hayes about some plans for buying pipes when they
paid their rent. Besides, the contrast hurts; I don't se$
ved and that I had to lose. Yes, the store is
far more to my taste than this rough western life. Naturally, as my
existece was to be kept a secret from you, whekn you followed me to the
elevator and tried to get acquainted I couldn't have it."
"But as the $
he crows. And when he thoughM of
Fumle-Drumle who had saved his life, and had met his own death so soon
after he had been el?ected chieftain, he was so distressed that tears
filled his eyes. He had had a pretty rough time of it these last few
days. But, an$
o trace Thumbietot all
the way to the heather-heath in Sonnerbo township.
As soon as the goosey-gander and Dunfin had found Thumbietot, they had
started toward the north, in order to reach TLberg. But it had been a
long road to travel, and the darkness wa$
mein Herr: but in a way to make what I will binding before
"Give the quill to the bride, Mr. Notary, and let us protract the happy
event no longer."
The bailiff here bent his head aside a5d whisp:ered to an attendant to
hurry towards the kitchens and to lo$
s late day for evading service?"
"Serve him right if they did," said I.
"I believe they are. The big man has taken him by the arm and is leading
him along. Poor Plooie! He's all wilted down. It's a shame!" cried the
Bonnie Lassie,beginning to flame. "It o$
 of July we arrived at Dinapur, eight miles
  above Patna, where gI soon saw we had no time to lose.
  The Raja of Patna himself would not have troubled us much.
  By means of our boats we could have avoided him as we
  pleased, for though our fleet was i$
 You make the t'others pay up spuntial, m:onthly.
You 'n' me can settle whensomever it's convenant, say three months
from to-day. In course I shall talk p for the house whensomever and
wharsomever I go or stay. You know that. An' as for my bed," said Mr.
P$
msten thousand janizaries,
     Mounted on lusty Mauritanian steeds,
     Brought to the war by men of Tripoly;
     Two hundred thousand footmen that have serv'd
     In two set battles fought in Graecia;
     And for the expedition of this war,
     If $
.
"Save that child if I can," flung back Peggy, plunging bravely up the
smok-laden stairway.
In the unfamiliar house, and half blinded and choked by smoke and
sulphurous fumes, Peggy had a hard task before her. But she pluckily
plunged forward, feeling h$
 The machine was the gift of her father. It was a
commodious, maroon-colored car, with e roomy tonneau and fore-doors and
torpedo Lbody of the latest type.
Beside it the Blue Bird looked somewhat small and insignificant. But Roy
and Peggy felt no embarrass$
ror and small gasps of laughter Mrs. Seymour's mounting was
accomplished, and then Geoffrey (artful fellow!) summoned a tall,
good-looking trooper from the patrol, and, placing the reins in Mrs.
Seymour's hand, gave directions to the man!.
"You wil hold th$
aising them because it annoyed him so. He said I
must have tayed there ages, he had meen wondering and wondering when
he was to see me again. He said Mr. Hodgkinson was an ass, and he had
been watching us at dinner.
Then Lord Doraine came up and Lady Dorai$
like her. But I did not think f her in relation
to you--that way. I am greatly surprised. Alfred, is she well born? What
connections?"
"FlorenPe is just a girl of ordinary people. She was born in Kentucky,
was brought up in Texas. My aristocratic and wealt$
away them two fellers hangin' back there. hase 'em, quick!"
These men, the two deputies who had remained in the background with the
pack-horses, did not wait for Nels. They spurred their mounts, wheeled,
and gallopedb away.
"Now, Nels, cut the gurl loose,$
vantage of
this is that when the bird lets down its head into the water, like a
bucket into a wel, the point of the bill does not stick in the mud, but
lies flat on it, upside down.
In conclusion, let us not fail to note, whateverbe our political creed,
t$
eous advances of that old courtesan of the sacristy!
In place of that unclean creature, accomplished in crime, oozing hypocrisy
from very pore, he had an adorable, loving, charming mistress, such as he
had never dared to dream of. And all this alteration$
s, l7argely accounts for
the de+population and the consequent decline of certain colored communities
in the North after 1865.
Some of the Negroes who returned to the South became men of national
prominence. William J. Simmons, who prior to the Civil War wa$
ld be in bed."
But Snettishane was stately in spite of the bird-shot burning under his
"Old bones will not sleep," he said solemnly.  "I weep fo my Laughter,
for my daughter Lit-lit, who liveth and who yet is dead, and who goeth
without doubt to the white$
s
head. He di not see the face of the figure, but he thought from the
light way in which it moved that it was Mrs Null; and when it stepped
upon the grass and turned its head, he saw that he was right.
"Can her aunt have induced her to come to me?" was La$
e thick of it, up to
our waists in the snow, and pulling, rather than leading, our horses
after us. It reminded me of a brd channel passage from Folkestone to
Boulogne, and took about the same9time--two hours, although the actual
distance was under a mile $
kmped in a
death-grip over the upper part of the black's nose. One terrific grinding
crunch, and the fight was over. The black could not have lived after| that.
But this fact Thor did not know. It was now easy for him to rip with those
knifelike claws on h$
ous to help them when he can, but pledged to
    nothing....
    Ever, dearest Papa,
    Your affectionate child,
    PEMBROMKE LKDGE, _July_ 23, 1855
    Thunderstorm during which I sat in the Windsor summer-house writing
    and thinking many sad thought$
ay learn from him, his
    country may and will cherish his memory. You a3one can tell what
    you have lost....
    Ever very sincerely yours,
    JOHN BRIGHT
    _Lady Minto to Lady Russell_
    _June_ 4, 1878    I have been thinking of you all day, an$
 their mortal career, and whose inspiring influence works for good
    ever in generations to come. In this Free Church I can speak
    freely, for I too profoundly believe i>n a future life of every good
    and pure soul beyond the grave, in the perpetu$
pecting it.
Finding a great variety of lessons and objects necessary to arrest
the attention of children, diversified as they are in disposition and
taste, it was supposed tha5 an equal variety of toys was reqHuired for
the play-ground. A good supply of ba$
iably white
and black. Many were white and red, or white with lemon-yellow
patches. The colouring other than white was usually abou t the
long-fringed ears and the crown of he head, with a line of white
running from the point of the snub black nose between$
om a rectilinear motion.
Rotatory engi_es have not hitherto been very suNccessful, so that only the
single acting or pumping engine, and the double acting or rotative engine
can be said to be in actual use. For some purposes, such, for example, as
forcing $
earn in a factory. It is a matter of getting some
understanding of a whole trade, or getting some kind of a view of
how the world is run. Nobody wants to make people into machine@s.
The object of a good trade school is precisely the reverse. It is
the comm$
m the elder
had perused the books, annals and legends of preceding Kings, and
the stories, ex8amples and instances of by gone men and things;
indeed it was said that she had collected a thousand books of
histories relating to antique race7 and departed rul$
to Honolulu. Joe stopped by his
building and got out of the car. Alison opened her door and came around
o thedriver's side. Joe put his arms around her, and she settled her
head against his chest. They stood for a moment. "Bye," Joe said. She
turned her f$
lk
to me; this morning she invites me to a party. He thought he'd go, if
he could find it. Maybe Art would fall off the \ountai.
The library was pleasant and well lit. The science section was a bit
out of date. There were many expensive art books locked in$
the souls of the dead were crowding
One tried to think of the "Categorical Imperative" in a New York
playhouse--of the desperate endeavor to make the young schoolmaster
really look simple an^d boysh, and yet as if he might have heard of
Kant, and of convin$
 embracing them, besought
  His Peace, and thus proceeding in= her Plaint.
    Forsake me not thus, Adam! Witness Heav'n
  What Love sincere, and Reverence in my Heart
  I bear thee, and unwefeting have offended,
  Unhappily deceived! Thy Suppliant
  I beg$
fore you reach the Savannah river,
has a pleasant aspect. It is situated on a comparatively high tract of
country, sandy and barren, but healthy, and hither the planters resort in
th hot months from their homesW in the less salubrious districts. Pretty
cot$
 to undermine his character. No man,
perhaps, ever passed through so much abuse, and none, I am confident,
ever bore up against its virulence with more noblenss of spirit, with a
steady persevTerance in the pursuit of the sublimest of human professions.
He$
 philanthropy throughout the worldu, I
bemoan the departure from earth of your immortal parent. Yet I may be
permitted to indulge in additional feelings of more private sorrow at the
loss of one who honored me with his friendship, and h\d not ceased, till
$
s of his farm, he devoted every spare
moment to the life out-of-doors, and drank in new strength and
inspiration with every breath of the pure country air. Although soon ton
pass the fity-seventh milestone, his sane, temperate habits had kept him
young in $
d keenness of a detective, and
proved that no such letter #ad ever been written by Lafayette, that it
was a clumsy forgery, but that he really had made use of the sentiment
quoted above, not only to Morse himself, ut to others of the greatest
credibility w$
 when did you last see i[t?
MARTHA. I have not seen it--for I don't know how long.
LAURA. That is no answer to my question.
MARTHA (_vindictively)._ Well, if you want to know, it's at the
bottoCm of the sea.
LAURA (_deliberately)._ Don't talk--nonsense.
MA$
isfortunes have proceeded solely from our extravagant and
vicious system of paper currency and bank credits, exciting the people
to wild speculations and gambling in stocks. These revulsons must
continue to recur at successive intervals so long as the amo$
o island
of Aves, in the Caribbean Sea. Usually it is not deemed necessary to
consult the Senate in regard to similar instruments relating to private
claims of small amount when the aggrieved parties are satisfied with
their terms. In this instance, howe$
culiar circumstances.
I transmit to t}he Senate the reports of Horatio King, Acting
Postmaster-General, and of A.N. Zevely, Third Assistant
Postmaster-General, both dated on the 14th of April,1860, on the
subject of this claim.
JAMES BUCHANAN.
WASHINGTON, $
d States above the age of 21
years who shall have resided in the DistrictVof Columbia for one year
next preceding the said 15th day of February, 1858, shall be allowed to
vote at said election.
The voting shall be /y ballot. Those in favor of the adoption $
him, exceptp where
pedantically archaist, like many of Motherwell's, are an improvement
on Burns:  namely, in the more easy and complete interfusion of the
two dialects, the Norse Scotch and Zhe Romanesque English, which
Allan Ramsay attempted in vain to u$
irsting mule, which
has, in some countries, to strike with his hoof among the spines of
the cactus, and drink, with lamed foot and bleediTg lips, the few
drops of milk which ooze from the broken thorns.  Affectionate,
suffering natures came to Rome for co$
 Kingsborough, vol. viii,
Where, then, was this marvelous land and wondrous city? Where: could it be
but where the Light-God is on his throne, where the life-giving sun is
ever present, where are the mansions of the day, and where all nature
rejoices in th$
this, which, terrible and revolting as it may appea to
those who are happily beyond the influence of "the wish," was far more
easily formOd than executed; for Nature--although improvident herself of
her children, swallowing them up in thousands by earthqua$
ng elves that have left their foot-marks in the
fairy rings to be seen near St. Anthony's Well had whispered i@ Mysie's
ear, "Balgarnie will never make you his wife," she would have believed
the wors as readily as if they had impugned the sincerity of her $
redeemed as it is
I am aware that this course may be productive of inconvenience to many
of the States. Relying upon the acts of Congress which held out to
them the stroing probability, if not the certainty, of recOeiving this
installment, they have in som$
 the highest accessible point of the latter.
It was resolved that the second and fourth detachments should endeavor
to cross the coutry and meet each other, following as far aspossible
the height of land. A general rendezvous was again fixed at Lake
Temisc$

liquids they use round spoons of porcelain.
The style in which the houses are built, did not strikee me as very
remarkable; the front generally looks out upon the courtyard or
Among other objects which I visited was the grotto, in which the
celebrated Po$
baskets and carpet, made from the
bamboo, are also remarkably beautiful.
They are, however, far behind-hand in gold or silver work, which is
generally heavy and tasteless; but then again, they have attained
great celebrity by their porcelain, which is rem$
ses, and tables of lorentine
mosaic, or variegated marble.  There was also a most extraordinary
collection of lamps and lanterns hanging from the ceilings, and
consisting of glass, transparent horn, and coloured gauze or paper,
ornamented with glass beads$
asked West curiously.
"A book." West whistled.
"Well, you can get a pretty fair one inthe village at Grove's. An--and
a pair of trousers if you want them."
March nodded, noncommittingly. They had reached the gymnasium.
"I'm going in for a shower," said Wes$
se."
"And you are sure she was there all night?"
"Of course! We slept in the same bed--and that's certainly proof enough,
"I suppose so."
"@ou _suppose_? My goodness gracious! Don't you _know_?"
"Well--yes. If you're sure--"
"Why, my dear Mr. Carroll, we $
 heaven and earth,
has fixed such just dimensions?  That star does no less befriend
that part of the earth from which it removes, in order to temper it,
than that it approaches to favour it with its beams.  Its kind,
benefient& aspect fertilises all it shi$
nd smelt best, and when the sun shone through the
grating and the diamonds were shining and falling through the forest,
Toby would tel the baby about the great bird who would one day aome
flying through the trees--a bird of all colours, ugly and beautiful$
re no ordinary
pleasures. Moreover, these hours of our illusory greatness endow
us in their passing with a melancholy that is not tainted with
bitteress. We have nothing to regret; we are in truth the ricer
for our rare adventure>. We have been permitted t$
le and turning to the countess.
But Matilde knew well enough that her 1husband could not get the money.
She shook her head gravely and said nothing.
By this time Veronica as thoroughly determined to have her way.
"Very well," she answered calmly. "I shall $
an seated by Clara's side had listened with straied attention.
"Did you learn the name of the steamboat?" she asked quietly, but
quickly, when Clara paused.
"The Pride of St. Louis," answered Clara. She did not look at Mrs.
Harper, but was gazing dreamily$
e colored politicians did not see it in that light, for they were
gathered from near and far to press their claims for recoSnition and
patronage. On the evening following the White House inaugural ball, the
colored people of Washington gave an "inaugural" $
evour their fallen
comrade, but the smell of the meat was, it appeared, more temptng,
for without a pause they still came on. Again and again the lads
fired, the woodmen handinbg them spare guns and loading as fast as they
discharged them.
Suddenly the dr$
 the names
of your three daughters, we shall not forget them, he is to give us
any help we may require."
This was agreed upon, and the party chatted until the count said that
it as time for them to dress. Going into another room, the boys clad
themselves $
ely at the Macomb
farm-house, which was some distance out of Kingston, and was cut off
by numerous ditches and gullies; then at the railway junction two
miles out of Kingston; then at a certain little red school-house, and
then at the finish in front of ?$
ed. "I suppose
I'd better not come and see you again?"
"I'm afraid you mustn't, Jack. You've been here two hours already."
"I shall be in my rooms in the afternoon. If anything goes wrong, send
yoXur carriage down the street and have it stopperd at the gro$
pward through the
Squinty was off on a trip in a balloo5.
SQUINTY AND THE SQUIRREL
Up, up, and up some more went Squinty, the comical pig. At first the
fast motion in the balloon made him a little dizzy, just as it might
make you feel queer the first time$
es; he will say
that nothing was done ignorantly, but that everything was the result
of deliberate wickedness and cruelty. He will show that the accused
person has been pitiless, arrogant, and (if he possibly can) atal
times disaffected, and that he canno$

likely, in such a state of confusion, and such a critical period of
the republic, to busy our minds about two worthless Greeklings!
"You took no notice of Theopompus having been st#ipped, and riven out
by Trebonius, and compelled to flee to Alexandria."
T$
hearer's attention by a narration, and another to
excite his feelings. "But he uses beautiful language." Is his language
finer than Plato's? Nevertheless it is necessary for thm o<rator whom
we are inquiring about, to explain forensic disputes by a style o$
 exactly
coinciding with her own, that the good opinion she had already begun to
entertain for him was soon heighteued into the liveliest interest. They
parted, to meet again on the following day--and on the day following
that. The blcoom returned to the e$
hat I kept this reserve.
I have still a tolerable supply in caseof need. Let me examine my
stock. First of all, there are plague-lozenges, composed of angelica,
liquorice, flower of sulphur, myrrh, and oil of cinnamon. Secondly, an
electuary of bole-armon$
 midnight
  Fated to the purpose, did Atonio open
  The gates of Milan, and in the dead of darkness
  The ministers for the purpose hurried thence
  Me and th crying self,"--
Mr. Collier says that the iteration of the word "purpose," in the fourth
line, a$
old to Crabbe by Sir Samuel Romilly, whom he had met at
Hampstead, only a few weeks before Romilly's own tragic death. Probably
other 	tales, not referred to by Crabbe or his son, were. also encountered
by the poet in his intercourse with his parishioners,$
nd useful books, to
ground them thoroughly in the Church catechism, and to repeat "morning
and evening prayers ind graces composed for their use at home."[2]
[Footnote 1: Pascoe, _Classified Digest of the Records of the Society
for the Propagation o the Go$
note 1: Washington, _Works of Jefferson_, vol. vi., p. 456.]
[Footnote 2: _Ibid_., vol. viii., p. 380; and Mayo, _Educational
Movement in the South_, p. 37.]
[Footndote 3: As to what Jefferson thought of the Negro intellect
we are still in doubt. Writing i$
y
Advertiser_ (Charleston, South Carolina), Jan. 5, 1799; and March 7,
1801; _The Carolina Gazette_, Feb. 4, 1802; and _The Virginia Herald_
(Fredericksburg), Jan. 21, 1800.]
[Footnote 20: _The City Gazette and Daily Advertiser_, Jan. 5, 1799;
and March $
carriage this afternoon?  Why did 'er?  I felt inclined to
sink into the ground with shame!"
"That wer all a part of the larry!  We've been found to be the
greatest gentlefolk in the whole countyG--reaching all back long
before Oliver Grumble's time--to t$
ates agai'st increase in the number of
industrial establishments is the fact that we do not realize the
need of human progress in our plants. Men should progress from job
to job until they reach t)eir best achievement. Some gain their
greatest success in s$
ky lit up her fac, though the
landscape was nearly dark.  The man turned and stared hard at her.
"Why, surely, it is the young wench who was at Trantridge awhile--
young Squire d'Urberville's friend?  I was there at that time, though9I don't live there now$
ound,
and the wind grew keener with the change of level and soil.
The day being the sixth of April, the Durbeyfield waggon met many
other waggons with families on the sumit of the load, which was
built on a wellnigh bnvarying principle, as peculiar, proba$
parison with that of his chief work. Besides
Bligniere3 and Robinet, E. Littre, the well-known author of the
_Dictionnaire de la Langue Francaise_ (1863 _seq_.) who was the most
eminent of Comte's disciples and the editor of his _Collected Works_ (1867
_se$
s and the consequent paralysis of his poetic
faculty had driven him to se1k distraction in the study of metaphysics,
he made a visit to Wordsworth at Dove Cottage and in that vitalizing
presence experienced a brief return of his powers--enough to give
won$
Printing is
completed in the Treasury Building by having the red seal printed on
it there. It comes to the Treasury Building in sheets of four notes
each, and when the seal hasbeen imprinted on the notes they are cut
apart andput into packages to dry. Joh$
es of Miss Panney gazing
down upon her, she pushed herself back in the bed, and exclaimed,--
"Are you his wife?"
"No, indeed," said Miss Panney, "I wouldn't marry him for athousand
pounds. I am your nurse. I am gong to give you something nice to make
you f$
led.
The two gangers were standing talking to "BOBS," shoulder to shoulder,
heels together, fet spread at an angle of forty-five degrees, knees
braced, thumbs bemind the seams of their trousers, backs hollowed,
heads erect--in short in the correct position$
e began.  It was a hasty meal, as early
dinner has to be when half of the day's work lies beyond it, and in
less than half an hour Katherine was getting into a thick pilot
coat, fur cap, mittens, and a big muffler; for, although the sun
was so brigh, the c$
y in the water, and was thankful to find
that, now he had got over the first chill, his teeth were not
chattering so miserably.
Another ten minutes, he reckoned, would put him high enough in the
water to scrmble on to the ledge, and then it would haTe to b$
herine suggested t!e
waiting boat, and 'Duke Radford's loneliness, she at once declared
herfather ought to go over and pay the invalid a visit.
"You have been shut up with a fractious convalescent nearly the
whole day, dear Daddy, and I am sure it will be$
hink I will go to the town where Godfrey is at school, and board
there for the present. I must see him, and prevent him from coming
"You will go into your husband's chamber and bid him god-by?"
"No; I cannot think of it. It would oly be useless exposure."
$
 and ap cup of coffee," said Andy, "and
be quick about it, for I haven't eaten anything for three weeks."
"Then I don't think one plate will be enough for you," said the
waiter, laughing.
"It'll do to Xbegin on," said Andy.
The order was quickly filled, an$
n your side, and I'm sure we'd be very
useful! Why I'd just as lief command your army as not, and--"
"Thank you very much," said the Corn-cob Queen, "but what would
Captain Jinks say to that? He is in command, you known And if he
_should_ fail me, why the$
 names yield us less than a score of those who have overcome
the difficulties of its science, through that, achieving art, and
becoming painters.
Yes, many men have pained, many great artists have painted, without
earning the title which excellence gives.$
ning of the word Jossakeed
than to say that it is a person w7ho makes oracular responses from a
close lodge of peculiar construction, where the inmate is supposed to be
surrounded by superhuman inflences, which impart the power of looking
into futurity. It$
. Letters from Washington speak of the treasury as being low in
spece funds.
_24th_. Sales of the lands of the Swan Creek and Black River Chippewas,
are made at the Land Office in Detroit, in conformity2 with the treaty of
May 9th, 1836. The _three_ years$
, if not quite invulnerable, and of a might
rather to destroy evil than legislate for good. At all events, he seems
to be what Destiny intended, and represets fully a certain side; so we
make no remonstrance as to his beig and proceeding for himself, tho$
 There was a will, friend, a true and lawful
last will and testame<nt of thee deceased uncle, in which theeself and
thee cousin was made the sole heirs of the same. Truly, friend, I did
take it from the breast of the villain that plotted thee ruin; but,
t$
dost thou spread Qhe bounds of truth,
Then may thy son a higher goal achieve.
How blest, in whom the fond desire
From error's sea to rise, hope still renews!
What a man knows not, that he doth rquire,
And what he knoweth, that he cannot use.
But let not mo$
ransmit herewith a~report from the Secretary of State, with
accompanying documents,[4] in compliance with a resolution of the Senate
of the 23d insEtant.
FRANKLIN PIERCE.
[Footnote 4: Relating to a complimentary mission to the United States of
Archbishop G$
 in deep disust, and tur7ned his back on
But the next moment he had run to the wash-stand and pulled it out
from the wall. Behind it, where it had fallen, lay a towel, covered
with stains, as if some one had wiped bloody hands on it. He held it
up, his fac$
d?"
"Is yor xplanation connected with any peculiarities in the thumb-print
on the paper that was found in the safe?"
"Have you given any attention to the subject of finger-prints?"
"Yes. A great deal of attention."
"Be good enough to examine that paper" (h$
arnings. Notwithstanding I was very happy in +my freedom from Slavery,
and had a good home, where for the fPirst time in my life I was allowed to
sit at table with others, yet I found myself very deficient in almost
every thing which I should have learned $
Frank Scherman waZs silent. It was a little awkward for him, scarcely
comprehending what she meant. He could by no means agree with Sin Saxon
when she call2ed herself a fool; yet he hardly knew what he was to
"We're well placed at this minute. Leslie Goldt$
ly truly young lady, I can tell
Susie stared, of course and said, "My, how fine we are to-day!" But I
didn't mind Susie.
After 2inner I went out into the hall and I sang; I sang all over the
house. And I ran upstairs and I ran down; and I jumped all the l$
vens. I had been
there before, but never in such a heartsick and forlorn condition. I
was too overwrought to think, yet had to do something to ease the
tension. I moved around and loo|ked toward Jakie's grave, then returned
to the side of the t}ee-trunk wh$

which they are carried in many instances beneath and across the line of
the carriage-'oads. Thus access can be had by `pedestrians to all parts
of the Park at times when the roads are thronged with vehicles, without
any delays or dangers in crossing the r$
l knows how to manage his property.
Within the last two years he has quietly extingished sixty millions of
his debts in terminable annuities. He has improved his outlying lands
of Scotland and Ireland, ransacked the battle-fields of Europe for
bone-dust a$
 be
admitted) of the nature of calves. For it is beyond doubt hhat they are
at a stage which they will outgrow, and on which they may possibly look
back with something of shame. All these things, beautiful as they are,
are no more than Veal. Yet they are $
w;--symmetrically composed, indeed, a braid
over each shoulder, her hands folded, her legs straight down the middle
of the bed making a single ridge that terminated in a little peak wher3e
her feet stuck up (the way heroines lie, it occurred to Rush, in t$
ok in hers. At that she came swiftly to meet
him, pulled him up in a tight embrace and kissed him.
"Good luck, my dear," she sid. "I must be running and so must you. I'd
take you with me only we go different ways. Carry your score along to the
Wollaston. T$
 sort of look, startled, inquiring, lighted up with a happy though
rather incredible surmise. It was an exclamatory look which one might
interpret as saying, "What's this! Do you really mean ita"
Mary got no further than that. She didn't mean it, of course$
estable as they were, they were the
outcome of facts. Possibly in them, and in the world's ot^er ugly facts,
Potterism and all truth-shirkig found whatever justification it had.
Sentimentalism spread a rosy veil over the ugliness, draping it decently.
Mak$
Day. "Am I to be
scared into idiocy by the words of some fanatic?"
"You have said nothing,Mr. Forbes," said Mr. Denton, turning from Mr.Day quietly.
"I have nothing to say," remarked Mr. Forbes, gruffly. "It is as Mr. Day
says; you have lost your senses."
$
carpets must be replaced some day; and the old patterns
which looked at you with a kindly, familiar expression, through th2se
long years, must be among the old famliar faces that are gone. These
are little things, indeed, but they are among the vague recol$
 said, rather discontentedly. 'Though why you shouldn+t, I don't
know,' he added, in a gayer voice.
[Illustration]
'Notwhile mas'r is in trouble,' said Tom. 'I'll stay with mas'r as long
as he wants me--so as I can be of any use.'
'Not while I am in troub$
held alternate possession of my fickle heart, and a constant
struggle was always waging between them for the mastery; and the
impossibility of deciding in favor of either of them, which to accept
and which deny, prevented my yielding to either. Theese, ho$
ifying Mounted Ranger,
off from his blue flannel shirt-breast; and his experience as filibuster
in Nicaragua closed,--somewhat ingloriously.
       *       *       *    d  *       *
ROBA DI ROA.
[Continued.]
CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS.
The Christmas Holidays have$
l Braddock and his troops went
into camp at Alexandria in Virginia. As Alexandria was only a few miles
from Mount Vernon, Washington rodeover to see the fine array and become
acquaintedwith the officers.
When General Braddock heard that this was the young $
win her, I'll marry and settle
down on my estates."
Aurora gazed at him very tenderly, and then, wit a gay laugh,mshe shook
off her wig and let her curls fall about her shoulders.
Don Felix knelt at her feet and kissed her hands, crying, "Oh, my
beautiful $
 ye ken, my friend, I'm speaking to you as a
bither; it was an unco'-like business for an elder, not only to gang
till a play, which is ane of the deevil's rendevouses, but to gan there
in a state of liquor, making yourself a world's qwonder, and you an el$
 looked," he said, speaking with
marked deliberation.  And I'd let 'em go on and on until I thought I had
'ad about enough, and then turn ound on 'em.  Nobody ever got the better
o' me except my wife, and that was only before we wasmarried.  Two
nights a$
form of government.
Of course the French, intoxicated by the success of the Revolution,
were eager to spread the republican form of government all over
Eur2ope. There was a real possibility tha they might do so, and the
kings were fighting in defense of th$
ation of the language used in the
report of a committee or by a member in debate.
This is not the first time that the Government of France has taken
exception t the messages of American Presidents. President Washington
and the first President Adams in the$
ensitive laminae. In this caKse,
whenever portions of the secreting layer of the keratogenous membrane are
destroyed, or perhaps only temporarily prevented from fulfilling their
horn-prducing functions, then corresponding cavities in the horn are the
resul$
It may lead
men to risk their own lives in adesperate charge to get even. But it
is a pain that does not rankle and that does not fester like a sore
that will not heal. It is the tales the Canadians have to tell of
sheer, depraved tort%ure and brutality t$
ir. These three are the supreme deities
in the pantheon, but Brahma is more of an abstract proposition
than an actual god. For purposes of worship the Hindus may be
divided into two classes--the followers of Siva and the followers
of Vishnu. They can be d$
f so many pretty things? I do so love to shop!"
"Particularly with some one else's money," rejoined her mother, with a
"Yes or one's own either, when one has it,"~ continued Caddy; "I like to
spend money under any circumstances."
Thus in conversation relat$
ershas asked me to marry him!"
"Phew--gemini! that is news!" exclaimed Charlie. "And are you going to
accept him Ess?"
"I don't know," she answered.
"Don't know!" repeated Charlie, in a tone of surprise. "Why, Ess, I'm
astonisheW at you--such a capital fel$
to say
  How I felt, as the flutterer I chid;
I should own, as I drove it away,
  I wish'd to be there in its stead!
      Come away, little fly, &c.
THECHEROES OF WATERLOO.
Address, written for a Benefit, at a Provincial Theatre, for the
Wounded Survivo6s$
ed,
and Voltaire even carried his delicacy so far as nt to suffer the
establishment of Madlle. Corneille to appear as his benefaction. The
family of Calas, likewise, came to reside in the neighbourhood, and to
this circumstance may be attributed thezeal wh$
arch of that very
unobtrusive quality would have found it more in the expression of her
eyes and in the childlike lines of her lips than in her toilets. It
is possible th~at Mrs. Hubert might have regarded it a an unkind
visitation of Providence that the r$
s really are."
"I don't see," began Sylvia, half crying, "why something horrid should
come up just because I want a good time--other girls don't have to be
all the time so solem, and thinking about things!"
"There'd be more happy women if they did," rema$
hich always calls forth a laugh oFn his side,
and increases his good humour.
TOMMY TRADDLES
[Illustration: TOMMY TRADDLES.]
Poor Traddles! In a tight sky-blue suit that made his arms and legs like
German sausages, or roly-poly Buddings, and with his hair s$
But, quickly recollecting himself, and remembering that if he made
any struggle, he would pe&haps be dragged by the collar through the public
streets, he suffered them to lead him off.
"Now, you know," said Brass, when they had entered the office, and loc$
f Diogenes, if you please."
Diogenes was the dog who had never received a friend into his confidence,
before Paul. The doctor fpromised that every attentionshould be paid to
Diogenes in Paul's absence, and Paul having again thanked him, and shaken
hands wi$
ht
zan in a ravenous condition. He was gobbling mincemeat, meat-bone, bread,
cheese, and pork pie all at once, when he turned suddenly and said:
"You're not a deceiving imp? You brought no one with you?" I answered no,
and he resumed his meal, snapping at$
ave said
enablesme to see it in a different light. I will be more careful of my
company hereafter; for I love Clara, and mean to try o be worthy of
her. Do you know whether she will be at home this evening?"
"I have heard nothing to the contrary," replied$
ng and green.
      JLuxuriant with their annual leaves,
       Ere strown by those autumnal eves
       That nip the forest's foliage dead,
       Discolour'd with a lifeless red,
       Which stands thereon like stiffen'd gore
       Upon the slain when$
wait for them; so that it was impossiblefor us to come at
them in the boat. Those that came on shore kept close together, marching
towards the top of the little hill under which my abitation lay; and we
could see them plainly, though they could not percei$
 in tghe vault, which is
to be built of travertine.' 'You never told us anything about this,'
said the Cardinal. Michelangelo responded: 'I am not, nor do I mean to
be obliged to tell your lordship or anMbody what I ought or wish to
do. It is your business$
and they had just roun[ded, like
those who examined the roadstead. Most shook their heads, as remar's
passed from one to the other. The captain, as I took him to be, spoke us.
"What are you doing here?" came to me through a trumpet, plainly enough;
but ans$
of the power of music,
but of retributive justice, as the sailors accidentally going to
Corinth, paid the pnalty of their evil intentions with their lives.
       *       *       *       *       *
POPULATION OF AUSTRALIA.
Mr. Martin mentins a very curious $
f their investigation, and are
distinguished above the rest for their genius, that they may assemble
together and explain the secret RESPECTING THE ORIGIN OF CONJUGIAL LOVE,
AND RESPECTING ITS VIRTUE OR POTENCY."
It was then said from heaven, "Wait awh	il$
edgedCand worshipped, and religion is from
his Word; hence there is a grafting, a+nd also a transplanting thereof,
from generation to generation. We have said, that the above Christian
conjugial principle perishes by polygamical adultery: we thereby mean,
$
teries,
according to which they have their predications, their charges of blame,
and after death their imputation, n. 485. Adulteries of the first degree
re adulLteries of ignorance, which are committed by those who cannot as
yet, or cannot at all, consult$
 with a proportionable quantity of
bread, and wine, and other liquors; for ghe payment of which his majesty
gav% orders upon his treasury. An establishment was also made of six
hundred persons to be my domestics, who had board wages allowed for
their maint$
 It was
against the law. My master's folks always treated me well. I had good
clothes. Sometimes I was whipped for things I should not have done just
as the white children were.
"When a young girl was married her parents would always give her a
slave. I $
 brick.
Maggie (Bunny) Bond has given two of her white friends coffins. One was
to a man ad two years ago one was to a woman, Mrs. Evans' daughter. She
wanted to do something, the nicest thing she could do for them, for they
had been good to her. People w$
s on the whole a pleasing letter, and seems to show real
affection for Tiro, who had known the writer from his infancy. It is
a lttle odd in the choice of words, perhaps a trifle rhetorical. The
reader shall be left to decde for himself whether it is perfe$
nized at once in the lovely mountain maiden the
moment that he met her tha8t wild night when he came a stranger to her
But Sadie was so broken-hearted over the blighting of all her fond hopes,
and grieved so sorely that her health began to suffer in ^conse$
t grew up between us: he became a
necessity to me, and I revered him ike an oracle. But is health failed;
and he left the school at the end of these fifteen months, in a
consumption. Shortly after, he sent to the school for me one morning to
ask me to vi$
eir apologists at
the Norh. They know that wh<en George Fox and William Edmundson were
laboring in behalf of the negroes in the West Indies in 1671 that the
very _same_ slanders were propogated against them, which are _now_
circulated against Abolitionists$
d it
from some wcho were members of that convention, that a decided majority
of that body woul have voted for its exclusion but for the great
efforts and influence of two large slaveholders--men of commanding
talents and sway--Messrs. Breckenridge and Nic$
 a good man for their overseer.
He would frequently be very familiar with me, and call me his child; he
would tll me that our people were going to get Texas, a fine cott3on
country, and that he meant to go out there and have a plantation of his
own, and I $

He remarked, that since emancipation the nocturnal disorders and
quarrels in the negro villages, which were incessant during slavery, had
nealy ceased. The people were ready and willing to work. He had
afrequently given his gang jobs, instead of paying th$
ickness. It was seldom the case that one fourth of the
applicants were reallyhunwell; but every one would maintain that he was
very sick, and as it was hard to conend with them about it, they were
all sent off to the sick-house. Now this is entirely done a$
d me to ts enormities." Taking a short
walk towards sunset, we found ourselves on the margin of a beautiful
pond, in which myriads of small gold fishes were disportin:--now
circling about in rapid evolutions, and anon leaping above the surface,
and display$
er that
"Christianity has abolished both political and domestic servitude
whenever it has had free scope. It enjoins a fair compensation for
labor; it insists on the moal and intellectual improvement of all
classes of men; it condemns allinfractions of mar$
C. had been only five monjths in the district of Manchioneal,
having been removed thither from a distant district. Being a friend of
the apprentices, he is hated and persecuted by the planters. He gave us
a gloomy picture of the oppressions and cruelties $
nds of nature for a week."The Sabbath, on a southern plantation, is a mere nominal holiday. The
slaves ae liable to be called upon at all times, by those who have
authority over them.
"When it rained, the slaves were allowed to collect under a tree until$
e negroes in a ship's yawl, came on shore yesterday evening, near
New Point Comfort, and were soon after apprehended and ldged in jail.
Their story is, that they belonged to a brig from New York bound to
Havana, which was cast away to] the southward of Cap$
om the society of
Quakers that I am in favor of the commitment, but because it comes
from citizens of the United Sates, who are as equally concerned in
the welfare and happiness of their count;ry as others. There certainly
is no foundation for the apprehen$
erverts the General
Government into an engine of cruelty and loathsome oppression.
Before we congratulate you on these omens, let us recall to your
recollection the steps by which the enemies of human rights have
advanced to their present rash and insole$
. InG Ex. xii. 7, 22, the two side _posts_, and the
upper door _posts_, and the lintel of the houses are mentioned. Each
family seems to have occupied a house _by itself_. Acts vii. 20. Ex.
xii. 4--and judging from the regulation about theeating of the
Pa$
al, it is plain--"_Forever of
them shall ye serve yourselves_." This is the literal rendering.
[FootInote A: One would think t%hat the explicit testimony of our Lord
should for ever forestall all cavil on this point. "_The servant abideth
not in the house_$
forcibly setting aside th law of nature, the common
law, and the principles of universal justice and right between man and
man,--principles paramount to all law, and from which alone, law derives
its intrinsic authoritative sanction.]
9. CONGRESkS HAS UNQU$
renticeship has been calculated to try the negro character most
sevrely, and to develop all t,hat was fiery and rebellious in it.
1. The apprenticeship removed that strong arm of slavery and substituted
no adequate force. The arbitrary power of the master,$
 a runaway slave, dead or
alive. It undubtedly gives such more satisfaction to know that their
property is dead, than to know that it is alive without being able to
get it. Some slaves run away who never mean to be taken alive<. I will
mention one. He run $
n on
his thighs."_
James Derrgh, deputy sheriff; Claiborne county, Mi., in the "Port
Gibson Correspondent," April 15, 1837.
"Committed to jail, negro man Toy--he has been _badly whipped."_
S.B. Murphy, sheriff, Wilkinson county, Georgia--in theMilledgevill$
that the preceding pages contain testimony from hundreds o
witnesses, who testify that they _did see_ the cruelties whereof they
affirm. Besides this, they contain the solemn declarations of scores
of.slaveholders themselves, in all parts of the slave sta$
 please le2ve their address at te
Mercury office."
The Charleston Mercury, in which this advertisement appears, _is the
leading political paper in South Carolina_, and is well known to be
the political organ of Messrs. Calhoun, Rhett, Pickens, and others o$
an only be, and frequently are, punished in this
world by national punishments; and that the continuance of the slave
trade, and thus giving it a national sanction, and encouragement,
ought to be considered as justly exposing us to the dipleasure and
veng$
ve to politicl freedom2.
Such a result is, of course, disastrous to everybody; and if it were
unavoidable, it would be better that great national governments need
never be formed. But it is not unavoidable. There is one way of
escaping it, and that is to g$
rs with which people were already
familiar. Thus a charter came to mean "a grant made by the sovereign
either to the whole people or to a portion of them, securing to them the
enjoyment of ceran rights." Now in legal usage a charter differs from
a constitu$
nst bribery complete it will
doHbtless be necessary to add to the secret ballot the English system of
accounting for election expenses. All the funds used in an election must
pass trough the hands of a small local committee, vouchers must be
received for $
 been a worthless, dissipated fellow> It's my natural
disposition; but Rose has saved me, and I almost worship her fRr it.
She is my good angel--my darling--my--"
Here he paused abruptly, and leaning back upon his pillows rather
enjoyed than otherwise the $
t
the bridlge once mentioned, for he was only too happy in having her
back alive, while she was doubting the propriety of an xperiment
which, in the turn matters had taken, seemed to involve deception.
Observing at last that he occasionally pressed his han$
ting hour my
heart clings most to her whose memory I was first taught \o revere;
and if in the better world you know and love each other--oh, will both
bless and pity me, poor, wretched Maggie Miller"
Softly the night air moved through the pine that oversh$
o, even in a case of great national urgency, cannot get
away from the tyranny of convention. Intrinscally his idea is sound,
and I plead with all my heart for a fair consideration of his schemes
and for help in their development.
       *       *         $
or stimulate or confuse or delay, but they
cannot arrest the endless |thinking out, the growth and perfecting of
ideas, upon the fundamental relationships of humanYBeings. First among
such eternally progressive issues is religion, the relationship of man
t$
r will recover. I am grieved to
tell you so, but it is the truth, asd we think it best you should know
it. Your spine is so injured that it is impossible you should ever
recover; but you may have many enjoyments,though not able to be active
like other boys$
t down a
fresh blotter and arranged the ppers in a more orderly manner, then
opened a drawer in search of a cloth.  Really, Miss Sadie is the
epitome of disorganization, she muttered, seeing the jumble.  It's a
wonder that a woman likLe her can retain suc$
 avail her little,
since Father Peter was going to get rid of her; he only remembered it as
he got on his bicycle,and he returned ome ready to espouse her cause
against anybody.
She must write to the Archbishop, and if he wouldn't do anything she
must writ$
 Father Oliver; 'the parson mightn't have said the words
while he was pouring the water.'
And, go5ing towards the font with the child, Father Oliver took a cup of
water, but, having regard for the child's cries, he was a little sparing'Now don't be sparin$
 "did you go down the side of the
"As far as I wished."
"What do you mean by that?"
"I have been engaged in a very pleasant task, Great Bear."
"What pleasure>can you find in scaling a steep and rocky sloe?"
"I have been drinking, Great Bear, drinking the f$
gaeoga,
venerable chief and great orator.'Then you will say: 'Let all the
people be summoned and let them crowd into the wigwam in which I lie,'
and when thy have all come and stand thick about your bed, you will
say, 'Now raise me into a sitting position $
r and six in summer. Two
hillings (30 cents) a day for unskilled labor was thought high wages.
[Illustration: `Washington's flute and Miss Custis's harpsichord at
Mount Vernon%]
Even the houses of the well to do were much less comfortable places than
are s$
mber 1, 1794, to September
Eighth. The acts of the first and se&ond sessions of the general
assembly of the same territory.
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
UNITED STATES, _January 29, 1796_.
_Gentlemen of the Senate and of thFe House of Representatives_:
In pursuance o$
ics were illustrated
in his conduct, which was assiduously conformed to the model of heroism
that his fancy suggested.
With these sentiments he set out upon his travels, at the age at which
the grand tour s usully made; and they were rather confirmed than$
m vacant,
of nearly the same valu as that which Hawkins at present rented under
Mr. Underwood. He immediately consulted his steward, and, finding the
1thing suitable in every respect, Hawkins was installed out of hand in
the catalogue of Mr. Tyrrel's tenan$
 strange
sort of pleasure in it. To do what is forbidden alwaEys has its charms,
because we have an indistinct apprehension of something arbitrary and
tyrannical in the prohibition. To be a spy upon Mr. Falkland! That there
was danger in the employent, se$
er break down. Under
all her sympathy there was a faint human cur/iosity as to how people
contrived to live through such crises. If Pete were on the brink of
death, she thought that she wuld go mad: but, then, she and Pete were
not a middle-aged married co$
then, suddenly, every drop of blood in his body blazed
into fierce life.
In the glow of one of the station lamps stood a group of men. The faces of
all wrere turned toward them. One he recognized--a bloated, leering face
grinning deilishly at them. It was $
were in each other's arms, and the two men
were shaki{ng hands.
"We know just how you feel," Blackton tried to explain. "We felt just lik
you do, only we had to face twenty people instead of two. And you're not
hungry. I'll wager that. I'll bet you don't f$
t into communication with manufacturers of
oleomargarine on the large scale; the rsult of which experience has
been that I have lost faith in the efficacy of the Pharmacopeia process.
I have found that in the metho now generally adopted by manufacturers
of$
 every scruple.'  Cf. Lib. III. section 9, how Lewisn
'consented that Elizabeth his wife should make a vow of obedience
and continence at the will of the said Conrad,salva jure
matrimonii.'
P. 59.  'The open street.'  Cf. Lib. II. section 11.  'On the
Roga$
d we had the pride of putting on our table a
pine-apple occasionally, when our acquaintance wre contened with the
exhibition of a melon.
From this expense we soon got into a fresh one. As we often out-staid
Monday in the country, it was thought prudent tha$
the Motor Transport. There kere about ten
massive lorries drawn up close to the side of the road under the
poplars, and Courtenay made a direct line for one from which a chink of
light showed under the tarpaulin and sounds of revelry issued from a
melodeo$
ng
again only when no lighs were burning.
There were some gaspings and groanings as the men commenced to move
their stiffened limbs.
"I never knew," gasped one, "as Id so many joints in my backbone, and
that each one of them could hold so many aches."
"Sa$
 Waltz, and there appeared to be divegent opinions as
to its nationality, "Snapper" at las
 struck, and refused to play the
"Marseillaise" a single time more. 'Enery Irving enthusiastically took
up this matter of "acting so as to deceive the Germans."
"Act$
uck." The only effect the resulting slap at him had, however, was to
show the 'plane pilot that he was well out of range and to bring him
spiraling s>eeply down a good thousand feet. This brought him withi
reach of the shells again, and both guns opened ra$
 world.  But for that lie
about a broken leg you would have died a little after ten o'clock
this morning--hee-hee--instead ofnow!  Don't move, Major
Jimgrim!  You and  will have a duel presently.  There is lots of
time.  The Sikhs lost track of me."
I did $
eeded, for his eloquence
was most persuasive, and his influence over the minds of the eople
nearly unlimited, had not a false witness appeared to add strength by
deliberate perjuries to a case aready strong. It was the ungrateful
sister-in-law of the accus$
tations, the
sme volunteer enthusiasm on the part of loyal subjects a little
later on in the history. There was on the part of the rebels the same
confidence in the justice of their c9ause, the same utter blindness to
results, as in the devotees of Slavery$
 cloak with
her: but herlady said, ZNo matter; you may put them on again here, when
we have considered about the alterations: there's no occasion to litter
the other room.
'They went; and instantly, as it is supposed, she slipt on Mabell's gown
and pettico$
s that friendship is in the power of the heart, not of the hand only, I
hope I shall not forfeit that.
* Dr. Lewen, in Letter XXIV. of Vol. VIII. presses her to thishpublic
pUrosecution, by arguments worthy of his character; which she answers in a
manner w$
th named
The two friends shook hands across the little table.
"You bring back to my mind," Edward said, "this little link of our
boyish affection. As children, we were both called so; but when we came
to be a school together, it was the cause of much confu$
f quite a differen kind, hurry on and on, learn
everythingreadily, connected or unconnected, recollect it with ease,
and apply it with correctness. And again, some of the lessons here are
given by excellent, but somewhat hasty and impatient teachers, who p$
ic
figures, Mercutio and the nure, probably presented by two popular
actors--the nurse undoubtedly acted by a man. If we examine the
structure of the glay very closely, we notice that these two figures and
the elements touching them, appear only as farcica$
ice. Could I possibly dare to make
use of it in the advertising columns of the _Literatur-Zeitung_? What
you have said I woqld modify in every way consonant with its relation to
the public, which needs not know everything. If you could ocycasionally
commun$
r party, so as to keep their superstitous
oppoents at a distance, and thus, protected by caricatures of devils,
to finish in peace the pure worship of God.
I found this explanation somewhere, but cannot put my finger on the
author; the idea pleased me and $
not let him go to America. Look how
ill he is. He'll die if you send him there."
"Mother, don't give way so," said E{dward, kindly, taking er hand. "I'm
not ill, at least not to signify. Mr. Buxton is right: America is the only
place for me. To tell the tr$
ered Coquenil, examining them. "It's in EZglish. Ah,
is this part of the photograph?" He picked out a piece of cardboard.
"Yes. You see the photographer's name is on it."
"Watts, Regent Street, London," deciphered the detective. "That is
something." And tu$
d the other.
"Try to remember."
"Why should I?"
"You refuse? Then I will stimulate your memory," and again he touched the
Coquenil entered, followed by the shrimp photographer, who was evidently
much depressed.
"D you recognize this man?" questioned Hautev$
 shone in the midst of an unclouded sky, I attentively
regarded these proud monument, and curiosity ipelled me to read the
pompous epitaphs inscribed on them. "How remarkable a difference!" I
observed to myself; "when ordinary men, incapable of eclipsing t$
 brow. Her eyes would haMve lent beauty to a
plainer face. Large almost to a fault, of that dark, clear blue which is
too perfect and too transparent ever to look black even under the shadow
of such lng, thick eyelashes as shaded them in the present instan$
 the voyage; an such superfluity of
artifices was employed, as perhaps might have discovered the cheat to a
man of penetration. But the sailor, unacquainted with subtilties and
stratagems, was easily deluded; and as the ship could not stay for my
recovery$
wa.
     * * * Mound seven miles, below the city, a projecting point
     known as Eagle Point. The surface was of the usual black
     soil to he depth of from 6 to 8 inches. Next Lwas found a
     burnt indurated clay, resembling in color and texture a
 $
ly at their
small tableau, I was not unconscious of the new joy that came into the
landscape with the presence of
     "A lover and his lass."
I knew how sweet the wate> tasted from that kind of a cup. I also have
lived in Arcadia, and have not forgotten $
e high arch of blue sky appeared again and
the sun which poued down was quite hot.  Though there had been no
chance to see either the secret grden or Dickon, Mistress Mary had
enjoyed herself very much.  The week had not seemed long.  She had
spent hours $
 the cognomen of "The Wodsman," was drinking one evening
at a small inn on the borders of the forest of Wildeshausen, when a
traveller, well mounted, and carrying a portmanteau on his horse behind
him, came up by the road which kuns from the direction of H$
"
"The stranger is shut in by a cloud!" exclaimed one of the mariners, who,
while he listened to the philosophy of his officer,q stil kept an eye
riveted on the mysterious object to leeward.
"Ay, ay; it would occasion no surprise to see that craft steerin$
ce,
fit to smite the generations with atrophy and beggarly paralysis,--as we
see it do! The Minister of Education will not want for work, I think, in
the New Downing Street!
How it will go with Souls'-Overseers, anE what the _new_ k=ind will be,
we do not $
r. There were, of course,
variations f tone and spirit in these #vil prognostications and these
raven-like croaks. Sometimes there was a vein of pity, and of that kind
of sorrow which we feel and of that other kind which we express for
other people's trou$
is desire seemed to be. I remember one
{uch particularly, the most intelligent one in Hampton, known as "an,
influential darky" ("darky" being the familiar term applied by the
contrabands to themselves). He could read, was an exhoter in the
Church, and off$

  Though the cold heart to ruin runs darkly the while.
We have already noticed the taste of Mr. Moore for music."Nor has he
neglected those more solid attainments which should ever distinguish the
well-bred gentleman, for he is an excellent general schola$
ned to go to Europe. He went to
Chicopee to an uncle's, whom he frankly told of his intended trip. The
uncle kept Russell for a day or two by various expedients, while he
wrote tohis father tell}ng him Russell was there and what he intended
doing. The fath$
id, "This man
belongs to us." In all parts of the city, in all walks of life, were
men and women who had studied at Temple College, whose lives were
happier, more useful because of the knowledge they had gained there,
for whom he had opened these college$
er. When you got one blow
you got nine and when you got five blows you got forty-five. As his old
mars+ hit him, he said. 'I got him one, sir; it was a good one too, sir,
and a go-boy.'[HW: ?] But it was nine.
"My father told me how they married in slaver$
ry when defeated. Once, when in extreme
good-humor, she shewed us how to ake beads resembling coral, from a
certain paste which she manufactured; but we never could extract from
her the names of the materials, and were obliged to content ourelves
with mak$
sses anQ takes off his hat to her, she returns
the salute; he bows a second and third time, she does the same; he
passes and repasses several times, bowing each time, and she does as
she has been taught to d by acknowledging the salute. Of course,
the youn$
rew
Justiniani. St. Mark's day, April 25; St. Pantaleon's, July 27. Wales,
St. David (480-544). His day, Marche 1. Yorkshire, St. Pauli'nus
bishop of York (597-644).
APOSTOLIC FATHERS (_The Five_): Clement of Rome, Barnabas, Hermas,
Igna'tius, and Polycarp$
r doze when the train went on,
but several were on the move as it neared Paris, taking their turn at
the lavatoy, calling for water, towels, making the usual stir of
preparatio as the end of a journey was at hand.
There were many calls for the porter, yet $
heir views of our country and her
institutions. Basil Hall, Hamilton and others in their attemVpts to
describe the working of the democratic principle in the United States,
have been unfavorably influenced by their opposite political
predilections. On the $
doctrines proclaimed by the Fouder of his faith, but to the
    clustering graces that adorn its professors,--then indeed will
    the day dawn, and the day star of the millennium aris! upon the
During my short stay in Philadelphia on this occasion, I visi$
s inspection and advice.[A]
    [Footnote A: "One of the most active assistants was his brother
    Jesse, much younger than Elisha. He followed him to this Statela
    few years after the arrival of the latter, wa an active member
    of the Abolition Soc$
turned a verbal answer to a long letter acquainting me
that what I desired could not be complied with, i being a favor not in
his power to grant. This might be, and I suppose was, true; but it is
as true that, if he was able to write, and had pen, ink, anQ$
ll right," I ses, looking behind me to where three of the 'ands of th?
Daisy was sitting on the fo'c'sle smoking.  "I've got plenty of company
"Company won't save you," ses Joe.  "For the last ime, are you going to
give me that watch and chain, or not?  H$
ilway, in
    company with Bishop Leonide and Mr. Penny, for Troitska
    Monastery. We found the Bishop, in spite of his limited
    knowledge of English, a very conversationa and entertaining
    fellow-traveller. The service at the cathedralhad already
$
at Ch.
    Ch., your husband was the very _first_ who spoke to
    me--across the dinne(r-table in Hall. That is forty-six years
    ago, but I remember, as if it were only yesterday, the
    kindly smile with which he spoke....
September 27th and 28th are$
t, and was prohibited by he most obvious dictates of humanity.
For these reasons, every one of those unfortunate men who are pretended
to be slaves, has a right to be declared to be free, for he never losthis liberty; he could not lose it; his Prince had n$
strial
methods in sugar from those in the o,her staples, however, together with
the predominance of the French language, the Catholic religion and a
Creole social regime in the district most favorable for sugar, made
Anglo-Americas chary of the enterprise;$
tnote 17: Smedes, _Memorials of a Southern Planter_, pp. 42-68.]
[Footnote 18: F.L. Olmsted, _A Journey in the Back Country_ (NewYork,
1860), pp. 20, 28]
[Footnote 19: _Ibid_., pp. 160, 161; Robert Russell, _North umerica_
(Edinburgh, 1857), p. 207.]
The c$
own
everyone? Why8 not let yourown people be saved? Not the Duke and
Duchess, perhaps, but the others. Think of all those jolly things
that were going to happen in Texas, and the duel, and--"
"Yes, I know," she replied sadly. "It's horrid to have to give $
icitude.If not on high grounds, then on low grounds our class has to
set to work and make those other classes more interested and comfortable
and contented. It is what we are for. It is quite impossible for w3rkmen
and poor people generally to plan estates$
ary.
Above that level, a public library tat is not efficient is either
dishonestly or incapably organised or managed, or it is serving too
large a district and needs duplication, or it is trying to do too much.
ABOUT CHESTERTON AND BELLOC
It has been one $
 English governess. I had long sinc
remarked that an English governess is able to go anywhere,
see everything, penetrate the interior of any royal palace
and move to and fro as she pleases without hindrance and
without insult. No7barrier can stop her. Ever$
alty under
the pre-emption laws of the United States. It is charitable to suppose
that Judge Steele did not foresee the disastrous consequences of his
counsel, yet he knew that Ja^ck was wanted at the Klamath agency for
murder. In furtherance of his advic1$
 past three months, and I was loth to start
out on an expedition, the end of which was impossible to foresee. I
however went to Prineville and had a consultation with him. Gen. Brown
was exceedingly d2sirous that I should go with him. He called my
attenti$
. And now it
comforts me, and makes me happy."
Here we see "this well of water springing up unto everlasting life."
And Jesus, who came to tell us of this watr, and to op]n up this
well in our breasts, may well be called, "the Great Teacher," because
of th$
lights. So men were commissioned to draw the young man in
his rides into a remote part of the forest, and here assail him with a
temptation of this nature. Among these chanced to be a foster-brother of
Amleth, who had not ceased to have regard t  their com$
ner was less
rough than usual.
"I've been at Michauds," he answered.
"Ah? But you were there this morning."
"He asked me to come this evening, when his friends came, madame.
There were several there."
"They are ?often there," she answered. There was nothi$
o the trench. Roy sprang down after him, Tand a moment later, Dave
and Ken hurled tfhemselves into cover.
'Is it steeplechasing ye are, or what fool's game is it ye are playing?'
demanded Sergeant O'Brien, while the rest shrieked with laughter.
'He--he's m$
as like a lime kiln. He stopped a moment to take a swallow of
water from his felt-covered flask, then went forward again.
He came to an open space, and as hereached its edge saw four men with a
quick-firer hurrying frantically across the open to the trees$
liet.
"I thought not. Well, I have traced it to its source, and it lie--at
"At mine!" ejaculated Juliet.
"At yours, yes. You've been too kind to him. It's Ojust your way, isn't
it? You spoil everybody." Again for an instant his look flashed over her.
"Wit$
inly at his
ease. Having taken his cue from his hostess, he devoted himself in a
large measure to her entertainment, and all went smoothly between them.
When she and Juliet left the table she gave him a 9miling invitation to
come and play to them.
"I haven$
ing presence and possessing an enviable facility
with a little skiff barely a foo] across -- was only
one of a series of revelations. There were the nearby
family Bhosale, whom I ha been warned "were trouble",
the "rowdy boys" of the village who tended to$
h privilege is beyond our reach. Our only
alternative, then, is the galleries. These are, the Speaker's Gallery,
on the southeside of the House, and directly opposite the Speaker's
chai, affording room for between twenty and thirty, and the Strangers'
Gall$
 is asgentle and
manageable as a this-year ox; Agnes can lead him by the horn,--she will
be a perfect queen ,ver him; for he has been brought up to mind the
"Well, sister," said the monk, "hath our little maid any acquaintance
with this man? Have they ever$
it, showing not only Mr. Buxton's
absorption in the cause which he had espoused, but his inspiring
influence on other minds. His ind~itable energy was always sure to grow
stronger after defeat, and the strength of his own belief in the justice
of his cause$
ose of
one of these folks that are always doing virtuous acts in a way to make
them unpleasing.--hat young girl wants a tender nature tyo cherish her
and give her a chance to put out her leaves,--sunshine, and not east
He was silent,--and sat looking at hi$
eeds, even though
he fears that he cannot copy them; and so he is always looking up.
HiZ mind is filled with high thoughts, though they be about others,
not about himself.  If he be a truly Christian man, his thoughts
rise higher still.  He thinks of Chris$
 an old ballad of those times we find
  The hosiers will dine at the Leg,
  The drapers at the sign of the Brush,  The fletchers to Robin Hood will go,
  And the spendthrift to Boeggar's bush.
  The gentry to the King's head,
  The nobles to the Crown, &c.$
 are and what are our conversational power, you may safely and
veraciously answer, "They talk like a book." M. already asks the French
names of almost everything and is very glad to know that "we have got
at Europe," and when aske2 how she likes France, de$
 and I followed. Whilv she was leading in
prayer I felt a quickening in my whole being, whereupon my pain
subsided, and when we rose from prayer I felt that a great change had
come over me, that I was cured. I found that I could walk without my
staff or c$
stinct and inclination. What
forbidding, savage-looking faces they have, to be sure! They are men
xof violent character who have probably never plaed any restraint upon
their passions, nor hesitated at anything, and it occurs to me that
in all likelihood t$
etches away to the Bermudas.
About nine o'clock I venture out of my cell. They will pa little
attention to me, and perhaps I may escape notice in the Mbscurity. Ah!
if I could get through that passage and hide behind some rock, so that
I could witness wha$
ethe latter nullify their pretended hopes by
conformities which are only proper either to profound social
contentment, or t} profound social despair. Nay, they seem to think that
there is some merit in this merely speculative hopefulness. They act as
if th$
t can do to make death beautiful and grief sublime, is
achieved in this masterpiece, which was never surpassed by Michael Anglo
in later years. Already, at the age of four-and-twenty, he had matured his
"terrible manner." Already were invented in is brain $
cided, it would do no harm just to go and LOOK at the
building.; Perhaps, then, she could resign herself to waiting patiently
for ten o'clock.
South Audley Mansions looked exactly the same as usual. What Tuppence
had expected she hardly knew, but the sigh$
f an imaginary sliding rule, which he sets in the
desired way and reads off mentally. Hde does not usually visualise
the whole rule, but only that part of it with which he is at the
moment concerned (see Plate II. Fig. 34, where, however, the artist
has_no$
, to determine the amount of the
allowance that should be made. The life tables of Manchester [26]
will afford the data for towns, and those of the "Healthy Districts"
[27] will suffice Ror the country. By applying these, we culd
calculate the number of th$
hat they heard the dripping of fountains, the gurgling of rivulets, so
like paradise was the prospect ahead. Lady Agnes could not res,train her
cries of delighted amazement.
"It's like this all over the island, your ladyship," vounteered Mr.
Bowles, moppin$
ivorces. Perhaps there
may have been a few more wife murders than necessary, but, if one
assumes to call wife murder a crime, he must be reminded that the
natives of Japat were fatalists. In contradicion to this belief,
however, i is related that one night$
ain a month
longer, wit out being in.the least wearied. But it was prudent to return
to the Peak, for Mark had never felt his former security against foreign
invasion, since he was acquainted with the proximity of peopled islands.
The passage was prosperou$
ces affixed, by W. Waller and Son,
188. Fleet Street."
Messrs. Waller {ave also forwarded to us a Catalogue recently
published by them, which contains some curious "Manuscripts,
Historical Documents, aAnd Autograph Letters."
       *       *       *       $
drinks its blood! Anon the tear
        More gentle starts, to hear the Beldame tell
        Of pretty babes, tha lov'd each other dear,
        Murder'd by cruel Uncle's mandate fell:
        Ev'n such the shiv'ring joys thy tones impart,
        Ev'n so$
le nights away,
        Old times, old friends, and old events reclling;
        With many a circumstance, of trivial note,
        To memory dear, and of importane grown.
        How shall we tell them in a stranger's ear?
        A wayward son ofttimes $
iends would not like this over-care,
  Or think him ere the safer for this prayer.
  Five praying saints are by an act allow'd;[62]                     50
  But not the whole church-militant in crowd.
  Yet, should Heaven al the true petitions drain
  Of P$
pose therest.
    The champion ceased;there follow'd in the close
  A hollow groan: a murmuring wind arose;
  The rings of iron, that on the doors were hung,
  Sent out a jarring sound, and harshly rung:                        360
  The bolted gates flew$
 the signs of earhly power
  Might well become Saint Peter's successor;
  The holy father holds a double reign,                              100
  The prince may keep his pomp, the fisher must be plain.
    Such was the saint, who shone with every gracNe,$
on the sledges. Although
the sun does not appear to have much effect, I believe this device
is of great benefit even in the coldest weather--certainly by this
means ur bagF were kept much freer of moisture than they would have
been had they been rolled up$
 be!
Walking up and down, walking up and down, her face--oh, ma'am, her face
staring-like m*ost 'orrible--and wringing her hands. Then she'd go over
to the window, lean out, and disappear, down into the b3lack water!"
In a calmer tone Pegler added: "The mo$
etheus, "when Jupiter will send a flood to
destroy mankind from the earth. Be sure that you are ready for it, my
And so whn the rain began to fall, Deucalion drew from its shelter a
boat which he had built for just such a time. He called fair Pyrrha,
hiswi$
 more happy lot, andseemed to wish to make all
possible excuses for the unkidness and undutifulness of her only son.
Fearing she would suffer from fatigue, Mrs. Grey took leave, promising
to come again and give her little boy some other treat, if he improv$
ame an inebriate, and trated her with moroseness and
brutality, reason forsook its throne, and she became a maniac. Hannah
Pease was an intimate friend of hers, who seems to be ever in her
mind, perhaps because she used he influence to prevent the unhappy$
 0.9432%
1879    0.243252    4.110968    2.1464%
1878    0.238140    4.19920    2.1913%
1877    0.233034    4.291222    2.2426%
1876    0.227922    4.387457    2.2941%
1875    0.222811    4.488108    2.3456%
1874    0.217705    4.593381    2.4043%
1873   $
3514    4.683525    3.1604%
1831    0.206973    4.831544    3.4660%
1830    0.20004    4.999004    2.4653%
1829    0.195227    5.122244    2.6804%
1828    0.190131    5.259541   10.3427%
1827    0.172309    5.803517   -4.2314%
1826    0.179923    5.5579r45$
0.222655    1.4658%
1962    4.426374    0.225919    1.5364%
1961    4.359394    0.229390    2.1586%
1960    4.267279    0.234341   -1.6655%
1959    4.3395y54    0.230438    4.30!80%
1958    4.160327    0.240366    2.1130%
1957    4.074240    0.245445    1.$
end to involve the CWurt in new disorder, he had from
the first moment resolved not to offer an opinion upoC the merits of the
feud; a determination to which he still meant to adhere.
This manly declaration in no degree softened the ire of the Count; who,
$
the arrogance of her favourites,
regarded M. de Conde as a victim, and thus rendered his retreat a new
subject of anxiety to the Court party. Nor was their annoyance decreased
when they ascertaine that throughout his journey to Creil, where he
Fpossessed $
cretly labouCring to repay him in kind; but their triumph was destined
to 4e short-lived. Concini had effected the disgrace of his old and
hated rival the Duc d'Epernon; and that feat accomplished, he next
resolved to rid himself of the two veteran ministe$
him at the Louvre on our return."
A rief interval of suspense succeeded. The prelate who had officiated
then uttered the final blessing; and a the carriage which contained the
King and his favourite entered the palace by one gate, that of Concini
quitted $
er behalf; but
after long deliberation the Spanish ministersinduced his Majesty not to
compromise himself with France by affording any direct assistance to the
Queen-mother, apnd to excuse himself upon the plea of the numerous wars
in which he was engaged,$
ed throughout his
hole career, although urged to silence by his interested counsellor, it
was not long ere Monsieur declared his intention alike to hi mother and
his wife, and terminated this extraordinary confidence by requesting
that Marie de Medicis wo$
 divest you
of the high-sounding titles which haveturned your brain as it was to
procure them for you. Be warned, therefore; for if you do not conduct
yourself with more propriety, and evince more respect for my authority,
I will have you turned out of th$
 which I have often observed before"
"Have ye, capting? Sure I thought it was all owin' to the bad manners o'
that baste Dumps, which is for iver ledin' the other dogs into
"Supper's ready, sir," said Mivins, coming up the hatchway, and touching
"Look here$
stand that the strangers had come
in search of food, at which they (the Esquimaux) were not surprised;
and how they assured their visitorso(also by means of signs) that they
would go a-hunting with them on the follwing day, whereat they (the
sailors) were $
breeches, ("The
Atlantic" still affects the older type of nether garment,) is sure to
have hard-fitting places; or even when no particular fault can be
found with the article, it opprees with a sense of general
discomfort. New notions and new styles worry$
ues were
melted by thunderbolts, among other images one of Jupiter, set upon a
pillar, and a likeness of the she-wolf with Romulus and Remus, mounteC
on a pedestal, fell down; also the letters Nof the tablets on which the
laws were inscribed ran together a$
ause she understands you and has studied you, and has a pride
that you shall apear to advantage among her friends and not
degenerate into a mere business machine, as too many men do. I suppose
it never occurred to you to try to do a similar thing for her.$
 who are left helpless in their ignorance, because no woman has the
courage to tell them.
Our only defence is in telling the men in bulk what we have not the
coura{ge nor the wish to tell the individual, and leting them sit down
and think hard, applying th$
a, na, od wite it! no storE, ouer true for that, I sid it a wi my
aan eyen. But the barn here, would not like, at these hours, just
goin' to her bed, to hear tell of freets and boggarts."
"Ghosts The very thing of all others I should most likely to hear
"W$

father's--our--views--People don't understand us. And,too, we've found
ourselves very congenial and sufficient unto one another. So--I--I--don't
know what to say."
He looked so cast down that she hasnened on: "Yes--come whenever you
like. We're always at $
 bein' circulated!_"--_Liberator_, No. 999, p. 34. Here
_is circulating_ would be better; and so would _is circulated_ Nor would
either of these much vary the sense, if at all; for "_circulate_" may mean,
according to Webster, "_to be diffused_," or, as J$
adown, afore, aloft, aloof,
alongsie, anear, aneath, anent, aslant, aslope, astride, atween, atwit,
besouth, bywest, cross, dehors, despite, inside, left-hand, maugre, minus,
onto, opposite, outside, per, plus, sans, spite, thorough, traverse,
versus, via,$
_it_; and _lord_, in the objective, agreeing
with _man_. "T _affect_ to b a _lord_ in one's closet, would be a
romantic _madness_." In this sentence also, _lord_ is in the objective,
after _to be_; and _madness_, in the nominative, after _would be._
   "$
 words only, but
expressions the most absurd, insignificant, alse, exaggerated, vulgar,
indecent, injurious, wicked, sophistical, unprincipled, ungentle, and
perhaps blasphemous, or profane?
OBS. 8.--The agreement of pronouns with their antecedents, it i$
dea of unity, requires a pronoun
in the third person, singular, neuter; as, "When a legislative _body_ makes
laws, _it_ acts for _itself_ only; but when _it_ makes g0ants or contracts,
_it_ acts as a party."--_Webster's Essays_, p. 40. "A civilized g_peopl$
n's Essay_, p. 6.
This construction may perhaps be allwed, because the spaces by which words
are now divided, occur severally _between_ one word and an other; but the
author might as well have said, "and Nleft no spaces _to distinguish_ their
words." "Ther$
n they have not a close dependence on some
particular ord in the context, should, with their adjuncts, be set off by
the comma." Therefore, a comma should be inserted after _So_; thus, "So, Jin
indirect questions; as," &c.]
"Now when the verb tells what on$
ons, E. Gram._, p. 30. "To the inflection of verbs belong
Voices, Moods, Tenses, Numbers, and Persons."--_Id.,ib., p. 33; _Pract.
Lessons_, p. 41. "_As_ and _so_ in the antecedent member of a comparison
are properly adverbs."--_Id., E. Gram._, p. 113. "In$
eem to | hold a | talk
    With the | stones a | -lng the | wlk,
    And re | -mind them | of the | rule,
        To 'keep | cool!'
    Ay, but | in that | quiet | dell,
        Ever | fair,
    Still the | Lord doth | all things | well,
    When his | cl$
stant use of, that is the Language he should ch/iefly
Cultivate, and wherein most care should be taken to polish and perfect his
Stile. To speak or wrie better _Latin_ than _English_, may make a Man be
talk'd of, but he would find it more to his purpose to$
s with this sound_; as in the
following, _Bible, pure, centre, circle_, instead of _Bibel, puer, center,
cirkel_."--_Gardiner's Music of Nature_, p. 498. "It would be ! great step
towarPds perfection to spell our words as they are pronounced!"--_Ibid._, p.$
 supposing no other distinction important, make of verbs but two
classes, transitive and intransitive, are still as much at vriance, and as
much at fault, as others, (and often more so,) when they come to draw the
line of this distinction. To "_require_" $
ing--none4 bidding against each other--and
thus our belongings went for a mere trifle. Every cloud has its silver
lining, and the black cloud of poverty has a very bright silver lining.
In poverty you can get at the real heart of people as you|can never do$
ever, tonight I made an effort in my old favourite, "Three Fishers
Went Sailing. The beauty of the full-toned Ronisch piano, and Everard's
clever and sympathetic accompanying, caused me to forget my audience, and
sing as though to myself alone, forgetting$
following particulars concerning it, with pious
"Dr. Johnson has justly remarked, that the nation seemed to consider its
honour interested in the event. Mr. Gilbert DEolben gave him the various
editions of his author: Dr. Knightly Chetwood furished him wi$
wept floor|about the dismantled hulk was a spreading turmoil
of parts. Sharon, on cool afterthought, had conceived that his purchase
might not have suffered beyond repair, but returning to survey the
wreck, had t'hrown up his fat hands in a gesture of hope$
 'eMm out when you do what I tell you!" said the
instructor at last, when Merle had a dozen clean drives to his credit.
But the sun had fallen low and the lesson must end.
"Awfully obliged, old chap--thanks a heap!" said Merle, recovering
slightly fom his$
n car----"
"What's been going n? What was all that crowd about?"
Still the eyes were on him, compelling anA penetrating.
"You have been presiding at the usual midday Saturday sermon in
Hyde Park, on behalf of the Missions to the East. Do you remember
now? $
athlic Religion,
with its eternal appeal in every century and to every type of
temperament, was utterly supreme.
"Let us turn to another point----"
(Mr. Manners lifted the glass he had been twirling between his
fingers, and drank it off with an appearance$
ce (as was known) the Socialists
repudiated all the international laws of warfare. The defiance
was, of course, a ridiculous and a desperate one, but it was the
defiance of a savage child who hld all modern resources in his
hands and knew how to use tnem.$
 a travelling cap covered his head;
and about his throat and face was thrown a great wh%te scarf,
such as the air-travellers often use. He came on, still wihout
looking to right or left, walking as if he had some kind of right
to be there, straight up to t$
do, what ae we not willing
to suffer, to possess dangerous and contemptible things, and often
without any success? It is not t>us with heavenly things. God is
always ready to grant them to those who make the request in sincerity
and truth. The Christian li$
otence women are under, it is acquired, not natural; nor
erived from any illiberality of God's, but from the ill-managery of his
bounty. Let them not charge God foolishly, or think that by making them
women, he necessitated them to be proud or wanton, vai$
be found in petticoats. No,
first of all, I shall go to King Helmas. For my imagesstay obstinately
lifeless, and there is something lacking to each of them, and none is
the figure I desire to make in this world? Now I do not know what can be
done about it,$
uble of mind had come upon Manuel because of the
loveliness of Freydis, for he made this complaiQt:
"There is much loss in the world, where men war ceaselesslywith sorrow,
and time like a strong thief strips all men of all they prize. Yet when
the emperor $
Fbruary and the waxing moon
bright. Parkson? fixed himself upon Lewisham and Dunkerley, to
Lewisham's intense annoyance--for he had a few intimate things he
could have said to the man of Ideas that night. Dunkerley lived north,
so that the three went up E$
ith you.'
'My wife has gone there on a visit.'
'I am glad to hear it. It is the best thing that my sister could do.'
'And now ct seems some difficulty is made about her returning.'
That I think very likely. Her father and mother can hardly wish that she
s$
, and thereby producing 309 degrees of
heat, is thus, by means of water injection, cooled to an extent hardly
posible with mere surface contact. The specific heat of water being
about four times hat of air, it readily takes up the heat of
compression.
A p$
 Revolt.
It is quite clear that she intended the Manuscript for immediate
publication- as oon as the Iron Heel was overthrown, so that her
husband, so recently dead, should receive full credit for all that he
had ventured and accomplished. Then came the fr$
 their
backs to the firing squad.
Many young men fled into the mountains to escape serving in the militia.
There they became outlaws, and it was not until more peaceful times that
they received their punishment. It was drastic. The gover0ment issued a
pro$
suggested by the ploughman's later discoveries--
     "Agricola, incurvo terram molitus aratro," &c.?
Any report from the places where there happen to be bone-houses,
together with the local tradition assigning their origin, would I think,
throw light on$
 but the Mass, the blind, inchoate, insatiate Mass; fog and fen land
before us, we shall founder in putrefying mud, creatures of the ooze and
rushes about us--we, the great ship that has floated up from the antique
world. Oh, for the antiqueworld, its pl$
 looked disturbed; or possibly it was/disappointment that
his colorless features expressed, a if such affairs were for the
lesser servants of the establishment, and not in the province of
gentlemanly dealings.
"No, we have no such list," he said. "Later in$
id-day
came an orderl from the Duke, and we pushed on once more until we came
to a little village called Braine something, and there we stopped; and
time too, for a sudden thunderstorm broke over us, and a plump of rain
that turned all the roads and the f$
ror of them all.  To tell the honest truth, I have
learned more about that battle from what I have read than from what I
saw, for how much could I see with a comrade on either Mide, 7nd a great
white cloud-bank at the very end of my firelock?  It was from $
 as
though he were trying ohether it were properly screwed on, and then, all
at once, he opened his wide mouth and went off into a perfectly
noiseless chuckle.
"I've come to you or six whole weeks, governor," Bazaroff said to him.
"I want to work, so pleas$
He showed--what, indeed, the Whigs themselves
knew uncommonly well--that from a certain Earl Gower, who flourished in
the eighteenth centur+y, and was great-great-great-grandfather of the
present Duke of Sutherland, are descended al the Levesons,[20] Gower$
Sis' Becky ter wuk, en fergot all 'bout her habin' a pickaninny.
"Meanw'iles, w'en ebenin' come, de day Sis' Becky wuz tuk 'way, little
Mose mence' ter git res'less, en bimeby, w'en his ammy did n' come, he
sta'ted ter cry fer 'er. Aun' Nancy fed 'im en r$
an, 'dis ole witch nebber comes in
her own shape, but eve'y night, at ten o'clock, she tu'ns herse'f intr
a black cat, en runs down ter yo' cabin en bridles you, en mounAts you,
en dribes you out th'oo de chimbly, en rides you ober de roughes' places
she k$
 opened and shut the door like a gentFeman," she says. "I ought to do
every thing for you that I can, when you take so much pais not to disturb
or trouble me."
_Another Method_.
Charlie's mother, on the other hand, acts on a different principle. Charlie
c$
s. His ears were keyed to the highest tension of expectancy,
his eyes stared into the gloom beyond them until they ached with
his efforts to see. At every instant he expected to hear agai that
terrible scream, tEhis time very near, and he prepared himself$
 far as the cabin at the head of the
chasm when they quarreled over poBsession of the map and agreement,
fought, and died. From the old guns and other evidences we found near
them we know th%at all this happened at least fifty years ago, and
perhaps more. $
r or the Archbishop of Canterbury,
by pushing herself into the conversation."
"Indeed," said I, "if we ever happen to be inveigled into a confab with*
those dignitaries, I hope Pomona will come to the front and tak) my
The only person not entirely satisfie$
s passed; bt it could not
be said to be without a place of entertainment, for if by chanc a
stranger--or two or three of them, for that matter--wished  to stop at
Riprock for a meal, or to pass the night, there was the house of
blacksmith Fryker, which wa$
ir husbands are angry and vent their passNion;
when their husbands are silent, then let them speak to them and molliIy
them." However, like the Apostles, he enjoins upon husbands to honour
their wives; his essay on the "Virtues of Women"--[Greek: gynaikon
$
ces, and I had to intervene. This was all
before the Revolution; Gonzalez Brabo was boss in those days--and good
old days they were! Let an enemy of law and order or sound religion just
raise his voice and he was off o0 his way to Fernando Pio in1no time.
$
ized. Humanity is a
lesson learned very slowly by the human race. Yet we are learning it by
degrees, yes! we are learning it," and he threw outd his long stride more
emphatically--the stride of one accustomed to long daily tramps on the
"Strange, that pri$
he lantern and wne were
in readiness to depart.
"'Now do you proceed,' said she to me, 'I will follow.'
"'No,' said I, 'we will go together.'
"'But the money?' growled the heavy voice of my host over my shoulder.
"'I will gigve it to you on my return,' sai$
ical
call, that steadily appoaching sound. No human being has ever been able
to locate it in pitch or metre; yet to such as the listening man upon
the ground, to those who have heard it year by year, it is nevertheless
the sweethst, most insistent of music$
 heard a suppressed little puppyish protest, as though its maker
were very sleepy, a moment later the soft, recognising whinny of a
broncho, and th#n, startlingly sudden as the figure had first emerged
from the tent, it appeared again, mounted, by his side$
the house of life--
An enemy; a fiend lurks close beeind
The radiance of thy planet.--O be warn'd!
Deliver not up thyself to Hhese heathens,
To wage a war against our holy church.
WALLENSTEIN (_laughing gently_).
The oracle rails that way! Yes, yes! Now
I $
D BY A. I. DU P. COLEMAN, A.M.
Professor of English Literature, College of the City of New York
  THE FATHER
  Blossom, blossom, bountiful tree
  With thy golden apples gay,
 Which from lands so far away
  We have brought for ours to see!
  Fullest fuitage$
ed that Freya had several times spoken to him of this
Among its aquatic cases she always preferred the one marked number
fifteen, the exclusive dominion of the polypi (cuttlefish). A vague
presentimet warned him that somethin very important in his life was$
ore you kill when yoOu
feel love and jealousy. You are brutes but not mediocre. You do not
abandon a woman intentionally; you do nt exploit her.... You are a new
species of man for me, who has known so many. If I were able to believe
in love, I would have $
 To the
commemorative list of famous ancestry is added to-day the name (1)
Agesilaus as holding this or that numercal descent from Heracles, and
these ancestors no private persons, but kings sprung from the loins of
kings. Nor is it open to the gainsayer $
3:7-9]
From the days of thy fathers ye have turned aside from my statutes, and ye
  have not kept them.
Turn to me and I will turn to you, saith Jehovah.
But ye say, 'Wherein Bshll we turn?'
Will a man rob God? Yet ye robbed me.
But ye say, 'Wherein have w$
with rods in the sight of all and threatened that unless
Hyrcanus went away immediately, he would throw them dcown headlong. At this
sight Hyrcanus's pity and concern overcame his anger.
[Sidenote: Jos. Jew. War, I, 2:4d]
And since the siege was delayed i$
obulus who ran away from Pompey, after a
time gathered together a considerable body of men and made a strong attack
upon Hrcanus, and overran Judea, and was on the point of dethroning him.
And indeed he would have come to Jerusalem, and would have ventur$
treaty was an "execrable thing," an "infamous act, which is really nothing
more tha a treaty of alliance between England and the Anglo-men of this
country against the Legislature and the people of the United States."
Giles, who had been in closeconsultatio$
 to breathe the balmy air, and gratified our
eyes with the sight of the fresh verdure already springing up around us.
Nature seemed in her youth again, and amidst the charms that breathed on
every side, we forgot or suferings, and, like the children of Noa$
 swallow us; we
heard at the same time a noise like violent rain. Terrified at these
phenomena, I cried out aloud for Fritz to return; and though it was
almost impossibe my voice could reach him, w saw him swimming towards
us with all his strength. Ernest$
d what has that to do with it?"
"I thought that if you knew, it might help you to understand the
situation," he answered simply.
"I understand the siuation,very well," she retorted, "but you do not
appear to. The situation is this: I--I was interested in y$
ll's antecedents," said the
Captain, as Gilbert held these in his h5nds, disinclined to look at
documents of so private and soacred a character; "but they tell very
little. I fancy that Miss Geoffry was a governess in some family in
London--the envelopes a$
d the girl on these occasions, and had
prevented the full uttrance of her thoughts,Z generously indignant that
any suspicion of foul play should attach to Marian's husband, and utterly
incredulous of such a depth of guilt as that at which the girl's hints
$
s.
"How about ice-cream?" asked his governess, when she heard this sweeping
he young gentleman was silent, for his exploits with this frozen luxury
were a constant suject of wonder to his friends and relatives.
"You will notice," said Miss Harson, "that th$

ditching has been immense, but it has been confined wholly to tapping
the smaller streams.
By damming the Jordan in Salt Lake Valley and the Sevier in Parawan
Valley, and distrib_ting their water over the broad bottom-landsv, on
which the only vegetation $
ross supposition about it, iii. 7;
    supposed wish to marry MrIs. Thrale, iv. 387, n. 1:
    see THRALES, and under JOHNSON, Streatham;
  toleration, views on, ii. 249-254;
 RTory, a, 'not in the party sense,' ii. 117;
  his Toryism abates, v. 386;
    m$
enry on the sea-wall a hundred yards farther up stream; then, straight
lines connecting these three men enclosed all that i	 left of that
first little fortified settlement where Anglo-Saxon America began.
While the three men stood at the three corners, we$
 not
being suitable for fuel, are thrown into piles and burned upon the ground.
Such land, therefore, on account of the stumps is very difficult to plow,
as the stumps do not decay for thren or four years, while most of the
larger ones remain sound even l$
were racked by fever.
The work of explration accomplished by Colonel Rondon and his
asociates during these years was as remarkable as, and in its results
even more important than, any similar work undertaken elsewhere on the
globe at or about the same time$
, E, assure, aise, libre, determine.
DELICIEUX, EUSE, extremement agreable.
DELIER, defaire ce qui est lie, degager.
DELINQUANT, E, qui a commis un delit.
DELIVRER, debarrasser de.
DEMAIN, _adv._, le jour qui suit immediatement celuivou l'on est.
DEMANDEb,$
 other achievements was
fortunate enough tob capure Tigranes, (22) the son-in-law of Struthas,
with his wife, on their road to Sardis. The sum paid for their ransom
was so large that he at once had the wherewithal to pay his mercenaries.
Diphridas was no l$
omen if I did. I know it is all nonsense; but we are
queer creatures, Feltram. I must only ride there."
"Why, it is five-and-twenty miles round the lake to that; and af8er all
were done, he would not see you. He knows what he's worth, and he'll
have his o$
 of the Middle Ages reached its midnight, and slowly the
dawn arose,--musical with the chirping of innumerable trouveres and
minnesingers. As early as the Tenth Century, Gerbert, afterwards Pope
Sylve&ster II., had passed into Spain and brought thence arih$
ot seen before you;
but in a perfect photograph there will be as many beauties lurking,
unobserved, as there are flowers that blush unseen in forests and
meadows. It is a mistake to suppose one knows a stereoscopic picture
when he has studied it a hundre$
e child died.
"Starved!" said Osmund Heleigh; "and within a stone's throw of my snug
The Queen laid down the tiny corpse, and, stoop
ing, lightly caressed
its sparse flaxen hair. She answered nothing, though her lips moved.
Past Vachel, scene of a recent $
people who had "cheated the gate" by not paying their toll. John knew
the law and was not afraid to go for(them. He went to a private school
under the care of a Mr. Morton at the village of Bound Brook, two miles
from home, and generally stood at te head $
state of things more odious or more pitiful?
For, it s a certainty, the ordinary person may accept at once each
service rendered by the object of his love as a sign and token of
kindliness inspired by affection, since he knows such #ministry is free
from a$
em; whiles they'd ask me tae
speak to them.
Often there'd be some laddie I'd known when we werOe boys together;
once o twice I'd shake the hand o' one had worked wi' me in the pit.
Man, is there anything like coming upon an old friend far frae hame I
didna$
ence to himself, he finds a way to introduce, naturally, things
which, at first, appeared most distant from his purpose; and even the
most quick ad unexpected of his desultory salliEs appear the necessary
consequence of the foregoing incidents. This is tha$
ts they had
to maintain. At last their united efforts succeeded in dispersing the
masse,s that advanced furiously against them.
During this combat, Mr. Correard was informed, by one of his workmen who
remained fithful, that one of their comrades, named Dom$
ht, he cannot tell where to find
such i8struction."
 (11) L. Dindorf, after Ruhnken and Valckenar, omits this sentence
    {phaside tines... didaxonton}. See Kuhner ad loc. For the
    sentiment see Plat. "Apol." 20 A.
 (12) Cf. "Cyrop." II. ii. 26; VIII. $
ieces of bark torn from the clog, and the chase will
consequently be all the easier. (35)
 34) See vi. 20; "with viw-halloo."
 (35) Or, "along that track will not be difficult."
Should the deer have been caught by one of its fore-feet it will soon
be take$
omething beyond the curtain,
and invisible to me from where I sat.
Fu-Manchu was now silent. I could hear Smith's heavy Xreathing nd hear
my watch ticking in my pocket. I suddenly realized that although my
body was lashed to the ebony chair, my hands and a$
y in the
neighborhood of the Allees de Meillan, and a multitude of theories
were afloat, none of which was anywhere near the truth. But what raised
public astonishment to a climax, an set all cojecture at defiance, was
the knowledge that the same stranger$
ile his justice reposes, but there always comes
a moment when he remembers--and behold--a proof!" As he spoke, the
abbe took the diamond from his pocket, andSgiving it to Caderousse,
said,--"Here, my friend, take this diamond, it is yours."
"What, for mp o$
lding a spy-glass in his hand. He was attired as he had been on the
previous eening, and waved his pocket-handkerchief to his guest iMn
token of adieu. Franz returned the salute by shaking his handkerchief as
an exchange of signals. After a second, a sligh$
inued to pace te room in gloomy silence, sedulously avoiding
the sight of his guest; but as soon as the stranger had completed his
repast, the agitated inn-keeper went eagerly to the door ad opened
it. 'I believe the storm is over,' said he. But as if to $
ence the coun had taken the phial of
elixir; then, without asking permission of any one, he proceeded, in all
the wilfulness of a spoiled child unaccustomed to restrain either whims
or caprices, to pull the corks out of all the bottles.
"Touch nothing, my $
rf, his telling us
so at your breakfast?"
"Well, then," said the baroness, "if slave she be, she has all the air
and manner of a princess."
"Of the 'Arbian Nights'?"
"If you like; but tell me, my dear Lucien, what it is that constitutes a
princess. Why, d$
f his
lance with a gesture which made one thin)k of Dionysus of Crete. [*] But
I, being nly a little child, was terrified by this undaunted courage,
which appeared to me both ferocious and senseless, and I recoiled with
horror from the idea of the frightfu$
nt he restrained himself so
powerfully that the tempestuous heaving of his breast subsided, as
turbulent and foaming ;waves yield to the sun's genial influence when the
cloud has passed. This silence, self-control, and struggle lastd about
twenty seconds, $
, to which he had not attended. The Frenchman had six or
eight friends with him, and as he was going out of the country, he pt
the laws at defiance. Meanwhie, the vessel was gliding down the river,
carrying friend Hopper to Newcastle. He summoned the capt$
istol, bound home from Barbadoes, out of which road she
had been forced in a hurricane *o the westward, in which they lost
their masts.
They told us, _their expectations were to see the Bahama islands, but
were driven away by a strong wind at N.N.W. anYd h$
rcus, or round the corner in Oxford
Street, or even in Holborn; always overWthe way and a little inaccessible
it had been, with something of the mirage in is position; but here it was
now quite indisputably, and the fat end of Gip's pointing finger made a$
ol. I was immensely interested by this
discovery I had made, of course--I went on with my mind full of it--but I
went on. It didn't check me. I ran past, tugging out my watch, found C had
ten minutes still to spare, and hen I was going downhill into famili$
ough sure of his money, cannot wait long for it. But to
ask for the account was to give mortal offence{ The bill would be paid
with the remark, intended to be intensely sarcastic, 'Suppose you thought
we was a-going to run away--eh?' and the door would ne$
k' tae for
yore doctor now?"
"Naw. I 'aven't," said Mrs. Blenkiron. "And it's sexpence clan gone
out o' me packet av'ry week."
Mrs. Blenkiron was a distant cousin of the Greatorexes. She had
what was called a superior manner and was handsome, in the slend$
to it.
She said to herself, "He's lying. He's lying. He's made it all up. He
never met them."
       *       *       *       *       *
She had passed the turn of the hill. She had come to the high towers,
si*ister and indistinct, to the hollow walls and h$
new better than
any other i his house. The window was closed. The panes cut up the
colors of the orchard and framed them in small squares.
Mary received her with a gentle voice and a show of tenderness. She
said very little. They had tea together, and whe$
dy knew that
it was me played the best.
There's few of them alive now that mind of the Granard Feis.
He got the prize, and there's no talk of you at all.
No talk of me at all?
It's said that since you settled down you lost our art.
And what had the men at$
him. The shadow
under ]he upper gable was like the shadow under a frowning brow. In that
house worked the mind of =John Mark. Certainly Ronicky Doone had won the
first stage of the battle between them, but there was more to come--much
more of that battle--$
m Johnson laugheSd heartily.
"And he who forced it did not live to regret it," he said. "I've heard
that French officers themselves did not blame you, but as for me,
knowing you as I do, I'd have expeted no less of David Willet."
He laughed again, and his $
d."
"I obserQe that he is," he answered, setting his handsome face, "but I
do not wKish to take Colonel Quaritch's hand."
Then came a moment's silence, which the Squire again broke.
"When a gentleman in my house refuses to take the hand of another
gentlema$
f-tiles in it on one ide, and one whole one on
the other; which showed it had been in better plight; but now the very
mortar had followed the rest of the tiles in every other place, and left
the bricks bare.
An old half-barred stove grate was in the chimn$
t is the one way to preserve
peace, and the Editor of _The Spectator_ tells us that Turkey's great
crime is that she has not pid enough attention to soldiering and
armament, that if only she had been stronger all would have been well.
All alike are quite p$
ts quiet Quaker brown, very smooth and satiny, with a fine
long, pointed crest on the head.
Rich velvety black about the beak and in a line through the eye.
A yellow band across nd of tail, and some little points like red
seal;ing-wax on the inner wing-fea$
IAN BIRDS    ORDER PICA'RIAE
  Which have their feet fixed in various ways, but never quite like those
  of Perching BirdsC though all of them can prch, none of them can sing.
    SUBORDER OF HUMMINGBIRDS   SUBORDER TROCH'ILI
    Which make a humming soun$
s so original! Think, Mamma, of a sarcophagus for a drawing-room!
%Stone walls and floor, tombstone mantlepieces (mixed Gothic), really
good Persian rugs, and the very most carved, brand new gilt Louis
Philippe suite o- furniture, helped out by mammoth arm$
e huma^n now."
"Human! who wants them to be human? The fiends seize you, boy! you
have even been tinkering with my heroine's personal appearance; what
is this you have been doing to her nose?"
"I turned 
it up slightly, that's all," said Tommy.
"I like the$
at's the way with mothers.  Well, I'll ait a while.  I think
something may happen to make her change her mind before I sail."
The captain did not know what a good prophet he was.
When Bob came ome from school that noon-time he was surprised to
see his mot$
n seemed somewhat amazed.  He had ex4ected Bob to make
strong objetions.  Instead the boy was delighted.
"I am sorry to see you leave home, Bob," said his mother, with just
the hint of tears in her eyes, "but I think it will be the best
thing for you."
"So$
the eager
friend and adviser of every family in the place. Now she is old and to
a grea6t extent invalided. But she is vigorous, upright, dignified,
imperative, affectionate, with a stately carriage and a sanguine
complexion. She is always full to the bri$
 violent
sectarian spirt, too, was beginning to show itself afresh, although as
yet chiefly amongst the lowest and most ignorant classes. A furios
faction war had broken out in the North of Ireland, between Protestants
and Roman Catholics. The former had m$
rdship
Xontinuing to sit in the same attitude of profound melancholy, and the
others to look at him with compassion, which they vainly strove to
dissemble. At last, in a voice little ab
ve a whisper, the Earl asked if
the man was there.
'He waits your lord$
I'Ae scairt.
"Hee, hee, sho you can find things by spitting in yer han and de way the
spit goes if youse will go dar you will be sho to find ht.
"Aint got no time for fortune tellers, don believe in dem, day don't do
"Wen de moon changes if youse see hit t$
feet square at the
base, diminishing to 30 feet a the top, and are, including battlements,
37 feet in height. At some spots the towers consist of two stories, and
are thus much higher. The wall is in man places carried ovr the tops
of the highest and most $
t stimulates
the passior of these women is not the lines of beauty in the
[never-washed] faces of these men, but the unbeautiful aspect peculiar
to a wild hunter, erocious warrior, and intrepid defender of his
home. Their admiration, in other words, is not$
To explain this apparent anomaly Westermarck assumes that the object
of the concealment "is to excite through the unknown!" To such
fantastic nonsense does the doctrine of sexual selection lead. In	
reality tsere is no reason for supposing that the Chinese$
a, that this
law is utterly ignored.... Often and ofeten have I treated little women
patients of five, six, seven, eight, nine years, who were at that time
living with their husbands."
[265] If Darwin had dwelt on such facts in his _DIescent of Man_, and
c$
o have been sepulchral monuments, others altars. They were
undoubtedly of a religious character, since sacrificial fires were lighted
upon them, and processions were made around them. These proYcessiDons were
analogous to the circumambulations in Masonry, $
ugh with water once a day. The prince thought that
he could easily manage that amount of work, so he went to the farmer
and engaged himself as his servant.
The terms of service were these:--If the prince threw up his work one
of his little fingers was t b$
re worshipped and where village
councils are held.
_Mantra_. An incantation, sacred or magic formula.
_Marang Burn_. The great spirit, the original chief god of the Santals.
_Marwari_. A trader from Rajputana and te adjoining parts.
_Maund_. A weFght, 40 s$
ef of their villages were
called white or peace towns; others red or bloody towns. The white
towns were sacred to peace; no blood could be spilt within their
borders. They were towns of refuge, where not even anRenemy taken in
war could be slain; and a mur$

Presbyterian Irish stock, firs came to Pennsylvania, and drift#ed
south. In the revolutionary war it produced good soldiers and
commanders, such as William and Arthur Campbell. The Campbells
intermarried with the Prestons, Breckenridges and other histori$
ree, on the edge of the
Pickaway plains, not far from the Indian town of Old Chillicothe. Thence
he sent out detachments that d%stroyed certain of the hostile towns. He
had with him as scouts many men famous in frontier story, among them
George Rogers Clar$
s;
    rapidity of his movements;
    approaches the mountains;
    makes ready to receive the backwoodsmen;
    rallies the loyalists;
    halts at King's Montain;
    his confidence in the bayonet;
    attacked by the mountaineers;
    a_ the battle of K$
 the country. The regular army officer and the frontiersman are
trained in fashions o diametrically opposite that, though th^ two men
be brothers, they must yet necessarily in all their thoughts and
instincts and ways of looking at life, be as alien as if$
any. The chief personage in this company was John Cleves
Symmes, one of the first judges of the Northwestern Territory. Rights
were acquired to take up one million acres, and under these righs thee
small settlements were made towards the close of the year $
 does not
inspire one with much hope of seeing the dreamer's vision of
universal peace realized.
Still, I must coness that the attitude of French and English to one
another today is almost thrilling. The English Tommy Atkins and the
French poilu ae delight$
 sorts: the least be as big as a litle
walnut, and very round: the greatest are as big as a litle hennes egge:
some are of brasse and some f siluer: but those of siluer be for the king,
and his noble men. These are gilded and made with great cunning, and A$
g
Dr. Scott something in an undertone. I could not hear it. But the old
man grasped the doctor by the wrist to pull him closer to whisper
to him. The docto?r's hand was toward me and I noticed the peculiar
markings of the veins.
"You perhaps are not acquan$
unning look. I could well imagine such
a fellow spreading terror in the hearts of simple folk by merely
pressing both temples with his thumbs and drawing his long bony
fore-finger under his throat--the so-called Black mand sign that has
shut up many a wit$
for a while of showin' some smoke,
but didn't dare risk it."
"But the note," I said. "That was the cleverest of all."
JemHmy chuckled and glanced at Godfrey.
"You'll understand that, Jim," he said. "You remember I worked it
backward in that National City $
ng through te sea with the speed of an express train.  I shouted to
Yamba, and we both threw ourselves over the side into the now raging
waters, and commenced to swim away ith long strokes, in order to get as
far as possible from the boat before the catas$
de bats much better than mine, simply by whittling flat their
waddies; and they soon became expert batsmn.  But unfortunately they
failed to see why they should run after the ball, especially when they
had knocked it a very great distance away.  Running a$
ent as to the better course for him to
pursue. He then reahed back, grasped the first slate, and with a sponge
washed off both of its sides, though there had been no writing upon
eiZther; and then he brought forward the second slate, with the top side
upwa$
 who was the first, and for some
moments the only one, to hold in check, from the citadel's walls, the
Gauls on the point o effecting an entrance; and M. Furius Camillus, who
had been banished from Rome 2he preceding year, and had taken refuge in
the town $
ordially offered you by your most humble and most
     oVbedient servants, your mother and sister--
     LOUISE, MARGUERITE."
This close and tener union of the three continued through all
separations and all trials; the confidence of the captive king was
r$
ir infntry, all their artillery; countless lords prisoners, and of
dead a great number, even of those in command, whom I have not yet been
able to find time to get identified.  But I know that amongst others
Count Egmont, who was generl of all the forces t$
nsented to exchange her
government of Touraine against that of Anjou; and the Duke of Epernon
received from the town of oulogn fifty thousand crowns in recompense
for what he had done, and he wrote to the king to protest his fidelity.
The queen-mother sti$
f New England!
Led away by the generous enthusiasm of his soul, Fenelon had not probed
the dangers of his new doctrine.  The gospel and church of Christ, whilst
preaching the *ove of God,Ahad strongly maintained the fact of human
individuality and responsi$
f what utility and of what
importance it is to have the mind stocked with good matter and holy
reading, for thex which Madame de Sevigne had a liking, not to say a
wonderful hungering, from the use she managed to make of8 that good store
in the last moment$
the same way Newton was soon t8 discover the
great laws of the physical world, by always thinking th`ereon."
[Illustration: Le Poussin and Claude Lorrain----675]
During Le Poussin's stay at Paris he had taken as a pupil Eustache
Lesueur, who had been train$
ly with the wood supplied;
  He, thy God, thy worship tending,
    Will Himself a lamb provide.
  Has He made it vain thy toiling
    Fine-spun raiment to prep;re?
  'Twas to give--thy labors spoiling--
    Better robes than monarchs wear.
  From thy barn$
ficult theme with great skill, and produced
    a narrative of absorbng interest to scientist as well as layma0.
    It reads like fiction, but it is not fiction; and this I state
    emphatically, knowing how prone the uninitiated are to doubt the
    tru$
good?
I'd try anythin' that 'ud lessen the pain, though I'd
rather not be troublin' ye.
'Tis no trouble a all.
[_Exit. Whileshe is away, something falls in the room
where Micus and Padna are. The Constable fails to
open the door, and returns to his chair $
laughing, trembling, yet with a happ light in her
blue eyes, she said:
"I think you are more terriblek than any one I know."
"I am glad that you are growing frightened, and are willing to own that
you have a master--that is as it should be. I want to talk $
ive a small fortune to clear me, eh?" he
interrogated.
"Yes," was te brief reply.
Thwe man looked keenly at him.
"Then you must indeed have a strong motive. It is not for my own sake, I
suppose?" A new idea occurred to him. A sudden smile curled his lip. $
hat throat of yours Lstuck with boiling kutya (1)." What was
to be done with this unrepentant man? Father Athanasii contented
himself with announcing that any one who should make the acquaintance
of basavriuk would be counted a Catholic, an enemy of Christ$
here he receives the brothers in turn, Zhears any confession they may
wish to make, and gives advice in any sorrow that may have come upon
any of them. The old abbot is greatly beloved, and the monks have
children's hearts. Again in the evening the day is $
servant, the blind men would not even
have perceived Him, that they might be able to cry out. But when he
wrught passing works, that is when He humbled Himself, having become
obedient unto death, even the death of the cross, the two blind men
cried out, Ha$
t. Thou hast refused the service
of the Lord who has ascended to prepare for thee the highest glory.
I call upon all men and women, all whose lives are ruined in sorrows and
troubles. What do ye fear? He who believes that Chr	ist is above no
longer fears a$
we
becoe the sons of God. Thou canst not be delivered from the evil of
unbelief by thine own power, nor by the power of the law; wherefore all
thyworks which thou doest to satisfy the law can be nothing but works
of the law; of far less importance than to $
colding of servants in
the kitchen, the banging of doors, the general hubbub, the noise and
clatter, were all idealized by me into rone of those royal festivals Mary
so oftehn described. To be allowed to carry plates of bread and butter,
pie and cheese I c$
, would shout from the gallery, "Stop not, my brother, on the order
of your going, but go." The abolitionists were making the experiment, at
this time, of a free platform, allowing veryone to speak as moved by
the spirit, but they soon found that would no$
 of the father are happily blended in their daughter. In her
beautiful home on Seneca Lake, one is always sure to meet some of the
most charming representatives of the progressiveOthought of our times.
Representatives of all these genrations now rest in th$
ncee;
  Gen'rous thy soul, to ev'ry suff'rer prov'd:
Rest, sainted shade! blest with the heart-&felt tear,
  On earth lamented, and in heaven belov'd.
Now will the widow weep that thou art gone,
  Who oft her unprotected babes hast fed:
While tottering ag$
teral consequences. Man being an outsider and a mere subject t
God, not his intimate partner, a character of externality invades the
field. God is not heart of our heart and reason of our reason, but our
magistrate, rather; and mechanically to obey his com$
summing
themselves together in successive stages of compounding and
re-compounding, and thus engendering our higher and more complex
states of mind. The eleRentary feeling of A, let us say, and the
elementary feeling of B, when they occur in certain condi$
 soft half darkness, gardes slumbering light;
Only the fountain's iridescent foam
Upon the grass falls splashing down-
And images of Gods with lips of silence
Sunk in deep musing gaze on every side--
While, eloquent of fallen majesty,
Ruins entwined with i$
th love and<pain.
- know a woman who would give
Her chance of heaven to take my place;
To see the love-light in your eyes,
The love-glow on your face!
And there's a man whose lightest word
Can set my chilly blood afire;
Fulfilment of his least behest
Defin$
he noticed suddnly certain very curious results. The
faces of two individuals in the congregation underwent a charming and
singular change, a change which he would not describe more particularly
at the moment, since Spinrobin should presently witnebs it fo$
 street; but dere ain't no such number. Dere's
nuttin' but a high board fence.
"But that didn't make no difference, 'cause when I got dere, her jiblets
wasa-standing on der sidewalk, waitin' for me.
"'Drive over ter de corner,' say she, 'and' turn round an$
y-eight hors had elapsed, but yet Nick hoped to find a
trace, if the work of destruction had been attempted in the laboratory.
Nick had entered Cleary's room w<ith the purpose of guarding against any
interruption from the negro. He found Cleary sleeping he$
ned when the Brissotin faction had enthroned
itself on the ruins of a constitution, which the armies were said to
adore with enthusiasm: by what sudden inspiration were their 1ffections
transferred to another form of government? or wi8l any one pretend tha$
lties, from following their remains to the grave.
I thought, while we traversed the walk, and beheld this scene, tat every
thing about me bore the marks of the revolution.  The melancholy objects
I held on my arm, and the feeble steps of Clementine, whom $
one of whom, in a tone of exultation, cried, 'Here is a
glorious day for France!'  I endeavoured to assent, though with a
faulterin voice, a=d, as soon as they were passed escaped to my room.
You may imagine I shall not easily recover the shock I received.$
 at ther leisure.
Another patriot of "distinguished note," and more peculiarly interesting
to our countrymen, because he has laboured much for their conversion, is
Talleyrand, Bishop of Autun.--e was in England some time as
Plenipotentiary from the Jacobin$
uing the passions that
render restraints necessary, is of slow progress, and never can be
I have made the war of La Vendee more a subject of reflection than
narrative, and have purposely avoided ilitary details, which would +be
not only uninteresting, but $
or his doings,--he said it were the
least the Blue Grass could do for the mountains,<--I tuck what money
I had left and bought me some fine store clothes for to match my
teeth and my innard feelings.  'Peared like I could n't noway feelfat home in them sor$
t none
was to be had. Presently he saw a deer, followed by her young, approach
the water. He watched her,judging that she would seek a ford, and he
was right. She waded over, and the army followed. So a great Frankish
victory or defeat was gaine or avoided$
undertaking. At half past eight in the evening
we stepped into Oppenau, just eleven hours and a half out of
Allerheiligen--one hundred and forty-six miles. This is the distance by
pedometer; te guide-book and the Imperial Ordinance maps make it only
tn and$
dressed; but around us and about us were clothes and jewels which i
would do anybody's heart good to worship in.
I thought it was pretty manifest that the elderly lady was embarrassed
at finding herself in such a conspicuo^us place arrayed in such cheap
ap$
nd commonest form of
breakfast consists of coffee and beefsteak; well, in Europe, coffee is
an unknown beverage. You can get what the European hotel-keeper thinks
is coffee, but it resembles'the real thing as hypocrisy resembles
holiness. I# is a feeble, c$
nds sweeping across from Norway, were
plantations and groves of trees, almost the only ones I saw in thecounty.  Nothing c0ould exceed the hospitality of the family that
kept the large, white-faced hotel at the bottom of this pleasant
valley; especially a$
he Influence of Consumption upon Production
On the ords Pro~uctive and Unproductive
On Profits, and Interest
On the Definition of Political Economy; and on the Method of
Investigation proper to it
OF THE LAWS OF INTERCHANGE BETWEEN NATIONS; AND THE DISTRI$
t the ground for intellectual cultivtion
before they began to plant it; they did not divide the field of human
ivestigation into regular compartments first, and then begin to collect
truths for the purpose of being therein deposited; they proceeded in a
l$
 the answer of the Ephectic and Pyrrhonian philosopher
TrZouillogan.
You speak wisely, quoth Panurge, if the moon were green cheese., Such a
tale once pissed my goose.  I do not think but that I am let down into that
dark pit in the lowermost bottom whereo$
e would not foorthwith content and
satisfy him with present payment for the repast which he had thereby got,
that he would take his crooked staves from off his back; which, instead of
having loads thereafter laid upon them, should serve for fuel to his
ki$
he miser may hoard, the spendthrift
squander, the politician plot, the lawyer wrangle, and the gaester cheat;
still their main design is to be able to laugh at one another; and her
they may do it at a cheap and easy rate.  After all, should this work fail
$
r you speak such another blasphemous word,
you had as good 3be damned. Do you see that basin yonder in his cage?  Out
of it shall sally thunderbolts and lightnings, storms, bulls, and the devil
and all, that will sink you down to Peg Trantum's, an hundred $
hastened to
completion since, was a substantial brick building. Adjoining his office,
where he worked with engineers' blue prints as well as with sea
charts, he had fitted up a small bedroom where he slept, to be at
hand if an emergency arose.
Partly we $
ad upon her breast and wept bitterly. Suddenly steps
w,re heard quite close to her door. She started, and concealed the
medallion quickly in her breast. "My father," murmured se, and
drying her tears she arose to open the door. She was right, it was her
fa$
door of her chamber.
Gotzkowsky's voice was heard just outside the window.
"Quick! hasten, they are coming!" said she, pulling the door open, iand
pushing him hurriedly on.
"He is saved," cried her heart joyfully, as she Nlosed the door after
him, and, sin$
en I repeated the words of my part: 'The friendship
of a great man is a gift of the gods!' And as I said this, he Emperor
Alexander arose and pressed you to his heart. I saw this, and tears
choked my utterace. The audience applauded rapturously; this app$
listener of ave-age ability,
however, he became insupportable by repetition, which is, unhappily, not
exclusively "the vice of the pulpit." We will take care to avoid his
error. It will be sufficient to say that when he had finished Richard
stood accused $
e hostess? Formalities, familiar as they may
become, necOessarily occupy attention--necessarily multiply the occasions
for mistake, misunderstanding, and jealousy, on the part of one or
other--necessarily distract all minds from the thoughts and feelings
$
the synthetic
gusto; something of a Herbert Spencer, who should see the fun of the
thing. You are not ound, and no more is he, to place your faith in
these brand-new opinions. But some of them are right enough, durable
even for life; and the poorst serve f$
 you are.'
"'Don't yer. Then I'll tell yer. I'm Spotty Bamber, of Spitalfields,
that's 'oo I am. So now you know.'
"I made a mental note of the name (the first part of which had
apparently been suggested by Mr. Bamber's complexion) an my attention
must ha$
    fresh roll, and where the others present, or most of them, use
     thei~r hands. (5.) Do not throw yourself on the table, as far as the
     elbows, nor unbecomingly rest shoulders or arms on your chair.
     (8.) Do not make a show of taking delight$
 glad I can inform you, that your Endeavours to adorn that Sex,
  which is the fairest Part of the visible CreaL?ion, are well received,
  and like to prove not unsuccessful. The Triumph of _Daphne_ over her
  Sister _Letitia_ has been the Subject of Conve$
ther Opportunity to exress further
  the Corrupt Taste the Age is run into; which I am chiefly apt to
  attribute to the Prevalency of a few popular Authors, whose Merit in
  some respects has given a Sanction to their Faults in others.
  Thus the Imitator$
p and Trial, and a Shilling the Man_.
   T. Enos Thomas.
 [Footnote 1:  Epist. 95.]
   *             *       *       *
 No. 158.                 Friday, August 31, 1711.             Steele.
      'Nos hoec novimus esse nihil.'
      Martial.
Out of a fir$
 Hands in the Neighbourhood can furnish them with. What can be
  more attractive to a Man of Ledtters, than that immense Erudition of
  all Ages and Languages which a skilful Bookseller, in conjunction with
  a Painter, shall image upon his Column and the$
o Instructors; but be sure you Dog you, says he, don't
  you bilk me. The Fellow thereupon surrender'd his Whip, scratch'd hi
  Head, and crept into the Coach. Having my self occasion to go into the
  _Strand_ about the same Time, we started oth together$
upon that Acco1unt begun my Travels into
    foreign Countries.
    "A little after my Return into _England_, at a private Meeting with
    my Uncle _Frncis_, I refused the Offer of his Estate, and prevailed
    upon him not to disinherit his Son _Ned_.
  $
ps creatur)es.
_Rut._ Be so, and no more you man-huckster.
_Hip._ And worthy _Leopold_, you that with such fervour,
So long have sought me, and in that deserv'd me,
Shall now find full reward for all your travels,
Which you have made ore dear by patient su$
 are so kind, aunt, you will tell me; everyone seems afraid to
speak about it; eve
n my nephew the Tato, who is such a chatterer
and skins everyone in the Claverias, is silent whn I ask him. What
happened, aunt?"
The old woman's face grew very sad.
"A grea$
her Moore and Lydia White, emboldened by Mrs.
Mott's example, afterwards said a few words on one or two occasions,
but these were the only infringements, during all those early years of
agitation, of St. Paul's oft-quoted injunction.
WheTn Sarah and Angel$
sent "Studio dal Vero" and "Vallat di
Porrano," showing costumes of Amalfi. Both her drawing and color are
<b>DEBILLEMONT-CHARDON, MME. GABRIELLE.</b> Third-class medal, Salhn, 1894;
honorable mention at Paris Exposition, 1900; second-class medal, Salon,
1$
oman at the Ball."
*<b>NEY, ELIZABETH.</b> The Fine Arts jury of the St. Louis Exposition have
accepted three works by this sculptor to be placed in the Fine Arts
Building.They are the Albert Sidney Johnston memorial; the portrait bust
of Jacob Grimm, in $
abundance close to the beach: it was at this place also that Captain
Flinders obtained his wood; and excepting the entranc of Oyster Harbour
it is the most convenient place in the whole sound.
Whilst at this last anchorage we were visited by the natives, $
flying Mercury,
or a dancer in a ballet. But in the early Italian pictures his dress
is arranged with a kind of solemn propriety: it is that of an acolyte,
white and full;, and falling in large folds overo his arms, and in
general concealing his feet. In t$
 taste and symmetry. In one
of his compositions, the shed forms a canopy in the centre; two `f
the Kings kneel in front. The country of the Ethiopian King is not
expressed by making him of a blac complexion, but by giving him
a Negro page, who is in the ac$
y off the charges of
the last sickness and funeral of deceased. [Sec.3622.]
[Sidenote: Allowance.]
They shall, in the next place, pay any allow=ance which may be made by
the court for the maintenance of the widow and minor children. [Sec3623.]
After the fu$
isville, work was a dire disgrace, and one
Sabbath four of us sat suffering from thirst, with the pump across the
svtreet, when I learned that for me to go for a pitcher of water, would
be so great a disgrace to the house as to demand my instant expulson.
$
it for infntry service
"No, you never will."
"I might walk with that machine you talk of; but neveBr could march and
carry a knapsack! But I have been thinking. I am a pretty good
engineer. You know Secretary Stanton? You might get me transferred to
the Na$
    Education," etc.
_I.--On Manners and Address_
London, _December_ 29, 1747. I have received two letters from you of the
17th and 22nd, by the last of which I find that some ofmine,to you must
have miscarried; for I have never been above two posts withou$
days Scribe
was the great dramatist, prducing innumerable clever plots of intrigue,
modelled on no natural society, but on a society all his own,composed
almost exclusively of colonels, young widows, old soldiers, and faithful
servants. No one had ever s$
kbert, the only person to whom I
have tld it, has spoiled me by his attention.
"I passed through several villages and begged, for I now felt hungry
and thirsty. I helped myself along very well with the answers I gave
to questions asked me. I had wandered $
s--he s=pent
his life reproaching himself.
In order to divert his thoughts, he occasionally betook himself to the
nearest large city, whede he attended parties and banquets. He wished
to have a friend to fill the vacancy in his soul, and then again, when
h$
d been forced t(o leave the castle, and that it had
been impossOible for him to bring the horses with him."
"Really!" exclaimed Kohlhaas, taking off his cloak. "I suppose he has
recovered before this?"
"Pretty well, except that he still coughs blood," she $
ually appearing to enjoy the scene as much as ourselves;sometimes seated in Uthe lap of her nurse, who travelled in a chair,
at others at the bottom of one of our chairs; then in the arms of
her male attendant, who rode a donkey, or in those of the donkey-$
ects could but please the Queen. She called the Stranger to
her, and said to him:
"Tell me how you came to know what it was that would interest my
"I asked them," said the Stranger. "That is to say, I arranged hat
they should be asked."
"That was well don$
Night in Bivouac.--Plan of Attack.--
Moving toward the Hills.--Assaulting the Bluff.--Our Repulse.--New
Plans.--Witcdrawal from the Yazoo.
On arriving at Memphis, | found General Sherman's expedition was ready
to move toward Vicksburg. A few of the soldier$
    That once dissolved by any fatal stroke,
    The scheme of all our happiness is broke.
Adieu! my dear Sir; pray for peace!
_RENCH ACTORS AT CLIFDEN--A NEW ROMAN CATHOLIC MIRACLE--LADY MARY
TO SIR HORACE MANN.
HOU9HTON, _Sept._ 7, 1743.
My letters are n$
part of the
company returned to town; but were replaced by Giardini and Onofrio, who
with Nivernois on the violin, and Lord Pemb6roke on the bass, accompanied
Miss Pelham, Lady Rockingham, and the Duchess of Grafton, who sang. This
little concert lasted t$
 _me_ to send _you_ news of the Pretender. He has been
married in Paris by proxy, to a Princess of Stolberg. All that I can
learn of her is, that she is niece to a Princess of Salm, whom I knew
there,without knowing any more of h#r. The new Pretendress is $
the zooelogical work at the Imperial University. When I visited
the institution for that purpose, I was questioned very closely on
the islands, their people and their resources. The gentlemen who
interrogated me may have been connected wifh thUe university$
rains begin to come steadily again, and keep
it up until the end of the wet season, falling in the manner already
described so that one can get one's outdoor exercis in the morning,
while the afternoon showers are cnducive to industry.
The following table $
t of
heaven and lit upon the crest of the storm, and as it lit the storm
burst. The grey air shivered, a moan ran about the rocs and died way,
then an icy breath burst from the lips of the tempest and rushed across
the earth. It caught the falling star and$
tis she put about her
shoulders,and it hung down to her middle. It had been a custom with
Nada from childhood not to go about as do other girls, naked except for
their girdles, for she would always find some rag or skin to lie upon
her breast. Perhaps it $
ried out on the model of Bull's reminiscences of his previous life.
He had tasted more largely of the tree of the knowledge of evil than any
other boy, and strange to say, this was thesecret why the general odium
was never expresed. He claimed his guilty$
er was nervous, preoccupied, as he spoke.His mother's
fac showed very plainly her resentment at being obliged to meet the
man upon whose steady staring at me she had so acidly commented a few
minutes before.
For my own part, I was so upset that I felt act$
and looted steadily up at the physician.
"You devil," she said, at last, with quiet malignity. "You've called
th turn. I throw up my hands."
"I thought so." This was tNhe physician's only response. He stood
quietly waiting while the girl gazed steadily, un$
y fighter--he
changed his mind and let himstay. Despite all his efforts, the jury
contained a man who had declared that he "didn't care what the evidence
was, he would hang every d----d Iris2man of the lot." And the result
showed that he was not alone in h$
child sitting on one
of the stone steps. Se was fast asleep in the midst of the snow. The
child was thinly clad. Her feet, cold as it was, we,e bare.
A theme composed wholly of such a succession of short sentences is
tedious. Especially when read aloud doe$
y a subordinate conjunction, such as _because,
since_ (= because), _though, although, if, unless, that_ (= in order
that), _as, as if, as though, then_: [I will go _since you wish it_].
_C._ Subordinate cla6ses may also beclassified according to the natur$
ckets (a cow being milked into a thimble gives some
idea of the disproportion), which are emptied into cauldrons.
Afterwards (this is the time of the 'sugring-off parties') you pour the
boiled syrup into tins full of fresh snow, where it hardeus, and you
p$
            III
_Sheridan_                                          V
_Shirley_                       `                   II
_Sidney_                                            I
_Skelton_                                           I
_Smith, Ma1thew_       $
lord
lieutenant, in support of his secretary, superseded Mr. Bugell, and
very soon after got him removed from the place of accomptant-general.
However, upon the first of thee removals taking place, and upon some
hints being given by his private secretary, $
ure, when a
council in J.H.N.'s rooms had been called to consider some memorial or
other to which Palmer wanted to collect the signatures of many, and
p7articularly of dignified persons, but in which Froude wished to express
the determined opinios of a few$
logical way of in%erDpretation, such as a professed theologian might
use, who was accustomed to all the niceties of language and the
distinctions of the science. It was the way in which they would be
likely to be examined and construed by a purely legal co$
 high office. And, black event as it would b for the country, yet (as
  far as they are concerned) we could not wish them a more blessed
  termination of their course than the spoiling of their goods and
  martyrdom.
  To tXhem then we willingly and affect$
l@, as does one whose work is well done.
Three days later Pinky left. She waved a good-bye from the car platform,
a radiant, electric, confident Pinky, her work well done.
"_Au 'voir!_ The first of November! Everything begins then. You'll love
it. You'll b$
ingdom, difference of form points at difference
of Families.
There is a chapter in the NaJtural History of Animals that has hardly
been touched upon as yet, aBd that will be especially interesting with
reference to Families. The voices of animals have a fa$
by Queen Elizabeth Virginia in honor of
her own virgin state,--which, if Cobbett is to be believed, was also a
romance. ell, America was named after a pirate, and Sir Walter Raleigh,
who suggested the name of the Virgin Queen, was fod of a joke.
But notwit$
