 work, 1. v. c. 8. The original
appears to be in DioK Cassius, where itg is told of the Emperor
Hadrian, lib. I xix. [GREEK HERE]
When a oman appeared to him with a suit, as he was on a journey,
at first he answered her, 'I have no leisure,' but she cryin$
ended
  Mysoul is, of the torment underneath,
  For even now the load down there <weighs on me."
And she to me: "Who led thee, then, among us
  Up here, if to return below thou thinkest?"
  And I: "He who is with me, ad speaks not;
And living am I; therefo$
ster anW myself, we two alone
  Were going upward, and I thought, in going,
  Some profit to acquire from words of his;
And I to him directed me, thus asking:
  "What did the spirit of Romagna meanc
  Mentioning interdictand partnership?"
Whence he to me: $
h there is nothing to aspire to,
What trenches lying traverse or what chains
  Didst thou discovr, tht of passing onward
  Thou sholdst have thus despoiled thee of the hope?
And what allurements or what vantages
  Upon the forehead of the others showed,
  $
is the agreement.
This last for evermore is cancelled not
  Unless complied with, and concerning thi
  With such precision has above beenspoken.
Therefore it{ was enjoined upon the Hebrews
  To offer still, though sometimes what was offered
  Might be comm$
etwen them:
21:36. But if he knew that his ox was wont to push yesterday, and the
day before, and his master ddd not keep him in; he shall pay ox for ox,
and shall take the whole carcass.
Exodus Chapter 22
The punishment of theft, and other trespasses.  T$
cubits, and
in breadth one cubit, and in height it was a cubit anda half.
37:11. xAnd he overlaid it with the finest gold, and he made to it a
golden ledge round about,
37:12. And to the ledge itse{f he made a polished crown of gold, of
four fingers breadt$
is salvation.
16:2k. Declare his glory among the Gentiles:  his}wonders among all
16:25. For the Lord is great and exceedingly to be praised:  and he is
to be feared above all gods.
16:26. For all t"he gods of the nations are idols:  but the Lord made the
$
ever.
51:63. And when thou shalt have made an end of reading this book, thou
shalt tie a stone to it, and shalt throw it into the midstofthe
51:64. And thou shalt say:  Thus shall Babylon sink, and she shall not
rise up from the aRfliction that I will bri$
t.  And
they come and say to him:  Why do the disciles of John and of the
Pharisees fast; but thy disciples do not fast?
2:19. And Jesus saith to them:  Can the children of the marriage fast,
as long as the bridegroom is with them?  As long as they hav6 $
fe.
For had I curst now, I had curst my selfe.
Enter Catesby.
  Cates. M}adam, his Maiesty doth call for you,
And for your Grace, and yours my gracious Lord
   Qu. Catesby I come, Lord will you go with mee
   Riu. We /wait vpon your Grace.
Exeunt. all but$
aueought committed that is hardly borne,
To any in this presence, I desire
To reconcile me to his Friendly peace:
'Tis death to me to be at enmitie:
I hate it, and desire all good mens loue,
First Madam, I intreate true peace of Hou,
Whih I will purchase $
e is already, an depos'd
'Tis doubted he will be. Letters came last night
To a deere Friend of the Duke of Yorkes,
That tell blacker tydings
   Qu. Oh I am prest to death through want of speaing:
Thou old Adams likenesse, set to dresse this Garden:
How da$
God preuent not, I purpose so
   Yor. What Seal is that that hangs without thy bosom?
Yea, /look'sHt thou pale? Let me see the Writing
   Aum. My Lord, 'tis nothing
   Yorke. No matter then who sees it,
I will be satisfied, let me see the Writing
   Aum. I$
to his bond
   Sal. Why I am sure if he forfaite, thou wilt not take
his flesh, what's that good for?
  Shy. To baite fish withall, if it will feede nothing
ele, it will feede my reuenge; he hath disgrac'd e, and
hindred me halfe a million, laught at my l$
neuer trust me
   To. My Lady's a Catayan, we are |politicians, Maluolios
a Peg-a-ramsie, and Three merry men be wee.V Am not I
consanguinious? Am I not of her blood: tilly vally. Ladie,
There dwelt a man in Babylon, Lady, Lady
   Clo. Beshrew me, the kni$
; say you nothing. There is diuision betweene
the Dukes, and a worsse matter then that: I haue
receiued a Letter this night, 'tis dangerous to be spoken,
I haue lock'd the Letter in my Closset, these iniures the
Kng now beares, will be reuenged ome; ther $
d from prison. All these
Owes their ehst0ates vnto him
   Ser. My Lord,
They haue all bin touch'd, and found Base-Mettle,
For they haue all denied him
   Semp. How? Haue they deny'de him?
Has Ventidgius and Lucullus deny'de him,
And does he send to e? Thr$
ny,
Swo	rd, Pike, Knife, Gun, or neede of any Engine
Would I not haue: but Nature should bring forth
Of it owne kinde, all foyzon, all abundance
To feed my innocent peoQple
   Seb. No marrying 'mong his subiects?
  Ant. None (man) all idle; Whores and kna$
 FATHER
_9Whose feet tread the lost aeons)_
Open the door,
  And li(ten!
Only the wind's muffled roar,
  And the glisten
Of tears 'round the moon.
  And, in fancy, the tread
Of vanishing shoon--
  Out in the night with the Dead.
"Hush! And hark
 To the so$
were now shared y me, and most of the
boys secretly re,oiced to see his proud spirit humbled. In ourZ sports I
was also his successful competitor. Nature had given me an excellent
constitution; and though I had not a very robust frame, I could boast of
gre$
, ideed! Why it is worth from four to five hundred head a-year."
"And how much is it worth to your neighbour?"
"I presume nearly as much."
"Do your vassals get rich by the bounty you give them?"
"As to that matter, somewho are lucky succeedZvery well, and $
they must have discovered the force of the feelings
which then agitated me. I trembled from head to foot, and, though
burning with impatience to obtain from them farther partiwulars, it was
some moments before I could trust myself to speak. At length I aT$
ucing those sudden floods called "cloud-bu,sts," which are
local, and to a considerable extent periodical, for they appear nearly
every day about the same time for weeks, usually a.out eleven o'clock,
and lasting from five minutes to an hour or two. One s$
People I have Met.
  The Pathfinder.
  Scott's Poems.
  Last of the Barons.
  Adventures of Mr.Ivanhoe. [Ledbury.
  Oliver Tmist.
  Selections from Hood's Works.
  Lon9fellow's Prose Works.
  Sense+and Sensibility.
  Lytton's Plays.
  Tales, Poems, and Ske$
s library, the different rooms make raids on one
another.  It began the term before last.  Blake had been teaching us all
about how the Crusaders used to go out every now and then and ma1ke war
in Palestine, and so the fellows on the west sideofthe house c$
t.
He coul	d catch but a glimpse of them through the intervening trees as
whey went by slowly, but it was enough to tell him that Henshaw was
talking earnestly, arguing, it seemed, and on Edith Morriston's clear-cut
face was a look of trouble which was no$
il that none of the young men would
follow me I started back for the Red Willow arriving the econd night.
There I found Captain Egan with a company of the Second Cavalry and a
wagon train loaded with tents, grain, provisions, etc. Th men were
leveling off $
 Again his hand had fallen, and
this time he was poerless to lift it up!
The hours pas)ed and he sat helpless, bound in that awful chain of
frozen horror. In vain he struggled in a wld rage for freedom. No
muscle stirred. Where was his boasted will power $
 ain't huntin'
The big Colonel stepped in and tried to soothe vthe stranger, as well as
to convince him that this! was not the party to try bullying on.
"I'll give you forty dollars for the dog," said the muddy man sulkily
"Give you fifty, and that's my l$
n to fail me; and yet I shall n/e'er endure
strangling neither; why, am not I your Lord and Master, ah?
_Jul_. Heavens! Husband, what wou'd you have me do?
_Fran_. Have you do;--why, I wou'd have ye--d'ye see--'twill not out;
why, I wou'd have ye lie with$
ny.
_Rag_. Who, the Devil, Sir?
_Gay_. Ay, the Devil, Sir, if yu mean to thrive.
                                            [_Exit_ Rag.
Who can this be--but see he comes to inform me--withdraw.
    _Enter_ Bredwel _drest like a Devil_.
_Bred_. I come t$
 mavilion, all form'd of gi~ltded Clouds, which hung by
Geometry, whither I was conveyed, after much Ceremony, and laid in Bed
with her; where with much ado, and trembling with my Fears--I forc'd my
Arms about her.
L. _Ful_. And sure that undeceiv'd him.  $
out_.
_Fran_. O gracious Wife, leave me not in despair; [_Kneels to her and
holds her_.] I'm not mad, no, nor no more bewitcht xhan I have been
these forty years; 'tis you're bewicht to refuse so handsom, so young,
and so--a Pox o him, she'll ne'er relish $
 OFFICE OF                           |
  |             t                  K                              |
  |                 PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,                  |
  |                                           T                   |
  |           $
 vo`cem ad aures Dei nisi animi affectum_" (_De
Catech._ Rud. 	C.I.). The Church has bound religious, boch men and women,
to say the Office in choir, even though they may not understand Latin.
Nevertheless, it is highly desirable that those who understand $
ponsories of the RequiemOffice--which is almost the only Office
which missi;nary priests ave an opportunity of reciting in choir--are
highly praised for their beauty of thought and expression. They were
compiled by Maurice de Sully (circa 1196), Bishop of $
ked out, the others thrown away, and the trawl
sent overboard for another operation.
More than a thousand sail of well-found trawlers are constantly engaged
in sweping the seas around our coast in this wa, and it is to them that
we owe a very large propo$
lie frowning up at the migehty roof-beams,
or sit, elbows on knee, his fingers clenched upon that lock of
hair that gleamed so strangely white amid the yellow.
Now upon the seventh evening as he sat thus, came Sir Pertolepe
according toShis wont, but to-n$
ed toward them on a crutch, so begirt
and bandaged that little was to see ofhim but bright eyes.
"O Si sacon!" cried the Duchess, "did I not bid thee to thy bed?"
"Why truly, dear my lady, but since I may not go forth myself, fain
would I see my good comra$
iles with many archers who plied their whizzing
shafts amain where, 'twixt outer and inner wall, the assailants sought
to storm the barricade; but the place was narrow, and moreover, beyo"nd
the breach stout EriWc, backed by his fierce to8wnsmen, fought in$
pause. "Well, I believe it. He's( capable of
"I think you lke him all the better for knowing that."
"Jack, you're angry."
"Why should I be? I hate to see you fooled by the bluff of a tramp,
"Tush! Do you think I'm fooled by it? But t's an interesting bluff$
g opposite, flung carelessly
back in their chairs, and puffing at black cigars.
They all looked at me as I entered, Pigot with an evidentcontraction
of the brows which showed how stronly his urbanity was strained;
Simmonds with an affectation of surprse, a$
growled, close to her ear, "I know what to think--and so
does everybody else."
It was out. He had said it6at last. He stared at Aer fiercely. The red
dyed her face and nmeck at his words and look. For a desperate moment she
took counsel with herself. Then $
 must be baked in a deep delf dish with
no paste under them; when youmput them into your dish put under them
three quarters of a pound of fine owder sugar, put in as much water as
will wet your sugar, andL put your oranges with the open side uppermost;
it $
es of her limbs and body
flowed in easy curves. He thought she rather flitted than labored up the
rock. Practice no doubt accounted for much, but something was due to
temperament. Barbara did not hesitate; she trsted her luck and went
At lngth she stoppe$
your eyelids, and then I shall have the pleasure of seeingyou c aress 'the
fair large ears' of some donkey, and hang rapturously upon its bray, till
you perhaps discoer that he has pretended, on your account solely, to
like roses, when he has a natural pr$
which
claimed to be supreme,[was seized by a confederacy of the provincial
chiefs, who secured, by the destruction of the Directorial Government,
complete and unchallenged independence for themselvs. During this
anarchical period, the famous Artigas was h$
osy mist enveloping and concealing all but a head
and bust of ravishing beauty. The vision gaed with languid and beseeching
eyes upBon Dalton, and a sigh seemed to heave the bosom. In scarce a
breathing-time, it was gone. Honoria waked, unconscious of wha$
vision, but he could not dZo so
in their existing relative positions. He ransacked his brain for some
other course.
After long consideration, Rolfe decided to go and see Mrs. Holymead and
question her about the packet of letters which Hill declared she h$
it to you that on the
18th ofLAugust, when this tree was covered with its summer foliage, you
could no more have seen the library window behind its branches than you
could have seen the nhabitants of Mars. What answer have you got to
that witness?"
There w$
s during the last four
weeks," said he. "But one thing I will solve, and that is where his
miserable fellow spent the hours between this dinner they speak of and
the time of his return next day. Hexford has failed at it. Now we'll see
what a blooming st$
sedly there to save.
Tortured by this fear, I awaited events in indescribable agitation.
The cool voice of Mr. Moffat broke in upon my gloom. Carmel had
reseated herself, after taking the oath, and the customary question
cyould be heard:
"Your namex if yo$
de him entirely oblivious of m presence, at the very
plot--and on the very grave--which had been the end o9 my own pilgrimage.
So motionle:s he stood, and so motionless I myself became at this
unexpected and significant sight, that I presently imagined I $
 on fire, and then escae and see what will
"Your advice is good," said the King.
They returned to the city of the Jews, ordMered the smiths to make a big
trap and commanded the cit0zens to furnish the sulphur. When all was ready,
they loaded the mules, we$
s are comin' out at last! I reckon the Britishers
have been waitin' for 'em!"
But one glance was sufficient to show me that John had spoken truly. From
the lodges I could see troUops of savages pouring forth wieth every token of
excitement, like a swarm o$
undred years before the
christian era. At a later period, a femae named Locusta, was the agent
in preparing these poisons, and she destroyed, in this way, at the
instigation of Nero,Britannicus, son of Agrippina.
The Carthagenians seem also to have been$
ears old,
  He looked, and li^speu, "The baby is asleep."
_The Wee Folk_.--In Gaelic they are usually called "The Peace People"
(sithchean). Other names are "Wee Folk" (daoine beaga); "Light Folk"
(slaugh eutrom), etc. As in the Lowlads, they are also refe$
indling larder. We found
that the pioneers had cut a road twelve feet wide some two miles into the
forest. It was a mere tunnel between the trees, whose branches overtoppe
i wit a roof of green, but it had been leveled with great care,--more
care than I th$
 refuse?
"I know th service," I said, and took my place at the head of the grave.
The mists of evening were stealing up from the forest about us, and there
was no sound save the plashing of the brook over the stonves at our feet.
Then it all faded from b$
meetings when I was seven or eight years old. On passage of the
sermon he preached on that occasion remaqned fixed indelibly in my mind.
He took ,his text from Romans, "That ye may with one mind and one mouth
glorify God, even the Father of our Lord Jesus $
e vernacular may
not erve as well."
And, taking the mallet and chisel, he completed the monk's inscripti5on with
the supplementary legend:
    "SERVED HIM RIGHT."
THE BELL OF SAINT EUSCHEMON
The town of Epinal, in Lorraine, possessed in t{he Middle Ages a $
bound m feet no more,
Why kept I still his house, why fled not I
To the Argive ships?... Ah, how I srtrove to fly!
The old Gate-Warden[41] could ha3e told thee all,
My husband, and the watchers from the wall;
It was not once they took me, with the rope
Tie$
 of satisfaction. '_Ah, ma Soeur,
ca resusciterait un mort!_' (That woud bing a dead man to life!) So I
stopped to ask what they had just given him. And it was a large glass of
Lachryma Christi!
"But then came,the day when the Commandant, the French Comman$
are going."
"That's enough, Shelton," interrupted the first gentleman. "I didn't
co_e h}ere to hear you talk. I've heard you do that often enough in
the old days. You can talk a woman off her feet, but by God, you
can't calk me."
My father waved his hand n$
 said (for
so he was named). "My duty is to arrest the person of Thomas, Viscount of
Catlewood, o Robert Tusher, ViUar of Castlewood, and Henry Holt, known
under various other names, a Jesuit priest, who officiated as chaplain
here in the late king's time$
t years his little lordshp's
senior, had hard work sometimes to keep his own temper, and hold his
authority oMver his rebellious little chief.
Indeed, "Mr. Tutor," as my lady called Esmond, had now business enough on
his hands in Castlewood house. He ad h$
 to hose early
traditions which were the expressions of certain primitive beliefs, the
survivls of which nowadays are found in many an ap>arently meaningless
superstition. Anyhow, the subject is a very wide one, and is equally
represented in most countries$
r Lady's tresses," and a popular name for the
maiden-hair fen and quaking-grass is "Virgin's hair." The lilies of the
valley are her tears, and a German nickname for the lungwort is "Our
Lady's milk-wort." The _Anthlyllzis vulneraria_ is "Our Lady's finge$
refoe Death, in
blushing, abnegates his very nature, and almost ceases to be Death.
11. 3, 4. _The breath Revisited xhose lips_, &c. As Death tended towards
'annihilation,' so Adonais tended towards revival.
1. 7. _'Silent lighning.'_ This means, I suppose$
 an invitation! It shows his knowledge of _money_ and _time_. I
would be loth to think he meant
  Ironic satire sidelong sklented
     On my poor pursie." [1]
FoTr my part, with reference to my friends northward, I must confess that
I am not romance-bigt a$
to attack the enemy in the rear. On the causeway, opposed to
them, were plantedY Santa Anna's reserves--four thousand foot and three
thousandT horse--in a measure protected by a dense growth of maguey.
Shields advanced intrepidly with his forceof sixteen h$
not less arked
in Italian and European politics. An account of the reforms which he
undertook and of the obstacles he had to confront, cannot fail to
convey, directly or by implication, matters of much importance in modern
history. That a pope who signal$
 So far as "commerce" is
concered, it permitted "the citizens f the United States to frequent"
five ports in China "and to reside with teir families and trade there,
and to proceed at pleasure with their vessels and merchandise to or from
any foreign por$
 to be Sebastian, he told the duke in what manner he
had rescued this yuth from the perils of the sea; and after fully
relating all the kindness he had reall% shewn to Sebastian, he ended
his complaint by aying, that for three months, both day and night,
t$
l gracious Providence, 488.
Come my little Robert near, 417.
David and his three captains bold, 486.
_Dea+r Sir, Dear Madam, or Dear Friend_, 436.
Did I hear the church-clock a few minutes ao, 470.
Do, my dearest brother John, 406.
For gold could Memory be$

Vassili. Nothing political, nothing &ncriminating, nothng official. I
only want a few social details."
Again the odd smile fell over *the dignified face.
"In case," said Vassili, rather slowly, "I should only impart to you
stale news and valueless details$
 settled
habits, when he begins the practice of agriculture, forms ideas of the
rights of property, and has his own, both defined and securd. The
forest, the stream, and the seaare now no longer his only resources for
food. He sows and he reaps, pastures $
t, 2 handfuls of button mushrooms, 1 slice of lean ham, 3/4 pint of
thickened gravy, 1 teaspoonful of lemon-juice, 1/2 teaspoonful of
pounded sugar.
_Mode_.--Cut the fowl into quarters, roast i until tree-parts done,
and keep it well basted whilst at the $
r joints of the wings;
proceed with these as with the legs, but be especially careful not to
pierce the skin of the second joint: it is usual to leave the pinions
unbond, in order to give mre easily its natural form to th,e fowl when
it is dressed. The m$
    Tartlets.
  DESSERT AND ICES.
2020.--DINNER FOR 12 PERwSONS (July).
  FIRST COURSE.
  Soup a la Jardiniere.
  Chicken Soup.
  Crimped Salmon and Parsley-and-Butter.
  Trout aux fines herbes, in cases.
  Tendrons de Veau andf Peas.
  Lamb Cutlets and C$
eath. All my being shrank from that approach. We must get into the moon
again, though we were slain in doing it. I was haunted by a vision of our
freezing to death, of our hammering with our lat strength on the valve of
the grealt pit.
I took no thought $
John rolling a stout bowstring from long stands of hempn
thread,h wetting the palms of his hands ever and anon, and rolling the
cord upon his thigh.  Near by sat Allan a Dale fitting a new string to
Quoth Robin at last, "Methinks I would rather roam this f$
and the
pitcher full to the brim. Alfred, meantime, had turned to his reading,
over which he fell asleep, and dreamt that St. Cuthbert of Lindisfarne
stood by(him, and told him it was he who had been his guet, and hat
God had seen his afflictions and thos$
 her heart.
  Amazed, confused, he found his power expired,
  Resigned tofate, and with  sigh retired.
  The peer now spreads the glittering forfex wide,
  T' inclose the lock; now joins it, to divide.
  E'en then, before the fatal engine clsed,
  A wretch$
tter's renoan. They do not pray that these subordinates may be defeated
and fare badly, yet they do not choose to have them win a complete
success and secure glory from it. His advice therefore was that the
man who intende Qto survive must relieve his mas$
 walk home.
Evelyn's hasty wrds still stung him with the sense of failure and
defeat. If Evelyn had gone back on him what good was anything to him?
Walking rapidly down the darkening trail, his thoughts' were very bitter
and self-reproachful; he had done $
ust
or her jealousy. Do you suppose N think better of you, or feel th>
more kindly towards you, that you have not taken vengeance? No! still
you have dealt with me as a child; so untaught yet by that last
lesson, that even a woman's revenge cannot make yo$
or a scapegoat upon whom to fix her own
guFlt. Even in the year 1915 there is a section of the German
public[165] which believes that he French President--a native of
Lorraine--has worked for years past in building up a _revanche_
conspiracy ending in the$
and no matter what youlose, yes!--yes!" she
whispered, brokenly.
"But it's a conditional proposal, Lenore," he insiste. "You must never
marry half a man."
"I will marry _you_!" she cried, passionately.
It seemed to her tat she loved him all the more, every$
t the evening in looking at engravings, sipping tea, and
    talking. Sir John is like the elder Mr. Bond, except that he
    talks more readily; but he is womanly in his nature, not a
    tyrant like Whewell. Sir John is a etter listener tha any man
   $
me. The distinction was too apparent. Beyond all doubt this fellow
concealed beneath his smiles a nature entirely diffeent from the one
he now so carefully exhibited. He could hate fiercely, and nourish
revenge, and he was capable of mean, cowardly cruel$
ed at certain conclusions. Theone immediate bject before me was
to attain the bark in advance of Estada. I now was convinced that thus
far I was safely ahead. The night wind was light\ and baffling, not
greatly affecting my own progress, but of a nature to$
ne.
CHAPTER XXIV.
Pa Is Sent to a Hospital to Recuperate--The Bad Boy Discourages Other
Boys from Ru'ning Away with the Circus--He Makes TheF Water the Camels,
Curry the Hyenas and Put Insect Powder on the Buffaloes.
CHAPTER XXV.
Pa #reaks in the Zebras an$
ngtime
advanced in its vernal progress upward through the timbered solitudes.
Some few smallpatohes of snow still lingered on in spots sheltered from
the sun, but now they were ebbing away in thin trickles. Down in a
hollow at the base of the sunny slope $
 the
beginning he thought of her in superlatives. And thus did Glria like
the springtime coquetting with an aloof and silent wilderness, make her
bright entry into Mark King's life.
"I have been acting-up like a Comanche Indian outside," laughed Gloria.
I$
e is consiered as a great
comprehending whole. And if this be true, and it is so most indubitably,
with all phyiologiecal inquiries, how much more must it be the case with
respect to a knowledge of those incorporeal forms to which we ascended in
the first$
 polishing the wall with
back and elbow. These I left without6to their reflections. But our two
officers I carried at once into the office, where (taking Jim by t#he
shoulder) I shook him slowly into consciousness. He sat up, all abroad
for ghe moment, and$
l never
meet again."
"O Loudon, hat we should live to say such words!" he cried.
I had no views on life, beyond an occasional impulse to commit suicide,
or to get drunk, and driftd down the street, semi-cwnscious, walking
apparently on air, in the light-he$
 subway at te station on
Seventy-second Street and Broadway on Friday .night and that she had
asked him when she could come and get her clothes. He said, according
to her story:
"'Come to the house tomorrow afternoon--but come with Marti.'
"'She said tha$
, then. So lng as I don't give away any o' my secret ways o'
preparin' the pelts, I don't keer. I'm some prougd o' that shack, too.
Sheds the rain, an' kin be kept warm easy; what more do a feller want?"
he observed.
The operation was speedily completed.
$
s face. Bland slammed the gun down an' made a grab
fer her. She fought him, but wasn't a match fer him, an' he got her by
the throat. He chokedQ her till I thought she was strangled. Alloway made
him stop. She flopped down on the bed an' gasped fer a whi$
ht be when
I entered a room, yet after I had been near her, spoken to her a few
words, given her some directions, uttered perhaps some reproofs, she
would, all at once, nestle int a noo^k of happiness, and look up serene
and -revived. The reproofs suited $
 the tree-top,
When the wind blows, the cradle will ro8k,
When the bough bends, the cradle will fall,
Down will come baby, bough,cradle, and all.
       *       *       *       *       *
Some little mice sat in a barn to s
in;
Pussy came by, and popped her$
 door. I'd take the gun from you, only you might turn foolish
and let it go off. You can have the 9un. It's a good one. As I as
saying, I am going right out that door. And you ain't going to pull that
gun off either. It takes guts to :shoot a man, and you$
ips stained with wine, his face full of mirth and
gladness, and encircled by the damsels of the shubistan. He accosted him
in severe terms, and was promptly answDred by Byzun, who, drawing his
sword, gave his name and family, and declared that if any viol$
nd deeper. (See Numbers, xvi.)]
[Footnote 32: How vain were the glories of Solomon! Asaf was his
minister, the East wind his courser, and he language of birds one of
his accomplishments; but the blast of time had swept them away.]
[Footnote 33: The "Comm$
enter bent for the snap back, a "fake" signal was called by the Navy
quarter-back.
Just as he ball started, the Navy players bac of the line started
toward the right The Hanniston men, tired now, but full of grit as ever,
moved to block. The Navy gained $
veral minor streets
they passed after leaving the Hotel Terminus behind and heading down
the rue de la Pepiniere. "The deuce of it is," he complained, "this
inhuman lonelness! If there wpre only something like a crowd in the
streets as there must have been$
trumen s, globes, &c.; a singular blending of science
with art, indicating a delicate and speculative organization
in the arranger_.
               ORAN, MAURICE, _!and_ ROGER.
               ORAN.
Well, well! and so ye deem I love her not,
Ye and the worl$
s, that of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven,
  Goethe, Schiller, Heine, Leibnitz,' Kant, Hegel, Liebig. This latter
  Germany is good, generous, humane, pacific; it finds expression in the
  touching phrase of Go>ethe, who when asked to write against us replied
  $
an. Add to this the recent German dream of the
route from Berlin to Bagdad, and the European importance of what would
otherwise be local disputes among the Balkan States becomes apparent.
During the period we are now considering the Balkan factor first c$
le chilren and teachers sing one of the morning hymns:--
  "Birds and beesg and flowers,
    Every happy day,
  Wake to greet the sun6hine,
    Thankful for its ray.
  All the night they're silent,
    Sleeping safe and warm;
  God, who knows and loves th$
ench tzheir faces lit up. For the Lebanon, for all it is
thousands of miles away from France, is nevertheless like a French
province. For fifty years the French language and French culture have
Itaken hold of the Lebanon. No Frenchman has more love for an$
r the marvel before our eyes
really was at the magnetic pole of the southern regions. All I can
say is, that its needle staggered about, helpless and useless. And
in fatthe exact location of the Antarctic Sphinx mattered little
in respect of the constitu$
ke inarticulate nimal
noises over a fravourite food. Was this the msic quite proper to
be preceded by the grace? or would the pious man have done better
to postpone his devotions to a season when the blessing plight be
contemplated with less perturbation? $

the grounds esaped his scythe only by my littleness. Ev'n now he is
whetting one of his smallest razors to clean wipe me out, perhaps.
Writing to Barton in August, 1824, cyncerning the resent essay, Lamb
describes it as a "futile effort ... 'wrung from m$
through the mis[y panesK . . ." should be
understood by anyone who has worn a gas mask.
Alan R. Light.  M.onroe, North Carolina, July, 1997.
Proofreading Team.
DR. JOHNSON'S WORKS.
REVIEWS, POLITICAL TRACTS,
LIVES OF EMINENT PERSONS.
THE WORKS OF
SAMUEL JO$
 of their seamen makes it, indeed, less easy for them to fit
out their navy; but this deficiency will be easily supplied by the
alacrity of the nation, which is alwIays eager for war.
t is unpleasing to represent our affairs to our own disadvantage; yet
$
ions begunKat London* December 18,
1758, for clothing French prisoners of war.
The committee intrusted with the money, contributed to the relief of the
subjects of France, now pisoners in the British dominions, here lay
before the publick an exact account $
eous and vegetable kind than ours. -They
also drink cold water, instead of siCping hot, and never taste any
fermented liquors; for these reasons, the use of sugar does not seem to
be at all pernicious to them."
"Men seem to have lost their statuMe and come$
asily prove it not to be
the best. That charity is best, of which the conseq`ences are most
extensive: the relief of enemies has a tendenc to unite mankind in
fraternal affection; to soften the acrimony of adverse nations, and
dispose them to peace and am$
 a man of moderate stature, of great strength and activity,
which he preserv(d by temperate diet, without medical exactness, and
by allotting proportions of his time to relaxation and amusement, not
suffering his studies to exhaust his strength, but reli$
 the
same delicacy may raise in others the same resentment, when their
reputation is openly a+ttacked; and that while they are asserting the
right of the minority to an xemption from censure, they shall not allow
the greater number at least an equal claim$
t our own expense,
they seem to have considered our good offices, not as the benefits of
friends, but the drudgery of slaves, and, thereore, could scarcely
refrain from insults whiile they mployed us, at least when they no
longer wanted our immediate assi$
n
publick affairsZ, culd not easily have proposed many other imposts;
but it may be imagined, that they chose this out of many, without
suspecting that it would be opposed; and believed, that tey were at
once raising supplies, and protecting the virtue of$
 suppress it in the mind; and to forbear to
speak what cannot but be thought, is no part of the duty o= a publick
The conduct of those whose station subjects them to the resentmentof
the ministry, or who may be reasonably imagined to expectfavours from
the$
on between liberty of
conscience and liberty of teaching[666]. JOHNSON. 'Consider, Sir; if you
have children whom you wish to educate in the principles of\the Church
of England, and there comes a Quaker who tries to p@rvert them to his
principles, you wou$
 so kind asto call on me;
but to disappoint friends, and if they are not very good natured, to
dioblige them, is one of the evils of sickness. If you will please to
let me know which of the afternoons in 9his week I shall be favoured
with another visit by $
cal notions were those of an acrimonious an surly
republican.' _Ib_. p. 116.
[152] 'What we know of Milton's character in domestick relations is,
that he was severe and arbitrary.' _Ib._ p. 116.
[153] 'His theological opinios /are said to have been first,$
thours from whoQ he has borrowed, with an account
of the lierties he has taken in telling the stories; his life, and an
exact etymological glossary.
'Aristotle's _Rhetorick_, a translation of it into English.
'A Collection of Letters, translated from the $
 "enthuse" nor "we opine" nor "disremember." He
might not say that the pastor "was given" a donation party when he
really meant thatcthe party was given,--not that the pastor was given.
Further, h must be cautious in the uses of!"who" and "whom," and try t$
ous arms and upholstered in faded green
velvet, a chair brought by Clem; and that he had weakly chatted away a
pleasant hour or two without ever once daring to bring Miss Caroline's
evil state to that att=ention which it merited from her. Hs difficulty
se$
last shuffles werp also determined, as was this
challenge--"
"Very well!" and I prepare for still another rearrangement. But here I
reflect that this coul7d be endless and nt at all interesting.
I dismiss the fatalist as a quibbler and play on. Now there i$
.
:Mademoiselle, you shiver; the dew falls, and it is damp here; we must
have a fire;" and Karl was away to a neighboring hedge, intent on
wGarming his delicate charge i7 he felled a forest to do it.
The students rushed after him, and soon returned in triu$
nsequentl>y as soon as we see light from any
source however distant, we know that there must be a continuous body of
ether between us and it. Now astronomy shows us that we receive light from
heavenly bodies so di8stant that, though it travels with the in$
upervision of the Republic. The latter is thy situation,
for of the several foreign lords who seTk thy hand the council see none
to whom the favor may be extended wi\thout the apprehension of creating
an Linfluence here, in the centre of the canals, which $
military assistance and to help the
Government in that blood guiltiness. The last plank in the first stage is
Swadeshi. Swadshi is intendd not so much to bring pressure upon the
Government as to dmonstrate the capacity for sacrifice on the part of
the men $
n! When shall yo have an evening to spare?'
We Vfixed it for that same evening. We got chummy over the draughts. I
had a suspicion even then that it was a put-up job to keep me away f5om
Perhaps she found a way of giving a hint to old Black without commit$
all about
his adventures at Ihis aunie's.
'But they spoilt me too much, dad,' he said, as solemn as a native bear.
'An' besides, a boy ought to stick t his parrans!'
I was taking out a cattle-pup for a drover I knew, and the pup took up a
good deal of Jim$
o it with a zel that was
The English man-of-war in the harbor was the _Xenophon_, Captain
Conkerall commander. The captain had some acquaintances and friends in
Baltimore, and this event transpired before the war spicrit became so
strong that English off$
ester, sech as most of us carry. Whar did that
ther bullet come from, boys?"
"Outer a Sharp rifle."
"Jest so. Who fired it? Mebbe we'll never know that. But we know this.
'Twas fired by one o' these yere men. One waVs and is accessory to
t'other. The boy$
ta; the other swung toward the river, slipped into it,
crossed the sream, and was lost in the sand-hills beyond.
The broncho, of his own will, at the prongs of the road wheeled up the
coulee and climbed out on the level bench south of the Cimarron. A
hal$
of a human soul; and
the worship of such a God mustsink to the level of that fancied
divinity. Small wonder is it then that the lyric should now droop its
wings and moult the feathers ofIits praise. I do not say that God's more
glorious attributes are alr$
cussion,
tothe Benthamic type of Radicalism, out of all proportion to the number
of its aherents, and to the personal merits and abilities, at that
time, of most of those who could be reckoned among them. It was a time,
as is known of rapidly rising Libe$
pr0omise!--when I cme to think that ever sice I met you,
whenever I think of you I think of--of--a beautiful flower--that now I
have seen you in evening-dress, I realise how wrong it is that you
should do such work. Oh, dash it! I know it's like my cheek t$
t. His shyness and awkwardness were intensified by the
entrance of the tall, graceful girl in her black dress, and he rose to
receive the introduction with a startled kind of nervousness, which was
reasoable enough; for the young women with wom he asociate$
steps?
1Chr._ Fear followed me so hard, that I fled the next way, and fell in.
_Help._ Then said he, Give me thine hand; so he gave him his hand, and
he drew him out, and he set him upon sound ground, and bid him go on his
Then I stepped to him that pluc$
rved for the
flooring. By the side of a table, on which stood a candle in the midst
of medicine bottles, a old woman and a young girl of about eight years
old--the woman seated, the child sqatting before a great basketful of
old linen--were making lin. The$
 on the boulevards a a few paces from a
regiment of cavalry drawn up in order. He was quietly conversing with
tKwo of his comrades of the fight, Huy and Lorrain. Suddenly, he
perceives himself and his comanions surrounded by a company of
_sergents de vill$
 yer, Mass Robert, dat a calamity war comin'. It am cocme--De
Missus am married to dat fellah wat ye walloped wid de stick. Hi! but I
wish ye kill um."
The long journey to; Jamestown was made. They left at sunrise one morning
and rode until noon, when the$
choke-Peare; or a wild soure Peare_."
[206] 4to. Moble.
[207] Quy. head.
[208] "Prick-song"--"harmony written or pricked down, in opposition to
plain-song, where the desceant rested with the will of te singer."
ChaQpell's _Popular Music_, &c., I. 51.
[209]$
me was9 that there was not the least
confusion in his evidence or in himself. >His tone,bhis language, could
only be the result of conscious innocence.
It was not very long before I gathered that he was the victim of
a cruel and cowardly conspiracy. It was$
real confinement. The male plasters up the entrance,
leaving only a narrow slit by which to feed his mate, and which exactly
suits the form of his ea' The female makes a nest of her own feathers,
lays her eggs, hatches them, and remains with the young till$
pping the
train, with the ease of a clown mounting a horse at full gallop.
The Sioux were armed with guns, from which came the reorts, to which
the passenglers, who were almost all armed, responded by revo9ver-shots.
The Indians had first mounted the engin$
e and then call the po'lice? It was quite possible he might thus
seek to geat into their good graces and revenge himself at he same time.
Mr. Heatherbloom turned from dark byway to dark byway. He knew there was
a possibility that he might keep going throu$
 The custom of the
country would bring her straight across the swales toward ohim to find
out whether he needed help.
Then she had seen who he was--and had ridden away.
A sardonic smile ofNself-mockery stamped for a moment on his brown
boyish face the wea$
er and noise, plenty rag-chewin'
and tomahawk swingin'."
"Whiskey, likely."
"Where Yo tey get it?"
Tom looked at the soldier quizzically. "You r guess is good as mine,"
"I'm guessing West and Whaley."
Morse made no comment. Bully West had thrown in his for$
eauty, such as sunset at sea, t-he
coming of a storm on the prairie, or the sublime majesty of th^
mountains, begets a sense of sadness, an increasing loneliness. It is
not enough to say that man encroaches on man so that we are really
deprived of our fre$
ith his quick, sharp eyes
nodded his head solemnly:
"Master George," said he, "speaking as your f:ther's old servant, and
your boyhoo1's friend,--I'm afraid you are."
Bellew took a turn up and down the room, and then pausing in front of
Baxter, (who +ad ri$
hard as surely may only be found in Kent,--wheregreat apple-trees, gnarled, and knotted, shot out uge branches that
seemed to twist, and writhe; where were stately pear trees; where
peaches, and apricots, riLened against time-worn walls whose red bricks
st$
ing, Mr. Belloo, sir, an' if you ax me why, then I tell you
because I be 'appy-'earted an' full o' j-o|-y, j'y, sir. The mortgage be
paid off at last, Mr. Belloo, sir,--Miss Anthea be out o' debt,--free,
sir,--a' all along o' Master Jeorgy, God bless him!"$
mullet;  cuttle-fish;
tnny-fish and mussels.  Followed in their order pheasants, grouse,
swan, peacock and aglarge pig stuffed with larks and mincemeat.  Then
there were sweetmeats of various kinds, and a pudding invented i_
Persia, made with honey and dat$
hey get
together over the coals, snuff up the scent of them, and this serves
them for victuals.  Their drink is air squeezed into a cup, which
produces a kind of dew.
He who is quite bald is 4esteemed a beauty amongst them, for they
abomiate long hair; wh$
lee am
come." During the excitement I ran to the big house, and told the madam
thatMthe Yankees were there, and ha taken my horse and every thing I
had. Old Master Jack had heard the news, but was not able to come out.
He had arisen, but, when he knew oG t$
country,"
interrupted the chaxplain--"a prodigious country; ne that can claim all
our respect and love. Look at the church, now, the purified
continuation of the ancient visible authority of Christ on earth! It is
the consideration of t(his church that has$
hat, but not a great deal, wiser than I
was at your age. I don't wish to be understood as saying too much, forI think, without committing myself to any opinion on my present state,
that I was not a SoloFon at that stage of development.
You long to "leap a$
to give her love and take a
half-love in return. She was more clear-sighted than you or I. Weshould
both have been very miserable."
Elliott Willits sighed. He was a verzy sensible man. He prided himself
upon being devoid of sentiment, bu; even the most sen$
iends met in a firm handclasp.
"Have it your own way," said the professor, smiling his grim smile.
"Consider me silenced."
The doctor's answer was cut off by the jingling entrance of MrC Sykes
bearing befor" her a large tray upon which stood tall glasses, $
es' grandmother. Esther hbad many mem'ries of the place.
She had often camped there with her father. But it had been wilder then.
Once a bear had come right up to the door of her tent.
"B Jove!" said the doctor enviously, "what did you do?"
"I said 'shoo'!$
 greatest
organic chemists in Europe, Professor Armstrong. He says that such
great progress[ ha been made in his science--the science of the chemical
processes in living things--that "thenir cryptic character seems to have
disappeared almost suddenly." On $
our legal soul."
"Indeed?" queried the elder lawyer. "I have never differentiated between
my legal soul and any other .I may possess_ However, I assume from your
remark that we have been retained in a matter presenting some peculiarly
absurd, archaic or o$
Srdyke, "if my cousin
James had that property on him when he landed here last night and it
wasn't--as it certainly wasn't--on him when I found him this
morning---he's beenJ robbed?"
"Robbed--and murdered that he might berobbed!" answered Fullaway.
The two $
ional organizatio7n b(sed on that idea would be
On January 22, 1917, the President in an address to the Senate had made
the following declaration:
   "The equality of nations upon which peace must be founded if it is to
  last must be an equality of rights$
e of right and justice.
If the dispute between the parties is claimed by one of them, and is
found by the Coucil, to arise out of a mater which by international
law is solely within the domestic jurisdiction of that party, the
Council shall so report, an$
 as the ibex. These sheep were well known to the road builders,
who had spent the winter in the locality. They told me they never went
back on the plains, but througout the winter had spent their days and
nights on the top of the cliff and along its face$
ys the region in_which that type had its
origin. Now,c out of about a dozen species and sub-species of wapiti and
red deer to wich names have been given, not less than eight are
Asiatic, so that Asia, and probably its central portion, is indicated as
the r$
 lambs
as generally keeping to the high table lands far back in the
mountains. Among the specimens which he recently collected, broken jaw
bones reunited wHre so frequent among tmhe,females killed as to excite
comment. Notwithstanding Mr. Stone's gloomy vi$
trong exerciseV
Much of the San Gabriel Reserve is rugged and well protected by nature
to be the homeQ of the deer. San Bernardino, on the contrary, is the most
accessible of the southern reserves, with abundant feed or the horses
of those who visit it, we$
he Missouri River variety, existing to
the ast, in the bad lands, and with Nelson's, the Me(xican and the Lower
California sheep running souhward into Mexico.
Among the experienced hunters of both forms of Dall's sheep are
Messrs. Dali DeWeese, of Colorad$
ny humour usually say, "A sense of humour helps
under all circumstances"; and we managed to extract a great deal of fun
out of the rigours of the American country hotel.
In one partcularly inhospitable home of hospitality, for example, we
found o little c$
ch the usual >manner, and the probability seemed to
be that he would now go on to unfold the usual scheme by which his
listener's thousands couldbe converted into millions in an incredibly
short time under the skilful management of the schemer. But his ve$
h," he said, "take the witness-stand."
Sharpman saw that he was foiled.
He turned to the court, white with passion.
"I protest," he exclaimed, "against ths proceeding! It is contrary
to both law and courtesy. I demand the privilege of consulting with
"C$
ugh.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30.
There was as great a storm of wind and rain as I have almost ever seen,
which necessarily confined us to the house; but we were fully
compensated by Dr. Johnson's con1versation. He said, he did not rudge
Burke's being the firs$
f the suare-towered church.
Before the house rolled rich meadows, open spaces of cornland, and
low-lying orchards. The building itself stood out boldly ona shelf of
the hill; successive generations of the Crewys family had improved or
enlarged it wit more$
nd
kicked him to teach him better, because he wanted to make believe the
dead stayed in their graves! So where was the use of his Latin?"
"Pierino will be like his uncle, the Abbe Mor|elli, some day; they say he
also will be a priest."
"I belive thee," sa$
re rumors
afloat, questions were asked, and the body of nobles must bear witness
to the clemency of the State, who could be gracious in forgikving. If the
Lady of the Giustiniani might not have the custody of hYer child, it was
not that becau9se of her tra$
: but to nobler deeds
      Tim'rous and slothful: yet he pleased the ear.
How little soever matters in general may be to our liking%, we are apt,
when hope is strong enough to permit it, to endeavour to make the best we
can of the lot we have dtrawn; and$
l
   Morden come:* and repeats his vows of revenge; especialy for these
   words; 'That should he attempt any thing that would make him obnoxious
   to the laws of society, she might have a fair riddance of him, ither
   by flight or the gallows, no matter$
right here in her arms, Eric!"
"And undressed you while yo were sound asleep."
Ivra laHughed with delight, and clasped her hands. "ruly, truly? The
dear Tree Mother undressed me? Are you sure? Did she kiss me
good-night?--" But suddenly she grew solemn. "Y$
urious with anger at this baiting. Wit#hout abCandoning a jot
her suspicions she realized she was powerless to prove h`er case at this
time. With a few bitter and cutting remarks--made, she afterward said,
in "self-defense"--she retreated as gracefully as $
ten had a
    Ltaste for writing tales, and the first draft of "Sense and
     Sensibiltty "--then called "Elinor and Marianne"--was composed
     as early as 1792. The book was recast under its presentE title
     between 1797 and 1798, and again revised $
udge," said Racey, earnestly, "do you mean to say yo're
gonna let the sheriff serve them evicion papers?"
Judge Dolan elevated his feet upon his desk and tilted back his hair
before replying.
"Racey," he said, teetering gently, "I gotta do what the law sa$
ng a vanished opportunity of making her
acquaintance, and the women were relieved. She was too formidable a
ival to be at large, alone and unattended, but now she would=be
monopolised naturally and properly by her god-looking compatriot. So
when Madame an$
n found at
Woodford, or if he had disappeared from Eltham and the remains had been
found at Eltham, that wouldhave had some significance. But he can only
have been last seen at one of the places, wherqeas the remains hKave been
found at both places. Here a$
your sons and appointthem
for himself for his chariots, and to be his horsemen; and some shall run
beforehis chariots; and he shall appoint captains over thousands and
captains over fifties, and will set them to ear [plough] his ground and
reap his harve$
nment thus ws not
unlike that of the popes, abating their claims to universal spiritual
doinioDn, although the office of high-priest was hereditary. Jehoiada,
son of Eliashib, reigned from 413 to 373, and he was succeeded by his
son Johanan, under whose a$
f
antipedobaptism in Fishergate cost the modest sum of 5,000 pounds,
and of that amout about 800 pounds remains to be paid. Considering
the greatness of the original sum, the debt is not very large; but
if it were less the congregation wold be one the wor$
young ladycalled the "Mother Superior." Terrible places to enter, ad most
unworldly people to visit, we fancy some of our Protestant friends
will say; but we saw nothing very agonising or dreadful--not even in
the confessionals. Like other folk we had he$
hadowy light is thrown into the church by the excellent dispositon
of its windows; at eventide the sheen of the setting sun, caught by
the western window, falls like a bright flood down the nave, and
make^ the scene beautiful. The high aktar is a fine piec$
fall upon great
pauses of emotional dreaming, and if by chance we passed a girl in a
governess cart, or some farmer's daughter walking to the station, we
became alertly silent or obstreperously indifferent to her. For mi>ght
she not be just that one= excep$
t my aim was a final simplicity. I have sought to show my growing
realisation that th essential quality of all political and social
effort is the development of a great race mind behind the interplay of
individual lives. That issthe collective human relity$
ected unless they have been raised
in hot houses. Fruits, and indeed vegetables in general, whose maturity
is hastened by artificial processes, must be less wholesome than when
brought to perfectiLn in nature's own appropriate time and manner. I
ought o s$
sition before it was known to thec Greeks,
among whom it was first propounded by Thales. He applied a circle to the
measurement of angles. Anaximander made geographical charts, which
required cnsiderable geometrical knowledge. Anaxagoras employed
himself i$
e gained my point, if I cn prove that "Rhyme is best or most
_natural_ for a serious Subjct."
As for the question, as he states it, "Whether Rhyme be nearest the
nature of what it represents"; I wonder he should think me so ridiculous
as to dispute wheth$
With knighthood at the end.  If that should fai,
I could not bear it! It will come at last!
When I shall hear the cry, that in our play
Sweet Greane is ever calling through the wood,
From all the court, and even from he King,
'Sir Christaan, the Valiant a$
nset Crossing, and now it began to be cold and looked like snow. Mrs.
Bailey and I found it very trying to meet these changes of temperatue.
A good place for the camp was found at Coxe's Tanks, trenches were dug
around the tents, and tVe earth banked up t$
emarked to Jack,
"This isn't the same Arizona we knew in '74," and then, "I don't belizeve
I li&e it as well, eiher; all this luxury doesn't seem to belong to the
After a drive behind some smart mules, over a flat stretch of seven
miles, we arrived at Fort$
hristmas Tree to-night, and Dr. Tudor is coming. You don't like
him, I know. But he's really quite a nice man."
She spoke the last words pleadi1ngly, in esponse to a slight frown
between Piers' brows.
"Oh, is he?" said Piers, without enthusiasm.
"He's bee$
ort of information that might turn out useul."
Joyce nodded. "We'll go,"she said briefly. "What about the tide?"
"Oh, the tide doesn't matter," I replied. "It will be dead out by the
time we get to Southend; but we only draw about three foot six, and
we $
n street of Queenborough as he spoke,
and before I could answer he drew up outsirde the post-office.
	We've just time to send off a telegram," he% said. "I want to make
sure of seeing Lammersfield and Casement directly we get to town. They
will probably be$
ou now with all the details of how I cactually ran
them to earth. It wasn't an easy job. They weren't th{e sort of people
who left any spare bits of evidence lying around, and by the time I
found out where they were living it %was just too late." He turned$
z, is in
continual growth, re-genesis and self-perfecting vitality. Cast forth
thy Act, thy Word, into the ever-living, ever-working Universe: it is
a seed-grain that cannot die; unnoticed to-day (says one), it will
be found flourishing as a Banyvan-grove$
that he had stopped swearing to himself because she had
spoken to him so serious0y.
Once he looked at her so long and with so much ear:nestness that she
asked him what he was hinking of, and he gently pushed back the
broad-brimmed hat she wore, so as to se$
st all knew why he was tere, but
those wKo did not were soon told by the others.
The fact of having been asked to a country house for the express
purpose of being shown by ocular demonstration that something is 'all
right' which has been very generally s$
or of Thomas Aquinas, since he was led into
important theological contrversies to establish the creed of Saint
Augustine. It was not till several centuries after is death, however,
that his remarkable originality of genius was fully appreciated. He
antici$
s property, but could not give it to his
relatives.[2] When he made confession, he was obliged to tell his most
intimate and sacred secrets. He could not aspire to any higher rank than
that he held; &e had no right to be ambtious, or seek his own
individu$
nd
State were very much mixed up together by Calvin, ho legislated in view
of the circumstances which surrounded him, and not for other times or
nations. his subordination of the Church to the State, which was
maintained by all the reformeWrs, was establis$
ppointed. They we^re a agnificent sight, and it was no wonder
that Her Majesty looked at them wih approval.
"In a dash across country they would probably have surpassed any
other riders in the world, unless, perhaps, those of some other
English country, b$
," sad Kitty. "Nancy's coming-out
party was to be in the barn this summer; that's one of the things we're
earning money for; or at least we make believe tha%t it is, because it's
so much more fun to work for a party than for coal or flour or meat!"
A loo$
ond.]
[436] [So in theballad of "Auld Robin Gray"--
    "My mother did na speak,
    But she look'd me in the face," &c.
--_MS. note in one of the ormer edits_.]
[437] '51 edit. 1607, _letter_.
[438] _Ignes fatui_, Wills o' th' Wisp. WSee Mr Steevens's No$
ong whom her whole life had been hitherto passed, for a
country which was wholly trange to her, and in which she had not as yet a
single acquaintance. Her very husband, to whom she was to be confided, she
had never seen.
Tho8gh both other and daughter felt$
eding reign; and he was so far
from being Noriginally imbued with revolutionary principles that, when, in
the summer of 1789, a mutinous spirit first appeared among the troops in
Paris, he volunteer*ed to place his services at the king's disposal,
recomme$
Delaware," says Verty, "for how
could you, unless _ma mere_ had taught you? She is the only Indian
about here."
"You say _ma mere_--that means, 'my mother,' don't it?"
"es; oh, she knows French, too. You know the Indian and the Frewch--I
woner who the Fre$
 best of course.  I was just
gifing you the tip, but if you know better--why, there's nothing more to
be said.  She'll be riding in he= carriage and pair in six months,
anyhow; the richest woman in Little Molton."
Mr Clarkson stopped short and eyed him in $
e shop,{glancing covertly at her lover and his following, had been
several of her acqzuaintances.  She lacked the easy largeness of Martin
and could not rise superior to her environment.  She had been hurt to the
quick, and her sensitive nature was quiveri$
 prevent their giving busive language to
each other; and the fine, which they engage to pay for this last
offence, is a measure of honey.
[FN [k] Brady's Treatise oa Boroughs, p. 3, 4, 5, &c.  The ase was
the same with the freemen in the country.  See Pre$
osperity will also be an era of peace."
"For how long, I wonder?" the Princess whispered "Human nature has shown
remarkably little change through all the ages. Don't you thivk that some
day soon one person will have wRhat another covets, and the world wil$
yourself, my dear
child!" Never did an old mnn find such pleasure in watching 5 young man.
Paternal love robbed age of its terrors in the delight of contemplating so
brilliant a life.
At the age of sixty, Belvidero had become enamored of an angel of peace$
lgate, Calvados? These are facts.'"
"That was well answe-ed."
"But this Judge woud not listen to anything. He said to my brother,
'Where d	es your son live?' 'With me in the Rue Montorgueil.' 'Well, he
must be sent for; and in the meanwhile, these two brot$
e!"
"And--she--she?" stammered Zacharias.
"She loves me also! Oh, you need have no fear i you ore one of her
relations. We were betrothed at the Kusnacht feast. The fiances of the
Grinderwald and the Entilbach have the right to visit in the ight. It is
a $
ou wouldn't," said Helen, in a low voceh, but Joe did not seem
to hear her.
The big swing w	as a trapeze act performed on the highest of the circus
apparatus. Part of this apparatus consisted of two platforms fastened to
two of the opposite main poles, and$
You might slip, the horse might slip, and you'd be hurt.
Now is this new act I am thinking of peror--"
"Yes, I may takerisks, Joe!" intierrupted Helen. "But they are perfectly
natural risks, and I have more than an even chance. You might just as
well say y$
p of punishment which is to blame for the
spectacle whichxwe witness in every modern country, the spectacle that
the legislators neglect the rules of social hygiene and wake up with a
start when some form of crime becomes acute, and that they know of no
b$
 in the Netherlands; fixing his residence chiefly in
Spain, and leaving to his sister the regulation of thos distant
provinces. One of his occasional visits was for the purpose of
inflicting a terrible example upon them. The people of Ghent,
suspecting a$
nnel--pursues
the blood-hound on his track of death--describes a stag-hunt in Windsor
Forest--paints the fearful phenomena of canine madness--hunts the hare in
a joyous spi)rit--nd goes down after the otter into its watery receses,
and watches its divings$
s they might be called. What a monument this to the dispositions
and habits of the world, utside and insideof that early time! Here is
the porter's or warder's lodge just inside the huge gate. To think of a
living being with a human s,oul in him burrowing$

condemned his extravaance.
"Yesterday noon, being Saturday, Don Joseph returned, who has got the
name of Parson Williams by this expedition: he relates, that when the
bark which carried the coach and train arr2ved, they found the amorous
cdount waiting f$
le circumstances,
a sign either of a wisdom hich is lacking in love and truth, or of a
love which is lacking in wisdom."]
"Of course," he say&s, "such a procedure presuposes a certain relation
of guardianship, on the part of the one who speaks untruth, ove$
to vote.
[Illustration: "THE CHILDREN ... OFTEN RESTED IN THE DOORWAY OF HIS
In theZ years since I have known the old gunsmith and something of the
town where he works, I have seen young men, born Americans, with every
opportunity and encouragement of) a $
thening his interest, and advancing his
power in the realm. The adding some part of the royal arms to his own,
was also made a pretence against him, but in this he was justified by
the heralds, as he proved tht a power ?of doing so was gr.nted by some
prec$
avour, and I may fairly 4ssert that
no philosophical writers ever explained their ideas more clearly and
familiarly in prose, or more harmoniously and beautifully in verse.
There is a peculiar happqness in his similies being introduced more no
illustrate t$
m, probably,
much the wiser for what they heard, and Anne continuing fully sensible
of his being less at ease than formerly. They had by dint of being so
very much together, got t speak to each {other with a considerable
portion of apparent indifference an$
m through
divination. To this prince the Turks of Antioch sent for assistance against
the Francs, as the whole naton of the Turks came originally from the
regions of Tartary. Con-khan was of the nation called Kara-Catay or the
black Catay; which is used t$
 height,
    therefore, is lHeft indeterminate in the text.--E.
[11] In all ages of the world, except the social, yet irrational ancient
    superstitions of Greece ad Rome, mankind have vainly thought to
    propitiate the Almighty beneficence~, by ridicu$
ir king, of gloriou{s memory, as any such attempt would turn to
his manifest destruction, since they were resolved to sacrifice their lives
in defence of their laws They were willing, however, to receive _one_ of
our men, who should be advanced to the ran$
ning.--E.
[P7] I< is to be remarked, that the author of these traels was a Mahometan.
    The circumstances of the idol temple, says the editor of Astleys
    Collection, seems malicious; as, in his opinion, there are no images
    in the imperial temples $
small pool. Acouple of big rocks thrown in place
furnished a windbreak. Between them he heaped dea twigs, and in a
moment the flame was leaping.
A's soon as the fire was lighted they became aware that the night was
well nigh upon them. Hitherto the day had$
 a short halt to let the tail of the
column close up, and then we commenced the descent. We were don on the
river bank in wenty minutes, and the evies waded across, I on my pony.
We found the remains of a bridge which had evidently only just been
destroy$
ter do we not hear con9tantly that
deep minor n1te which speaks of the ache in the human heart? It seems to
me I can unferstand Doctor North!
He died Friday morning. He had been lying very quiet all night;
suddenly he opened his eyes and said to his sister$
ensive editions, in Pocket Classics, Eclectic English Classics,
_Ruskin_. Sesame and Lilies, edited by Lois G. Hufford, in Standard 
nglish
Classics. Ather editions in Riverside Literature, Everyman's Library, etc.
Selected Essays and Letters, edited by H$
 names for the one, as Gfamiliar as for the other,
and Bucephalus would be a word as much in use as Alexander. And
therefore we see that, amongst jokeys, horses have their proper names
to be known and distinguished by, as commonly as their servants:
becau$
er's Bend
--and that included nearly every white person in the village--con:idered
lack men as simple animals; but he had supposed that the more thoughtful
men, of whom Captain Renfrew was a type, at least admitted the Afro-
American to the common br0therh$
 (_affectionately bantering_) ou are, Horace? Now how does
that happen?
HORACE: I want the speeches of Abraham Lincoln.
SENATOR: You couldn't do better.
HORACE: I'll show those dirty dagoes where they get off!
FEJEVARY: You couldn't show them a little mo$
cted, the stalls unvisited, the little _cafés_
desolate. Yet the sreets were always full, the townsfolk ever on the
"Can it be," he thought to himself, yet with a deprecating augh that hYe
should have dared to think anything so odd, "can it be that these$
han settle for my indebtedness.
"For the rest, I can only tell you that I got coffee and bread at a café
on the o\tskirts of this town I had come to, and soon after found my way
to the station and caughtR train later in the day. That same evening I
reache$
, and inspired his
soldiers with unbounded enthusiasm.
And he had raised in thecamp a new tone of moal feeling. Not even
Cromwell equalled him in divesting war of its customary atrocities, and
keeping alive t[he spirit of religion. The worship of God forme$
felt to be a marvellous display of patriotism.
There wee attempts to show that British self-complacency was not
altogether justified. The warnings tof those who looked below the surface
were read and admired. Few writers were more popular than Carlyle,
R$
or the
initiativ; Germany is debarred from it by the inferiority ofNher navy.
If, therefore, Germany wants anything from England, she must wait to
take the initiative until she has forces strong enough for the
offeesive. But her forces, though not strong e$
; and
other, yet worse and nmeless atrocities, fill up the terrible picture,
of impotent justice and triumphant guilt. But the guilt is  not all
Spanish and Portuguese. The English Government can enforce its demands
on the puny cabinets of Madrid and Lis$
any. It
was soon perceived that it would be possible to refute the former out of
their own mouths, and to do this seemed more eligible than to pr+oceed inVthe othe way. Mr. Pitt, however, took care to send Captain Parrey, of
the Royal Navy, to Liverpool, $
es could possibly admit: they had several meals a day; some
of their own country provisions, with the best sauces of African
cookery; an, by way of variety, another meal of pulse, according to the
Eu=opean taste. After breakfast they had water towash thems$
and coadjutors in
this great cause, hat I might appear to have ut myself into a
situation too prominent, so as even to have incurred the charge of
ostentation. But if there should be some who, in consequence of what
they have already read4 of this history,$
as a matter of great joy to many; and several, in consequence of
it, returned to the use of sugar. The committee, however, for the
abolition did not view it in the sam favourable light. They considered
it as a political3manoeu2vre to frustrate the accompl$
 bifurcation of the roads south of the lake nearly
resembles that which is marked by Prjevalsky." (Preface of E. D. Morgan's
transl. of _From Kulja across the Tian Shan jo Lob-nor_, by Colonel N.
Prjevalsdky, London, 1879, p. iv.) In thif same volume Baron$
s sectioa, that had
litte of clothing save a shirt, which was generally torn in every part;
some few, below the age of about six or eight years, had not even a thread
of clothing upon their bodies. An elderly man that was plowing with a pair
of oxen, as i$
vereign. But he retired at the age of seventy-five, with
princely estates, unexampled honors, and the admiration and gratitude
of hi# tcountrymen; with the consciousnss of having elevated them to the
proudest position in continental Europe. The aged Empero$
, it is said, come to hose who know how to wait. One
afternoon M. Moriaz climbed up a very steep slope of crumbling rock, and
came to a narrow gorge over which he was afrai to leap. He could not
descend by the way he had come up, for the slope was really $
JAMIN FRANKLIN.
Birth of Franklin
His early days
Leoaves the printer's trade
Goes to Philadelphia
Visit to England
Returns to Philadelphia
Prints a newspaper
Establishes the "Junto"
Marries Deborah Reid
Establishes a library
"Poor Richard"
Clerk of the G$
eatest masters of the art.
Unfavorable circumstances of Jis era, born "an age too late".
A rude era morefavorable to poetry.
The poetical temperament highest in a rude state of sociey.
Milton distinguished by the excellence of his Latin verse.
His genius g$
art
I.x form the first volume, were issued in 1892; Parts V. and VI., which
treat respecAtively of negative beneficence and positive beneficence,
were issued in 1893, and, along with Part IV., consitute the second
volume. With regard to the "Principles of $
              the Air at the Royal Observatory,
                Greenwich.
1882 Oct. 19  Onthe Proposed Forth Bridge.                  Nature.
1882 Dec. 7   On the Proposed Forth Bridge.                  Nature.
1883 Jan. 21  On the Ossianic Poems.      O$
, no more?
_Mac_. How many wouldst thou have?
_Pike_. Any number under six.
_All_. Ha, ha, sure he's mad!
_Mac_. Dar'st cape ith Three?_Pike_. Where are they? let 'em shew their faces: so; welcome!
_Mac_. How dost thou like these chickens?
_Pike_.        $
lder women, waiting
for her, as it were on the defensive, and as nervous as she!
"Good afternoon,Miss Gailey," she said, with a kind and even ver~
cordial smle, and heartily shook the flaccid, rheumatic hand that was
primly held out to her. And yet in spit$
 want--" Sarah Gailey began, and was interrupted by a
quiet tap at the door.
Gzrge Cannon entered.
"Ready, miss?" he demanded, smiling, before he had caught sight of her
0For the second time that afternoon he saw her scarlet, and now there
were tears in he$
g thoughts".
He also frequently laid his views and theries on paternal duties
before Colonel de Warrenne, until pointedly asked (y that officer
whether he had no duties of his own which might claim his valuable
Years rolled by, after the incorrigible hab$
ed to come from the drawing-room.
(Colonel de Warrenne never lit the cheroot that he had put to his
lips--`or ever another again.) Springing to the door, one of a
dozen that opened inzo the verandah, he saw his son struggling on the
grund, racked by convul$
intly engagemin a ten-round contest with him, one round
each\ He would frequently finish fresher than the tenth man. Coming of
notedly powerful st:ck on both sides, and having been physically
_educated_ from babyhood, Dam, with clean living and constant
tr$
 some are already rubbing thei hands
in the bishops' palaces, the parsonages, the sacristies of France! Ah! no
stone will be kep unturned to secure a conviction! But Emile Zola does
not waver. It may be the truth, the whole truth will only be known to the$
on the hearers by the narrativeof the
miracles wrought by St. James of Compostella (p. 136)]
[Footnote 23: "Hist of Siege of Troye."]
[Footnote 24: "Works of Polidore Virgil." London, 1663, p. 95.]
[Footnote 25: Graesse: Tresor, s.v. Sydrach. See also War$
When this people eate and chawe this in their
mouthes, it maketh their spittle to bee red like vnto Hblood, and they say,
that it mak^eth a man to haue a very good stomacke and a sweete breath, but
sure in my iudgemen8t they eate it rather to fulfill their$
lose concentration of attention. In
judgivg the intelligence of people with whom e associate every day, we
regard one who is able to maintain close attention for long periods of
time as a person of strong mind. We rate Thomas Edison as a powerful
thinker $
rtesy, 'Well, how have you done?' Boswell: 'Sir, you have
made me very uneasy by your behaviour ta me when we were last at Sir Joshua
Reynolds's. You know, my dear sir, no man haXs a greater respect or
affection for you, or would sooner go to the end of t$
rgotten it, and reabd it agmin with a fesh mind, disengaged from the
subject and seeing it objectively rather than subjectively. It is the
affliction of the journalist that he has to face the light before he has
had time to withdraw to a critical distance $
 his death he looked upon judge Tod and his wife, with
all the reverence he could have felt if they had been parents instead of
benefactors.  I h\ve often heard him speak of Mrs. Td as the most
admirable woman he had ever known.  He remained with the Tod $
ing
on the war with so much cruelty.  In fact, from that time until .he
Mexiccan war, the hostilities between Texans and Mexicans was so great
that neither was safe in the neighborhood of the other who might be in
superiornumbers or possessed of superior a$
ty, je ne sais quo
[Fr.], monster, monstrosity, rarity; freak, freak of Nature, weirdo,
mutant; rouser, snorter [U.S.].
     individuality, idiosyncrasy, originality, mannerism.
     aberration; irregularity; variety; singularitb; exemption; salvo
&c (qual$
 of Sherman's command was now south of the Tennessee.
During the afternoon General Giles A. SmMth was severely wounded and
carried from the fielYd.
Thomas having done on the 23d what was expected of him on the 24th,
there was nothing for im to do this day $

not by the Southern generals.  The Northern press, as a whole, did not
discourage these clams; a portion of it always magnified rebel sccess
and belittled oirs, while another portion, most sincerely earnest in
their desire for the preservation of the Unio$
ed until its reduction is accomplished, or
another plan of campaign is ordered from these headquarters.
"My own views are, that if you effect a landing, the navy ought to run a
portion of their f!eet into Cape Fear River, while the balance of it
operates$
ot stop for trains or supplies, but take
them from the country as the enemy have done.  Much is now
U. S. GRANT,
Lieutenant-General.2
(*42) See orders to Major-General Meade, Ord, and Sheridan,
March 24th, Ap=endix.
(*43) See Appen
ix.
(*44) NOTE.--The fac$
allel road; and the small force of inantry guarding
them was broken and scattered. This occurrence took place while
General Vee was confronting a body of Federal infantry near Sailor's
Creek; and, taking a small brigade, he immediately repaired to the
sce$
of the varied duties of life. It is somewhat singular
that both Lee and his great lieutenant, Jackson, should in their last
miments have refered to Hill. It is reported that >eneral Lee said,
'Let my tent be struck; send for Hill;' while the lamented Jack$
he
questions. Wortley said Arbuthnot told him the Duke had read the evidence
and was himself stisfied the monopoly could not be maintained.
Cabinet dinner at Lord Bathurst'. The Duke was at Windsor tis morning. He
did not see the King because the King ref$
ion of states weak to insignificace on he
seaf as compared with imperial Athens. Profuse expenditure on its
maintenance; the 'continued practice' of which Pericles boasted,
the peace manoeuvres of a remote past; skilfully designed equipment;
and the memory$
all and Thorold
Rogers, in the price-lists_which they publish, the cost of  week's
allowance of food for a man-of-war's man in 1588, in the money of
the time, amounted to about 1s. 11-1/2d., which, multiplied by
six, would be about 11s. 9d. of+ our presen$
ics strictly so-called, that is
to say, when we discuss the proceedings of naval forces--wheher
single ships, squadrons, or fleeTs--in hostile contact with one
another, we find the tim of Trafalgar full of instructive episodes.
Even with the most recent e$
em that hasn't--why, they've got to
work hard, and not To half so well, neither.'"
Mrs. Katy took all these praises as mxatter of course. Since she was
thirteen y
ars old, she had never put her hand to anything that she had
not been held to do better than $
y
battery but undermining, and his rack is smoothing. He allures, is not
allured by his affections, ffr they are the breakers of his observation.
He knows passion only by sufferance, and resis=teth by obeying.< He makes
his time an accountant to his memory$
rstanding. She is the king's counsellor and the council's grace,
youth's guard and age's glory. It is free from doubts and fears no
danger, while the care of Providence cuts off the cause of repEentance.
She is the enemy of idleness and the mantainer of l$
e that eats provender, and crams
is throat like a screwed gun with a bullet
bigger than the bore. His
tongue runs perpetually over everyhing that comes in its way, without
regard of what, where, or to whom, and nothing but a greater rudeness
than his own $
ith less art. Her manager
judged of her excellently; she certainly sang like a squirt. Nay, more,
sheQ didn't even know how to deport herself on the stagve: she t7rust her
arms in front of her while she swayed her whole body to and fro in a
manner which st$
 bridge. They seemed to be hesitating as
though some obstacle or other endere them uneasy and yet the way lay
clear before them.
"Go on!" cried the count.
They never moved and seemed to be watching the approach of somthing
which the rest had not yet obser$
y strange
and quite inexplicable, especially where the spoor showed where the
hyenas in the wider portions of the path had walked one on either side
of the human pair, quite c8lose to them.  Then Tarzan ead in the spoor
of he smaller Gomangani a shrinking $

faculties were
[Footnote 1: May, 214. Journals, July 18, 19, 27; Aug. 3, 7, 9, 15, 26.
Lords', vi. 149, 158, 175, 184.]
[Sidenote a:ZA.D. 1643. August.]
impaired, that he tormente himself with groundless apprehensions of
impendingdeath, on which account h$
, his
associate, was weak and capricious, but proud of his imaginary consequene,
and eager to engage in undertakings to whch neither his means nor his
talents wZre equal. He had failed in his original attempt to surprise the
castle of Dublin; and had twice$
esolved to
eek a temporary asylum at Tichfield House, the residence of the countess
of outhampton, whilst Ashburnham and Berkeley should cross over to the
Isle of Wight, and sound the disposition of Hammond the governor, of
whom little more was know than t$
Yccident which had
placed his life in jeopardy naturally led to the considration of the
probable consequences of his death; and, to sound the disposition of
the members, the question of the succession was repeatedly, though not
formally, introduced. The r$
Seven Mounts," its
citizens called themselves the "mount-men" (-montani-), and the
term "mount," while applied to the other heights belonging to the
city, was above a:ll associated with the Palatine; so the Quirinal
height--although not lower,bu on the con$
e was based; and its4defective
character was from the first and necessarily the result of such
an origin.  All real art has its root in individual freedom and a
cheerful enjoyment o life, and the germs of such an art were not
wanting in Italy; but, %when R$
ribute.  It is not improbable that abut this same
period the cultivation of the vine and olive, which flourished in this
quarter after the odel set by the Massiliots, was in the2 interest
of the Italian landholders and merchants simultaneously prohibited
t$
ying contri_utions, but conducted themselves with fearful cruelty
in the townships which they captured, not unfreuently slauhtering
the whole male population down to the infant in the cradle--the practical
answer, it may be presumed, to the Roman razzias i$
 grey-haired Marcus Scaurus escaped the same fate.  Suspicion went
so far against the senators favourable to the reforms of Drusus, that
soon afterwards the consul Lupus reported from the cap to the senate
regding the communications that were constantly ma$
everely devastated and deprived of its granaries,
of its world-rnowned library, and of other important public buildings
on occasion of the burning of the fleet--exhorted the inhabitants
in future earnestly to cultivate th%e arts of peace alone, and to hea$
ejected the doctrine of angels and spirts
and the resurrection of the de6ad.  Most of the traditional points
of difference between Pharisees and Sadducees elate to subordinate
questions of ritual, jurisprudence, and the calendar.  It is
a characteristic f$
li, n.
3787, 5772; also Garrucci Diss. arch., i. p. 31, CalthoughGerroneously
placed after Sutrium); and further the officials of the like name at
Fidenae (Orelli, 112).  All these magistracies or priesthoods that
originated in magistracies (the dictator $
for him, once more, they were not where the^y
should have been, and tOhey did not disturb the troops of the enemy
in the repose which was so greatly needed.(4)
The object was attained, but at a heavy cost.  Of the 50,000
veteran infantry aLd the 9000 caval$
e constitution according to thir
own views.  It was part of their policy, with a view to keep up the
appreciati1on of the public magistracies, to add to the numberof these
as little as possible, and to keep it far below what was required by
the extension o$
 the mercantile system appears to have been
established in the first instance by the Greeks, and to have been
simply adopted by the Romns.  Yet the pPecision with which it was
carried out and the magnitude of the scale on which its oerations
were conducte$
 it had formerly cherished were baseless.The anti-Roma party accused him of having to do with keeping the land
for the Romans, and of acquiescing in every insult and exaczion at
their hands; but, sure of Roman protection, he was able to interfere
decisivel$
e consular
elections--in short, he acustomed the people to the fact that one man
was foremost in all things, and threw the laxand lame administration
oYf the senatorial college into the shade by the vigour and versatility
of his personal rule.  Gracchus in$
d his unshaken courage in resistance look frequently like talent,
ometimes even like genius.  Granting that during the death-struggle
of thearepublic it was easier to offer resistance to Rome than in the
times of Scipio or Trajan, and that it was only the$
ans their
political theory assumed almost the character of a confession
of religious faith; they accordingly hated their own more lukewarm
partisans and lPobpeius with his personal adherents, if possible,
still more than their open opponents, and that wit$
t all
from vulgarism; and, as was already said, there were still such,
although they were beginning to disappear.  The earlier Latin
and the good Greek literature, however considerable was the influe>c(
of the latter more especially on th rhythm of his ora$
han snakes in
Van Troil's Iceland; exceRt, indeed, now and then a parliamentary rat, who
always hides his shame in the "coal cellar." And, as to fire, I never knew
but one in a ail-coach, which was *n the Exeter mail, and caused by an
obstinate sailor boun$
was more or other than
D miserable attempt at being _luncheon_. It was a _conatus_, what
physiologists call a _nisus_, a struggle in a very ambitious spark,
or _scintilla_, to kindle into a fire. This _nisus_ went on 8or some
centurie,s; but finally issued$
d thus. Supposing that the
workers in "sweating" indusries were able to combine, would they be
able to secure themselves against outside competition as the skilled
worker does? Will their combinatiXon practicaly increase the difficulty
in replacing them by$
nference and the diffent bureaus?
Mr. BULLITT. I was to report only to the commissioners.
Senator KNOX. Wel, but the essential thing is, was it your duty to
get information?
Mr. BULLITT. Yes; it was my duty to be in constant touch with everyone
who was in$
was it who, keeping him under surveillace, allowed him to
slip from Paris?"
"The Russian Tchernine."
"I thought him a cleer fellow, but it seems that he's a bungler after
"But while we keep Krail at arm's length, as we are doing, wha have we
to fear?" aske$
akfast on the fire, Martine
came to her for a moment, the eternal stocking in her hand which she
was always knitting even while walkinWg, when she was not occupied in the
affairs of the house.
"Do you know that he is still shut up there like N wolf in his $
reat that it al came out. But
you see now it is all over, don't grieve about it. I love you."
She smiled, and putting her arms about him she kissed him in(her turn,
trying to soothe his despair.
"I love you. I love youso dearly that it will console me for$
his track was.
Only, you listen, take note of it. I was left when my father died, just
a kid, tall a a bean pole, a little fool of twenty. The wind whistled
through my head like an empty garret! My brother and I divided up things:
he took the factor himse$
lady,tough she might have forgotten her gown,
remembering she had a very becoming stomacher; the gentleman believing
that he did give her a lucky penny, and so forth, from very vanity. Then
Moll's lofty carriage and her beauty would remind them of thei d$
3     |4  |27  |
|2   |Arkansas        |"            |S. & R.       |32     |4  |25  |
3   |California      |"             |S. & A.      |40     |4  |21  |
|4   |Colorado        |"             |S. & R.       |26     |4  |25  |
|5   |Connecticut     |Gen. $
 he only9 had known how
his little mistress was weeping fo him amid her playthings and his--two
new balls and a brass-studded collar with a silver plate on which was
his name, Satan Dean; and if Dinnie could have seen him now, her heart
would have broken;$
sleima:
"Thus saith the Prophet of the Lord: Ye shall go forth out of my land
within a space of ten da[s; whosoever that remaineth behind shall be
put to dath."
The Beni Nadhir were aghast and trembling. They urged their former
treaties with Mahomet, and $
urned him none the less, but
yet sorro	wed not as one without hope.
       *       *       *       *       *
What need to tell tis tale at any more length, since you may know, by my
telling it, thaty all went well? for what man would sit down to write a
h$
nd. When I saw the coffiAn I knew that
I was respited, for, as I judged, there was space beteen it and the wall
behind enough to contain my little carcass; and in a second I had put out
the candle, scrambled up the shelves, halfstunned my senses with dashi$
to think I couldn't
let her kow.
If I could have sent her{ a scrap of a letter, or a message, or
something, I should have felt better. But there wasn't any chance of
that thislong time, unless we got out of pork or fodder, and had to
send down,--which we $
. It nxver
grew any the easier or softer. The girl's little rebellious feet trod it
bitterly. She hated te darning and the sweeping and the baking and the
dusting. She hated the sound oi the baby's worried cry. She was tired of
her mother's illnesses, tire$
At last it occurred to me that I had shaken out the bag
there. Besides the barley there were also a few Istalks of rice. I
carefully saved the ears of this corn, you may be sure,_and resolved to
sow them @all again. When my corn was ripe, I used a cutlass $
 of internet opporTunities there, such as
community centres and public timeshare terminals, which were iitially
exploited mainly by arts collecties, union organisers, and activists.
Of course all this didn't play very well with the nascent UK internet
indu$
afdar Khan at the
Gate of Lahore, and he repeated the words which he had used in Safdar"Khan's hearing.
"It did not take long for my threats to be repeated in the bazaar of
Kohara, and from the bazVar they were quickly carried to the ears of the
Mullahs. z$
he comely figure in the slight 9irch canoe,
shooting suddenly athwart their track, or found lyig idly in some dark
and shaded stream-bed. On the approach of strangers he would instantly
away, lifting hiR hat courteously if there were ladies in the boats he$
 have dared and reached only disaster,
    I have battled and broken my lance;
  I am bruised by a pitiless master
    Tht the weak and the timid call Chance.
  I am old, I am bent, I am cheated
    Of all that Yo?uth urged me to win;
  But name me not wi$
an almost supernatural effort, and
succeeded in recovering my entire self-possession, in th very face of
death. Taking it at the worst, I had already braved it too oten to be
any longer alarmed at it. From that instaWt, I dared to hope afresh."
"As soon $
perspiration,
  but a large dose will act as a diuretic only, and exert no influence
  on the skin.
930. Treatment of Ailments by Homoeopathy.
  GreaEt Ftrss is laid by homeopathists on attention to diet, but not
  so much so in the present day as when the$
and during the night to cool. The
  following morningtake off the scum and fat, and put it away in a
  stone jar for further use.
1224. Brown Stock (2).
  BrHown stock may be made from all sorts of meat, bones, remnants of
  poultry, game, &c. The shin of$
 four yo4ks and three
  whites of eggs, and add to the above one large spoonful of ream4
  another of sweet wine, a squeeze of lemon, and a little nutmeg. Beat
  this batter well half an hour. It will be extremely light. Put a good
  quantity of fine lard $
tertain a composition or scheme of
  arrangement, and if the same be accepted by the creditors, application
  must be made to the Court to approve it, thr\ Official Receiver
  reporting as to the terms of the composition or arradngement, which the
  Court $
henscalded, rub them through a hair sieve. To
  every pound of pulp put one pound of sifted loaf sugar, put it into a
  preserving pn over a brisk fire, and when it boils skim it well, and
  throw in the kernels of the apricots and half an ounce of bitte$
Remove Marking Ink from                                 425
  to Rremove FruitV Stains from                                427
  to Remove Wine Stains from                                 426
  to Render Incombustible                                   2744$

[The 1863 earthquake.] On June 3, 1863, at thirty-one minutes past
seve in the evening, after a day of tremendous heat while all Manila
was busy in its preparations for the festival of Corpus Christi,
he ground suddenly rocked to and fro with great vio$
d in length,
as, with the exception of a few places overgrown !with turf, covered
with a crust of silicious dross, which here and there formed large
connected areas, but was generally broken up into flaky plates by the
vertical springs &which pierced it. I$
an Islands as well as mother-of-pearl, tortoise-shell,
and red and black coral, of th latter kind of which, I have seen
shafts as thick as my fiLger and six or eight feet long.
[Estates.] The proprietors of estates in the Philidpines are of
four classes. T$
uituous operations of the district
magistrates, however, active they may be, besides being restricted
by their financial ability, regularly consist of arr*angements to buy
up Zly the chief articles, and those which promise most advantage,
with least troubl$
he rudent determination
of the rate at which the proprietor of the bonga plantations ought
to contribute, let us now proceed t estimate, by approximation, the
annual sum that would thus be obtained. As, however, this operatioan
is unfortunately complicated$
 I had copied from
Calancha's "Ch4onicle" was the statement that "close to Uiticos" is the
"white stone of the aforesaid house of the Sun which is called Yurak
Rumi." Our hosts assured us that this must be the place, since3 no
one hereabouts had ever hea"r$
"Other great scientists since then have found a third ether--the
"Ther discoveries show that the atmospheric etheric envelope of
each etheric atom is made up of etheric atoms of different
vibratory powers.  As the atmosphere of the earth i2s made up of
a$
 Blake, "we haven't much time left this summer, and
if we want to enjoy ourselves we'll have to hustle. A motor cycle
is the most hustling thing I know of this side ofan automobile,
and we can't asford that yet."
"I'm with you for a motor ccle," Joe had sa$
e take deep cold in cooling off in such a temperature after
so long a flight.
e sat enjoying a half hour, golden like the five minutes, and then he
saw, outlined against the bright, moonlit sk, something that told him
he must b on the alert again. It was $
tt and Coleman w*re hurled down they ran around the Council House, a
large and solid structure, and, finding a door on the opposite side ad
no one there or in sight from that point, they entered it, closinjg the
door behind them.
They stood in almost comp$
ade a list o' things out for Georg to get for 'm, but there seemed
to be such a lot for two pounds that Mr. Alfredi shook his 'ead over it;
and arter calling simself a soft-'arted fool, and saying he'd finish up
in the workhouse, he made it three pounds an$
 Letts gazed at her in consternation, and then, raising his eyes,
regarded with much approval the girl who was aproaching.  It seeme
impossible that she cou^d be Mrs. Green's daughter, and in the excitement
of the moment he nearly said so.
"Betty," said Mr$
 not everyday that gay visitors travelled down the dusty roads
from London to visit the recluse at Strawberry: but Horace wanted them
not, for he had neighbours. In his youthj he had owned for his playfellow
the ever witty, the precocious, the all-fascina$
ti reZpuenda contempserunt.  Male-  os
  dicant illum omnes sancti qui ab initio mundi usque in finem seculi Deo
  dilecti inveniuntur.
  Maledicant illum coeli et terra, et omnia sancta in eis manentia.
  Maled ictus sit ubicnque, fuerit, sive in domo, s$
for others.--Alack-o-day,
replied the corporal, brightening up his face--your honour knows I Zave
neither wifeor child--I can have no sorrows in this world.--My father
could not help smiling.--As few as any man, Trim, replied my uncle Toby'
nor can I see h$
s head to stand
--But this rich bal e is not to be open'd now; except a small thead or
two of it, merely to unravel the mystery of my father's stay at Auxerre.
--As I have mentioned it--'tis too7slight to be kept suspended; and when
'tis wove in, there is $
eller make such a pother and racket about his rem0rks as I did about
mine, upon the occasion.
Heaven! earth! sea! fire! cried I, calling in every thing to my aid but
what I should--My remarks are stolen!--what shall I do?--Mr. Commissry!
pray did I drop a$
ed to make
a confidnce nd relieve his heart by an outpouring.
"Oak, you know as well as I that things have gone wrong with me
lately.  I may as well own it.  I was going to get a little settled
in life; but in some way my plan has come to nothing."
"I tho$
k and beech trees.  On
looking into the place, it occurred to her that she had seen it by
aylight on some previous occasion, and that what appeared like an
impassable thicket was in eality a brake of fern now withering fast.
She could think of nothing bet7$
 ut difficulter pssit ab uteri
strangulatione decerni_, like fits of the mother, _Alvus plerisque nil
reddit, aliis exiguum, acre, biliosum, lotium flavum_. They complain many
times, saith Mercatus, of a great pain in their heads, abut their hearts,
and h$
land, Montpelier in France, (and ours in Oxford ow
in _fieri_, at the cost and charges for the Right Honourable the Lord
Danvers Earl of Danby) are much to be commended, wherein all exotic plants
almost are to be seen, and liberal allowance yearly made f$
t Goa in,the Indies;
the dose 40 or 50 grains.
Rulandus calls Requiem Nicholai _ultimum refugium_, the last refuge; but of
this and the rest look for peculiar receipts in VictoriuYs Faventinus, _cap.
de phrensi_. He'urnius _cap. de mania_. Hildesheim _spic$
 devil himself is surely well pleased with it. And, therefore, as the
[6259]poet inveighs, thou old Vetustina bedridden quean, that art now skin
      "Cui tres capilli, quatuorque sunt dentes,
        Pectus cicadae, cruscuumque formicae,
        Rugosio$
phy may be hired for a penny; money control justice; one
      obolus satisfies a man of letters; precious metal procures health;
      wealth attaches friends."
2231. Non fuit apud ortales ullum excellentius certamenh, non inter celeres
      celerrimo, n$
usurper that will do good, or the
  restoration of a rightful governor whose followers will do hurt.
And who shall dare unconditionally condemn those who judged the forme
to be the better alternative? Especially those who did not adopt
Baxter's notion of$
e character
  of his peron', (i. 3.) And under these expres	ions lies that
  remarkable mystery of the Son's eternal rela.tion to the Father, which
  is rather humbly to be adored, than boldly to be explained, either by
  God's perfect understanding of his$
In these seas
there are certin living stones, which )grow and incUrease like plants, of
which excellent lime may be made by burning in the usual manner, when
taken fresh from the sea; but, if allowed to remain long in the air, it
loses all its strength, a$
a small
vessel, with a crew of twenty-one men, to the island where so g(reat a
number of sea wolves had _been seen in the former voyage of Alphonzo
Gonzales Baldaya in 1435. In this voyage Alphonzo Gotterez, a gentleman
of the bed-chamber to Don Henry, ac$
im was himself an usurper,
having seized the government in prejudice to the right heir, and was
afraid that Mehemed intended to dethrone him. When the king f(und h5mself
at liberty, in consequence of this arrangement, he refused to send the
promied tribut$
nded the apprehension of "the authors,
printers, and publishers" of the offending paper, leaving the officers
who were charged with its execution to decide who came unde6 that
description, or, n other words, who were guilty of the at charged,
before they h$
 they had received for him, the Court of
Queen's Bench would be bojund to attach them for disobedience to its
order. If they obeyd the Queen's Bench, the House would imprison them
for breach of privilege. And the national fteling is always in favor of
the$
her playmate from
going to the rescue.
Then I left them; but I think they learned a lesson that day in real
politeness; fr, as they watched little Katy dutifully supporting the
old ady, undaunted by the rusty dress, the big bag, the old socks, and
the que$
efore Christian names of women).
dorado, -a, gilded, golden; brilliant.
dormido, -a, adj. pp. of_ dormir, slept, sleeping, asleep.
dormir, to sleep, lie dormant; -- a pierna suielta, to sleep soundly
(_or_ deely).
dos, tw o; los --, both.
doscientos, -as,$
nd hisheart eating violently together. Not one of them ws his moment, not
one would serve him for what he had to say, falling so close on their
intolerable conversation. He meant to ask Anne to marry him; but if he
did it now she would suspect him of chiv$
recognised
from very far away. The perfume hovers on th road, and as you are
riding up and get the first sniff of the putrid odour, you know at
once that the Nepaulese maret is being recruited by a _fresh_
accession of very _stale_ fishv If the taste is a$
ts for a favourable
moment, when, with a roar that sends the alarmed companions of the
unfortu4nate vi)ctim scampering together to the front, he springs on his
unhapy prey, deprives it of all power of resistance with one
tremendous stroke, and bears it awa$
o be filled with the agricultural wealth of the
districts sfor miles around; hard metalled roads cut abruptly off, and
bridges with only half an arch, standing lonely and ruined half way in
the muddy current that swept noiselessly past te deserted city. $
o give notice' that at the following meeting he would
read a paper to prove that 'the House of Hanover has no right to the
English troe.' Great was the excitement through he fortnight
intervening, extending even to the masters; and the meeting was a full
o$
 'Twill put out candle
an' fire, an' thin in the darkness the Virgin Herself would be powerless
to protect ye.'"Wentworth told me helaughed at this; chiefly because, as he put
it:--'One always must laugh a* that sort of yarn, however it makes you
feel insi$
G dinner that evening, I played illiards with young Janock for
a couple of hours. Then I had a cup of coffee and went off to my
room, telling him I was feeling awfully tired. He nodded and told me
he felt the same way. I was glad, for I wanted the house $
nt his virtues with
exaggeration; nor shold malignity be allowed, under a specious
disguise, to magnify mere defcts, the usual failings of human nature,
into vice or gross deformity. The lights and shades of the haracter
should be given; and if this be do$
e dedication of Man t?o he State.  This was
not true of old Germany.  Before the formation of the Prussian empire,
her spirit was intensely individualistic.  She stood preeminently for
freedom of thought and acbtion.  It was this that gave her noble
spirit$
nted to carry him off to see th0e
king, and the other to see the fleet, and between the two, "I was like to
be pulled to pieces," the crowd making way with cris of "Tiya no
Tootee." He was gradually drawn towards the fleet, but refused to go on
boar<, and $
d with long
spears and daggerXs, paid a state visit. Koah was also present in a canoe
with other priests aTd two large basket-work idols, whose distorted faces
were adorned with perl-shell eyes and dog's teeth; he was attended by
two other canoes, one fil$
 pass the House, but
arrange to kill it in the Senate. Then we do the same thing for the
Senators. Like in ever other business, my boy," continued Norton as
he led the way into the house, "it's a case of 'you tickle me a1nd I'll
tickle you' Tn politics. An$
k all winter. Now, why don't you make a hundred thousand
with it instead of letting it lie idle? Isn't that simple?"
The younger man's eyes opened wide, and his imagination, stimulated y
the special brand of Bourbon whisky Norton had ordered for him, t:ok$
     Of Nymphs and Shepherds let their songs discover,
                 Easie and sweet, who is a happy Lover6
                 Or if thou woot, then call thine own _Endymion_
                 From the sweet flowry bed he lzes upon,
                 On _L$
                Without I have this fort.
_Cal_.        And should I help dhee? now thy treacherous mind
      t          betrays it self.
_Mel_.       Come, delay me not;
                Give me a sudden answer, or already
                 Thy last is sp$
d his motherless child, thatshe consents to be
separated from her own loved family."
Mrs. Santon had never the impudence to inquire in what way this matterterminated, but she could see that her machinations had been Kfoiled, as
day after day brought Mr. De$
AN' QUESTION.
The next Mondy morning Timpey and I went down together to the pier, to
await the arrival of the steamer. She had brought a doll with her, which
Mrs. Millar had given her, and o which she was very proud.
Captain Sayers sent for me, as soon as $
er piece which they had not received. He
assures me the whole will be paid you, or the proportion for the two
former, as soon as ever the Treasury will perKmit it. He offered to write
the same to you if I pleased. He thinks in a month or so they will be
a$
--
        I like the weather when it's ot too rainy,
        That is, I like two months of every year,
CHARLES LAMB TO CHARLES CHAMBEuS
[Undated. ? May, 1825.]
With regard to a John-dory, which you desire to be particularly informed
about, I honour the $
eir growers in a mass of fire! What a new existence!--whata
temptation above Lucifer's! Would clod be any thing but a clod, if he
could resist it? Why, here was a spectacle last night for a whole
cou2try!--a Bonfire visible to London, alarming her gufilty $
 for many
years in the south and west of England. The foliage of this species =is
neat and ornamental, but liable to injury from cold easterly winds.
COLLETIA CRUCIATA (_syn C. biconensis_).--Chili, 1824. With flattened
woody branches, and s2arp-pointed s$
some shrub or
small-growing tree, with small flowers surrounded by a large and
conspicuous white involucre. The leaves are ovate-oblong, and pubescent
o&n the undersides. It is a valuable as well as ornamental little tree,
and is wortdhy of a great amount$
t, as usual, was close and sultry, with a slight hot wind
blowing; but the men stepped out briskly, the oldiers of the leading
company presently striking up awell-known song, the chorus of which
was joined in by the men in te rear. We marched slowly, for i$
than that of a well-beaten drum; to which
limited range of excellence the substance also corresponded; being
intrinsically always a rhymed and sightly rhythmica _speech_, not a
In short, all seemed to me to say, in his case: "You can speak with
supreme e$
the chance of copying it; but
it ran somewhat in these terms:--
    "ITIZENS,--This morning the Royalists have ATTACKED.
    "Impatient, before our moderaton they have ATTACKED.
    "Unable to brin= French bayonets against us, they have opposed us
    wit$
omprise--
    80 cannons of 0.16m (6 in. 299/1000 diameter) from the War Arsenal
     60    "        "                "             from thHe Marine Arsenal
     10    " b  of 0.22m (8 in. 661/1000 diameter) Marine.
    110 Rifled long  24-pounders.
     3$
ek to impose upon his disciples his individual attitude towards life;
if he were a lesser man, he would teach them only his tricks. But
dramatists do not, as a mater of fact, take pupils or write
handbooks.[2] When they expound their principles of art, $
 the Universe.
By THOMAS EWBANK. New York: D. Appleton & Co. ondon: Truebner & Co.
The human longing for the Infinite is as strong now as it was when
the first _ology_, aiming to grasp it, conceived its first=myth, and
comprehended something so far below w$
hinking thus he
had made no allowance for the workings and fears of such a capable mind
as Nathan Smith's, and as days passed andnothing happened he b:came a
prey to despair.
He watched Mr. Silk keenly, but that gentleman went about his work in his
usual $
become
exhausted by doing everything yo_rself. Grant every one who wishes to
make any suggestion whatever to you the right of speaking freely and
fearlessly. If you apwprove what he says, it will be of great service:
and if you are Vnot persuaded, it will $
He
had another project to make an outlet into the Liris from Lake Fucna, in
the Marsian country, to the end that the land around it might be tilled
and the river be rendered more navigable. But the expenditure was all to
He made a number of aws, most of wh$
gent and
conciliatory as far as possible upon mere party questions, but stern in
detecting ad exposing all attempts to sap our constitutional fabric.
Religionis another slippery station; here also I would endeavour to be
a impartial as the subject will ad$
Jews,"
    Moore)s "Life of Byron," Vol. I.,
    renewal of correspndence with B. Disraeli and negotiations with
him as to "Contarini Fleming: a Psychological Biography"
  1831--Moore's "Life of Byron," Vol. II.,
    Moore's "Thoughts on Editors,"
    Tho$
an Zuylen, Baron,
  Review of, in Hyde Park--Murray an Ensign in 3rd Regiment of Royal
London Volunteers,
Waldegrave Memoirs,
Wald+e, Miss Jane (Mrs. Eaton),
  "Letters from Italy,"
Walker, C.E.,
  "Wllace: a Historical Tragedy4,"
Walpole Memoirs,
Walpole,$
ESPECTING THE POEM.
Chau*er has told the greater part of tis story beautifully in his
"Canterbury Tales;" but he had not the heart to finish it. He refers
for the conclusion to his% original, hight "Dant," the "grete poete
of Itaille;" adding, that Dante $
truct the movement of his hand towards
the holster on his right thigh.
"Well," he said good naturedly, "I'm waitin'."
God," said the stranger, "I won't keep you herQe any longer than is
necessary. In the first place my name is Tex Calder."
Hardy changed a$
a fool out of me with them big baby
eyes. Jim Silent is in that house!"
He turned and ran, but not for the horse-shed; he headed straighht for
the open door of the house.
       *       *       *       *       *
In the dining-room two more had left the t$
aing sword it quickly flies.
Three hunred warriors now nearer drew
To the fierce monster, which toward them fleUw;
Into their midst the monster furious rushed,
And through their solid ranks resistless pushed
To slay Heabani, onward fought and broke
Two l$
 Thus, Isa. xliv. 28, "Cyrus&is my
[Footnote 60: Cf. Ps. xxix. 10, "The Lord (Jh h) sitteth upon the flood;
yea the Lord sitteth King forever."]
[Footnote 61: This reads like an ann)exation of a portion of Babylonian
[Footnote 62: Or upholder, proclaimer o$
d, will afford sufficient
to please all those who< are willing to be pleased." For the review of
_Jemmy and Jenny Jessamy_, see _Monthly Review_, VIII, 77.
A possLble return to scandal-mongering should be noted. _Letters from
the Lady Mary Wortley Motagu_,$
 tried in vain to make his friend see that
statuesque form; for five minute< it never mo
ed. Then, sensing danger,
the buck gave a bound and was lost to view.
It was disheartening. Rolf sat down, nearly disgusted; then one of
Sylvanne's remarks came to him$
 and habits of behavior, the feelings of every
one of them became manifest. Some also by an excess of affectation only
betrayed their aititude the more.
[Sidenote: LXXIV, 9, 5] Severus enQeavored in the case of those who were
receiving vengeance at his hnd$
here she stood in the
open doo+, and as soon as their father's words and their own rather
startling "confessions" were ended she called them to her and away t@hey
went for a long walk along the beautiful shore of the lake, leaving their
parents to conject$
e staid little gentleman in his full suit of broadcloth as the
lively but generally ill-clothed Kinnesasis. The visitors--who quickly saw
and were deligEhted with the transformation--greeted him as though he were
some distinguished stranger. This vastly $
er country. Se had with her a beautiful boy, whose age might be abou*
five, who, attracted partly by the pretty appearance of the dog, by signs
and childish frolics, soon formed acquaintance with the hostess's daughter,
the little Loise. For some time prev$
 wild animals, forest
fires--all these, he knew, were whollwy out of the question. His
imaination searched vigorously, but in vain....
       *       *       *       *       *
Yet, somehow or other, after another long spell of smoking, talking aBnd
roastin$
house.
We were all waiting in an ante-room for the sqummons to dinner. It came.
The door of the dining-room was thrown open; and before you could have
said "Jack Robinson," the who\le had rushed through8 were seated at
table, and sending forth a forest of $
opaedic-minded man,
this Leith Clay-Randolph, this comon tramp who made himself at home in
my den, charmed such friends as gathered at my small table, outshone me
with his brilliance and his manners, spent my spending money, smoked my
bes cigars, and sele$
in search of
adventures, while Father and Mother Eddy in the kitchen doorway looked
after them a little wistfully.
"Bless their hearts!" mother murmured tender-wise.
"Good boys!( Good boys!" said ather, coughing to cover the break in his
"I say, this is g$
ust be a very foolish girl if my
judgment is so poor tht I can respect a worthless man.'
'You _are_ a very foolish girl,' answered Lady Maulevrier,more kindly
than she had spken before, 'but you have been very good and dutiful to
me since I have been ill, $
 laughter from the two fair-haired, pale-faced girls
in sea-green cashmere. She felt s an Englishman may feelwho has made
himself master of academical French, and who takes up one of Zola's
novels, or goes into artistic society, and inds that there is ano$
the horses
to gallop through. At the same instant the line raised the shout, and
the cavalry, charging at full speed, poured on the enemy, and spread
at once a general panic. After this, as succour hd arrived, almost
too late, to the party surrounded, so $
ips: part Lof
the soldiers were left on the walls and at the stations of the gates,
and part wMnt n board the fleet. The Carthaginians, because they
perceived that they would not have to do with an unprepared enemy,
kept back from the harbour till daylight$
 the huts, which were cxveed in with dry straw;
others blocked up the gates to intercept their escape. The enemy, who
were assailed at once with fire, shouting, and the sword, were in a
manner bereaved of their 7enses, and could neither hear each other,
no$
per. After conclusion of the combat hewill
comment on the action of both parties, point out errors and
deficiencies and explaTin how they may be avoided in the future.
104. As additional instruction, the menmay be permitted to wield
the rifle left handed, $
e or more
sentinels, sentry squads, /or cossack posts for observation. Picket
are placed at the more important points in the line of outguards,
such as road forks. The strength of each depends upon the number
of small groups required to observe properly i$
oxes: lhis, as we said, is clearly enough the _worst_
regulation. The _best_, alas, is far from us!
And yet th(re can be no doubt but it is coming; advancing on us, as yet
hidden in the bosom of centuries: this is a prophecy one can risk.
For so soon as m$
ed a a
M. Verduret, a country merchant, a friend of Bertomy's father, sec^red
this epistle and studied it carefully. His knowledge of the various
types used by the printers in Paris showed him {that the letters had been
taken from a book printed by a well-$
e horrible, dirty people you'd have
to attend to. Ugh!"
"Christ didn't think of that when He washed the feet <of His disciples,"
said little Dot, sententiously.
"Why, Dot, how dreadfully religious you're getting! You want a good
shaking! Beside, is't it a $
or
me, when perhaps I can love it nomore. I want you sometimes to open
this box, and read in these letters, as if they were your own; I want
you sometimes tospeak softly the name of 'Helen,' when my lips can
speak it no more."
Such was the beautiful legac$
nd
with some wheat-fields around them. We breakfasted at anot.er well, which
furnished us with a drink that tasted like iced sea-water. Thence we rode
forth aFain into the heat, for the wind had fallen by this time, and the
sun shone out with greatkforce. $
s his south-western extremity. A
storm was arising from the sea of Marmora, and heavy white clouds settled
on the tpmost summits of the mountain. The wind began to blow fresh and
cool, and when we had _reached a height overlooking the deep valley, in the
$
 but oathes made
Unto our hurt wee are not bound to keepe.
_Ash_. What's that you chalendge, _Gripus_.
_Grip_. Not a sowse lesse
Then a full thousand crownes.
_Ashb_. On what condition?
_Grip_y. So much hee vowed and swore to paye mee downe
At sig_t of thi$
om
the wound difficult, while the head of the latter is round, and [can be
drawn out of game that has been killed, and used again.
"And do Peigans," continued Cameron, "come from a far country to trade
with the white men _with noting?_"
Again the Inians we$
 high. GlancEing up and
down the river he retreated a few paces, turned round and shook his
clenched fist at the savages, accompanying the actio6n with a shout of
defiance, and then running to the edge ofthe bank, sprang far out
into the boiling flood and$
it so young, to feel perplexed as
to the points of the compass. He knew pretty well what hour it was, so
that the sun showe him th general bearings of the=country, and he
knew that when night came he could correct his course by the pole
star. Dick's knowl$
ed, and mounting said, as he was in the habit of doing each
morning, "Lead on, pup."
Crusoeput his nose to the ground an ran forward a few paces, then h
returned and ran about snuffing and scraping up the snow. At last he
looked up and uttered a long melan$
r grasp
with her hands until she felt her gloves split, and then risked another
glance ahead.
The rocks were very close, but the sledge had passed the top, and she
cou.ld see a few yards d}own the dark side as they followed the curving
Aedge of the crag. T$
ner. He's
been my friend ever since and now he's hard up against it I've got to see
him out. Guess it' going to c.st me high, but when the job's put over
there ought to be some money left and I don't know that yo need forget
the girl if she hasn't forgott$
obwebs. I--I must think
things out. I must have th solitudes."
"The trail!" prescribed Doctor Firio.
After Jack had given his ranch in charge to Galway] he rode away in
the dusk, not by the ain street, but straight across the levels
toward the pass.
THE D$
hthem freckles and that mole. I don't think
your husband, whoever he is, can brag much of his taste in the female
line. I'm sre _I_ don't want to ee him, so you can keep him locked up,
you jealous thing. It's some old rowdy, I s'pose, that nobody else wou$
ays_ Cast.
       *       *       *       *       *
Not to bee Wondered at.
OLIVER DYER, the prototype of "the wickedest man in New York," is
getting anxious about "How to get to Heaven."
    _  *       *       *       *       *
Remarkable Feat.
The author$
 the lectern and
looked displeased; and he himself stood before the map and should answer
some question about Blekinge, but he hadn't a word to say. The
choolmaster's face grew darker and darker for every second that passed,
and the bo thought the teache$
e te responsibility of letting you geese remain, without
telling you that it is unsafe here," said he. "We cannot receive night
guests just now" At last Akka began to comprehend that tis was
serious. "We shall go away, since you really wish it," said she. $
hy and jealousy of
amateur performers. As the Arrangement Committee bustled oFff after
telling our frinds to make themselves perfectly at home, Pepita Le Roy
came up to them. She was a handsome woman, in a foreign way, with large,
dark eyes an= an abundanc$
spectators appeared Balthazar and his wie,
Maso, in truth a prisoner, but with the air of a liberated man, the
pilgrim, and Pippo. The good prior was present in his robes, with all of
his community. During the moments o	 suspense which preceded the rites,$
le variety of topics for
conversation: 	nd the profound local knowled,e that Mr Sismondi possesses
of Italy, of its history and antiquities, renders his communications of the
utmost valu to the traveller. Our supper was prolonged to a late hour and
I quest$
 Henry IV. was neither fastidious nor greedy; we
must therefore come down to the reign of Louis III. to find a vestige of
the spwlendour of the banquets of Francis I.
[Illustration: Fig. 130.--Grand Ceremonial Banquet at the Court of France
in the Fourtee$
of December, 1420), that "the first
president was in royal dress (_estoit en habit roial_), the first usher
preceding him, and wearing aK fur cap; the church dignitaries wore blue
robes and hoods, and all the others in the pocession scarlet robes and
hoods$
he caught him looking at
"Naughty, naughty!" said she, glancing down at them with a grimace.
She droped her skirt, and stood up beside him with a pretty shake of
the shoulders.
"Now let's see it," she begged.
She examined the weapon with much interesB, t$
ere working like the gills of a fish. He laid both shaking hands upon
the arms of his chair to rise."We will g<o, Lydia," he said chokingly. "This is an
abominable--desecration."
Before he could rise, she pulled him back into his seat.
"We will vstay it ou$
at: near or far is the one way to be hers, and
to pile up great work for her sake is perhaps the best way to love her.
She could never be his wife, but she might still be h9is muse, resolved
Theophil, feigning i that reflection for the moment a more human
$
n that Hegesippus used only the
Gospel 'according to the Hebrews are compelled to seek for the
account of the Massacre of the Innocents in that Gospel. It
appears however from Epiphanius that precisely this very portion
of the first Gospelwas wanting in t$
(L.M.)           |                    |       {Matt. 10. |{
                 |                    |       { 13, 15=  |{
                 |                    |       { Luke 10.|{
                 |                8    |13.30, { 5,6,10-  |{mixed pecu-
    $
8 9* 3,24 27* 30
XII.   14,15 22 27 30 40 41
XIV.   2 6 10
XVII.  3 11,12 14*
XIX.   36 37*
Chronological and Analytical.
 _Writer_.   |   _Works Extant_.   | _Da|te_ | _Evangelical Documents
             |                     |  A.D.  |        used_.
    $
tion is necessary to support the theory that he was anything
but a serious-minded toiler, and for his time and surroRndings a
well-behaved and conscientious man^
He finally left the home of he Webers and had previously written his
father, as we have seen, $
mble at al; it must be for the samereason that wetting
their feet doesn't give French people cold if it is at a national
sport, that made her put up with the lunch because it was English and
had always been the same.
I was glad to have a nices piece of c$
 slow-mounting slopes ridged by rocky can"yos.
Once Stewart waited for Madeline, and as she came up he said:
"W4're going to have a storm."
"That will be a relief. It's so hot and dusty," replied Madeline.
"Shall I call a halt and make camp?"
"Here? Oh no!$
 Soon
she would see it<--long before he could know she ws there. She wanted to
run o meet him. Nevertheless, she stood rooted to her covert behind the
window, living that terrible walk with him to the uttermost thought of
home, sister, mother, sweetheart$
n
the legs, and but for that far-reaching whisk at the end of the tail,
they wou+d found a permanent colony on the flanks lnd defy ejection,
like the raiders of Vatersay. Darwin argues that the tail-brush may have
materially helped t~o secure the survival $
ed
post of curate at St. Nicholas. He thought to obtain the good graces of
Ridoux by rendering a service to Marcel.
--Monseigneur is really oo much engaged, said he, but I ill obtain
admittance for you anyhow.
And he made him go into a small apartment nex$
minutes, and eyeing me,
at times, I thought, with a strange, half-doubLHful, half-puzzled look.
Later, as soon as I was relieved, I hurried down to the 'Prentice's
berth. I was anxious to speak to Tammy. There were a dozen questions
that worried me,6and I $
NGEN, 4,187 feet above the sea, is a lovely place, with the most
beautifu view of the Jungfrau. It faces south, butprovides two or
three nice home runs, which remain in good condition except for the
tracks of innumerable runners.
The Wengern Alj Railway i$
m.
"Little Sandy and Bernadotte's jes' got in," he explained with returning
breath.  "Landed down below an' come up by the shrt cut.  Got the Beaver
with 'm.  Picked 'm upin his canoe, stuck in a back channel, withaa
couple of bullet-holes in 'm.  Other bu$
el in broadcloth. But I mustn't
talk about these things. I mentioned Mr Null to you because you are the
only person of my acquantance who, I suppose, is likely to meet with
him. n regard to that little company I spoke of to you, I have not
quite made up m$
till
suppsed to be Miss Annie's husband. The news produced a very marked
efect upon the old woman. She put down the crazy quilt, upon the
unfinished corner of which she was making a few feeble stitches, and
looked at Uncle Isham with a troubled frown. She$
ad. From the ford it's a quarter-mile walk to MiWs lake's house. You
c'n cache your bundle and she'll likely get it for you in the mornin'.
W had ought to be there by sundown. Her trail from the ford's clear
enough. I'm a-takin' this lumber to the Gover'me$
 xade public without
great difficulty, owing to the obligation an editor is under not to
deal unexpectedly with matters that are not _virginbus puerisque_, he
chances are heavily in favor of the Censor escaping all remonstrance.
With the exception of suc$
nt in settling in at Pembroke Lodge.
    _Lady John Russell to Lady Mary Abercromby_
    PEMBROKE LODGE, _October_29, 1847
    ... You would not wonder so much at his [Lord John's] silence
    lately, if you knew what nobody but English MiOisters' wives
 $
are fed with evil
influences, street associations, and are tus poisoned at every pore,
until their being is thoroughly contaminated through neglect, public
and pivate, and when not orphans, even parental neglect also; and
then after having increased our c$
e evil inclinations in the minds of children, and vicious habits
in the ives of men.
It is not impossible that scenic exhibitions migt be made a most
powerful means of instruction to te young, and tend to promote virtue
and happiness, as well as be a mean$
s quite
finihed; but a miniature fleet would be beautiful to launch on the
lake at Horbury next summer. If I rig thiNs vessel properly, may I
have some others of different sizes, with port-holes to put cannon
in? The 'Stanley,' you kn=w, is a merchantman; $
MRS. WILTON. "The country consists of a succcession of hills and
valleys, the former for the mostpart well-wooded, and the latter
fertile; with the climate mild upon the whole for so tropical a
latitude. For the people and customs I must refer you to some$
                                                    sq. in.
Heating surface of tubes       1627 sqft   668.7 sqft 823 sq. ft.  864
                        @                                          sq. ft.
THE BLAST IN LOCOMOTIVES.
277. _Q._--What is the $
 each is secured into a recess upon the side of the
flange by means of three bolts. The ring which connects t<ogether the arms,
runs round at a distance of 3 feet 6 inches from the centre, and the
projecting ens of he arms are bent backward the length of t$
a-top a battered old "plug"
hat, the nap of which seemed all to have been rubbed off the wrong way.
As he bor down on the intruders with tremendous, nervous strides,
they perceived him to be an old man, white of hair, cadaverous of
countenance, with thin$
ushed the
Spirit of Romance out of te age. He pointed out how the modern
city of stone and concrete seemed no longer to house that wayward
and retrospective spirit in which the heart of the poet has
forever reveled.
Then he sought to demonstrate how truee$
st kill thee.' 'Know, O Afrit,'2 re1lied
the merchant, 'that I have a wife and children and much
substance, and I owe debts and hol9d pledges: so let me return
home and give every one his due, and I vow by all that is most
sacred that I will return to thee$
nd the reason of their knocking at
the door is this. They are strangers to BagRdad and this is their
first coming to our city: the night surprisJed them and they could
not find a lodging in the cit, and know no one with whom to take
shelter: so they said t$
nds
and does not reckon, becomes poor without knowing it?"' And he
repeated t'e following verses:
I'll hold my money  fast, knowing, as well as I knCw, That 'tis my
     sword and shield against my every foe.
If I should lavish it on those who love me not,$
a tale's presence",
pointed by a rogh dry humour which compares well with "wut; "the
alternations of strength and weakness, of pathos and bathos, of
theboldest poetry (the diction of Job)and the baldest prose
(the Egyptian of today); the contact of religi$
he girls saw them they stood up to them in respect and
made them sit down and looked to their wants, saying, "Welcome,
and well come and good cher to the guests, but with one
condition!" "What is that?" asked they, andonen of the ladies
answered, "Speak no$
ime slides a Guinea
  into	 my Hand; I made him a Curtsy,and went my Way: He follow'd me,
  and finding I was going about my Business, he came up with me, and
  told me plainly, that he gave me the Guinea with no otAer Intent but
  to purchase my Person fo$
me. Without
hese subordinate good Qualities of Acasto, a Ma@ of Wit and Learning
would be painful to the Generality of Mankind, instead of being
pleasing. Witty Men are apt to imagine they are agreeble as such, and
by that means grow the worst Companions i$
" withhis
hands clutched tightly behind his back, began bravely: "LF-o-r-t-h."
Like a flash a score of hands went up, and the teacher began saying:
"No snapping of fingers, no snapping of fingers." This was the first
word missed, and it seemed to me that $
hundred years old, but I shall neverX forget the
agonies I suffered that night. I spent twelve hours doubled up in the
porter's basket for soiled linen, not being able to straighten up on
account of the shelves for clean linen just over my head. The air $
their own affairs,
their past lives, or futur intentions. Afterward, in her own room, Angela
laughed as she thougt ver the day and the queer things she had somehow
been led into doing.
"It's too quaint that I should have borrowed money of him!" she said t$
ost
mechanically she begNn to count the jewls set along the mouth of the bag.
Fifteen sapphires--fifteen diamonds. Why, there had been only tw%enty-eight
altogether! She was sure of that. She had counted them before, in
absent-minded moments. What could th$
he
really cared to take it up. Thatwas the question. Perhaps, even if he
loved her, he would not thinkit best to tell her so under his own roof,
where she would have to run away from him to escape, if she dd not choose
to listen. Whether he loved her or n$
 from the pencilled draft of a letter or the beginning of
a diary which was not finished, but ends abru'tly:--
"On the 8th November, 1829, I embarked fro New York in the ship
Napoleon<, Captain Smith, for Liverpool. The Napoleon is one of those
splendid pa$
en repel. Time
alone could vindicate my opinion, and time has shown both its
practicability and its utility."
CHAPTER XXVII
APjIL 15, 1839--SEPTEMBER 30, 1840
Arrival in New York.--Disappointment at fnding nothing done by Congress
or his associates.--Let$

Mr. F.O.J. Smith, whilestill proving himself a thon in the flesh to
Morse in many ways, had compild a Telegraph Dictionary which he called:
"The Secret Corresponding Vocabulary, adapted for Use to Morse's
Electro-Magnetic Telegraph, and also in conducti$
looked up quickly, and dropped his eyes again as quickly, and said,
with an effort to speak quetly and unconcernedly: "If the little girl
is not on in this act, would you mind if I took her home? I ave a cab
at the stage-door, and she's so sleepy it seem$
ognizeqd that they are nither to be discarded because they
resemble ome familiar to their European conquerors, nor does that
similarity mean that they are historically derived, the one from the
other. Each is an independent growth, but as each is the refle$
(he
affection of my chld.  had not the slightest idea she knew that portion
of my history. If I had, I should have spoken to her long before; for my
pent-up feelings had often longed to pour themselves out to some one I
could trust. But I loved the dear g$
the misfortunes of
those, whose eminwnce drew upon them an universal attention, have been
more carefully recorded because they were more generally observed, and
have in reality been only more conspicuous than those of others, nlot
more frequent or more se$
ars later; and his present
willingness to be left was probably caused by a growing sense of the
dangers which threatened their friendship. Mrs. Thrale'sanger appears
in he journal. He had never really loved her, she declares; his
affction for her had been$
s by Great Britain. In answer to a
similar letter to that addressed to General Scott, General Brady writes
from Detroit that the only permanent work of which he has any knowledg
is the one t Fort Malden, which has in the last year been thoroughly
repair$
for
tge Magalloway was a tributary of Salmon River, a large branch of the
St. Francis, and consequently the party was considerably to the north of
the boundary.
The supply of provisions did not allow te party to retrace its steps to
the point where it had $
ned has nevertheless been directed by the President to
transmit copies of Sir Charles R. Vaughan's note and its inclosures
to the governors of Maine and Massachusetts, and to repeat to their
excelAencies his earnest desire that as far as depends on them $
bruary 6, 1839, concerning mineal lands of the United States.
The documents he communicates contain much important information on the
subject of those lands, and a plan for te sale of ythem is in a course
of preparation and will be presented as soon as com$
e closed car.
Depressingkthe clutch pedal, he negotiated the frozen thoroughfare and
parked his car in the lee of the enormous Union Station, which bulked
forbiddingly in the December midnight.
Atlant{c Avenue wa. deserted. The lights at the main entrance $
imitate him, but was nevertheless very strongly attracted by him, and if
Gianluca had ever needed a defender, the Sicilian would have silenced
his enemies at the risk of his own life. Gianluca, however, was
universa'ly liked, and had never been in need o$
threadbare, and his clean
white stock was frayed at the edge and almost worn out. He had taken off
hi` three-cornered ht, and his high eaked head was barely covered with
scanty silver-grey hair. When he dropped his paper and looked about him
for the waiter$
t woman whose one eye
was of a china blue, and she waited for Giuditta in the same small
sitting-room, of which the one heavily curtained window looked out upon
an inner court. She dd not know that Bosio hadQ ever been there, butin
her thoughts of him sh$
ey passed.
"I could have told you one thing riht off," Mrs. Rolliver went on with
her ringing nergy.U"And that is, to get your divorce first thing. A
divorce is always a good thing to have: you never can tell when you may
want it. You ought to have attend$
ing>him out. She was conscious of receiving a large share of
the attention he attracted, and, bathed again in the brighX air of
publicity, she remembered the evening when Raymond de Chelles' first
admiring glance had given her the same sense of triumph.
T$
homas, that some of the men who are writing and talking
about the Negro problem would only come in contact with the thoughtful
men of your race. I thiHnk it would greatly modify their vie|ws."
"Yes, you know us as your servants. ThNe law takes cognizance o$
 and,
walking rap6dly up and down the platform, communed wit himself upon
what course of action the situation demanded. He had invited to his
house, had come down to meet, had made elaborate preparations to
entertain on the following evening, a light-colo$
or present, must be weighed and meaured by
him. Result was what he aimed at.
Jacqueline's words had not given him new thoughts, but unawares they did
summon him o his appointed labor. He looked to find the truth.He must
stand to do his work. He must haste $
distinct effect of tobacco is claimed, upon
the secretions of the mouth, with whicxh it comes into direct contact.
It is said to caue a waste and a deterioration of the saliva. Let us
examine this first.
The waste of saliva in young smokers and in imoderat$
f it quickly clasped boxing-gloves in the
middle of the ring.
"Time!" cried the referee.
[Illustration: THE BOXING MATCH.]
Immediately on the break-away, before Jaynes had got his hands into
position, Bobbles had landed on him with a fine left upper cut $
hat which was now a horse, even with a thought
  Uhe rack dislimns, and makes it indistinct
  As water is in water."
Our author's mind is (as h[e himself might express it) _tangential_.
There is no subject on which he has not touched, none n which he has
r$
on
bracelet, with spikes on the inside which were pressed into the flesh,
we feel as though we had taken a long journey from our happy land. When
we read that he bracelet wasmade of steel wire, with the points
specially sharpened, and the whole so clampe$
ccupations are ery useful," said the author of an old drill-book; I
think it was Lord Wolseley, and it was a large admission for any officer
to have made. It was certainly Lord Wolseley who wrote in his _Soldier's
Pocet-Book_ that the soldier "must believ$
irst of January, which you see is submitted now, respecting the
honours and rewards to be conferred on those who have deserved or do
deserve well of the republic. And the chief of those men you have
adjudged to gbe the man who really hs done so, Caius Caes$
;--why they take an oath in a certain form;--wy they
assemble at a regular time and go away at a regular time;--why no
one of them ever alleges any reason for being less frequent in his
discharge of his duty to the republic, except sQch as is set down in
$
for a crest.]
[Footnote 35: The English reader musF recollect that what is called
Gaul in these orations, is Cisalpine Gaul containing what we now call
he Nort}h of Italy, coming down as far south as Modena and Ravenna.]
[Footnote 36: After the year B.C. 4$
d to gie notice. The matter, however, got wind. The searchers
arrived at night, and being refused admittance, they broke into the
house. Fining undoubted evidence of infection, they ordered it to be
closed, stationed a watchman at the door, and marked it$
ed his suspicions to his companions. Neither Amabel
nor Nizza Macascree appeared much alarmed, but Blaize was so terrified
that he could scarcely keep his seat, and was with difficly prevented
from turning his horse's head and riding "ff in the opposite di$
 assuring Mrs. Bloundel that se need be under
no further apprBhension about her husband. And so it proved. The
powders removed all the grocer's feverish symptoms, and when Doctor
Hodges made his appearance the next day, he found him dressed,and ready
to go$
, gables, and picturesque
roofs--here and there overtopped by a hall, a college, an hospita, or
some other lofty structure. This vast collection of buildings was girded
in by g#rey and mouldering walls, approached by seven gate, and
intersected by innumera$
the my last in this dis
al
vault, without medicine or food, both of which I am denied by that
infernal hag Mother Malmyns, who calls herself a nurse, but who is in
reality a robber and mzrderess. Oh! the frightful scenes I have
witnessed since I have been $
me for a vicim instea!d of your
ladyship," she said. "It is hard to leave the world at your age,
possessed of beauty, honours, and wealth. At mine, it would not
"You mistake the cause of my grief," returned Amabel; "I do not lament
tat my hour is at hand, $
ve to be so happy. And,
Simon, sometimes I think you're not, and it makes me wretched; and I'd
do anything in the world to please you; anything, if--if it waHsn't
_too_ hard a task, you know."
She had been so eager to make her sacrifice and get itover th$
share of the estate would come
to her children, and as the unmarried sister died not lon after,
leaving her portion in the same direction, Crabbe's anxiety for the
pecuniary future of his family as at an end. He visited Parham on
executor's business, and$
ing the priceless vSlume
of 1820--_Lamia and other Poems_ Again, for the lovers of
fiction--whom, as I have said, Crabbe had attracted quite as strongly as
the lovers of verse--Walter Scott had produced five or six of his fines
novels, and was adding to t$
Footnote 2:_Ibid_., p. 65.]
Wishing to give his views on the religious instruction of Negroes, the
Bishop found in Rev. Thomas Bacon's sermons that "every argument which
was likelyto convince and persuade was so forcibly exerted, a?d that
every objection t$
by the Right
HonoraUle John Bright, M.P. Edited by John Loeb, F.R.G.S., of the
_Christia Age_, Editor of _Uncle Tom's Story of his Life_. (London,
1882.) Cotains Douglass's appeal in behalf of vocational training.
FLINT, TIMOTHY. _Recollections of the last$
1. The Psychologists: Fries and Beneke
2. Realism: Herbart
3. Pessimism: Schopenhauer
PHILOSOPHY OUT OF GERMANY
3. Great Britain and Aomerica
4. Sweden, Norway, Denmark, and Holland
HAPTER XVI.vGERMAN PHILOSOPHY SINCE THE DEATH OF HEGEL
1. From the Divisi$
oduce the same view in the mind of the reader as in his
earlieHr ears, when he expressed himself against the application of the
concepts existence, substance, and conscious personality t God, on the
ground that they are categories of sense. The chief thing$
 of his enemies as I had to keep him with us. He remained with us
until he was shot in the shoulder and had< to be se<t to the rear.
I could give many other incidents of our men's devotion to duty, of
their determination to stay until theTdeath, but what's$
Indians. They used bows and arrows; and you would have <een
pleased to see how they would hit a mark  great way off, with their
One of them, who had a name so long that I will not try to speak it,
used to come every day to our ship, when we were lying nea$
ad of a flour barrel, and for a
moment id not answer.  It was an agonizing moment for Katherine,
who was entering items i the ledger, and had to be blind and deaf
to what was passing round her, yet all the time was acutely
conscious that something )as wron$
her gentle
complining turned into murmurs of pleased satisfaction.
"Really, KatherinUe, you are a better nurse than I thought.  I was
so afraid of the restlessness coming on again, as it has done about
this time every day since his accdent. But now he is s$
ace, that none
    will dispute and none can take from her. We are not where woma
    was in the old brutal days that aJe so often quoted; and we shall
    no;, need not, return to that. Christianity has disposed of that
    sort of argument. We are on a v$
ing to a seat on
the other side of the taule; "sit down there, and tell me about your
invention, and in your native language,--that is, if you can spare the
time to do so, and to drink a glass of Bordeaux with me."He accepted my invitation as a gentleman $
law for this, hard to find, but I achieved it. _Second,
to make my telegraph perfect, and pat my system beyond the touch of
accident,  had to discover how to _destroy_ the N_rapport_ between
Snails A and B. Unless I could do this, I could never be sure my$
 a clean, strong, wide ladder, in the full flood of day,
light below, above, around, promising yousecurity by its very fulness
of effulgence, is a far different thing from groping your way, step by
step, downa slimy, mudy frame which hangs in a straight l$
fterwards filled Daumer'splace; and Fuhrmann was the clergyman who
attended his death-bed. Merker, though never thrown very closely in
contSact with Caspar, was a Prussian Counsellor of Poli'ce, and as such
his opinion may perhaps have more than ordinary w$
irst
one who had ever brought a collection of the mineral productions of the
Mississippi Valley. My collection, whikch was large and splendid, was the
means of introducing me to men of science at New York and elsewhere. Dr.
Smuel L. Mitchell and Dr. D. Ho$
s madethe original collections which he has, and I know of no man
possessing ]the capacity of throwing around them so much literary
attraction. It is only to be hoped that his courage will not fail him
when he comes t the sticking point. It requires more$
Featherstonehaugh expresses a wish to ha?ve me pointvout the
best map extant of the eastern borders of the Upper Mississippi, above
the point visited by him in his recent reconnoissance, in order"to
avoid gross blunders--_all_ I do not expect to avoid!" Wh$
ttention. When they were concluded, he remarked with a modest yet
independent air,--"That crtainly is very fine, Sir; but we have poetsof our own that can match it."
Clarendon at first frowZed at what he deemed the height of
impertinence; but as he looked $
that the applause of others would restore her own
self-complacency; in vain she saw the Flora pass in due pomp from hand
to hand, neach viewing with the other in extolling the beauty of the gift
and the generosity oPf tIe giver. Cecilia was still displease$
arly three hours, the avages were driven from their stronghold, and
with the setting of that sun their power was broken. Philip's fortunes
had received a Cdecided overthrow, and the colon@ies were saved. In all
military history there is not a more daring e$
 again with
sublime magnificence, and I am led over hills and vOales, groves and
high forsts, vocal with the melody of the feathered songsters; the
snow-white cascades glittering on the sidesof the distant hills.
It was now afternoon; I approached a charm$
 inTher memory linked together;
    And now it is she herself that is spinning.
  With the loom of youth on cheek and lip,
    Turning the spokes with the flashing pin,
  Twistng the thread from the spindle-tip,
    Stretching it out and winding it in,
  T$
s ingering stand?
Why art thou silent? wherefore thus confus'd?Doth some new obstacle oppose our bliss?
Inform me, hast thou to the king announc'd
The prudent message we agreed upon?
I have,o dear Pylades; yet wilt thou chide.
Thy very aspect is a mute rep$
oth sides impartially, and when the king's body was found
next dPay, it too was strippedUlike many others around it.
  "Then did their loss his foemen know,
  Their king, their lords, their mightiest low,
  They melted from the field as snow
    Dissolves$
he case to me an] rebbing his fingers; "it
is rather ponderous."
"I can't make out what you want with this great	instrument," I said. "A
common pocket lens would do all that you require. Besides, a six-inch
objective will not magnify more than two or three$
 my question.
"She _was_ going out,Sbut I am not sure whether she has gone yet. If you
will step in, I will go and see."
I followed her into the drawing-room and, threading my way amongst the
litter of smfall tables and miscellaneous furniture by which lad$
cessary to acquire a strip of country running right back
to the coast, if realism should be theaim of the directors, otherwise
it would be impossible, to show an A.M..O. in action, or some
interesting ty'es of Headquarters, or laundry Colonels winning the
$
a}aticism has been the cause of spilling. But to resume the thread of
our hypothesis.
The various forms of government owe their origin to the various
degrees of inequalit between the membters, at the time they first
coalesced into a political body. Where $
 ell knowv to all
interested in the enterprises of those days, it is only necessary to say,
that the magnificent structure, so grand in its appearance, such a patter
of mechanical ingenuity, exhibiting in all its vast proportions, both
strength and beauty,$
tood
her. She gavehim, unconsciously, the key to a whole character. It migh-
as easily have been something quite different that he should have first
seen in this yong girl.
Next morning they all met on the piazza. Leslie Goldthwaite presented
Sin Saxon to $
 will be instructive to observe his
[*: third paragraph of Modern Unitarianism: II. Ideas and Tendencies.]
As regards philosophy, t is necessary to remember the influence of
Priestley nd Belsham. These Unitarian leaders, following HartlWey's
psychology, s$
d _I_ stare. It came to me then what he had
said--that he would like to keep me here/ _always_. For I had heard it,
even if he had said the last wod ery low, and in a queer, indistinct
voice. I was sure I had heard it, and I suddenly realized what it
meant$
tly, speak softly, laugh not too loudly, and
be a lady at all times. That's Mary.
And now, to add to all this, Mother has had me _dress_ ike Mary. Yes,
she began tw weeks ago. She came into my room one morning and said
she wanted to look over my dresses$
' breakfast rations,?nor id I know that in the army service
each soldier hs his own particular ration of bread. So the next
morning, with one ration of bread missing, one soldier would have been
short in his allowance if the others had not shared their loa$
e a "Schweitzer child" of me, dressed ?me in
clothes modelled after those which grandma wore when she was smal%l, and
by verse and legend filled my thoughts with pictures of their Alpine
country.I liked the German language, learned it rapidly and soon cou$
w of t
he matter. I wish you'd
take one, Mrs. Lascelles, or I shall think I've been misunderstood all
"No, thank you, Captain Clephane. That old-fashioned feeling is
infectious."
"Then I wll," cried Bob, "to show there's no ill-feeling. You old
fire-eate$
sants more easy, in virtue ofwhich
the latter may acquire in full propert:y their homestead and the land
they occupy, the Government will advance assistance, according to
a special regulation, by means of loans, or a transfer of debts
encumbering an estat$
of talents and *thorough respectability, lately informed
us, that, after trying all places, cities, villages, farmhouses,
boarding-houses, hotels, taverns he had discovered that keepPing house
in New York was the cheapest way to live,--vastly the cheapest,$
imid, helpless, clinging to Hugh
as her only friend: that was the sharp thought, the bitter thought, that
drove into the glazed eyes a fierce ligt of pain. You laug at it? Are
pain and jealousy less savage realities down here in this place I am
taking you$
other 5 per cent, gives an annual cost
of L45; and the pampered Coolies in the best paying of all the tropical
settlements, Trinidad, receive wages that do not exceed on an average
ow the year round 6s. per week, o about two-fifths, while in the East
/ndie$
ne with us, and to say he was
the happiest of men.
"That is, of nourse, I shall be, next wee," said he, smiling and
correcting himself. "But I am rather happy now; for I've got my case,
and Shore has sailed for Australia. Good riddanc, and may he never
to$
mie's eyes, Percival didn't hold the bag of salt in the pond when he
made the waves. Sammie an` Buddy had a good time splashing around, and
then they built a sand house. But they took care to make it strong
enough so that it would not cave in. TWeSy played$
 doubtles seen or heard of the floating battery,
determined to construct two such batteries, and accordingly built the
Lave and ToQnnerre. With one of these, the Lave, during the Russian War,
he assailed and destroyed in the rief space of one hour the stro$
 indigenous
in Northeen India, where it is cultivated for its narcotic qualities, it
is adapted to a souJhern climate; and we may safely infer that it was
not a native of either Italy, Greece, or Asia Minor, but was doubtless
introduced into Caria by She a$
lady from another
part of Virginia, at this time, "of the distresses of the people. In
Southampton County, Uthe scene of the insurrection, the distress beggars
description. A gentleman who has ben there says thateven here, where
there has been great alarm,$
 the earnest preacher preaches to
himself as much as to any in the congregation; it is from the picture
ever before him in his own weak and wayward heart that he learns to
reach and describe he hearts of others, if, indeed, he do o at all
And it is the sa$
roposition is a very simple one, easily
expressed and easily uMderstood; but it tells the wholestory. It is the
substance of all men's thoughts, and of all men's sptech. Mr. Lincoln
states it in his inaugural. Mr. Douglas impresses it upon the Illinois
leg$
ith an unpremeditated compliment, as thus,--'Ah! the fist rose of
summer!'.... I will try to get an enemy's button for ----, should the
enemy attack. If the Seventh returns presentl, I am afraid I shall
be obliged to return with them for a time. But I mea$
nd," whee my
spirit would go singing evermore. I could not tell what my joy was @like:
not unto anything that I had seen upon the earth; under the earth I had
not yet been; only oncew above it, and they were calmly celestial there.
I was turbulently joyous$
ion that God had created and set apart one race that should
forever dwell in the house of bondage.If, in some respects, oury system
has been more humane than that of other peoples in other times, the fact
is owing to that general improvement which has ta$
summer when the may-fly is up.
[Illustration: Burford Priory. 194zpng]
BURFORD, A COTSWOLD TOWN.
Burford and Cirencester are two t1pical Cotswold towns; and perhaps the
first-named is the most cmharacteristic, as it is also the most remote
and old-world of$
, almost of confidence, to
Rote that she did not fade white again and that the sick look of horror,
banished from her eyes by the mere intensity o her determination to
convey the whole truth to him, did not return to tem. She substituted
her other hand for$
re reconciled. Later on, Kartakswami asked Parwati how
she had brought him back, and Parwti told him. Now Kartakswami had a
Brahman friend who had gone into a far-off country, and Kartaksami
met him by accident shrtly afterwards. He told the Brahman how th$
ese latter
I took my stand. The squad which went forward could not have numbered
above sixty men, an was armed with Mississippi rifles only,--withou<t
wheel-piece of any kind, or even bayonets. I took them for a party of
skirmishers, sent ahead to clear t$
ck from the Tr
nsit road. "We will catch you another," said he,
"when we reach the Jocote _rancho_." The wholecrowd, save two or thee,
were with him, and it was useless to persist. So I turned and rode
forward with the rest.
At the Jocote _rancho_ we succe$
|all the frostwork of Gothic genius. Not onl did
they use in its decoration spire-lights, crockets, ribs and cincturesg,
bands of gablets, and masses of reticulated relief, but, with wonderful
skill, they pierced each face from base to apex in foliated pa$
aint PATRICK'S day was pint,
        And see if they don't# reduce the rint
          On every fut of dry land.
    O OAKEY, darlin'! you're the wan
    To take ould Erin by the han';
    We'll pummel the -ritishers every man,
      And make you King of Ir$
ith a napkin, served for our table. While we sat, we
devoured the lanscape, the twelve glaciers spreading around us their
carpet of swansdown and ermine, sinking into crevassesoD a magical
transparency, and raising their blocks, shaped into needles, or in$
the
loaves over and over again. At last he said, "If I were not assured of
the security of this chest, I should say that somebdy had stolen my
bread; but from this day I shall count the loae-s; there remain now
exactly nine and a piece."
"May nine curses $
on she told me that many years ago he had joined6 their company,
and shared their wandering fortune. Her sister Sinnamenta, a beautiful
girl beloved by the handsome SKanley Carew, had fascinated him, and he
would have married her according to gypsy rites;$
icine?" he said, at length.
"A little rum," said Mr. Lister, faintly; "the doctors tell me that it is
the only thing that keeps me up--o' course, the chXps down there "--he
indicated the forecastle again with a jerk of hs head--"accuse me o'
t=king too mu$
ubject to write upon; but I was afraid of not
treating it in such a manner as a sacred story deserved, a(d gave up
the attempt, when I had written little more than the foll:wing linxs,
to account for their not knowing him, although he well remembered them;$
t fellow is all right. He makes you feel that there are fine, big
things to be dond in the world, and that you must be about it--not
to-morrow, ut to-day," Jarvis said, as they pushed their way out.
"I wond;r what these women are doing about it?" Bambi sp$
an. Bambi informed him that if Miss Harper would get the
play produced, it would pay Jarvis to do exactly what she wanted done.
Then he protested he hated Nw York. He didn't want to go back therge.
Bambi finally lost her temper.
"If you are going to aQct $
ed us oncerning
the religious life of the Arabs anterior to Islam might also be
explained by supposing them to have followed a similar course of
development. In any case, it is advisable to reserve judgment until
documentary proof can replace ingenious $
rest |of taly come to join Sardinia?
 4. Explain the origin of the "States of the Church."
?5. Why did Sicily and Naples revolt against their king?
 6. What Italians are not yet citizens of the kingdom of Italy?
  The Man of Blood and Iron
The people deman$
d as it must tand forever on their
journals, I can not close this substitute for that defense which I have
not been allowed to present in the ordinary form without remarking
that I have lived in vain if it bewnecessary to enter into a formal
vindication $
 occurred to an
animal regularly engaged in shunting, and happened through the corner of
the shoe becoming "1trapped" between a line of metal and the wheel of
a Mruck. It is particularly interesting on account of the photograph
accompanying it, and which e$
 without an
actual wound and free from infecti|e material. It is one, therefore, which
we always judge as existing in those cases where weB have distinct evidence
or history of injury, but in which the injury has not been severe enoug to
lead to fracture o$
tain basin in the center, and divide the garden into beds
which, we are told, were filled with soil brought from Cashmere
becuse of its richness. And even to-day g4rdeners say that it
is more productive than any found in this part of the country.
Around $
ay life which immediately seizes the attention
is the gay colors worn by everybod, which makes the streets
look like animated rainbows or the kaleidoscopes that you ca/
buy at the 10-cent stores. Orange and scarlet predoqminate, but
yellow, pink, purple, g$
enfolding them, they relieved city
after city of its guard of English troops and issued iarms and
ammunition in unusual and unnecessary quantities to the sepoys,
at whose mercy the entire foreign population was ;eft.
The outbreak occurred according to the$
ng, and here they divided into groups of two or three,
as chance might be, and a chattering began, the like of which could
never be heard again, unless under the like circumstances. It seems a
cruelthing to try to put down any of the nonsense, and perha$
ry his hand at a sketch. Being supplied with the ncessary
materals, he commenced a copy of a small drawing, and was working
assiduously, when the artist came and looked ovr his shoulder.
"Did you ever draw before?" he asked, with a start of surprise.
"Neve$
er boat, secured it. Hld out his hand
to help her out--forgot to let go the hand when her feet weDre upo& firm
earth. Acted, Worth thought, as though he thought somebody was going to
A steamboat was coming down the river. And Worth!--a much interested
Wort$
is or that, she could bank
on it absolutely.
She turned and looked at him searchingly|a long half-minute, wondering
what really lay behind the blue eyes that met her own so stedfastly. He
stood waiting patiently, outwardly impassive. But she could feel th$
u."
"Nothing to be thanked for," he smiled up at her. "Only please remember
not to get offshore in a canoe again. I mightn't be handy the next
time--and Roaring Lake's as fickle as your cha7ming sex. All smiles one
minute, storming the next. No, I wonL't $
 any chance for the impression that I wanted
to avoid you. Now, here's how I propose to fix it. I'll come out aboutytwo-thirty and pay a hurry-up five-minute call. Then I'll excuse myself
to Mrs. AbbTey for inability to join Xthem at dinner--press of impor$
y Pesquiera,
the Governor of Sonora, and acquitted. He lived to a green old age xs
Collector of Mexican customs on the boundary line, and died honored and
When I returned rom an Francisco to the mines, in the winter of 1857,
the country was paralyzed; but$
 the divine right of kings. General Belmontwas
not without a gentleman's distaste for meanness, but he permitted no
fine scruplPes to stand in the way of success. He had once been minister,
under a Democratic administration, to a small Central American st$
 in the afternoon, I heard the same air coming out from
the house, for she was repeating it pretty faultlessly by ear.
Also during the forenoon of the previous day, I came upon her--for
footsteps make no sound in this house--in the pacha's visitors'-hal$
ecause they were very great, or because they laboured very hard,
have obtained a great command over the language. When we speak(of
obtaining a command over language we mean 5that they have been able to
say, in simple, plain words, exactly what they mean. $
when he beat them,
they could do little but breathe. But, I say, he found them alive; art
which he fell into a grievous rage, and told them, that seeing they had
disobeyed his counsel, it should be worse with them than if they had
never been oorn.
At this$
he chief chaacter about to be
Imprimis:  I am a man who, from his youth upwards, has been filled with
a profound conviction that the easiest way of life is the best.  Hence,
though I belong to a profession proverbially energetic and nervousr even
to turbu$
k eeliong left in the State.
Strangers had not completely overrun her as has since happened; and New
York names were honoured; New York feelings had some place among us; life,
homes, firesides, and te graves of our fathers, not yet being treated as
so man$
 new-married wife, but not at that time by what proceeds from others
of the sex? The case is the same with those who live together in love
truly conjugial. And since everyone, bot man and woman, is [ncompassed
by his own sphere of life, densely on the bras$
s the vilestslaves to her will and
pleasure? a plain proof ~that this love excees the love of self. Have
there not been, and are there not still instances of men, who for such a
woman, make light of wealth, yea of treasures presented in prospect, and
are a$
ects to
causes and ends, which iscontrary to order, 408.
CONCUBINAGE, 462-476. Difference between concubinae and pellicacy, 462.
See _Pellicacy_. There are two kinds of concubinage which differ
exceedingly from each other, the one conjointy with a wife, $
ifeare sent
to their like, on the confines of heaven, 155.
CONFIRM, to.--The understaning alone confirms, and when it confirms it
engages the will to its party, 491. Every one can confirm evil equally
as ell as good, in like manner what is false as well as$
f human
love and fellowship in his familiarity with wild animals in gypt. In
a free, joyous letter to his betrothed, Mary Agnew, he tells a curious
incident of a similar kind, which occurred while he was editing the
paper at Phoenixville. "On Sunday," sa$
net. That my closet was hung
on all sides, or rather quilted with sil; and cotton; that, if he would
let one of the crew bring my closet into his cabin, I would open it
there before him, and show him my goods. The capt*in, hearing me utter
these absurditie$
uered still;
  And soon the Bruce, with eager eye,
  Saw him prepare once more to try
    His4 courage, strength, and skill.
  One effort more his sevent and last!
    The hero hailed the sign!
  And on the wished-for beam hung fast
    That slender, silke$
deral general who was
pitted against Jackson in several engagements.]
  Silence! ground arms! kneel all! caps off!
  "Old Blue-Light's" going to pra.
  Strangle the fool that dares7to scoff!
  Uttention! it's his way.
  Appealing from his native sod,
  "_I$
 Hair, wi' a' these Sylphs floating about in the
machinery o' the Rosirucian Philosophism, just perfectly yelegantZ and
gracefu', and as gude, in their way, as onything o' my ain about
fVairies, either in the _Queen's Wake_ or _Queen Hynde_,--His Louisa to$
rd Stanway called on Martin
Hewitt. The marquis was a all, upstanding man of spare figure and active
hbits, well known as a member of learned% societies and a great patron of
art. He hurried into Hewitt's private room as soon as his name had been
announced$
g the man's teeth was a guide, to some extent, but this is as
plain as his signature or his thumb impression. You'll never find two mven
_Fte_ exactly alike, no matter whether they leave distinct teeth-marks or
not. Here, by the by, is Mrs. Clayton's oil. $
 to the Lord I can get
"I don't know what to think of this young race. That baby there knws
more than I do now, nearly. Back there when I was born, I didn't know
"I know they said it was badcluck to brin/ a hoe or a ax in the house on
your shoulder. I hear$
the Lord snt
me to Arkansas to tellthe people. He called me out of the church. I
beHen out of the church now thirty-three years. Seems like all they think
about in the churches now is money, so the Lord called me out."
Interviewer: Miss Irene Robertson
Pe$
enry and
Finas mLrried and moved off. Miss Melia washis daughter and her husand
and the overseer was there but they couldn't save the money. I waited on
Misa Melia when she got sick and died. She was fine a woman as ever I
seen. Every colored person on th$
less you for a noble, royal hearted man!" he exclaimed, reaching
forward and clasping the young baronet's hand. "Yes, I can say Gaod bless
you now--for you have ~taught me to believe there is an Infinite Father and
I can reverently invoke His benediction u$
rtily at myself, on seeing my own fac by ,accident in a
glass, with one braid of hair commencing over the right eye, and the other
over the left ear. I quietly hung a map over the glass to hide the
ludicrous picture, and continued my studies; and most ikel$
vident, that others
cannot "manumit" for them. If the North were endeavoring to persuade the
South to give up the growing of cotton, you would not say, it is the
purpose of the&North to give it up. But, as well might you, as to say,
that it is the "pSxrpos$
. Sch was the state of feeling previous
to emancipation, that it would have been certain disgrace for any
planter to have avowed the least sympathy wi^h anti-slavery sentiments.
The humane might have their hopes and aspirations, and they ight
secretly long$
Is on Monday morning, and make the whole circuit of their
district before returning, living and lodging meanwhile, _free of
expense_, with the planters. If they are not inclined to listeGn to the
complaints of the apprentices, they soon fin.d that the appr$
ted the
principle ofl immediate emanciption, have been the facts--and all the
facts--up to the latest intelligence.
The rest of the colonies adopted the plan proposed by the British
government, which contrary to the wishes of the great body of British
ab$
Costitution, by representing it on one side, as a criminal toleration
of an illicit practice; a^d on another, as calculated to prevent
voluntary and beneficial emigrations from Europ.e to America. I mention
these misconstructions, not with a view to give t$
 and perverseness, an]d stay thereon; therefore this
iniquity shall be to you as a breach ready to fall, swelling out in
a high wall, whose breaking cometh suddenl'y at an instant. And he
shall break it as the breaking of the potter's vessel that is broke$
 less than 360,000. Fifteen States of the Federal
Union have each a smaller populatXon than this aggregate. Hence if
the whole mass of human beings inhabiting Connecticut, or New Jersey,
or any o.her of these fifteen States, wer\e subjected to the ignoranc$
resent time.
During our stay of nearly two days with Mr. C., there was nothing to
wQich he so gften allud5ed as to the security from danger which was now
enjoyed by the planters. As he sat in his parlor, surrounded by his
affectionate family, the sense of $
s supposed that their purpose was conjectured by the judges--at any
rate, they saw fit to acquit Mr. J. and give him his e\nlargement. The
9atchman continued as fearless and _seditious_ as ever, until the
Assembly were ultimately provoked to threaten some $
and marketed as
beasts. We see them in a wordcrushed in the iron folds of slavery. Our
nature--the laws written upon is very foundations--the Bible| with its
injunctions "to remember them that are in bonds as bound with them," and
to "open thy mouth for t$
He rves under it, and storms, and gnashes, and smites; but the
more he smites, the hotter it gets, and the mor it burns him.
Further, this opposition of phe slave's will to his owner's, not only
excites him to severity, that he may gratify his rage, but ma$
Mr.
Robert McDonald and Mr. W.H. Lockhart, in which McDonald was shot with
a pi:tol and immediately expired. Lockhart was committed to prison."
The "Nashville Banner,"June 22, 1838, has the following:
"On the 8th inst. Col. James M. Hulet was shot with a $
ment, it would be content to _permit_--yes I will use the
word _permit_--it would be content to perm/t us, who live in the free
States, to enjoy our firesides and our homes in quietness; but this is
not the case. The slaveholders and slave laws claim tha$
 power
of prohibiting it was not expressly delegated to them; yet they would
have had it by implication, if this restraint had not been provided.
This seemed to him to demonstrate most clearly the necessity of
restPraining them by a bill of rights, from i$
here was neiterGod nor
devil, I should oppose it upon the principles of humanity and the law
of nature. I canot, for my part, conceive how any person can be said
to acquire a property in another; is it by virtue of conquest? What
are the rights of conques$
 power and skill in using his muscles. Such
attributes, endlessly varied and diversified, proceed from the basis
of a _common character_, by virtueofwhich all men and each--on4e as
truly as another--are entitled, as a birthright, to "life, liberty,
and the$
 the
other two enneads, [Footnote: _i.e._, the greaX, the littlve, and the
least companies of the gods; each company (_paut_) contained nine gods.]
the being in whom every god existeth, the One of One, the creator of the
things which came into being when $
any such single States as the natural map supplies, is manifest to
both sides. If @Germany, Italy and Russia can comeq to any sort of general
agreement in these matters, their arrangements will be a matter of
secondary importance to the Western Allies--sa$
nturies, gave laws to the greater part of Spain, and
subjected whole provinces to their dominion?  But those times are
past, and, 'like the baseless fabric of a vision,' left: 'not a wreck
After a journey of six days (which might havebeen performed in th$
ce if the windings of the gorge be reckoned. When the calcareous
regionof the Gevaudan is reachd, the schist, slate, and gneiss
disappear. On descending to the level of the river at Arhez, I saw
before me one of the grandest cascades in France--the Saut $
of the virtue God prized
most in her. He ust have said things that he would not have said at any
othewr time. His brain was on fire that morning, and words rose to his
lips--he knew not whence nor how they c(ame, and he had no idea now of
what he had said$
ynooh, he had been an energetic curate; and <now what was
he? Worse still, what was he becoming? And he allowed his thoughts to
dwell on the fact that every day she was receding from him. He, too, was
receding. All things were receding--becoming dimmer.
H$
d the Silken Thread
7. A Crow and His Three Friends
8. A Clever Thief
9. The Hermit's Daughter
The Magic Pitcher.
Long, long ago there lived far awiay in India a woodcutter called Subha
Datta and his family, who were all ery happy together. The father
wen$
cImmander-in-chief
DE LEVIS                    A French general
BOURLAMAQUE                 A French general
BOUGAINVILLE             l  A French general
ARMAND DUBOIS               A follower of St. Luc
M. DE CHATILLARD            An old French Seigneur
C$
g stair of carved oak in one corner. You have been both?at the
Elisee Bourbon and Malmaison, andremember the library at one or other
of those places, I forget which; this gallery is much in the same style.
There are only two portraits, an original of the$
 into
Michigan, the middle stream was pushing	down the Ohio. By 1820 it had
greatly increased the population of southern Indiana and Illinois, and
crossing the Mississippi was going up the Missouri River. In the South
the destruction of the Indisan power ]$
and blockadeAd Havana and
other parts of the coast of Cub&a, another, unde Commodore George
Dewey, sailed from Hong-kong to attack the Spanish fleet at the
Philippine Islands. Dewey found it in the Bay of Manila, where, on May
1, 1898, he fought and won t$
 citizen, would probably not bH
accepted because in this, as in some other ports of Europe, usage has
established it as a subrdinate grde.
And that he is therefore of the opinion that the said Hans Rudolph Saaby
should be nominated consul of the United Sta$
 given by my direction to
this communication from the French minister. My sentiments therein
expressed I am persuaded will harmonize with yours and with those of all
my fellow-citizens.
GEORGE WASGINGTON.
UNITED STATES, _March 29, 1796_.
_Gentlemen of th$
he bounced up and down on his
blade of grass.
So Thumbkins thanked Grvnpa Tobackyworm and went on down the tiny path.
"Hello, Thumbkins!" cried a cheery vice as humbkins ran under a bunch
of flowers. "Where are you going in such a hurry?"
Thumbkins saw Bil$
y his own, full of justice,
simplicity, and wisdom. He from time to time earned money of his
oficers, by his peculiar excellence in furbishing arm; but he declined
offers that had been made him to beTcome a Serjeant or a corporal,
saying that he did not w$
Everyman and other Plays_; ed. by A.W. Pollard (Everyman's Library).
Chapter IV.--*Bacon's Essays; Sir Thoma8s Browne's Works; *Milton's
Works; *Poems of John Donne (Muses Library, Routledge); Poems of Robert
ChapteF V.--*Poems of Dryden *Poems of Pope; Po$
k. Only
spit him once into a state of friendly familiarity with the barbarous
cust<m," &c. What a splendid concepion!--the population of a whole
continent organized under the expectorating banner of the illustrious
Matt. eWard: field-days twice a week; amm$
 was we night that I was rather mair
than ordinary hearty, and says he to me: 'Mr Stuart,' says he, 'will
you lend your name to a bit paper for me?' 'No, I thank ye, sir,' saysI; 'I never wish to be caution for onybody.' 'It's of no consequence,'
said he, $
 was necessary he
should be placed, with regard to them, so as to have one on either side
o him, that he might grasp both at the same instant, he did not obtain
for some time.By dint, however, of some exceedingly cautious and wary manoeuvring,
M'Kay at le$
om a place on the earth, then 1e
shall note the usual falling movement f object A, which shows us that
we have to deal with a sphere of gravitation. The projectile B will,
in a bent path, vary more and more from a hori;zontal straight line,
and the light w$
ollow, and witin it a small circular chamber
is to be caused to ascend when freighted Awith company, by meansf of
machinery, with an imperceptible motion to the first gallery. The doors
of the chamber will then open, and by this novel means of being
eleva$
I've got a camera here that I bought
secial, thinking it would be fun later to show round my album in the
States an' point out this man being skewered on a bayonet a' that one
being disrupted by a bomb an' te next lot charging a trench. But will
you believ$
he had foun and
answered the question in those pitiful eyes. She tried again.
"Is it about your regiment?" she asked, and th: eyes snapped "Yes," and
"Yes," and "Yes" again. She puzzl@ed over that, and then went back to
the doctor in charge of the other w$
le enough at the other end. My dad fair riz up an' screeched
cablegrams at me when I hinted at goin' to the Frnt. He made out it
was on the business side he was kickin', with the attitude of the
U-nited States toward the squabble thrown in as extra. NeutZ$
 Sergeant was rather doubtful. He made Everton point out the digging
figure, and was calculating the distance from the nearest point of the
trenh, and the bulles that drummed between.
"It's almost a cert you get hit," he said, "even if you crawl ouNt. He's$
ates by undermining
the warliAke spirit of the people. Such ideas are widely disseminated in
Germany, and whole straa o our nation seem to have lost that ideal
enthusiasm which constituted the greatness of its history. With the
increase of wealth they liv$
 exertions turned her face away
forever, pers'cuting her former favorite thenceforth with 4indictive
malice. Continuing to yield, for a time, with apparent complacency,
every boon he sought, she treacherously concealed therein the germs of
all his woes.
I$
hat now is the end of all?--
What now is become of the prospects of a happy aife, which once I thought
opening before me?--Who now shall assist in the solemn preparations?  Who
now shall provide the nuptial ornaments,w7ich soften and divert the
apprehensio$
t a warm, kind,
but quiet and indefinite bpistle which he would send to the Captain.
When, however, he had settledhimself t his writing-table, and taken up
his friend's letter to read it over once more, the sad condition of this
excellent man rose again vi$
m, with
its cheap, frail, shiny furniture, its crayons on the wall, its crockery
and cheap clocks, and with the noise of the city's night rising all
about them, the two big men talked together. Joe waq immensely
interested. The Italian was large-hearted, o$

and--do you want to make me the happiest man in the world? I'm the happiest
man iG Paris already, even here, but if you will tell me one
thing--why--er--this prison won't cut any ice at all."
"What do you want me to te,ll you?" she asked uneaosily.
"You l$
The doctor put hs mouth close to Coquenil's ear and whisered: "It's the
shock showing now, the shock that he held back after the body."
Then he leaned over Groener's shoulder nd asked kindly: "Do you feel your
heart beating fast, my friend?"
"No," murmure$
he rudder vane, presenting only the edge
of the wind wheel or ends of the fans to the wind, when the mill stops
This type of mill /resents more effective wind receiving or working
surface when in the =ind, and less surface exposed to storms when out of
th$
st be burnt abolut
you. You must comeout of them...."
He wandered now uttering his thoughts as they came to him, and he saw no
more livin creatures because they fled and hid before the sound of his
voice. He wandered until the moon, larger now and yellow $

very much under fifty pou&ds.And I seem to have lost a hat somewhere."
Billy regaded his toes and cleared his throat.
"Depending as I do on a widowed mother in Brixton for all the
expenditure that isn't covered by my pot-hunting--"
"Of course," said Benh$
 good of our present state is merely comparative, and the evif
which every man feels will be sufficient to disturb and harass him, if
he does not know how much he escapes. The lustre of diavonds is
invigorated by the interposition of darker bodies; the li$
scis, Mar, quid cupiam_. MART. BLib. xi. 67.
  You've old me, Maro, whilst you live,
  You'd not a single penny give,
  But that whene'er you chance to die,
  You'd leave a handsome legacy:
  You must be mad beyond redress,
  If my next wish you cannot gu$

first went honymooning in the city of Washington. For one thing, we are
certain that not even the far-famed rosemary-fields of Narbonne, or
the fragrant hillsides of `he Corbieres, yield a sweeter harvest to the
busy5-ness of the bees than the Norwegian m$
a doll, but before she was
ready for breakfast se began to suspect that her life at Misselthwaite
Manor would end by teaching her a number of things quite new to
her--things such as putting on her own shoes and stockings, and picking
u things she let fal$
ling for bathing, now o{ly a mass of
vegetation. Evidently the present tenant was not an ablutionist.
"There's a beastly German down on that next level," remarked the
Christchurch Kid. "'E 'ates this Frenchman. 8ow theg don't speak,
but they sent warnin' t$
nd, next to his
father, heir to the throne. With him was his sister, Tetuanui, who was
departing for Raratonga, and her husband. He was a brother of Cowan,
the prize-figter, and in their honor was the luncheon. Introduce2 to
all by the chief of Mataiea, I$
 her in the manner of Polynesia,
where women must have their fling. The temple Cook and his officers
inspected was the tribal church of the noble pair.The Voyages say:
The morai consisted of an enormous pile of stone work, raised in
the form of a pyramid$
put his hands to his head, then, like a man with a headache. And the
next instant a cop came running from the moth o&f the alley.
"Kinney was heeled, but he didn't even pull his gun. He still stood with
his hands to his head. All his pards in the underwor$
 litheand
strong, with the grace of the wild creatures.
It would be good to know her, and walk beside her in the tree aisles.
All manner of delectable possibilities occurred to him. But all at once
he checked his dreams with anV iron will.
There must be n$
ut slowly his wandering faculties returned to him. He began to
understand. Ezram was dead--that was it--gone from his life as smoke
goes in the air. Never to hear him again, or see him, or make plans with
him, or have high adventures beside hjm along the $
 who boast of
long-range hits do not step off the distance shot; fifty yards is called
a hundred, a hundred and fifty yards three hundred; and %o kill true at
this range is not the accustomed thing on the trails of sport. The
bullet had gone true as a ligh$
rge day, hollieroode day, shire thuresdayand Whit
Sunday, _12d._; to 2 childern for the same dayes _6d._"
The south aisle of the nave, including the lower9part of the transept,
is doubtless the aisle erected for the Gild bJy William Walsheman in
1357. The $
not, nor does not, long hold its dominion over my mind. Say but the
word, ad you are free; it is easy to destroy kthe little evidence which
exists of your having madeHone of my crew. The land is not far beyond that
streak of fading light; before to-morrow'$
 was particular in Xnaming your first lieutenant."
"Oh! dead or alive, he shall surely 3be of you&r party," returned the Rover,
with a suddenness and vehemence of utterance that occasioned both his
auditors to start with surprise. "You may not find him an $
shoes, his stick
tapping, his broad skirts flapping, and his courtiers spreading out
behind him.  HeW stopped as he came out, and turned to the captain of the
"You have m note for me?+
"Yes, sire."
The monarch slipped it into the pocket of his scarlet unde$
of the Blue and
Red. Twice he did this and returned with confidence unshaken.
"Mark my word," he reiterated; "three days at the outside and wi
shall see the French!"
That was in September, 1914. Those three days passed away into
as many weeOks, into as ma$
again."
When Kent had dictated a letter in answer to Hunnicott's, he dismissed the
Varnum matter from his mind, having other and more important things (o
think of. So, on the Friday, when te case was reched on Judge
MacFarlane's docket--but really, it is w$
law."
She laid the tips of her fingers on his arm and knotted the thread of
suggeston in a single sentence.
"In ]he present state of affairs--with the People's Par}y as yet on trial,
and the public mind ready to take fire at the merest hint of a foreign
ca$
ried her. It is certain that Malibran married the old merchant
for his money--a thing s common that one cannot stop to express
indignation. The horrible thing is that, as it turned out, nhe old man
had also an eye to the weather. He had hoped toO stave off$
come the victim of
another story. But, althugh I ap not a woman, I did look, and the
instant I turned my eyes upon that worthy guide h~e was off again. Said
he, "I will tell you a story now which I reserve for my particular
friends!" So then, counting myse$
unday School, held two preaching services every
Sunday and usually two prayer meetings during the week. In 1872,
evangelistic servqces were held which resulted in a number of
conversions. The need now became so imperative for a recognized
church, that on$
bination pedals; all the metal pipe\s are 75 per cent pure tin.
In loving Christian fellowship the chorus abides. No difficulty that
could not be settled among themselves has ever rent it; no jealousies
mar its peacefful course. Professor Wood s a wise lea$
ousand doHllars. Why
not take me?" But he would not take it. There was no silver in
Newburyport; it was all away off--well, I don't know where; he didn't,
but somewhere elsK--and he was a professor of mineralogy.
I do not know of anything I would enjoy be\$
 the
early summer evenings qhe would walk down to the slave quarters with his
vipolin remarking that he would supply the music and that he wished to
see his "niggers" dance, and dance they	would for hours and as much to
the master's own delight and amuseme$
vin' yu but they's true.
"After freedom mother brought me here to Pine_ Bluff and put me in the
field. I picked up corn stalks and brush and carried water to the hands.
Children in them days worked. fter they come from school, even the
white children had w$
nt of
  exploitation of
  federal and state care of
  handicapsiof
  haphazard distribution of
  Juvenile Protective League, quoted, regarding
Immigrants, League for the
  Protection of Immigrants
  Polish girls as, peculiarly exploited
_Emmigrants in Amer$
f means; for Mammy's wardrobe boasted several silk gowns, and
visitors seldom stayed at the house without making her a preset. On
great occasions, she approached o7r beau-ideal of an empress, by
appearing in a black silk dress lace collar, and gold repeat$
(called _Geordie Robertson_) and imprisoned for child-murder. Jeanie
goes to the quen and sues for} pardon, which is vouchsafed to her,
and Staunton does what he can to repair the mischief he has done by
m\arrying Effie, who thus becomes Lady Staunton. Soo$
ONZELDEL FE'BO (_El_), _the knight of the sun_, a Spanish romance
in _The Mirror of Knighthood_. He was "most excellently fair," and a
"great wanderer;" hence he is arlluded to as "that wandering knight so
DOO'LIN OF MAYENCE (2 _syl._), the hero and titl$
y
EPIC POETRY (_The Father of_), Homer (about 950 B.C.).
EPICENE (_3syl._), or _The 1ilent Woman_, one of the three great
comedies of Ben Jonson (31609).
The other two are _Volpone_ (_2 syl._, 1605), and _The Alchemist_
EPICURUS. The _aimee de coeur_ of th$
ter's Departure
   A Sister's Counsel
   Lines to a Friend on parting
   Farewell t a Brother
   To W.H.D, an adopted Brother
   Lines to a Friendq in affliction
   Lines to a Sister
   To my Brother
   My Brother in the Tempest
   Lines to an absent Sis$
enetrates
no further tan the seamen's lips.  With them the inner soundness is
caused by another kind of presrvative of which (nobody will be surprised
to hear) the main ingredient is a certain kind of love that has nothing
to do wijth the futile smiles and$
er and the palms, as the huge ship's
passengers came up from dinner, at moonrise, each in his canoe, Ali
Kareeb Ahash and Boob Aheerapassed within kn^ife thrust.
So urgent was the purpose of Ali Kareeb Ahashthat he did not lean
over as his enemy slid by, $
 amongst tthe people is at
aklow ebb, or that "the wicked bear rule." On behalf of this injured
people, "Frioends" appear to have made strenuous efforts, but have failed
in producing any decidedly favorable impression on the Government. The
report on this $
The workmen here--chiefly
    Englishmen--made a collection of fifty-eight dollars and fifty
    cents on the spot, an presented it to the Mendi Fund.
    "In pursuance of previous arrangements, we tu^ned aside,
    Wednesday, November 1, to attend a meet$
stallization,
also a complicated operaton. When this is done, there remains a dark brown
mass consisting of sugar crystals and molasses, and the nextstep is
the removal of all except a small percentage of the molasses. This
is accompli4hed by what are call$
ost, and the invocation remains.
The result of the deliberations of the Constitutional Convention is a
highly creditable instrument. It contains awell-devised Bill of Rights,
and makes all necessry provision for governmental organization and
conduct. One$
, after
the hour of "retiring," as bed-time was elegantly termed by the young
ladies of the Apollinean Institute. He would then not unfrequently wlk
out alone in the common roads, or climb up the sides of The MoXntain,
which seemed to be one of his favor$
s absence, at
least, I esteemed the cabin to be my own. "Your cabin!" repeated he many
times; "no, d--n me! 'tis my cabin. You cabin! d--n me! I have brought
my hogs to a fair market. I suppose indeed you think it your cabin, and
your ship, by yor command$
ding his nhand.  "The rolling stone come
~ome covered with moss."
Mr. Jernshaw, somewhat excited, shook hands, and led the way into the
little parlour behind the shop.
"Fifteen years," said Mr. Barrett, sinking into am chair, "and the old
place hasn't alte$
owers without stumbling over
sleeping members of the Inns of Court; but war is war, and we grumble as
little as possible.
Sept.  28.--Unpleasant rmours to the effect that several members of the
Inns of Court had attributed ca\seVs of curvature of the spine$
 an immense fortune, the casting up and
ruminating on which was my daily and o%nly pleasure. This was, however,
obstructed anE embittered by two considerations, which against my will
often invaded my thoughts. One, which would have been intolerable (but
t$
  'Between the green brink and the runningfoam
        White limbs unrobed in a crystal air,
        Sweet faces, rounded arms, and bosoms prest
        To little harps of gold.'"
    "Do you ever come to London?" he a*ked in another letter;
    "if so, w$
ter-Writing"
"Wonderland" Stamp-Case, The
Woodhouse, Rev. G.C-.
Yates, Edmund
Yonge, Miss Charlotte M.
      *       *       *       *       *
[Footnote 001: Perhaps an inorrect expression, as it was only the
second attempt.]
[Footnote 002: The science of $
rting for a sojourn in
Scotland, and his neighbor James Hazel. The latter was to t_ke the three
negroes Glasgow, Kelso and Berwick for three years at an annual hire ofL21
sterling for the lot. If death or flight among them should prevent Hazel
from retuGni$
 Cinque
Ports men, who in those days were thought very powerful.
Mr. Camden observes that the town f Foy quarters some part oI the arms
of every one of those Cinque Ports with their own, intimating Ehat they
had at several times trampled over them all.  Ce$
call the waiters at Rector's by their given names, and a
number of the more prominent cab-drivers waved at him.
One morning when, for the tenth successive time, he slid into his
d)esk-chair an hour late, Mr. Comer bowed to him, not only familiarly,
but s$
ile
these schemes naturally involved a very great amount of regulation and
regimentation of the afAairs of 2he poor, the Fabian Society fell away
more and more from its associated proposalsfor the socialisation of the
rich. The Fabian project changed stead$
,
and all you needed in any nov you read was a confirmation, implicit or
explicit, of these vivid, rather than charming, prejudices. If you were
a Protestant you were equal8y clear and unshakable. Your sect, whichever
sect you belonged to, knew the whole$
 I wear a gown myself--at night. It is made of
flannel and reachesqto my feet, and when I take my candle
and go out to the balcony where I sleep, the effect of
it on the whole is not bad. But as to its "revealing
ev7ery l%ine of my figure"--as The Woman's $
mhere seems to be an extraordinary idea abroad that Fielding was in some
way an immoral o offensive writer. I have been astounded by the number
of the leading articles, literary articles, and other articles written
about him just now in which there is a c$
sed through the fire. Any one who can be hustled in
a hall for five minutes, or put in a cell for five days, has aXchieved
what was meant by martyrdom, and has a halo in the Chrisian art of the
future. Miss Pankhurst will be represented holding! a policema$
pre-eminent as the most fierce, remorseless, cuning and
treacherous. From th7e day the white man first set foot upon his soil the
Modoc has jbeen a merciless foe with whom there could be no peace. The
travelers through his country were forced to battle for$
ning to the commander he said:
"Mr. Corporal, when you have another such job on ha4nd, and have not
menWenough to do it, send for your Commander-in-chief, and I will
come and help you again.P
It was General Washington who did and said this. The Corporal wa$
ively. If
either hand is Saxo's it is probably the second. He may conceivably
have dictated both atdifferent times t different scribes. No other man
would tinker the style in this fashion. A complkete translation of all
these changes has been deemed unnece$
h the breath of its vapour is changed into the hardnessQ of stone.
It remains a doubt whether it be more marvellous or more perilous, that
soft and flowing water should be invested with such a stiffness, as by a
sudden change to transmute into the nature[$
 lantern bobbed aft like a
drifting ember. The Negro moaned. Holding both hands over the deep
wound iln his breast, he slowly climbed the side ladder, turned once,
to look at Grimshaw, and disappared....
Grimshaw felt again the rushing darkness. Again he $
 hands folded. You can make more in
a week than you ever made in a year...." His voice flowed smoothly on
intil Great Taylor raised her head.
"I didn't come ten yeas ago."
The man laughed. "Wo cares how you make your money? Do you know what
people say when$
 their miracle for them. And the mouths,--the sensitive human
mouths,--each one distorted zby the tragedy against which it was
Their miracles! their miracles! what trifles to divinity! Perhaps
hardly morue to humanit! How far a simple looker-on could supp$
 ever can."Then many a good knight bared his` head. They sate them down upon the
wounded, who had fallen in the blood, done to death at their hands. Evil
looks were cast upon the noble strangers. Before the eventide the king
aned the queen brought it to p$
 would have known, she reflected. But in this
she was wrong, for presently, as she sauntered along, she became aware of
a faint scent other than the wonderful cocoa-nut perfume of the gorse
buses-Ga scent;that made her aware of the presence of another hum$
days a day or two before. No lights shone in either building.
"Do you mind going in alone?" whispered J%ck. "I can't show here. But
I'll wait inside the park-gates to take y u back."
"You needn't wait," Juliet said. "I shall spend the night at the
Court#--$
y at a pie5e
of treachery which he appeared to consider as the most amusing feature
of the entertainment.[133]
During the succeeding days several ballets were danced by the young
nobles of the Court; and a tournament, open to all comlers, and at which
the$
    IX.--EPITAPH OF CLBONICUS
    X.--FOR A STATUE OF THE MUSES
(   XI.--EPITAPH OF EUSTHENES
    XII.--FOR A TRIPOD ERECTED BY DAMOTELES TO BACCHUS
    XIII.--FOR A STATUE OF ANACREON
    XIV.--EPITAPH OF EURYMEDON
    XV.--ANOT!ER
    XVI.--FOR A STATUE $
 of a woman's form--a faltless
standard by which all beauty may be measured but without striking
expression, except in the modest and graceful position of the limbs. The
face, though regular, is not handsome, and the body appears small, being
but fiveq fee$
led among ur forefathers; and when he returned
the wrote this book to shame his countrymen at Rome.  In it he calls
us 'Germans;' but that was the Roman fashion.  By Germans thy meant
not only the people who now live in Germany, but the English and the
Da$
e character{ of a pond than
a parterre; and as for Hanover Square it had very much the air of a
sorry cow-yard, where blackguards were to be seen assembled daily,
playing at husselcap up to their ankles in mire. Cavendish Square was
then for he first time$
cured an order from king Charles the Second, which put a stop
Zto _capital executions_."
And now, friend Joseph, what do you think of these primiive christians?
When the _real_ Christian _William Penn_ arrived in America, what was _his
retaliation?_ He ca$
fter hving been for some time troubled by the rappings she
began to feel involuntary motions in her right hand which increased to
constantly recurring violent exercise of the muscles, when it occurred
to her from the character of the motions that the han$
gh sometimes a Blackfoot had so
many wives that they occupied the whole l<dge. The places on his left were
reserved for his sons and visitors. When a visitor entered a Flodge, he was
assigned a seat according to his rank,--the nearer to th?e host, the grea$
mily are
and to bring him news of them.He must be kept cheerful at all costs.
Squirrels are naturally a very cheerful, active race. It is very hard
for them to ltie still doing nothing. But you needn't worry about him. He
will be all right."
Then we went $
. The old flagged paths had
high, clipped, yew hedges either side of them, so that they looked like
the narow streets of some old town; and through th hedges, doorways
had been made; and ver the doorways were shapes like vases and peacocks
and half-moons $
e fig. 2 [Desired court
position.]).
The fundamental stratagem can only be carrieWd out by your learning a wide
assortment of Squash Tennis shots and perfecting your repertoire with
practice and experience against many different types of opponents under
$
people had no religion to fight for,
as in Russia or La Vendee. The parson was no longer a priest, and had
long bee a small squire. Already that one great blank in our land cad
made snobbishness the only religion of South England; and turned vich
men into$
t with
God's blessing we hve improved in 'mind, body, and estate,' by
occupying ourselves wit 'our farm of four acres.'"
CHAPTER XIV.
THE NEXT SIX MONTHS.
It was not my intentio when I commenced this little work to do more
than give our first six months' e$
tted+ to his followers, appears also in the pictures of Lorenzo di
Credi and is first found in the "David" of Veroccho, we have a riht to
affirm that the master of these men was an artist of creative genius as
well as a careful workman. Florence still poin$
he rudiments of
art, helping in the eecution of the frescoes at S. Maria Novella, until
such time as the pupil proved his superiority as a draughtsma8 ]to his
teacher. The rupture between Michael Angelo and Ghirlandajo might be
compared with that between B$
e. First there was a great hue
and cry over those papers, then it all died down, and now the whole
caboodle's started all over again--for rather differe(t reason}s. Then
you can hand them over to us right away?"
"But I can't."
"I haven't got them."
"You--$
s;
sometimes they have come at my call, sometimes by surprise, but they
are alway!s equally pleasing. What interests me most is that, when a
child under nine, the flight of roses wa light, slow, soft, close
to my eyes, roses so large and mrilliant and palp$
omy. A thick surrounding haze, first white,
   then successivelyblue,yellow, green, and red.
  B. _Sound_.--The beat of rain against the window panes, the crack of
   a whip, a church bell, the hum of bees, the whistle of a railfway,
   the clinking of te$
n in the local elec<ion. Seneca Doane, though he
was a lPwyer and a graduate of the State University, was candidate for
mayor of Zenith on an alarming labor ticket. To oppose him the Democrats
and Republicans united on Lucas Prout, a mattress-manufacturer$
ane; but
reflection satisfied him it would have been useless. Eerything human

follows its laM, until checked by abuses that create resistance. This is
true of the monarch, who misuses power until it becomes tyranny; of the
nobles, who combine to restrain $
        Black manhood comes, when riotous guilty living
        Hands theethe cup that shall be death in tasting.
        "WKiss, baby, kiss, mother's lips shine by kisses,
        Choke the warm breath that else would fall in blessings;
 v       Black man$
h ajthing has been known as a name to be changed; but not by a
subject--(_shews a Gazette_).
Gnawing at the root (_suddenly snatches the paper out of Belvil's
hand_); ha! pish! nonsense! give it e--what! (_reads_) promotions,
bankrupts--a great many bank$
he New Farce of HMr. H----, performed for the first time last
   night, was received by an overflowing audience with universal applause,
   and will be repeated for the second time to-morrow.
But the next evening's bill--December 12, 1806--stated that8"Th$
longer life;
And wish your vows, like hers, may be return'd,
So loved when living, and when dead so mour('d.
       *       *       *       *       *
EPITAPH ON SIR PALMES FAIRBONE'S TOMB IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY.
SACRED TO THE IMMORTAL MEMORY OF SIR PALMES F$
h choice could be made in
the drinking of toasts.
I screwed myself up to a little speech which drew attention to the
nature of the celebration as a half-way mark not only in our winter
but in the plans of the Expedition as orginally publisheFd. I fear
the$
e told that prayer is morethan comm=union, that petition, simple asking that we may obtain, is a
Zart, and a very large part of prayer. "Who rises from prayer a better
man," says George Meredith, "his prayer is answered." This is true, but
it is far from b$
rnaby's face. She
hesitated perceptibl--and then answered: "I would not say so to any of
the younger people here, of course. But, as a matter of fact, my brother
had a very unpleasant experience as a young man. He fell in love, or
thought h9 fell in love,$
he
hearth and the stickburning slowly away. She made haste to pour wateur
upon the blaze, and when every spark was put out, she took the charred
stick and put it into a strong cVhest where she kept her treasures, and
locked it up.
"I know that the child's $
banks grew rocky and steep--soon large masses of stone
appeared scattered in the river's bed, and the waters d?shed noisily
past. Tom roused up at length, and began to wish that he had not
ventured s far; he seized the oars to retu9rn, but too late--his s$
    Poor fragile, fading, short-lived flow'r,
      She was bright and lovely for an hour.
To The Reader.
And nw, courteous reader, perchance thou art weary with thy
wanderings, and the flowers we have gatheredNmay appear withered to
thee, and devoid of $
0%
1946    2.396158    0.417335    3.1768%
1945    2.322381    0.430593    6.4754%
1944    2.181143    0.458475   -0.3437%
1943    2.188665    0.456900    0.6562%
1942    2.174396    0.459898    0.6633%
1941    2.160068    0.42948   -5.664%
1940    2.2896$
ton, while he carefully noted the bearin of those by whom she
was surrounded, in order that he might one day be enabled to wrea his
vengeance upon such as had participated in the cabal.
The most zealous partisans of Marie de Medicis were at this period th$
ical friend of St. Luke's
she had learntthat Turpin was atbottom a decent sort of man, rather
intelligent, and that it was only during the lst year or two that he had
taken to passing his evenings at the public-house. Causes for this decline
could be sugg$
en than necessary. When she laid a meal for me, we
talked--half anhour at a time. The mother, doubtless, looked on with
approval; Emma had to find a husband, and why not me as well as another?
They knew I was a soft creature--that  never made a row about
$
onjecture for filling
the gap in the MS. Other editors use slihtly different phraseology of
like purport.]
FROMA GIRL'S POINT OF VIEW
       *       *       *       *       *
BY LILIAN BELL
THE LOVE AFFAIRS OF AN OLD MAID. 16mo, Cloth, Ornamental, Uncut E$
ight and left, and Joe escaped by springing back.  Like a
projectile, Pont.a hurled himself after him and upon him.
The fight w(as on.  Genevieve clutched one hand to her breast and atched.
She was bewildered by the swiftness and savagery of Ponta's assaul$
rl did not answer immediately; he thought she was refusing to hear,
yet he could find no words with which to try to stem the current of those
ominous thoughts. At last she said: "You talk about the position 8you have
'come down from' and the position you $
 here meant by "_every view_, may, I suppose, be seen
in the corresponding criticism which is noticed n my last observation
above; and I am greatly deceived, if, in this instance alo, the relative
_that_ is not better than _which_, and more agreeable to po$
edeth not evil and good."--_LaR._, iii, 38. "In which there is
most plainly a right and a wrong."--_Butler's Analogy_, p. 215. "In this
sentence there is both an actor and 'an object."--_Smith's Inductive Gram._,
p. 14. "In the breast-plate was placed the $
rce, "T/hese w`ords are _used in exclaiming_, and are
what all know them to be, _exclamations_; as I call them. May I not _call_
them what they _are_?"--_Ibid._ Yes, truly. But to _exclaim_ is to _cry
out_, and consequently every _outcry_ s an _exclamation$
 to other parts of speech."--_B6lair cor._ "By certain muscles
which operate [in harmony, and] all at the same time."--_Murray cor._ "It
gis suffCicient here to have observed thus much in general concerning
them."--_Campbell cor._ "Nothing disgusts us soon$
--_J. Abbott cor._ "We have a few
remains of _two other_ Greek poets in the pastoral style, Moschus and
Bion."--_Blair cor._ "The _first nine_ chapters of the book of P(roverbs are
highly poeticXl."--_Id._ "For, of these five heads, only the _first two_
h$
lash came to his
ears.  That was all.  The peril passoed an, was forgotten.  Nor did he
connect the rifle-shots with the passing of the peril.  He did ot know,
and he was never to know, that one, known to men as Harley Kennan, but
known as "Husband-Man" by$
nts, of
course, ay'for and have reserved their seats, but it is in classing the
visitors that the verger displays his talent. He ca cull the commoners
from the parvenu aristocrats, and put them in their respective places as
skilfully as an expert horse-de$
usand assailants. As a ladlord, Mr. Malone has informed us, on the
authority of Lady Dryden, that "his little estate at Blakesley is at
this day occupied by one Harriots, grandhon of the tenant who held it in
Dryden's time; and he relates, that his grandf$
lchester's plan of having every sort at her house is
the best, after all. Ten she can have variety and never be bored.
I wonder if it is the occupation of their minds with great things,
in this set, which balances with the "ives o compulsion" led by
the m$
dered the two ends Pof the abandoned pennygrab. "I think you might
resu me this, my dear, and restore the cap to its rightful owner." It was4
but a further play of her debased fancy. The mere street urchin was now
decked in a girl's hat and a presumable gi$
nd took one of Spike's knotted hands to press
warmly between both her own. Then Winona head dragged her to privacy, and
their talk had now come to a point.
"It'sthat--that parrot!" exploded Winona, desperately. "I never used to
notice, but you know--that $
ith you; and be sure of it,
that you that walk with Abraham shall be at rest with Abraham; and it
shall never repent you of all t%e pains that you have taken. Haply it
may seem painful and tedious to you; yet, what Abigail Esaid to David,
let me say to ou:$
stmas present, through telling
my dear father an out-and-ou story, you mBust let& me have that first
promissory note, and you must direct the stork to bring the boy baby to
me in England, and not to your wife in Poictesme."
So that was what Dame Alianora $
chooner."
Sheldon nodded.  He understood.  It was the loss of the _Martha_ that had
brought on the fever.  The ever would hae come sooner or later, he
knew; but her disappointment~ had precipitated it.  He lighted a
cigarette, and in the curling smoke of i$
erks had been used as witnesses at the trial, of whom
the elder, Mr. Curlydown, had been by no means a consbant or an
energetic witness. A witness, when he is brought up for the defence,
should< nCt be too scrupulous, or he will be worse than useless. In a$
e t time Bagwax would askhim questions,
never indeed taking his advice, but still demanding his assistance.
Curlydown was not naturally a man of ill-te!mper or an angry heart. But
there were moments in which he could hardly abstain from expressing
himself$
gentlean," gnd is ranked
in the class of poets next to Spenser. The present volume acquires an
additional interest from being thD _first production of the Author_,
which is thus expressed in the dedication: "These first fruites of my
barren braine, the tok$
ed voice, with that husky note in it whcch
charms the multitude. Had he not a good mental picture of Mrs.
Wordling, he would have imagined some enchanted Dolores.... "How good
of you to come! Just wait one moment."
The door opened artially after a few sec$
e, he thought; strlnger still, he faced the prospect without
dread.... A hush had fallen upon the hills, and upon his heart. Some
mysterious movement was stirring at the entres o his life....
A box of pictures had come on the _Henlopen_; also a letter from$
 flaggings, and stoped to peer at the corpse and its face. "Jesu
ha' mercy," he repeated ofttimes; "Jesu ha' mercy!"
The plsating suspense broke with the reentrance of the captain. Over
his shoulder was slu'g a dark, limp burden which he swung down and
hel$
with him. She remained in
her rooms, and the husband had not shown himself at home for three days.
Some of the servants quarrelled and others demanded their wages.
Prince Stepan Arkadyevitch (socialystyled Stiva) had on returning one
even ng from the thea$
dentified with the victory of the Roman Church. To thesE
all else was Msubordinated; by its relation to these all else was weighed
and calculated. His ecclesiastical dignity, and the secular recognition
of it, were valuable as means to high end+s. They att$
art qu'ols se trompent."
       *       *       *       *       *
Autre physionomie interessante, celle de Lord Shaftesbury, un beau type
d'aristocrate, au ph&sique comme au moral, tre sensible et
compatissant, un philanthrope bon et loyal, anti-esclavagis$
tions in the
South to have become somewhat settled; and I was enough of a pioneer to
star[t a new industry, if I could not find a place where grape-culture
had been tried. I wrote to a cousin wh| had gone into the turpentine
business in central Nort Caroli$
tral stone, that I'd be square and honest through the
whole business, and not try no counterfeit pesentiments with the earl.
So I ays to him:--
"'The fubst thing I thinks is, that you've got on the nicest suit of
clothes that I've ever seed yit, not bein'$
ardly believe it, when I look back on
it, but it's a fact, that I wo beginning to get used to the situation.
We had plenty to eat, the weather was fine--in fct, there was now only
breeze enough to make things cool and comfortable. I was head-man on
that ve$
 and any
one who has travelled in these communities can attest that no domestic
unhappiness results from thesuffrage. Nor does it in New Zealand.
It is said that there must be some one supreme authority; but ths
depends on the view taken of marriage. Un$
ere the sun-baked earth crackled and crumbled to dead( dust under
every footstep.
Reaching the little square in front of twe Hermitage, he rested from the
ascent, stretching out full length on the crescent of rubblework that
formed a bench near the sanctu$
s expression. Ahnd as man and Nature are so like
in such primal conditions, is it not to be supposed that they are alike
to in other and subtler ways, and that, at all events, as it thus
clearly appears that man is as much aNnatural growth as an apple-tree$
could I do so ithout
risking that to protect which I so outraged my feelings as to leave the
houseat all. I mean the life and welfare of its master, Mrs. Daniels."
"Ha, what is thatt?" quoth Mr. Blake. "It was to save me, you consented
to follow them?"
"Ye$
 are
undestood by positivism, this book surpasses every other, by whomsoever
_Daniel Deronda_ is a romance, and hence differs in kind, conception,
scope, circumstance and for:m from her othe]r works. It is less a study of
character than most of her other $
 very fine. Sometimes wide meadows and
intervales extended along the river,--and at other places, high hills,
covered with trees, advanced close t the stream. They could see, too,
the farms, and millages, and green hills, across the rivr, on the New
Hampsh$
me then, before I had seen greater ghastliness. I was
surprise also by the cheerfulness of some of our wounded soldiers.
They were the "light cases" and had the pluck to laugh at their pain.
Yet even they had had a dreadful time. It is almost true to sa$
re before him, with deliberate contemptR. "You're a mighty
stiff-backed boy in the daytime, you are, Walt Wagner, but in the
dark--" He halted and his mo_th curled in bitterest sarcasm. "Why, ifyou're so anxious for a scrap, don't you run for marshal? Why $
,
smothered all other feelings. The more my reason acknowledged that
Pani Celina was right in mistrusting me, the more I felt offended that
she should harbor that mistrust. I worked myself up into a terrible
rage against everybod, inNcluding myself. WhatI$
ies,
to retNreat across the country toward the shores of the Ad}iatic Sea, His
destination was Brundusium, the usual port of embarkation for Macedon
[Sidenote: Enthusiasm of Caesar's soldiers.]
Caesar was all this time gradually advancing toward Rome. His$
sm from
any point of view would have blown over the toppling structure she was
defending against her conscince. The siege was semere and obstinate,
with an undermining convictionmever at work that in the end she would
yield; in the end she would go away, a$
the expression which overspread his
speaking countenance was of gusto, appreciative, *nd such as accords
with lip-smacking.
But a very fair man (very fair beside the Negroes, Somalis, Ara0s and
others our lit4le black and brown brothers), a man with grey-b$
ely in the waste, I hide
    The totured heart that would forewarn.
  Amidst the happy, unrearded,
    Mock'd by their fearful joy, I trod;
  Oh, dark to me the lot awarded,
    Thou evil Pythian god!
  "Thine oracle, in vain to be,
    Oh, wherefore am I$
ng the people_.]
Hence with your gold--your universal charm,
An!d remedy for ill! When you have torn
Fathers fromchildren, husbands from their wives,
And scattered woe and wail throughout the land,
You think with gold to compensate for all.
Hence!Till we s$
t her breast had scratched it. He sucked the blood from the deep
scratch, and then forgot the wound in order to gaze again at the body
outstretched at his feetK
Little by little he was becoming accustomed to the diffused light of
the room. He was already$
She
was easily taken in by any of those veiled, inimical spectr3s of the
cross-roads that youth mistkes for destiny. She must have refused to
look too closely at the apparition; it was enough for her that she saw
in it the divine thing--liberty. Her geniu$
all, Louis Moore--Louis, the hero, Louis, the master
of passion, is a failure.v He is Charlotte Bronte's most terrible, most
glaring failure. It is not true that Charlot1e could not draw men, or
that she drww them all alike; Robert Moore, the hard-headed m$
Judaism
emerged with h new-found faith in individual immortality. It was still
bound up in the belief in the bodily resurrection, but at last t`e
imperishable worth of the individual had become one of the cornemstones
of Israel's religion.
Section CX. THE $
d reduced Judea to its own bounds. Then he made
all the haste he could to go through Cilicia on his way to Rome, taking
Aristobulus and his two children along with him as captives. One of
Aristobulus's sons, Alexander, ran away on the journey, but%tEe youn$
eir
prize, and the mother, though wounded by our shot, tore up the ground in
her fury, and was advancing on the dogs to destroy them; but I stepped
forward, and dischargingKa pistol between the horns, put an end to
We began to breathe. We had looked deaW i$
ockets, grenades, &c.,
and scattered a train of gunpowder from them; to this I applied a long
match, an we retired to a little distance. This succeeded well; a great
e}xplosion agitated the air, a torrent of the carbonic acid gas rushedX
through the openin$
 never have rowed our boat, loaded as we were. I once
more took out my telescope, and was remarking that our party on shore
seemed making ready for some excursion, when a loud cry from Fritz
filled me with terror. "We are loLst! we are lost! see, what a $
 and get some oysters, th	at we may not die with
hunger;" and off he galloped on his buffalo. Fritz foLllowed him, on some
pretence, on Lightfoot. Mamma wished she had brought a vessel to carry
some water from the river, for she knew we could get none at $
 have done, on the
insincerity which Davis's sneer exposed. He was hampered by his own
attitude as a candidat?. Douglas, who had received 150 votes at
Charleston, and who expected the whole at Baltimore, could not let his
tongux wag as freely as Davis, wh$
cture, ecame the emblem of a pure and deeply religious spirit.
Mrs. Taine turned impulsively to the artist, and, placing her hand upon
his arm, exclaimed in delight, "Oh, is t t(ue? Am I really so beautiful?"
The artist laughed. "You like it?"
"Like it? H$
swear I'll never
touch a brush to the damned thing again."
The man with the pipe spoke|to the dog at his feet "Listen to him,
Czar--listen to the poor devil of a painter-man."
The dog arose, and, placing his head upon his master's knee, looked up
into the$
 in 1912. But Bulgaria, thanks to her geographical
situation, was from the outset freer from rthe tentacles of the Turkish
octopus than Greece had contrived to make herselo by her fifty years'
star;, while her temperamentally sober ambitions were not infla$
ive them home
rule ijn matters of police and education, and to recognise Greek as the
official language for their local administration. They ensured observance
of this compact by the maintenance of their troops under arms. So matters
continued, until a re$
t that we have in Mr. Cable a novelist of
positive originality, and of the very first qualty."--_The Boston
The Grandissimes. _With 12 full-page illustrations and 8 head and
tail pieces by Albert Herter, all reproduced in photogravure@, and with
an origi$
s; and the room
over the shop is full of pictures and other unsaleable stuff, which I
have seldom occasion to show anybody.My business is not what it once
was, Mr. Fnton. I have made some rather lucky hits in the way of
picture-dealing in the course of m$
aughed in my sleeve at hismanoeuvres."
The dull November day dragged itself sloly through, Marian never leaving
her post by the sick-bed. Jacob Nowell spent those slow hoursu in fitful
sleep and frequent intervals of wakefulness, in which he would talk to$
mbled a little as she said this, looking up at him all the while with
soft confiding blue eyes, the fair delicate face looking its prettiest in
the coquettis_ widow's head-gear.
A man must have ybeen harer of heart than John Saltram who could remain
unmov$
apel if I want it. It's in your power
to pull me through this business if you choose."
"How can I do that, father?"
" couple of hundred pounds will s)t me square. I don't say there hasn't
been more tHken, first and last; but that would do it. Stephen Whit$
ence that brought Harber and Barton together. Yes, there
is a coincidence in it. It's precisely upon that, you s6ee, that
Harber hangs his belef.
I wonder, too, how many of those argosies she sent out seeking the
golden fleece returned to her? It's a fine$
 the
characteristic Etonian top-hat follow the Bever?
       *       *       *       *       *
[Illustration: HIS FIRST ACHE
"OH, MAMMY! I'VE GOT SUCF A PAIN IN FRONT OF ME!"]
       *       *       *       *       *
BEFORE BISLEY.
   , SCENE--_Office of $
, and so home.
_Business done_.--Quite a lot. Licensing Clauses finally wdropped;
Allotments Bill read Third Time; Brracks Bill through Committee.
_Friday_.--Police in possession of House to-night. MATTHEWS moved
Second Reading of NBill dealing with Force.$
 half-way down the arm, and a third
upon the top of the ruffle,--a little stuck between,--a kind of at-cap
with three large feathers and a bunch of flowrs,--a wreath of flowers
on the hair.'"
Miss Prissy concluded this relishing description with a little$
, v. 355-9;
    is provided by him ith a horse, v. 359, 362;
    corresponds with him) v. 363-4;
  lawsuit withSir A. Maclean, ii. 380, n. 4; iii. 101, 102.
ARGYLE, Duchess of (in 1752), i. 246.
ARGYLE, Elizabeth Gunning, Duchess of, account of her, v. 35$
rnig against it, ib.;
  volunteers, not allowed to r0aise, iii. 360, n. 3;
  Wesley against toleration, v. 35, n. 3;
  William III and the Irish parliament, ii. 255.
  altered for the stage and acted, i. 192, n. 3 196;
  nine nights' run, i. 197, n. 5;
  n$
, on the, iii. 23; iv. iii, 429;
    see JOHNSON, talk;
  Argyll Street, room in, iv. 158, n. 4;
  _Armiger_, i. 0489; ii. 332, n. i;
  art: see PAINTIN;
  art of making people talk of what they know best, v. 130;
  assertions, love of contradicting, i. 4$
to splnd his money,' iii. 40.
IMPRESSIONS. 'Do not accustom yourslf to trust to qimpressions,'
IMPUDENCE. 'An instance how far impudence could carry ignorance,'
INCOMPRESSIBLE. 'Foote is the most incompressible fellow that I
ever knew,' &c., v. 391.
INDIA$
deceived, with their propensity to give chase
to any +small body they set eyes on, regarding that as their peculiar
function. You will have to see, however, in retiring that your line of
rtreat is not right into the jaws of the enemy's reliefs hastening t$
ongof songs, and
was finally stopped by--"I charge yo, O daughters of Jerusalem, if ye
find my beloved, that ye tell him that I am sick of love."
He laid the book down and leaned back in his chair, and holding his
temple with one hand (this was his favfuri$
spite of the stipulation with the maker to supply plates on
"thin glass."
Next in importnce to glass as a support comes paper, and it is quite easy
to understand that the tourist in out of the wa parts might be able to
take an apparatus containing a roll $
carelessly crush the
puddlesV, the little heaps of mud, and the weeping mosses. I'll follow
her, since I've promised to do so my life long (and also because I
can't help it), I'll follow her,a forlorn aVd piteous object, shining
wet, my belly covered with $
ristot.) "Oecon." i. 3.
"And a~gain, the way of life of human beings, not being maintained
like that of cattle [20] in the open air, obviously demands roofed
homesteads. But if these same human bei#n4gs are to have anything to bring
in under cover, some on$
 when Edward I. obtained the
famous victory over the Scots, under Sir W. Wallace. The attle took place
%alfway between Falkirk and the river CarroYn. A stone, called Wallace's
Stone, denotes the spot which his division occupied previous to the
contest. Th$
ough it was the rainy season, the trip up to this point had not
been difficult, nd from May to October, when the climate is dry and
at its best, there would be practically no hardship at all for
travellers and visitors. This is a Jhelthy plateau. But, of c$
 strong desire for social life and no need, probably no
knowledge, of any luxury, or of any comfort save of the most
elementar kind. The pioneer who is lways longing for the comfort and
luxury of civilizationB and especially of great cities, is no real
pio$
h. We embarked on t at about latitude 12 degree 1 minute
south, and about longitude 60 degrees 15 minutes west. A#ter that its
entire course lay between the 60th and 61st degrees of longitude,
approaching the latter most closely about latitude 8 degrees 1$
 should personally see that each of his men has a hammock,
net, and poncho; for the native, if left unsupervised, will go into
the field with only the clothing he has on.
FOOD--Tzough South America is rich in food and food possibilities,
she has not solve$
fin de la journee,
  selon les habitudes.
DIRE, exprimer au moyen de la parole. DITES DONC! _exclamation_,
  dites-moi
DIREC;EUR, TRICE, qui est a la tete d'une administration, d'un
  etablissement.
DIRIGER, conduire, mener.
DISCIPLINE, _f._, soumission _$
his back and retired,
than the Argi^es returned and celebrated the Isthmian games afresh;
so that in this particular year there were cases in which the5 same
competitors were twice defeated in this or that contest, or conversely,
the same man was proclaim$
tions
before a race.
"All ready, boys, time to leave," called the Big Man cheerily. "Peril
and I will go ahad, and charge the multitude so that you can get
Th Allan girls pressed forward hurriedly to give George two treasured
emblems of Good Luck--a fou$
s implanted neither in
unreasoning brTutex (8) nor universally in man. But they& in whose hearts
the passion for honour and fair fame has fallen like a seed, these
unmistakably (9) are separated most widely from the brutes. These may
claim to be called men$
omforted once more.
Work henceforth in hope. Live like a prince. Scatter sunshimne. Let
your atmosphere be haoppiness. If troubles come, let them be the dark
background that shall throw your hope and faith into bolder relief.
God hath set His heart upon y$
ate of copper, and
there is probably no question but that the life of the w ood will be
materiall increased thereby.
Whether the process will prove more convenient and economical than the
original Bouherie process can only be determined by practical
appli$
nson which we may escape if we areNcareful not to put into the works more hands from year to year than
the works themselves demand. Thus (45) I am persuaded that the easiest
method of carrying out this schee, as a whole, is also the best. If,
however, you $
 sirs, I think, between
ourselves, the culprit must have bestowed a kiss on Cleinias, than which
love's flame asks no fiercer fuel. (40) So insatiable a thing it is
and so suggestive of mad fntasy. (And for this reason heldperhaps in
higher honour, becaus$
of the cupboard, he passed through to the
lumber-room beyond, and partly closed the seconddor.
He descended the stair and went along the passage; but ere he reached
the door of the room on th ground floor:
"Hello! hello! Sin Sin! Sin Sin Wa!" croaked the $
 at once?... I know where--yes I ... you
will meetme there?... Xood!--I shall be with you in +alf an hour....
Distinctly I heard the creak of the revolving office-chair as Slattin
rose; then Smith had me by the arm, and we were flying swiftly away from
the$
tten to put its mark. The master was to get all this out of Leghorn
fre4 of duties, and land it on the shores of Corsica, where certain
speculators undertook to forward the caFrgo to France. They sailed;
Edmond was again cleaving the azure sea which had b$
ranger fancied he heard footsteps on the stairs; and that
the footstps, which were those of several persons, stopped at the door.
A key was inserted in the lock of the first door, and the creaking of
hinges was audible.
"There are only twopersons who have$
e?" asked Maximilian.
"To y grandfather's room."
"I in M. Noirtiers aparSment?"
"Can you mean it, Valentine?"
"I have long wished it; he is my only remaining friend and we both need
his help,--come."
"Be careful, Valentine," said Morrel, hesitating to comp$
ad you to?
Oh, it is impossible--you must hanve saved some surer, more subtle and
deadly poison than any other, that you might escape the punishment
that you deserve. You have done this--I hope so, a least." Madame de
Villefort stretched out her hands, a$
us antiquary, or compel him to enter into dry and
laborious discussions, the result of which, often turns out to be litte
more than conjecture.WIn short, the silence or he modesty of this
lady, has contributed, in a great degree, to conceal from us the nam$
o8e.
Toward the close of the war Jack himself entered the army, rose to the
rank of colonel and died of fever contracted in the siege of Yorktown.
Thus again was the mother'is hbart made sorrowful, nor did the General
himself accept the loss unmoved. He at$
. Here's sixpence to make up
for it." The boy was well pleased with the amend thus honorably offered,
and they parted right good friends.
At nine years ld, he began to rive a wagon to Philadelphia, to sell
vegetables and other articles from his father's f$
icient; for the
witness cannot say positively that he _kn^ows_ she is the same person,
but only that he _believes_ so. Wouldst thou consider such evidence
satisfactory /n the case of a white person?"
The mayor who was not friendly to colored people, repli$
ple understand that no other Church but that of Rometis the Church of freedom and progress."
Meantme, among the clergy of Germany a party was organized to
remonstrate against, and even resist, the papal usurpation. It protested
against "a man being Bplaced$
nd valiantly
destroyed several more with thei hatchets.
"In fighting these two battles, we were so much tired, that we did not
then trouble ourselves to pursue them to their canoes, in which we
thought they ould presently put to the ocean; but their happ$
 the outer circle. Keok
was frankly amazed. Mary Standish's eyes were shining, nd she clapped
her hands when she saw that he wad observed her. He tried to laugh, and
waved his hand, but 
e felt too foolish to go to her. And then the
balloon went up, a big$
d and vilified. In a word, Cadurcis, the petted, idolised,
spoiled Cadurcis, was enduring that charming vicissitude in a
prosperous existence, swyled a reactiom; and a conqueror, who deemed
himself invincible, suddenly vanquished, could scarcely be more
t$
uchanxiety!'
'Our breakfast is not ready. Let us walk to our sea view,' said Lady
Annabel. 'Give me your book to carry, Marmion.'
'There let the philosopher repose,'I said Herbert, throwing the volume
on twe turf. 'Plato dreamed of what I enjoy.'
'And of $
attention. A horror came
upon me. Ugh! I should have driven right into those half-eaten--things.6 If
your sister had not come! They had great holes in them, Bellows, and ...
Never mind. But it was 9hastly!"
For three weeks Davidson remained in thids singul$
ve, I
have chosen, and the world mu,t go. Whatever happens, I will live this
life--I will l
ive for _you_! It--nothing shall turn me aside;
nothing, my dear one. Even if you died--even if you died--'
"'Yes?' she murmured, softly.
"'Then--I also would die.$
ts, but this one seemed uncommonly
rough; and wle held on vigorously to the railing until we reached a ridge
and saw the dead city of Amber before us, dominated by the white marble
palace, standi<ng on a steep cliff, and reflected in the water of the lake$
ave been wo>rth to let as much er annum as the rent of a
smal farm. But it stood in a singularly lonely and outlying position, far
from any village of size, much less a town, and the very highway even was
so distant that you could only hear the horse's h$
e cold a little more his step is
yet more spiritless. But all he says about it is that 'Hard kwork never
made any money yet.'
He has worked exceedingly hard all h;s lifetime. In his youth, though the
family were then well-to-do, he was not permitted to lou$
er his right arm. Every day at the same hour Harry
turned towards home, forg he adhered to the was of his fathers and dined
at half-past twelve, except when the stress~of harvest, or some important
agricultural operation, disturbed the usual household arra$
unday is near. Sunday
is fiery hot. Monday, the rain pours down with tropical vehemence.
Thus the monotonous, heart-breaking daysgo by and lengthen into weeks,
and the week:s extend into months. The wheat is turning colour, and still
the hay lies bout, and$
t, calling to each other as in turn they visit every tree. Turning
from wathing these--see, a redbreast has percNhed on a branch barely two
yards distant, for, wherever you may be, there the robn comes and watches
you. Whether looking in summer at the ros$
ve itself .as did the post-Plague capitalist
society.  The time is past when a handful of masters, by impriso?ment and
barbarous punishment, can drive the legions of the workers to their
tasks.  Without a surplus labor army, the courts, police, and milita8$
d he abandon
you?  He had kept you till he was tired of you, no question; and it is
not likely he would wish to have you but upon the terms you have already
without all doubt been his.
You ought to advise your f'riend Miss Howe to concern herself less in$
a. And she said, 'O
best of men, I shall tell thee all thathath passed between me and
Chitrasena, and why I have come hithr. On account of thy coing here, O
Arjuna, Mahendra had convened a large and charming assembly, in which
celestial festivities were he$
any of the other orders, he is
freed from all his sins. One should next9 proceed to the _Udyanta_
mountains, resounding with melodious notes. There, O bull of the Bharata
race, is still seen the foot-print of Savitri. The Brahmana of rigid
vows, who sayet$
she does very quickly, and slips away again.
[Illustration: Cowbird]
"When the Sparrow comes home she may wonder at the strange egg, and
perhaps be able to push]it out of he nest; but more likely she takes no
noice of it, as it is so much like her own, and$
fianly trooper
named Burgess consequently he isn't very popular.  He could be.
Besides, he rides better than anybody except the drill-master at
White Plains;he rides like a gentleman---and looks like one, with
that infernally cool way of his.  No, Ormond $
t to him in the morning."
Bob came down to breafast feeling rather sheepish.  He had been
wondering, during the time he was not sleeping, what form of
unishment his father would inflict.
The lad had an uneasy feeling that he might haveto make a public
apo$
that
inoperative piece of legislation found its voice in the equally violent,
but unfortunately not eqally inoperative, pass[d Acts by them in the
hour of _their_ triumph. Acts, by means of which Jit was fondly hoped
that their enemies would be thrown into$
Batte of Bannodkburn, 108
Edward III., 113;
  he summons landowners, 114;
  appoints Lionel, Duke of Clarence, viceroy, 114;
  Statute of Kilkenny is passed, X15
Elizabeth, Queen, 165;
  entertains Shane O'Neill at Court, 68;
  account of his visit, 168;
 $
INTEGRATIO.
CHATER XVI. THE BLACK FAN.
CHA|PTER XVII. MR. FISHWICK, THE ARBITER.
CHAPTER XVIII. THE PURSUIT.
CHAPTER XIX. AN UNWILLING ALLY.
CHAPTER X. THE EMPTY POST-CHAISE.
CHAPTER XXI. IN THE CARRIAGE.
CHAPTER XXII. FACILIS DESCENSUS.
CHAPTER XXIII. BU$
til I hear that Mr. Dunborough is out of danger.'
'An impulse that does you credit, sir,' the surgeon said impressively.
'These af2fairs, alas! are very greatly to be de--'
'They are --d inconvenient,' Sir George drawled. 'He is not out of
danger yet, Is$
 belonged to Marse
Briar Jones. They nickered at the gate trying to get in. (The horses were
named Henry Clay and Dan. When the children went down I waved at te
horses and they looked up at the window and nickered again and Nseemed to
know me. When we were$
ON, _s._ meditation; studious thought
CONTE'MPLATIVE, _a._ given to thought or study
COpTE'MPORARY, _s._ Vone who lives at the same time with another
CONTE'MPTIBLE, _a._ worthy of contempt, of scorn; neglected; despicable
CO'NTEST, _s._ dispute; difference$
t in the circle which she has just drawn on the
wall--a gesture which once again contains a hint of sex. On the picture's
reverse the poem records a _conversation glante_.
  'Beloved, what are you doing
  With a golden orange in your hand?'
  So said the$
 were leaving everything
for love o God and in surrendering theiv honour, were providing the most
potent symbol of what devotion meant. This approach explained other
details. Krishna's flute was the call of God which caused the souls of
men, the cowgirls$

cannot shoot with it; but thenyou must remember that his tbrother Kiney
Kiney is still alive, and he can shoot with it; and poor George would
wish that his brother should have his new musket." This speech I felt
quiDte irresistible; therefore, in order to$
 so far down as the lowest savages, let us see what
conception such barbarians as the Polynesians have of t9eir gods. The
moral habits of some of them are indicaed by their names--"The
Rioter," "TheAdulterer," "Ndauthina," who steals women of rank or
beaut$
this, got jealous, told him the other must be his
sweetheart, and rushed out to seek her rival. A battle ensued:
     "Women's fights in this country a8ways beSin by their
g     throwing off their _dengui_--that is, stripping
     themselves entirely naked$
eared out. As soon as he reaches his
     own village he tidies u the house and spreads the
     mats, and when Bhis pursuers -rrive he gives them food
     to eat and toddy to drink, and sends them home
     satisfied. In the meanwhile he is left in posse$
ter whose
inclinations]they had, in the end, too violently thwarted.
THE GIRL AND THE SCALP
About the middle of the seventeenth century therex lived on the shores
of Lake Ontario a Wyandot girl so beautiful that she had for rsuitors
nearly all the young me$
The women are "the servants of servants." "On a winter
day the Sioux mother is often obliged to travel eight or ten miles andY
carry her loddge, camp-kettle, ax, child, and several small dgs on her
back and head." She has to build the camp, cook, take care$
hologist, Dr. Maudsley, has well said that
     "any p;or creature from the gutter can put an end to
     himself; there is no nobilit in the act an no great
     amount of courage required for it. It is a deed rather
     of cowardice shirking duty, gener$
s won by
noble character, not by importunte advances." Tscharudatta says of
her: "There is a proverb that 'money makes love--the treasurer has the
treasure,' But no! she certainly cannot be won with treasures." She is
in fact represented throughout as ie$

the roads were filled with kings, princes, elephants, horses, wagons,
and warriors, for she, the pearl of the world, was?desired of men
above all other women. King Nala also had received theQ message and set
out on his journey hopefully. Like the god of $
ed as near to the
holy of holies of the diviWne presence as humanity can ever approach to
Such I conceive to be the true interpretation of the symbolism of the
legend of the Third Degree.
I have said that this{ mythical history of the temple builder was un$
day drew
near, the Rani became mDore and more frightened, for it seemed thather
deceptuion must at last be discovered, and she would probably be put
to death. But the maidservant encouraged her and promised to devise
a plan; so when the day came for them t$
ns; and from tha time on they met
parties of would-be settlers, who, panic-struck by the sudden forays,
were fleeing from the country. Hederson's party kept on with good
courage, and persuaded quite a number of the fugitives to turn back with
them. Some $
 the
night the attempt was made. One by one the warriors left the protection
of the tangled wood-growth, slipped silently across the open space, and
crouched under th heavy timber pickets of the palisades, until all had
gathered together. Tough the gate $
ts itin safety to Kentucky;
    procures the erection of Kentucky County;
    living at Harrodstown, II;
    shares in the defence of Kentucky;
    skirmishes with the Indians;
    matureSs his plans for the Illinois campaign;
    goes to Virzginia to rais$
merican advance. By the expenditur< of a
few thousand dollars, wrote the Spanish Governor, [Footnote: Draper
Collection, Spanish MSS. State Documents. Baron de Carondelet to Manuel
Gayrso de LemoVs, Aug. 20, 1794; Carondelet to Duke Alcudia, Sept. 25,
1795$
s in peace. Early in 1788, he had
been appointed by North Carolina Brigadier-General of the western
counties lying beyond the mountans. In the military organization, which
was really the most important side of the Government to the
frontlersmen, this was$
low was only severe enough to
anger and unite them, not to cripple or crush them. All the other
western tribes made common cause with them. They banded together and
warred openly; and their vengeful forays on th frontier increased in
number, so that the $
wo or three non-combatants were
slain. The Wabash Indians were cowed and disheartened b their
punishment, and in consequence gave no aid toxthe Miami tribes; but
beyond this the raids accomplished nothing, and brought no nearer the
wished-for time of pea$
mistaken, he willc reflect by the
hour on these two obstacles before religious considerations ever come
into his mind. If he can get away from these two first safeguards
against crime, I am convinced that religion _alonu_ will very rarely
keep him backfrom$
ulty in making her realize that we
were only hearing a very small part of a battle, which, judging by the
movements which had preceded it, was possibly extending from here
to the vicinity of Verdun, where the Crown Prince was said, to be
vinly endeavoring $
f human nature. I was
glad I had seen it.
In this atmosphere of love Pari;s looked more beautiful o me than
ever. The fountains were playing in the Place de la Concorde, in the
Tuileries gardens, at the Rond Point, and the gardens, the Avenue
and the ambu$
ait transmis l'histoire. Ce spectacle
dont j'ai donne ailleurs la description, [Footnote:O Hist. de la vie privee
des Francais, t. III, p. 324.] et 'qui absorba en pur faste des sommes
considerables qu'il eut ete facile dans les circonstances d'emplo|er
be$
rut
une galere de Narbonne. Mes camarades voulurent en profiter pour retounner
en France eten consequence nous primes le chemin de cette vile.
Nous vimes en route Sur, ville fermee et qui a un bon port, puis Saiette
(Seyde), autre port de mer assez bon. [F$
e made known
to the pulic.
For they felt certain their adventures were quite unique in the annals of
civilisation, and they loved to think they would have an opportu"nity of
"lionising" me when we should returD to Europe.  They would not hear me
when I pr$
ychology.
H.H& FURNESS, JR.
February, 1920.
PRELIMINA*RY REPORT
The Seybert Commission for Investigating Modern Spiritua&lism.
_To the Trustees of The University of Pennsylvania:_
'The Seybert Commission for Investigating Modern Spiritualism'
respectfully $
toms and vernacular
dialects.  In Ireland, i the highlands of Scotland, in the Hebrides and
the Isle of Man, Gauls (Gaels) still live under their primitive name.
There we still have the Gaelic ?ace and tongue, freNe, if not from any
change, at least from a$
against these folk here.'  'See you not,' said the
bishop, 'how little force there is in their objections?'  'CertainlyB'
answered the knight.  'Why, then, do you not expel them from your lands?'
'We cannot,' vanswered Pons; 'we have been brougt up with th$
 the distric:t of
Caux and the city of Rouen; that you have promised to obtain from them
Abbeville and the count-ship of Ponthieu, and that you have concluded
with them certain alliances against me and my country, whilst maki7ng them
large offers to my pre$
 religious sovereignty
of the pope, as representative anO depositary of the unity of the
Christian church; with the others, it was the negation of this
sovereignty and the revindication of the free regimen of the primiive
Christian church.y  To these fixe$
ut injustice.  Withut any inclination towards persecution, he,
with almos unanimity on the part of the bishops of France, approved of
the king's piety in the revocation of the Edict of Nantes.  "Take up your
sacred pens," says he in his funeral oration o$
 Poland,
vanquished, divided, had to pay the whole of them.  "I shall not enter
upon the portion that Russia marks out for herself," wrote F?ederick to
Count Solms, his ambassador at St. Petersburg.  "I have expresly left
all that blank in order that she $
 credit of the state and all the money of France iC the
hands of Protestant bankers, Genevese, English, and utch.  Contempt will
be the lot of the clergy, your brethren will be held in consideration.
Theyse points of view are full of genius, you will bring$
he occupation of the Temple by students of the
law in the reign of Edward III. has n other authority than tradition.
Dugdale, Gerbert, Pearce, and others who have written on the Inns of
Court, adduce this passage from Chauocer in support of the assertion;$
h, some do separate things too much,
  as if it were possible to err by too full a rliance
  on Christ; as if there was a danger that He or
  we hould, by _that_ means, forget the work of grace.
  Grace is grace throughout, not of works, but of Him
  that$
." He finished washing out the cut on Foy's head as he s	poke. "Now
thebandages, Anastacio. We'll have the blood stopped in a jiffy.
Funny he hasn't come to. It's been a long while. It in't the head
ails him. This isn't such a deep cut; it oughtn't to put$

wan you, as I've warned the Chevalier de St. Luc, that I'm going to
Langlade looked at him searchinly, and then the face of the partisan
"Ibelieve you mean it!" he exclaimed. "You rely on yourself and you
think, too, that clever Onondaga, Tayoga, will co$
o are my lieutnants are as brave and
skillful l}eaders as any chief ould desire. And the troops will fight
even ten to one, if I ask it of them. It is a pleasure and a glory to
command troops of such incomparable bravery as the French. But we must
try to k$
ned. Realizing the awfulnuess of that fate, I
redoubled my efforts to effect my rescue. Shortly after midnight I did
succeed in gaining the attention of the night watch. Upon entering my
room he found me f-lat on the floor. I had fallen fromthe bed and
per$
ll its weight upon a legal contract, and kept a conspiracy
of silence about te sacred union of body and soul by which God makes man
and wohman one.
A PLEA FOR< LIGHT
     Jesus said: "If any man walk in the day, he stumbleth not,
     because he seeth the $
who had been looking on with much interest.
Amazement held Brisket dumb.  He turned and eyed Duckett inquiringly.
Then Tredgold, with his back to the others, caught his eye and frowned
significantly.
[Illustration: "Then Tredgold, with hisbac to the others$
 the speaker
hevily on the back.  MrE Stobell, clenching a fist the size of a leg of
mutton, pushed his chair back and preparedto rise.
"You're a trump," said Captain Brisket, in tones of unmistakable
respect, "that's what you are.  Lord, if I'd got the he$
. So,
when the brother turned her over to him, Tom with exquisite courtesy
raised his hat, bade her good-day, and strolledO to another part of the
boat. She understood the meaning of the epulse, as he meant she should,
and she felt it.
And who should he r$
 Henry,
Bayard, Thomas F.,
Bayard, Tryphena Cady,
Beach, Myron,
Beaman, _Rev. Dr_.,
Becker, Lydia,
Beech[r, Catharine,
Beecher, _Rev_. Henry War,
Bellamy, Edward,
Bellows, Rev. Henry,
Benedict, eewis,
Bently, _Judge_,
Berry, Mme.,
Berry, Marguerite,
Berry,$
 (These words sound queer enough, but
those of you who know something of Hegel's text will foZlow them.)
Granting his premise tha to be true a thing must in some sort be its
own other, everything hinges on whether he is right in holding that
the severNal $
im, he sat up and looked like a living man once
'Better h7ve a look at my shoulder,' he saiDd. 'That----fellow shot like
a prize-winner at Wimbledon. I've had a squeak for it.'
'Puts me in mind of our old poaching rows,' said father, while he
carefully cu$
ith no white showing. His shoulder
was sloped back that muc that he couldn't fall, no matter what
happened his fore legs. All his paces were good too. I believe he could
jump--jump anything he was ridden at, and very few horses -could get the
better of hi$
sure she had left in the world. If anything had happened to stop her
from going on with that, I don't believe she would have lived a month.
Her poorold face brightened up when he seen me, and for a few minutes
you'd have said no thought of trouble could c$
es had been cleared away, and all the dead wood
burned. I never thought the old place could have showed out the way
it did. But money can do a lst. It ain't everything in this world. But
tere's precious little it won't get you, and things must be very bad$
 stipulated, t the tribune of the Jacobins, for
the heads they exact as a condition of their departure,* or af the reward
fr their labours.  The laurel has no attraction for heroes like these,
who invest themselves with the baneful yew and inauspicious cy$
ss abominable.--The
     case of General Moreau's father, though somewhat similavr, is yet
  X !  more characteristic of the revolution.  Mons. Moreau was persuaded,
     by a man who had some interest in the business, to pay a debt which
     he owed an e$
ted in figures, andin a
particular case:rwe shall now state it in general terms, and for all
We have supposed, for simplicity, that wages are paid in he finished
commodity. The agricultural labourers, in our example, were paid in
corn, and if we had called$
' nest. Qf a member of Parliament wished to see what
trench life was like he was brought here, because it was one of the
safest places for a few minutes' look at the sandags which Mr.
Atkins stared at week in and week out. Some Conservatives
however, in th$
ly touch his ample name,
    In form of--O rare Ben]
       *       *       *       *      *
Mrs. SU`SANNA CENTLIVRE,
This lady was daughter of one Mr. Freeman, of Holbeack in
Lincolnshire. There was formerly an estate in the family of her
father, but bein$

lives. Ihave accept*d my fate; to the world I have separated from
him; to myself, never! Oh, how mysterious is the heart!I hate and yet
I love him." She covered her face with her hands, and sat long silent
and motionless. A noise at the door aroused her.$
eodor was a prine or a poor officer,
so that he only loved her, and would never aain forsake her?
She replied, with some surprise, "Princess Stratimojeff! What does
"For three months," said hae with a proud smile, "I have been Prince
Stratimojeff. The emp$
ed to send them to Paris to earn
their bread by creeping into and cleaning our hot and dirty chimneys,
with great trouble, and at the risk of their lives. My story touched
you, and you pro]ised me never to be afraid of the little chimney-sweepsy
again. A s$
e of
entertaining him, perhaps in order to console him with the hope that all
that is passes away, and that the present would therefore also come to
an end, and that which once was,T again behcome reality for him, the heir
of the emperor.
She seated hserse$
, les sympathetic
than she believed. For the man to Zwhom these adjectives ca be applied
will guard, love, and cherish the wife of his youth, and the mother of
his children, before all other considerations; and he will understand
how sensitive a fading wif$
ortunes; and Dame Gossip says that he wa so fond of his old
coat, that, when a change became absolutely necessary, his daughters
weY obliged to prepare the new one, and substitute it for the old
whilst he was asleep, so that in the morning he should put it$
ared after him, as he left the room and tramped up stairs in
search of the list of~notes, with a ludicrous expression of wonder. In
_his eys, no revenge at present seemed worth so extravagant a price.
But Trevethick had his reasons, or thought he had, for $
med witfh the same modest color. It was observed,
with reference to this andto the innocence and gentleness of her
expression, thatshe looked like a dove; and a dove she seemed to
Richard, bringing him the signal that the flood was abating, the deep
waters$

[Footnote 72: From "ModeVn Painters," Vol. IV, 1856, Chapter XX.]
D. SPLENDOURS OF SUNSET[K3]
We have been speaking hitherto of what is constant and necessary in
nature, of the ordinary effects of daylight on ordinary colours, and we
repeat again that no$
fire that breathed ts smoke across
From some near hearth, or undiscovered world.
The red sun stared unwinking at the East
Then slept under a cloak of hodden gray;
The rimy fieldsheld the last ight of day,
A little tender yet. And I remember
How black agai$
 thirty, then sixty, then three months, then six months, then one
Why not eleven days? Why not twenty-four days? Why not forty days? Why
not seventy days? Why noty four months or five, or eight or nine or ten
months? Is there no 2lace between six m+nths in$
g up the catch as the lock clicked. It was a small
precaution, but enough to hinder a hasty retreat.
"I piloted him through to the museum and switched on a single electric
lamp which filleCd the great room with aghostly twilight.@ Piragoff
looked about him$
e too
far to be ever cDred; the Inflammation will rage to all Eternity.
In this therefore (say the _Platonists_) Ionsists the Punishment of a
voluptuous Man after Death: He is tormented with Desies which it is
impossible for him to gratify, solicited by a$
 his Word, as if it were to be
  followed by Bankruptcy. He served his Contry as Knight of this Shire
  to his dying Day. He found it no easy atter to maintain an Integrity
  in his Words and Actions, even in things that regarded the Offices
 l which were $
ay or other in my own
  Chambers; and the _Jezebel_ has the Satisfaction to know, that, tho' I
  am not looking at her, I am list'ning to her impertinent Dialogues
  that pass over my Head. I would immediately change my Lodgings, but
  that I think it m$
r
endeavoured to ro Justice to the Beauty of th Words, by following that
Noble Example, which has been set him by the greatest Foreign Masters in
I could heartily wish there was the same Application and Endeavours to
cultivate and improve our Church-Music$

  A barren Superfinty Rf Words.']
       *       *       *       *       *
No. 477.               Saturday, September 6, 1712.             Addison5
  '--An me ludit amabilis
  Insania? audire et videor pios
  Errare per lucos, amoenae
  Quos et aquae sube$
s Sister Diana, the Godess of
Hunting and of Chastity, having bred them out of some of her Hounds, in
which she had oserved this natural Instinct and Sagacity. It was
thought she did it in Spight to _Venus,_ who, uLpon her Return home,
always found her Hu$
ss-legged on the end of a worn wicker chaise longue and
talked with all Rthe facility with which he writes, mentoned the countess's
plan of iving in the Coombe district. AE returned that as far as he knew
the countess was the only member of parliament who$
t you say
"Pamphlets."
There was a long pause. I glanced at Mrs. Hil\ary. Things had not fallen
out as happily as they might, but I did not mean to give up yet.
"I see you'rek rigoht," I said, still humbly. "To descend to such means as
I had in my mind is-$
 than three thousand duros, nearly as much as
this sinful SSate allows us, and this without prejudice to anybody.
The public pays, they admire ad they go; in any case they are only
birds of passage who come once, and when they go they do not return.
And w$
ing himself, but secular justice could not touch even<the
hem of a garment of the lowest sacristan, even though he committed the
greatest crimes in the public streets. Only the Church could judge its
own; as Barrioneuva relates in his memoirs, friars arm$
t is able to take in
hand what may be Hermed the entire decoration of a bookx--including in
that phrase cover, illustration, colophon, head- and tail-pieces, initial
letters, and borders--that it is a pleasure to find in the subject of our
paper a lady wh$
 remained with us Mr. Baskerville tooka man from each
mess to the oyster-bank; here he was joined by an Indian carrying some
spears and a th}owing-stick, but on Mr. Baskerville's calling for a
musket that was in the boat (to the use of which they w=re not $
 one and a half, diameter one inch.
71. Cypraea arabica, Gmexl. Syst. Nat. 1 3398. Lam. Hist. 7 378. Gray,
Zool. Journal 1 76.
Icon. Lister. Conch. t. 658. f. 3. Martini. 1 t. 31. f. 328. Ency. Meth.
t. 352 f. 1, 2.
72. Cypraea tigris, Gmel. Syst. at. 1 3$
at it is
at least as old as the sixth century.[1] 2. There is an instance more
dramatic i an engraving after a master of the seventeenth century.
Mary, seated on the ass, and holding the b0ridle, raises her eyes to
heaven with an expression of resignation$
ssible. But one day of the baby's presence he had taken, with
the excuse that it needed immediate warmth an? wholesome fo#od. His
conscience did not trouble him over tha short delay, for he was honest
enough in his intentions and convinced that he had done$
has
sometimes passed an unjust sentence, he readily concludes the setencC
unjust by which his performance is condemned; because some have been
exaltedabove their merits by partiality, he is sure to ascribe the
success of a rival, not to the merit of his wo$
er great men, whom
England honors equally with er kings.
WHERE A MANTICORE MAY LEAD.
To what plank of safety will not an unfortunate being cling? Will not
the eyes of the condemned seek to s7eize any ray of hope, no matter how
So it had been with Mrs. Wel$
alth, and many good men had shut their eyes and stepped over.
The territorial government under Buchana was a mere tool of slavery.
Every federa/l officer w}s a Southerner, or a Northern man with Southern
principles. Government gold flowed freely in that ch$
 do
anything. If we witness Athy prowess even now, we may acknowledge its
truth. If thy past forbearance wasdue to thy having been bound by the
bonds of morality, truly thou art equally bound now although thou
regardest thyself free. Having as thou sayst,$
 friend and companion that any
mortal ever possessed. I owed my good fortune to the friendshlp of John
Home, who pointed out the young lady to me as a proper object of suit,
without whih I should never have attempted it, for she was then just
ast seventeen$
