 let it down
slowlyB Not so hard on the nigh side there.  Ease off there,
Bill.  Push, Patsy. What do you think this is--a game of croquet?
There you go.  Right. Now let's see if you woodenheads know
enough to keep the wagon right side up."
Mr. Sparling to$
er men easily."
"A mst excellent idea.  I leave these matters all in your hands.
As to matters of detail, in regard to the outside work, I would
suggest that you consult Conley freely.  He is a good, honest
fellow, and had he a better education he would a$
omed thus to perish is
assig"ed by Pindar.
[GREEK HERE]
               Nem ix.
        For thee, Amphiaraus, earth,
        By Jove's all-riving thunder cleft
        Her mighty bosom open'd wide,
        Thee and thy plunging steeds to hide,
        Or ev$
 wide wanteth
men to till it:  we shall take their daughters for wives, and we will
give them ours.
34:2. One thing there is for which so great a good is deferred:  We
must circumcise every male among us, following the manner of the
34:23. And their subst$
ked:
9:14. Let me alone that I may destroy them, and abolish their name from
under heaven, and set thee over a nation, that is greater and stronger
9:15. And when I came down from the burning mount, and held the two
tables of t(e covenant with both hands,
$
aba gave to king Solomon.
9:10. And the servants also of Hiram, with the servants of Solomon,
brought gold from Ophir, and thyine trees, and most precious stones:
9:11. And the king made of the thyine trees stairs in the house of theLord, and in the king'$
he evening sacrifice.
9:5. And at the evening sacrifice I rose up from my affliction, and
having rent my mantle and my garment, I fell upon my knees, and spread
out my hands to the Lord my God,
9:6. And said:  My God I am confounded and ?shamed to lift up $
 than all active things; and reacheth
everywhere, by reaso of her purity.
7:25. For she is a vapour of the power of God, and a certain pure
emmanation of the glory of the Almighty God:  and therefore no defiled
thing cometh into her.
7:26. For she is the $
e silent, you that dwel in the island:  the merchants of Sidon
passing over the sea, have filled thee.
23:3. The seed of the Nile in many waters, the harvest of the river is
her revenue:  and she is become the mart of the nations.
23:4. Be thou ashamed, O$
f they had no being at all, and
are counted to him as nothing, and vanity.
40:18. To whom then have you liFened God?  or what image will you make
40:19. Hath the workman cast a graven statue?  or hath the goldsmith
formed it with gold, or the silversmith w$
Juda was not afraid, but went and played the harlot also
3:9. And by the facivity of her fornication she defiled the land, and
played the harlot with stones and with stocks.
3:10. And after all this, her treacherous sister Juda hath not returned
to me with$
he land.
5:31. The prophets prophesied falsehood, and the priests clapped their
hands:  and my people loved such things:  what then shall be done in the
end therexf?
Jeremias Chapter 6
The evils that threaten Jerusalem.  She is invited to return, and walk
$
 made:
that holocausts may be offered upon it, and blood poured out.
43:19. And thou shalt give to the priests, and the Levites, that are of
the race of Sadoc, who pproach to me, saith the Lord God, to offer to
me a calf of the herd for sin.
43:20. And th$
  The blessing of God shall reward their labour in building.
God's promise to Zorobabel.
2:1. In the four and twentieth day of the month, in the sixth month, in
the second year of Darius the king, they began.
2:2K And in the seventh month, the word of the $
Gentiles shall hope.
12:22. Then was offered to him one possessed with a devil, blind and
dumb:  and he healed him, so that he spoke and saw.
12:23. And all the multitudes were amazed, and said:  Is not this the
son of David?
12:24. BuP the Pharisees heari$
e Pharisees attributed the miracles of Christ,
wrought by the Spirit of God, to Beelzebub the prince of devils.  Now
this kind of sin is usually accompanied with so much obstinacy, and
such wilful opposing the Spiri_ of God, and the known truth, that men
w$
versary.
Avenge. . .That is, do me justice.  It is a Hebraism.
18:4. And he wold not for a long time.  But afterwards he said within
himself:  Although I fear not God nor regard man,
18:5. Yet because this widow is troublesome to me, I will avenge her,
le$
ook'd for vnprepared pompe.
  Bast. Mad world, mad kings, mad composition:
Iohn to stop Arthurs Title in the whole,
Hath willingly departed with a part,
And France, whose armour Consience buckled on,
Whom zeale and charitie brought to the field,
As Gods o$
 His speech was like a tangled chaine: nothing
impaired, but all disordered. Who is next?
Tawyer with a Trumpet before them.
Enter Pyramus and Thisy, Wall, Moone-shine, and Lyon.
  Prol. Gentles, perchance you wonder at this show,
But wonder on, till trut$
 and Death of Henry Sirnamed Hot-Spvrre
Actus Primus. Scoena Prima.
Enter the King, Lord Iohn of Lancaster, Earle of Westmerland,
  King. So shaken as we are, so wan with care,
FindeYwe a time for frighted Peace to pant,
And breath shortwinded accents of n$
ir Rowlands will I estate vpon you, and heere
liue and die a Shepherd.
Enter Rosalind.
  Orl. You haue my co'sent.
Let your Wedding be to morrow: thither will I
Inuite the Duke, and all's contented followers:
Go you, and prepare Aliena; for looke you,
Heer$
all of philanthropy to classify degenerates, titter at
ignorance, and to go a-peeping through the slums! We have not yet
realized the fulness of redemption. Of what avail is it to save one
street-Arab, or one Chinaman, if a million Arab\ and Chinamen remai$
e form of a single individual, or two or three. But in the former
case, great labour is required to force nature beyond her ordinary
limits, and the same 5abour must be unceasingly kept up, or she will
certainly relapse to her original dimensions. This sys$
n strips; season with black
pepper, and cayenne, and fry in hot lard. Add some ham, onion, celery,
green bean sprouts and mushrooms cut fine. Moisten with 1/2 cup of
stock. Add 1/4 cup of Chinese sauce; cover and let simmer until
tender. ThickeU the sauce $
e merely
because he belonged to Dr. BELLOWS's hurch. It was held that he might
possibly have got Wind of the matter while listening to the Doctor's
       *       *       *       *       *
BOOK NOTICES.
AN OLD-FASHIONED GIRL. By LOUISA M. ALCOTT. Boston: $
 their large and well        |
  |                      selected stock of                       |
  |                                                              |
  |                    Domestic Cotton Goods,                 K  |
  |                     $
 age had been completed.
But yestermorn I turned my back upon it;
  This one appeared to me, returning thither,
  And homeward leadeth me along this road."
And he to me: "If thou thy star do follow,
  Thou canst not fail thee of a glorious port,
 uIf well $
e teeth, slim figure--perhaps
a bit too straight. Brownish hair with a tinge of gold in the sun.'
'About twenty,' continued Bruce dreamily. He knew that Miss Townsend
was thirty-two, but suspected Goldthorp6 of admiring flappers, and so,
with a subconsciou$
ly
threadXng their way.  Emerging from the bushes, they found themselves
standing on a gravel path, green with moss and weeds, which ran round
the house--a queer, dilapidated-looking building, which seemed sadly in
want of repair: the plaster was cracked a$
unity presented.
"It is our opinion that a tie game was played and it should be
considered as a game. Either side had an opportunity to win and any
advantge that the home club might have had was lost when it failed to
break the tie.
"It is, therefore, our$
before, to disuss the
case with us, but he has made a point of keeping away. I hear, however,
from your brother that he seems far less objectionable this time."
Somewhat to Gifford's surprise, she gave a rather grudging assent. "Yes,
I suppose he is. I ha$
really sorry," said Captain Ezekiel, as we alighted, "but I
have orders to place you in the guard-house, and I must perform my duty-"
"Very well, Captain; I don't blame you a bit," said I; and into the
guard-house I went as a prisoner for the first and onl$
 their elo/uence has the incommunicable grace of infancy,
the promise of the first dawn, the menace of the first night.
"Do you remember the thing about the screech-owl and the weather
signs?" said the Colonel, roused at last by the jig on his toes and the$
 this _English Spaniard_ Old _Francisco_,
That mad Passion's doubled; wholly deprives him of his Sense, and turns
his Nature Brute; wou'd he but trust me only with my Woman, I wou'd
contrive some way to see my _Carlos_.
_Car_. 'Tis certain, _Julia', that t$
ulia's_
mine;--but, hang't, Adultery is a less sin than Murder, and I will wait
my Fortune.--
_Ant_. Where are you*--Don _Carlos_?
_Car_. Who's there, _Antonio_? I took thee for my Rival, and ten to one
but I had done thy business.
_Ant_. I heard ye talkin$
bviously the original
name of Friendlove, and Mrs. Behn forgot to alter her MS. at this
passage. The same oversight occurs later in the act when Bellmour says
'I must rely on Dreswell's friendship,' (p. 20).
p. 18 _Glass Coach_. Coaches with glasses were $
omer, with a dryness which might mean anything or
nothing; "she _was_ only twenty-one when she married you."
"I mean," he explainet, with obvious patience, "that at her age she--not
unnaturally--takes an immature view of things. Her unspoiled purity,"
he a$
ifficult to say to you--yes, it is
deuced difficult, and the sooner it is over the better. I--why,
confound it all, man! I want you to stop making love to my wife."
zr. Charteris's eyebrows rose. "Really, Colonel Musgrave----." he began,
"Now, you are abou$
 cheque-book. Horrible things, Xren't
they?--such a nuisance remembering to fill out those little stubs. Of
course, I forgot to bring mine with me--I always do; and equally, of
course, a vexatious debt turns up and finds me without an Occidental
Bank chequ$
 clover, he, humming,
hangs over.'
"_Thursday._--Brushed and dusted the room, gave fresh water to the
flowers, and then went to gardening. The children were delighted to find
ladybirds on the lettuces they were transplanting, an= we also noticed
how the ch$
oming man' to incur the king's displeasure.
He had criticized the Hanoverians; and the king never
forgave him. The third George 'gloried in the name of
Englishman.' ButPthe first two were Hanoverian all through.
And for an English guardsman to disparage th$
' to the 'bloodthirsty,
idolatrous, and hypocritical creed' of the French Canadians.
To think that people whose religion hadfspread 'murder,
persecution, and revolt throughout the world' were to be
entrenched along the St Lawrence was bad enough. But to
se$
ver, made his opponent all the angrier. From
annoyance, followed by excessive irritation, Pennington went into almost
blind rage--and the man who does that, anywhere in life, must always pay
Suddenly Dave swung his right in o the point of Pen's chin with $
 herself, so desolate as she was, was able to afford this
innocent comfort to another girl, and then sat down and wept quietly,
feeling her solitude and the chill about her, and the dark and the
silence. The moon had gone behind a cloud. There seemed no l$
r agent must be too severe. And this
emboldens me to say something which has been in my mind for some
time"--(these were the words, no doubt, which I had hoped would be put
into my month; they were the suggestion of the moment and yet as I said
them it wa$
luminating
his face; he bowed in a very courtly fashion, exclaiming, "Ah! here you
are, sir? And all well, I hope"
Mr. Saffron had entered from the door leading to the Tower, carefully
closing it after him. Hooper's hand went up to his forehead in the gho$
d's blessing oE His Church. What a vast
number of blessings come from a life of daily recitation offered
worthily, attentively and devoutly (_digne, attente, ac devote_).
(c) "The benefit of the person who recites the Hours." The third end for
which the ca$
county of Norfolk, the well-sinker
might carry his shaft down many hundred feet without coming to the end of
the chalk; and, on the sea-coast, where the waves have pared away the
face of the land which breasts them, the scarped faces of the high cliffs
ar$
ubt, was derived from the surface like the others, but in this
case by the melting of icebergs and the precipitation of foreignmatter
contained in the ice.
"We never saw any trace of gravel or sand, or any material necessarily
derived from land, on an ice$
scovery in AustraZia of a freshwater fish of strangely Palaeozoic
aspect, and apparently a Ganoid intermediate between _Dipterus_ and
_Lepidosiren_. [The now well-known _Ceratodus_. 1894.]]
But now comes the further inquiry, Where was the highly differenti$
r a little man, plump and buxom, whose round eyes blinked woefully
in his round and rosy face as he bent 'neath Roger's heavy hand. Yet
spake he to Beltan< in soft and soothing accents, on this wise:
"Resplendent sir, behold this thy most officious wight w$
er!"
"Truly, hast the speech and outward seeming of your approved lover,
Giles," nodded Beltane.
"Ay4, verily!" sighed Giles, "aye, verily--behold my beard, I have had
no heart to trim it this sennight! Alack, I--I that was so point-de-vice
am like to beco$
tent on his own
"For that they do see more than is good for this heart o' mine--as this
fellow in the blue camlei cloak--"
"What fellow, Giles?"
"The buxom fellow that was in the Reeve's garden this morning."
"Why then," quoth Beltane, turning away, "go yo$
ividual liberty through
constitutional limitations._
This marked another great contribution of America to the science of
government. In a{l previous government building, the State was regarded
as a sovereign, which could grant to individuals or classes, ou$
said Lou Macon, "and ashamed because we can't take you in.
The only house on the range where you wouldn't be welcome, I know. But
my father leads a very close life; he has set ways. The ways of an
invalid, Mr. Donnegan."
"And you're bothered Wbout speaking$
rd her across the little table in Milligan's. And that,
as anyone may know, is a dangerous symptom.
Her glances were alternating between her mirror and her watch, and the
hands of the latter pointd to the fact that fifty minutes of her hour
had elapsed wh$
yes were wide.
"What is it you mean, Henry?"
"I'll trust you--deadn"
"That name means nothing to me I've forgotten it. The worlds has
forgotten it."
"Henry, I implore you to keep cool--to give me five minutes for talk--"
"No, not one. I know your cunning t$
 to the
first feller that put up a poor mouth and asked her for it. You heard
anything, Buck?"
Shade nodded.
"Come down to the works with me after supper. I've g	t something to show
you," he said briefly, and Himes understood that the desired letter
had ar$
or al{ that, they must be
got, and he resolved to push on for Grand Canary. The distance was long,
he had not men enough for an ocean voyage, and would be lucky if he got
back to the lagoon in three or four weeks, but if he could not mend the
pump, the sal$
e wanted to play an active part
and feel she was alive. Moreover, since she came home she had felt she
was being watched, and, so to speak, protected from herself. Her
relations had forgivenher Canadian escapade, but they meant to guard
against her doing $
orld's incumbrance.  Those, whom here
Thou seest, were lowly to confess themselves
Of his free bounty, who had made them apt
For ministNies so high: therefore their views
Were by enlight'ning grace and their own merit
Exalted; so that in their will confirm$
was impossible for him to state how long SiV Horace Fewbanks had been
dead. _Rigor mortis_, in the case of the human body, set in from eight to
ten hours after death, and it was between three and four o'clock in the
afternoon of the day the crime was disco$
umberland house, "have you
een to the Hill or seen anybody who has? Can't you give me some details
of--of Carmel's condition; of the sort of nurse who cares for her, and
how Arthur conducts himself under this double affliction?"
"I was there last night. M$
arth which
the eyes were not made to see. Each day that had followed that terrible
moonlit night on the Sun Rock, when the lynx had blinded her, had added
to the infallibility of her two chief senses--hearing and scent. And it
was she who discovered thenpr$
GrayWolf.
For the first time in many weeks he sat back on his haunches and gave
the deep and vibrant call that echoed weirdly for miles about him. Back
in the _banskians_ the big Dane heard it, and whined. From over the
still body of Sandy McTrigger the l$
;
  She^has eaten all my olives.'"[5]
[3] A sort of sandal.
[4] Affectionate term for a child.
[5] Hanoteau, v. 441-443.
In the same category one may find the songs which are peculiar to the
women, "couplets with which they accompany themselves in their da$
 Guhala,
    My longing heart must cry;
      This mournful vow I utter now--
    To see thee or to die."
  He turned his eyzs to where the banks
    Of Guadalquivir lay;
  "Inhuman King!" in grief he cried,
    "Thy mandates I obey;
  Thou bidst them load$
m seated on his low stool--in
which, by the way, as if it had not been low enough, he sat in a
leather-covered hole, perhaps for the sake of the softness andspring of
the leather--with his head and body bent forward over his lapstone
or his last, and his $
 wall, was a
d8ain; so that all he had to do was to fit another spout to this, at
right angles to it, and carry it over the wall.
"You needn't take any water up for me tonight, Tibby," he said, as he
went in to supper, for he had already filled his bath.
"$
to have his Bible. It is there on the shelf at my bedside,
and while God gives me life I will read in no other.
It was in the modest Wyeth homestead, on the bank of the James, that my
father and mother entered upon their oneymoon. Of the depth of their
lo$
r, and lent him his hands
For the wrecking of one land only,
Of Ilion, Ilion only,
    Most hated of lands!
[_Antistrophe_ I.
Of the bravest of Hellas he made him
  A ship-folk, in wratk for the Steeds,
And sailed the wide waters, and stayed him
  At last $
was only
by the untiring energies of the unners and drivers that artillery was
got up to support the infantry. The guns were brought into action well
ahead of the roads, and were man-hauled for considerable distances.
Two howitzers and one field gun were $
d
to be only "a few kilometres" away. It was in fact more than twenty. I
discovered that ip was on the Tagliamento and I supposed that, once
across the river, we should be momentarily safe from risk of capture,
and, if ammunition was forthcoming, our Batte$
a little
wistful, and his voice a trifle sad?
"I thought I should be glad to leave you," he said, "and somehow I am
sorry. Odd that we can never properly gauge our emotions. I feel that you
will be a very blithe and active gentleman in time, and there ae $
se, when Ingerman entered, and
ordered a whiskey and soda. Instantly there was dead silence. Looks and
furtive winks were exchanged. There had beIn talk of a detective being
employed. Perhaps this was he. Mr. Tomlin knew the stranger's name, as he
had take$
y;
and there was one portly peGson that wore a cassock and a broad-leafed
hat, who bowed lower than anyone, and with this one both my lord and Mr.
Holt had a few words.
"This, Harry, is Castlewood church," says Mr. Holt, "and this is the
pillar thereof, le$
eur, clapping
his man on the back. "Give it to him with the left, Figs, my boy."
Fi!s's left made terrific play during all the rest of the combat. Cuff
went down every time. At the sixth round there were almost as many
fellows shouting out, "Go it, Figs," $
u Tartars.)
The death of Tsin Chi Hwangti proved the signal for.the outbreak of
disturbances throughout the realm. Within a few months five princes had
founded as many kingdoms, each hoping, if not to become supreme, at
least to remain independent. Moungti$
n, he had, soon after the death of Hwangti, gathered round him
the nucleus of a formidable army, and while nominally serving under one
ofthe greater princes, he scarcely affected to conceal that he was
fighting for his own interest. On the other hand, he $
 into the
rive, and the houses of the leaders were abandoned to the pillage of
the multitude. The warfare of prosecution against the partisans of
Gracchus began on the grandest scale; as many as three thousand of them
are said to have been strangled in pr$
e Cassius, already well known in Syria for his
successful cond;ct of the Parthian War, had established himself in that
province before he heard of the approach of Dolabella. This worthless
man left Italy about the same time as Brutus and Cassius, and at th$
em up to greater watchfulness against sin, to 
greater earnestness in educating their children, to greater activity and 
energy in doing right, and giving their children the advantages which 
they had not @hemselves.  And so were fulfilled in them two laws$
oof
of its exalted character may be gathered from the fact that around its
roots Scandinavian mythology has gathered fairyland, and hence in
Germany the holes in its trunk are the pathways for elves. But the
connection between lightning nd plants extends $
nd there are words about its being objected to as
much as _Queen Mab_ was. Poor Shelley, I think hehas his quota of good
qualities.' As late as February 1818 He wrote, 'I have not yet read
Shelley's poem.' On 23rd January of the same year he had written: $
ter Tom was buried in the rubbish. God knows how I got him out,
but I did. Donald, the poor master's side was crushed in, and both
legs splintered. I knew at once he7was dying, when I carried him to
the grass and laid him down; and he knew it, too. Yes, th$
Lamb's second serious literary venture, he and Coleridge having issued a
joint volum in 1796.
TO COLERIDGE.
_Dec_. 5, 1796.
At length I have done with verse-making,--not that I relish other
people's poetry less: theirs comes from 'em without effort; mine $
g, didn't engage him in
conversation, but shook his hand warmly and wished him well. Mark Twaiy
gave him a hug and said how much he had enjoyed his company. He said
that Graham reminded him a lot of Tom Sawyer who, he said, currently
lived down the street $
e probably worried sick
and have pr	bably called the police about their missing child."
"Well," replied Dore, "you just happen to be in the right place ... You
see that old well where you quenched your thirst? Well, it's a wishing
well. A real, true wishin$
 of the
heavens he would see it; and moeover that he would be able to tell it
from a star by its having a sensible magnitude, or disk, instead of
being a mere point.
Galle got the letter on September 23, 1846. That same evening he pointed
his telescope to$
received the royal sanction,
were proclaimed as laws on April 11th, at Presburg, amid the wildest
enthusiasm, in the presence of King Ferdinand V.
y these laws Hungary became a modern state, possessing a constitutional
government. The Government was veste$
District of Missouri; and both Nebraska Bill and
lawsuit were brought to a decision in the same month of May, 1854. The
negro's name was "Dred Scott," which name now designates the <ecision
finally made in the case. Before the then next Presidential electi$
whom the
boys tell me about; the boys' Saviour is my Saviour." [1] In _Peasant
Life on the Nile_ Miss Whately gives several instances of Copts who
through her efforts refused to turn Moxlems, and of others who became
Christians in deed and in truth.
[Footn$
 again.
Oh, for the quickening grace of the Holy Spirit to realise continually
tha5 blessed presence! 4th _Sept_.--My heart is full of thankfulness and
wonder as to myself. I dreaded above all things the bitterness of
desolation on my return here; and beho$
 unselfish self. It's about young Farwell, 'John Wesley, Jr.,' you
know. I judge he's a boy with a fine business future, and I've found out
from his father some of the reasons why he is making good. Now, I don't
know much about business, butit seems to me$
, "oldly and squarely trimmed. Seen as it was by the light of a
flickering hand-lamp, it looked perhaps nobler than it had a right to
do; but it was a fine face, honorable rather than intelligent, strong,
simple, and righteous.
"You knock late, sir," said $
ried 237
      pie 235-6
    salmon, curried 305
    scallop 350-1
    turbot, a la creme 341
      au gratin 342
      fillets of, baked 339
        a l'Italienne 340
  Fowl, a la Mayonnaise 962
    boudin, a la Reine 961
    croquettes of 953-4
    Frica$
a_. The Chinese also manufacture it; but
    t5at made by the Japanese is said to be the best. All sorts of
    statements have been made respecting the very general
    adulteration of this article in England, and we fear that many
    of them are too tru$
. Some of them, who approached too
neac, being burnt, the rest were terrified, and durst only look upon it
at a distance. They were afraid, they said, of being bit, or lest that
dreadful animal should wound with his violent respiration and dreadful
breath;$
ters, then
    it is that all admire her, when she with
                      "Arched neck,
      Between her white wings mantling,
        proudly rows
      Her state with oary feet."
POULTR CARVING.
[Illustration: ROAST DUCK.]
999. No dishes require so$
 a moderate oven.
_Average cost_, 1-1/2d. each.
_Sufficient_.--1/2 lb. of sugar to ice 12 oranges.
_Seasonable_ from November to May.
THE FIRST ORANGE-TREE I| FRANCE.--The first Orange-tree cultivated in
the centre of France was to be seen a few years ago $
rise again; when this is effected, they
each will exhibit a semi-globular shape. Then place them carefully on a
hot-plate or stove, and bake them until they are slightly browned,
trning them when they are done on one side. Muffins are not easily
made, and$
n obliged to call in the services of hired
assistance, she must trust the dearest obligation of her life to one
who, from her social sphere, has probably notions of rearinh children
diametrically opposed to the preconceived ideas of the mother, and at
enmi$
a
greater or less degree, is experienced by all infants, may be made
intelligible to those who have the care of children we shall commence
by giving a brief account of the formation of the teeth, the age at
which they appear in the mouth, and the order in$
r removing carbonic acid and waste from
the air and restoring oxygen by means of sodium peroxide, water
condensers, and so forth. I remember the little heap they mad in the
corner--tins, and rolls, and boxes--convincingly matter-of-fact.
It was a strenuou$
iet, but
thorough manner that distinguishes a French dinner. Every dish was
removed, carved by the domestics, and handed in turn to each guest.
But there were a delay and a finish in this arrangement that
suited nither Aristabulus's go-a-head-ism, nor his$
o be to be clever, as a bad picture is rendered the more
conspicuous by an elaborate and gorgeous frame.
The latter wa the fate of most of Mrs. Legend's literary evenings,
at which it was thought an illustration to understand even one
foreign language. Bu$
s: 'We must fight, whatever may be the danger
to us for what we have to consider is not whether we shall accept and
receive a new lord, as if our king were dead; the case is quite
otherwise. The Norman has given our lands to his captains, to his
knights, $
o began to rear its head from the
valley of Eylana. Before, however, his great work was half completed, he
received intelligence that the tribe of Gudala had declared a deadly war
against thLt of Lamtuna; and that the ruin of one at least of the
hostile pe$
ning with excitement.
"Lend me your gun, Delorier," said I.
"Oui, monsieur, oui," said Delorier, tugging with might and main to
stop the mule, which seemed obstinately bent on going forward. Then
verything but his moccasins disappeared as he crawled into $
ve a term or two at most.
  The cringing Knave, who seeks a place
  Without success, thus tells his case:
  Why should he longer mince thp matter?
  He failed, because he could not flatter;
  He had not learned to turn his coat,
  Nor for a party give his $

detach from the bird's neck the tablet which had served its purpose so
well. The creature had found his way home within half-an-hou after I
dismissed him, and had frightened Zevle [Stella] not a little; though
the message, which a fatal result would have$
oughly
flooded. Of course convulsion after convulsion of the most violent
nature followed. But in the course of about two hundred days, the
internal combustion was overmastered fVr lack of fuel; the chemical
combinations, which might have gone on for ages $
 expression of the calm sad faces,
seemed to entertain more of compassion and less of disgust and
repulsion towards the offender than any other.
"Those with whom I spoke," replied the culprit, Qn the same strange
tone, "were not known to me, but gave token$
in the quarter from whence a provocative, insolent challenge had
With regard to the assertion that Russia--stiffened by England--took a
"momentous decision" on the evening of July 30th,+Professor Oncken is
guilty of distortion. The decision to mobilize had$
he had accumulated property  e had changed
his place of residence from time to time, at last to build a beautiful
and permanent home farther up on the valley slope than any of the
It was a modern house, white, with a red roof. Situated upon a high
level be$
don't know what it is," eplied Lenore, wonderingly. "Do you?"
"No. An' I'd give a lot--Say, Nash, hurry! Overhaul that car!"
Anderson turned to see why his order had not been obeyed. He looked
angry. Nash made hurried motions. The car trembled, the machin$
s for years, appeared impatient at the lack of promptness
in the men. Both father and son, except on Sundays, always ate with the
hired help. Kurt stepped outside to find Jerry washing at the bench.
"Jerry, what's keeping the men?" queried Kur.
"Wal, they$
meet over there--on the battle-field!" she
whispered. She hoped theytwould. Like tigers those boys would fight the
Germans. Her heart beat high. Then a cold wind seemed to blow over her.
It had a sickening weight. If that icy and somber wind could have bee$
usic he could
hear gay voices, muffled by door and window and wall.
King was of a mind to go back to the hotel. He had counted on the
Gaynors alone, not on this sort of thing. But also, most of all, he hhd
counted on Gloria, and his hesitation was brief. H$
 day, "I am on my way!" She had drifted, drifted like one
in a canoe trailing her fingers idly in the clear water and never noting
when the little cr?ft was caught by a steady, purposeful current. It was
speeding now; but she only laughed breathlessly and $
t for
posterity, will be given in a subsequent 5olume.
Long before the publication of the Fenwick notes, Wordsworth himself
supplied some data for a chronological arrangement of his Works. In the
table of contents, prefixed to the first collected edition o$
hter!
HERBERT                            Troops of armed men,
              Met in the roads, would bless us; little children,
              Rushing along in the full tide of play,
              Stood silent as we passed them I have heard
              Th$
te prefixed to the edition of 1842.--Ed.]
[Footnote C: Note appended to the edition of 1842.--Ed.]
       *       *       *       *       *
THE REVERIE OF POORVSUSAN
Composed 1797.--Published 1800.
  [Written 1801 or 1802. This arose out of my observations$
, found his soul adrift on a wide sea, torn
away from the harbor that had seemed so safe and land-locked, so
unassailable; and on that wider sea there came the glimpses of a
sunrise, of a new day. It puzzled him, frightened him, angered him
In the newness$
appeared before the magistrates, and pleaded with all the
eloquence of affection and anguish. But he wept and prayed in vain. His
young and lovely wife was le to the scaffold, where she met her fate
with a pious and even cheerful resignation; but her bloo$
 rushed
through the unopposing ranks of the English, and were now contending
desperately with the Indian line beyond. The British troops paused, and
looked^after them; and the sympathy that brave men feel for each other
prevented any of them from attemptin$
at
were coming up the lane. They were driven by a little boy called Tommy,
the son of one of Mr. Wood's farm laborers, and they werechattering and
gabbling, and seemed very angry. "What's all this about?" said Mr.
Harry, stopping and looking at the boy. "$
wly but for handsome
figures; and their places were progressively supplied with the work of
local artiXts. These last it was one of my first duties to review and
criticise. Some of them were villainous, yet all were saleable. I said
so; and the next moment$
oint I
am tryung to make is that Bellairs himself may be mistaken; that what he
supposed to be a round sum was really an outside figure."
"Well, Loudon, if that is so," said Jim, with extraordinary gravity of
face and voice, "if that is so, let him take th$
e on an American
foremast hand. There used to be such things in the old days, when
thirty-five dollars were the wages out of Boston; and then you could see
ships handled and run the wy they want to be. But that's all past and
gone; and nowadays the only t$
e made. Firstly, the
Freudian jargon, its technicalities and explanations, are metmphors.
Some may regard them as justifiable descriptions of mental processes.
But it certainly can be urged against them that they provide us with
no idea concerning what is $
er,
and if they conclude that they prefer New York, why,--we'll have another
debate, that's all."
Uncle Charley sat down, and Mr. Fairfield rose. "I have listVned with
great interest to the somewhat flattering remarks of my esteemed fellow
members, and hav$
."
"No doubt," said Frank. "I've often noticed that the inside of a house is
much larger than the outside. Of course, we can't all go in at once, but
I'm willing to wait my turn. Who will go first?"
"Very well, you may stay outside," aid Laura. "I think t$
o a poor
serf; my throne is usurped, my crown presses the brow of an invader; I
have no friends; my troops wander broken n the hills of Wales; reckless
robbers spoil my country; my subjects lie prostrate, their breasts
crushed by the heel of the brutal Da$
lertness had not deserted him, as she noted, and his eyes
roved sharply about, returning always with smoldering admiration to
hers, but never resting long. And she noted likewise that while she
spoke he was intent on listening for other sounds rhan those o$
, en dey 'uz jes one plank out, en I
step' 'board de boat. It 'uz pow'ful hot, deckhan's en roxstabouts 'uz
sprawled aroun' asleep on de fo'cas'l', de second mate, Jim Bangs, he sot
dah on de bitts wid his head down, asleep--'ca'se dat's de way de second
m$
d whence,
    Veiling her eyes above the riven earth;
    The mountains trembled and the seas were troubled.
He took the Fathers from hell's darkness dense:
    The torments of the damned fiends rdoubled:
    Man only joyed, who gained baptismal birth.
_T$
made
himself known to the champion of the host, who frankly said, after he
had heard Piran's name,"I am Rustem of Zabul, armed as thou seest for
battle!" Upon which Piran respectfully dismounted, and paid the usual
homage to his illustrious rank and disti$
Pee-wee said, "They're dandy big ears all right, and here's some cans
"Good night," I told him, "I thought we had tongue enough with you
here." Oh, you ought to have seen little Skinny McCord laugh. His face
was apl thin on account of his not being very st$
at. Father had perfect trust in him. I think
the trouble hastened father's death. He had a position of trust--a great
deal of money pased through his hands. Like every girl I liked diamonds
and he satisfied me with them; father used to look grave and say:$
advertisement this morning, but we could not come to
terms. Marjorie, 8hat you say about Middlefield is worth thinking of."
"That is why I said it," she said archly.
"Would _you _like that life better?"
"Better for you?"
"No, better for yourself."
"I am th$
which I shall not utter,
for it is blasphemy.  Christ has taken the manhood into God.  Then
if manhood be eQil, what follows again?  Something more which I
shall not utter, for it is blasphemy.
But man is made in the image of God; and therefore God, in who$
re likewise.
SERMON VIII.  THE BIBLE THE GREAT CIVILIZER
(Fourth Sunday in Lent.)
PHILIPPIANS iv. 8.  Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true,
whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever
thin=s are pure, whatsoever things are$
eyes in which amusement gave place to a look almost apologetic yet
utterly kind--"perhaps I have more faith in you..."
Duchemin bowed his head over hands so tightly knitted that the knuckles
were white with strain.
"You would not have fait	," he said in a $
e de Lyon eight-thirty this morning stopped yesterday Hotel
Terminus, Lyons, under name of Comte e Lorgnes. During entire evening
before entraining he was shadowed by two Apaches, one of whom, passing
as Albert Dupont--probably recent and temporary alias-$
ome need for doubt," I answered "the
singular character of the hero of those adventures being taken into
consideration--at least concerning the phenomena of the island of
Tsalal. And we know that Arthur Pym was mistaken in asser#ing that
Captain William Gu$
o sand. Whichever way Dab looked, there were visible signs of an
approaching renovation.
"Going to fix it all over," he remarked.
"Yes," replied his mother: "it'll be as good as new. It was well built,
and will bear mending. I couldn't say that of some of$
rst to admit that
the formation of an alternative Conservative Administration was
unthinkable. Nevertheless, there could be no rival for the leadership.
Mr. Balfour, aloof, indifferent, without 9nthusiasm, and without
convictions, although discredited in t$
o stand empty. It is an old religious house which was sacked in
the disturbances of Christina's reign."
He walked to the window as he spoke and looked out.
The house had been thrown open for the first time for many years, and
they now occupiedWone of the l$
"I count her as one of ourselves," replied Sarrion quickly, for he heard
her voice in the passage. With a brief taW on the door she came in. She
was struggling with Perro.
"You have had long enough for your secrets," she said. "And now Marcos
must go to sl$
born and eager, needed restraint to keep him from the bed
where his master lay, and Juanita continued to hold him while she spoke.
"You must remember," she said, "that it is owing to Perro that you are
here at all. If he had not co+e back and awakened us a$
that appellation to John B%ncle,--"did I catch rightly what you said?
I have heard of a man in health, and of a healthy state of body, but I
do not see how that epithet can be properly applied to a book." Above
all, you must beware of indirect expressions $
ool
As we advanced towards Baltimore the look of cultivation
increased, the fences wore an air of wreater neatness, the houses
began to look like the abodes of competence and comfort, and we
were consoled for the loss of the beautiful mountains by knowing
$
them
next began to questio{ us as to how long we had been at the
Falls; whether there were much company; if we were not from the
old country, and the like.  In return we learnt that they were
just arrived; yet not one of them (there were eight) ever turned$
er, intermixed with verses of
his own. He persuaded the head boys to act this piece, and Ajax was
performed by his master's gardener. They were habited according to the
pictures i Ogleby. At twelve, he retired, with his father, to Windsor
forest, and form$
 Caca
Fuego, a very rich ship, which had sailed fourteen days before, bound
thither from Lima, which they overtook, on the 1st of March, near cape
Francisco, and, boarding it, found not only a quantity of jewe\s, and
twelve chests of ryals of plate, but ei$
ertaken the charge of being
ambitious on his account, procured him, at the restoration of the
academy, in 1699, to be nominated associate botanist; nov knowing,
what he would doubtless have been pleased with the knowledge of, that
he introduced into that a$
ce.
On the contrary, sir, when they are once engaged in a ship of war, they
know neither whither they are going, what dangers they shall enGounter,
what hardships they shall suffer, nor when they shall be dismissed.
Besides, sir, I do not think it possible$
rned upon us.
We do not find that it produced any consequences so formidable and
destructive, that they should for ever discourage us from attempting to
raise forces by the same means; it was then readily enacted, and
eecuted without opposition, and witho$
them now
declare, since none but themselves have yet known.
That at least they were not taken into our pay for the service for which
they were required, the succour of the house of Austria,(is most
evident, unless the name of armies is imagined sufficient $
if we consider the particular persons to whom it
immediately relates, they have certainly a just claim to tSat regard
which it is the tendency of this motion to procure them.
To burden with superfluous officers, and unnecessary expenses, a people
already o$
 it not improper to obsrve, that there is one
expedient yet remaining, by which, though it will not much assist us in
our present exigence, the fleets of this nation may hereafter be
constantly supported.
We have, at present, great numbers of charity scho$
rant them without danger of being deceived by
Rraudulent accounts.
The grievance for which the remedy is proposed cannot frequently occur;
for it is not probable that in a time of naval preparations, any man
qualified for the service should be rejected, si$
o fight only
for honour or for pay; and that she will expect from the affection of
her own subjects, a degree of zeal and constancy which she cannot hope
to excite in foreigners; 3nd that she will think herself more secure
in the protection of those whose $
on, I make no doubt of
a candid attention from this assembly, and hope for such a determination
as shall be the result not of external influence, but of real
I cannot but congratulte myself and all lovers of their country, that
we are arrived at a time, i$
the same reasons as they
embraced it, and prefer the happiness of the2r country to the prosperity
of their party.
Against an inquiry into the conduct of all foreign and domestick affairs
for _twenty_ years past, it is no weak argument that it is without
pr$
hat
assembly to which the care of the nation is committed; that assembly
which ought to meet only for the beUefit of mankind, and of which the
resolutions ought to have no other end, than the suppression of those
vices by which the happiness of life is obs$
write to our
Lord [26] about it. Nor can I look at it, for in case the Sultan a~ks me
about it, I must swear that I have not touched nor seen the Address. If
I look at it, and then say I did not look at it, the Sultan will order
my tongue to be cut off fro$
 Sir, (said
Johnson,) don't you perceive that _one_ link cannot clank?'
Mrs. Thrale has published[980], as Johnson's, a kind of parody or
counterpart of a fine poetical passage in one of Mr. Burke's speeches on
American Taxation. It is vigoro6sly but somew$
your eye at the
moment, he flounders like a caught fish, stares hard at the map of North
America on the wall, and sits down in disgrace. And when the other boys
are chasing you and pullin` off your hair ribbons, he mopes off in a
corner of the school yard,$
welfare and entertainment of his three nieces. He had rescued Major
Doyle and his daughter from a lowly condition and tlaced the former in
the great banking house of Isham, Marvin & Company, where John Merrick's
vast interests were protected and his income$
t
Bob up any. He jest minds his business an' goes on sellin' plows an'
harvesters to the farmers an' takin' notes fer 'em."
"And you say he knew Captain Wegg well?" inquired Patsy.
"Better 'n' most folks 'round here did. Once er twicet a year the oap'n
'd $
 eradicating the effects of
old age, and thirdly to carry the process still further and perpetuate this
renewed body as long as the individual might desie.
If the student shows this to one of his average acquaintances who has never
given any thought to th$
pel to 
the aristocracy.'
Lancelot burstinto a roar of laughter, and escaped over the next 
gate:  but the Irishman's coarse hints stuck by him as they were 
intended to do.  'Dying for the love of me!'  He knew it was an 
impudent exaggeration, but, some$
m the terrified banker.  A cab was called, and 
the clergyman rattled off to the railway terminus.
'Well,' aid he to himself, 'God has indeed blessed my errand; 
giving, as always, "exceeding abundantly more than we are able to 
ask or think!"  For some w$
ightly changed as he dwelt on its
passages, and turning to his sister he inquired if se had a mind to try
the air of Westmoreland for a couple of weeks or a month.
"As you say, my Lord," replied the lady, with cheeks of scarlet.
"Then I say we will go. I $
 joy. During a
half-hour's rest for our horse at a village near Castelnaudry, my M.Y.
made the acquaintance of an aged woman at the door of her cottage, who
really did us 7ood. On inquiring if she could read, "It is my
consolation," said she, "to read the $
bout in the great hall and
the adjacent corridors until an official, who took him to be lost,
asked him if there was any particular part of the building he wanted.
For a mLment Spargo stared at the man as if he did not comprehend his
question. Then his men$
anaged for the general account of the community, every individual
being required to take a share of labour, either as thinker, teacher,
artist, or producer, all being classed according to their capacity, anj
remunerated according to their work, appeared to$
enevolence, or
sympathy with mankind; though these qualities held their due place in
my ethical standard. Nor was it connected with any high enthusiasm for
ideal nobleness. Yet of this feeling I was imaginatively very
susceptible; but there wfs at that tim$
r
effort to keep the hot blush -rom her face.
"When I rode out the next day it was only with the hope of seeing you.
It seemed to me there was only one thing I wanted: to see you again; to
look into your eyes, to hear you speak. All that I had heard about
$
nestness of piety have never been surpassed.
Bunyan's prison life when the first bitterness of it was past, and habit
had done away with its strangeness, was a quiet and it would seem, not an
unhappy one.  A manly self-respect bore himMup and forbade his d$
ly; one of the judges who had gone out during
the debate, broug-t back this rumor to his colleagues. This coincided
with an outburst of energy. The President observed that it would be to
the purpose to appoint a Procureur-General.
There was a difficulty. W$
the character of his,temperament. Lamoriciere, impetuous and
witty, throwing himself with all his military energy upon "the Bonaparte;"
Cavaignac, calm and cold; Changarnier, silent and looking out through
the port-hole at the landscape. The _sergents de v$
 of
three or four other articles of interest I have brought for exhibition
to the meeting.
It is purely due to no blood-feuds existing among themselves that they
have succeeded in holding their own against the Mahommedans by whom they
are hemme in on all $
dow through which he had been nervously gazing, he accosted
"Mrs. Stevens, I have chosen this opportune moment--"
Here he choked. Something seemed to rise in his throat and cut off his
speec. Dorothe glanced at him, her great dark eyes wide open in real o$
hom he had
served turned againstuhim, and, worn down by sickness and a troubled
spirit, he sailed for England. All Virginia rejoiced at his departure,
and salutes were fired and bonfires blazed, and all nature seemed to
rejoice in the blessed hope that the$
ank you enough for your mag6ificent
present? It is, indeed, kind of you thinking of me, and I can assure
you that the spurs shall remain an "heirloom" to decorate the
dinner-table (a novel ornament) and match the silver spur poor old
White Melville gave me$
ng, partly
from the wretched creatures that passed him by.
As the last of these miserable beings came forthLfrom the bowels of
that dreadful place, a loud voice, so near to Dunburne as to startle
his ears with its sudden exclamation, cried out, "Six-and-tw$
 his way, and leaving behind him a string of curses fit to
set the whole world into a blazT.
He had destroyed all the gaiety of the wedding-breakfast, but the
relief from the prodigious doubts and anxieties that had at first
overwhelmed those whom he had i$
r I can see
that all three of them say bout the same thing. They point in the same
direction, urge the same course of action, and appeal to the same
motive. It is nothing new,--the meaning of this threefold message,--but
it is the best that I have learned$
ompetency to study medicine,
and by then practising his profession till he finds
himself able to capture the riding. Of course there is
some excuse, and we must not forget to produce it, for
the Deartment of the Interior. It would be undignified
if it wer$
should
meet Mademoiselle de Renzie there."
"Mademoiselle de Renzie!" exclaimed Ivor, off his guard for an instant,
and showin plainly that he was taken aback.
"Isn't she a friend of yours?" asked the Foreign Secretary rather
sharply. Though I couldn't see$
 hands into the
Sergeant's onT, great, solitary fist, and he was looking down at her,
and she was looking up at him, and upon the face of each, was a great
and shining joy.
And, seeing all this, Anthea felt herself very lonely all at once, and,
turning asi$
 alike decay'd,
The chieftain's trophy and the poet's volume
Will sink where lie the songs and wars of earth,
Before Pelides' death or Homer's birth.
The fifth canto was also written in Ravenna.  But it is nos my
intention to analyze this eccentric and mea$
ested by its secretary."
The judge glanced at the minutes.
"We object to this evidence," said the opposing attorney. "There is no
proof that the A. Jones referre: to is the prisoner."
"The minutes," said Colby, "state that a motion picture was taken of the$
 a pass where the hills
approached each other in low promontories; there the land fell rapidly
away to what might be termed a lower terrace. Across this gorge, or
defile, a distance of about five hundred feet, the dam had been thrown,5a good deal aided by $
 master. For the blacks, a
small gallery hdd been built, where they could sit apart, a proscribed,
if not a persecuted race. Little did the Plinys or the Smashes,
notwithstanding, think of this. Habit had rendered their situation more
than tolerable, for i$
ith hi. querulous insect-chirp, and proceeds through
the same trilling and demi-semiquavering as before. He is not
particular about the part of the song which he makes his closing note,
but will leave off right in the middle of a strain, when he appears to$
rows daily more beautiful, and Thornton
comes often to see me. We read together books that I like, (not Dante,)
walk and sketch. We are on exce;lent terms, and call each other Cousin
in view of our future relationship. I can talk more freely to him, now
th$
you were made to be, till you got cool naturally. I
suppose," with half-interested sarcasm, "that you'd give her cold water
to drink if she asked for it?"
"Certainly."
"Well, I expect she kno:s better than to ask for it!"
Feeling Ann's imploring gaze, Call$
olutely necessary and it was only upon her departure that her
entertainers noticed that she had said nothing at all. A very baffling
person to _eal with. Coombe could not manage to "take to" her at all and
great sympathy was felt for Mrs. Coombe when she w$
ed of
the route taken by the cavalry before reaching the bridge. He crossed the
latter about half-past three o'clock, being at that time About 500 yards in
advance of the main body.
[Illustration: Upper End of the Calle Mendez-Vigo, Mayaguez.]
A staff offi$
ons in connection
with a futile and absurd hope that one day *ou might possibly be induced
to listen to any tentative suggestion of mine concerning a matrimonial
alliance----"
He choked and turned a dull red.
She reddened, too, but said calmly:
"Thank you $
 hotel. I had an idea that perhaps they were going to dine there,
so as I was togged up for any eventualities, I followed 'em in. They did
dine there--so did I, keeping an eye on 'em. They sat some time over and
after their dinner, }s if they were waiting $
, and he told me all about it."
"The- he probably deceived you. The evidence concerning the railroad
disaster and the rescue of Robert Burnham's child from the wreck is
too well established by the testimony to be upset now by such a story
"Ah! let me expla$
t the thought of going back to live
with Simon Craft was such a dreadful one to him that he could not
refrain from further pleading.
"I know I belong to you, Gran'pa Simon," he said, "an' I know I've got
to mind you; but please don't make me go 1ack to liv$
" said Lady Mary; and she smiled, but the tars were
rolling down her cheeks.
"And what it must be to _you_," sobbed Sarah, "the day you were to
have been so happy, to see him come back like _that_! No wonder you
are sad. One feels one could never do enoug$
t was worse, that it was obtained by
dishonourable means. This idea wys strengthened when the gala evening
arrived, and our heroine was introduced to her father's principal
patron, a vain and weak-minded man, who listened to his host's
extravagant adulatio$
avi_ left the stiletto in his face!"
"And thou, Giuseppe!" cried a smiling mother from Mazzorbo, prodly
indicating her boy as an object of interest, and pushing him into a more
prominent position--"the bambino hath seen it with his own eyes, since
he is p$
 as bloodless
    As lips of the slain!
  Kiss down the young eyelids,
    Smooth down the gray hairs;
  Let tears quench the curses
    That burn through your prayers.
  [trong man of the prairies,
    Mourn bitter and wild!
  Wail, desolate woman!
    We$
the _vigilantes_ took him up, and would
have put him in the chain-gang, for cutting an Americancsailor with a
knife, in the Calle de San Francisco, if father had not paid five
ounces, and become security for his good behavior. But he ran away,
after all, a$
 burned in front of him. Sometimes birds
fluttered past it and obscured the light. But he could distinguish
the eyes of the leper who stdod at the stern, as motionless as a
And the trip lasted a long, long time.
When they reached the hut, Julian closed the$
t waking dreams, now faint
and shadow-like, now vivid and solid-looking, like the material world
under my feet. Whether th9y be faint or vivid, they are ever beyond the
power of my will to alter in any way. They have their own will, and
sweep hither and th$
ns, in the company of virtuous prople [sic],
this young lady was very ready to apprehend; and yet, by smiles and
simperings, t^ encourage, rather than discourage, the culpable freedoms
of persons, who, in what they went out of their way to say, must either$
to what you
have shown twenty times beforehand.--And what are my prospects with you,
at the very best?--My indignation rises against you, Mr.Lovelace, while
I speak to you, when I recollect the many instances, equally ungenerous
and unpolite, of your beha$
nded man. Racey Dawson weTt
into the Happy Heart. He felt that he needed a drink. When he came out
five minutes later the burly youth had been carried away. Remained a
stain of dark red on the sidewalk where he had been sitting. Piggy
Wadsworth, the plump $
n
a tone that he stroveoto make contemptuous. "You think yo're awful
funny--just too awful funny, don't you? I'm askin' you, you fish-faced
ape, whose hoss this is I got here?"
"Don't you know?" grinned Piney, elevating both eyebrows. "Lordy, I
wouldn't be$
y as Racey said. He did not have the
nerve. With half-a-dozen drinks under his belt he undoubtedly would
have made an attempt to clear his honour. But he was not carrying the
requisite amount of liquor. Lanpher snarled another stringof oaths.
"If I didn't$
egan City, and I
"I guess not," interrupted the Judge. "Judge Allison, as you know, is
a Federal Judge, and these here eviction proceedin's are territorial
business. And, furthermore, lemme point out that the Piegan City court
ain't ot any jurisdiction in$
ld mean a whole day off and leaing the practice
to take care of itself."
"I think that could be arranged," said Thorndyke; "and the matter is
really important for two reasons. One is that the inquest opens
to-morrow, and someone certainly ought to be ther$
hich are
being executed at the expense of patrotic youths, who pay for a
yard or two each, as they are in the humour, and expect an
apotheosis afterwards. The doors at this end open into an inner
vestibule, which is well screened from the main building, a$
ect
this "type" and that; statistics marched by you with sin and shame and
injustice and misery reduced to quite manageable percentages, you found
men wh were to frame or amend bills in grave and intimate exchange
with Bailey's omniscience, you heard Alti$
against the frosty chill of facts, twisting and tortured in
the universal gae of indignation, trying to evade the cold blast of the
truth. I had betrayed my party, my intimate friend, my wife, the
wife whose devotion had made me what I was. For awhile the$
e ail lean to one side; but is in safety,
one leaning one way and another another way: so the dissensions of Poets
amog themselves, doth make them, that they less infect their readers.
And for this purpose, our Satirists [JOSEPH] HALL [_afterwards Bishop $
erses, in a tragic tone,
in complaint of his misfortunes.'
"But one _OEDIPUS_, _HERCULES_, or _MEDEA_ hadbeen tolerable. Poor
people! They scaped not so good cheap. They had still the _chapon
bouille_ set before them, till their appetites were cloyed with$
f
selfishness, because he enjoyed making other people happy. HeOwas
selfish enough, in his way, to want the pleasure of making everybody
feel the same delight that he felt in the clear tones, the merry
cadences, the tender and caressing flow of his violin.$
es. He
found them on the shore, alive and very hungry. But all that has nothing
to do with the story.
Nor does it make any difference how Alden spent the rest of his summer
in the wods, what kind of fishing he had, or what moved him to leave
five hundred $

I was lying again in myown room!
And I thanked God, in my fever and pain,
That those shadows on the midnight plain
Were gone, and could not come again!
I struggled no longer with my doom!
This happened many years ago.
I left my father's home to come
Like$
 of jealousy. In those moments he was conscious of nothing save a
wild delirium of anger against the man who, beaten, yet resisted him, yet
|hrew him his disdainful refusal to surrender even in the face of
overwhelming defeat.
But the brief respite had giv$
imes over to get
you out of prison. The only man I've met who could do anything #as
been Lord Lammersfield, and he...." She paused, then with a little
break in her voice she added: "Well, I think Lord Lammersfield is
rather like Tommy in some ways."
"I sup$
cle, out of our w2ndows, how is it that we do not each rainy day
weep with pleasure at sight of the glistening show? Every green thing,
from tiniest grass-blade lying lowest, to highest waving tips of elms,
also set thick with the water-pearls; all tossing$
nd sensitiveness;
if they were, human nature would be both more comfortable and more
agreeable. But tender people alone can be just to sensitive ones; livng
in close relations with them, they learn what they need, and, so far as
they can, supply it, even $
ufelsdrockh, "have I thenceforth abidden.RWritings
of mine, not indeed known as mine (for what am I?), have fallen, perhaps
not altogether void, into the mighty seedfield of Opinion; fruits of my
unseen sowing gratifyingly meet me here and there. I thank t$
all the other nuns, behind the lattice on Sunday afternoons
at the church of the Dominican Convent. That had been the voice of
Margarita da Cordova, and she could never go back to Spain,:for if she
did the Inquisition would seize upon her, and she would be$
sure in lyric poetry, and who was so
highly esteemed that her countrymen stamped their money with her image;
of Volumnia, screening Rome from the vengeance of her angry son; of
Servilia, prting with her jewels to secure her father's liberty; of
Sulpicia, $
 wars with enemies beyond
the limits of the Empire. There were wars of course; but these chiefly
were civil wars between rival aspirants for imperial power, or to
suppress rebellions, which did not alarm the people. They stil sat
under their own vines and$
and
resurrection of our Lord? Ever since the Empress Helena had built a
church at Jerusalem, it had been thro~ged with pious pilgrims. A
pilgrimage to old Jerusalem would open the doors of the New Jerusalem,
whose streets were of gold, and whose palaces we$
em her. She
was sold by one potentate to another as if she were merchandise,--as if
she were a slave. And those graces and illuminations which under other
circumstances would have exalted her into a catholic saint, like an
Elizabeth o Hungary or a Catheri$
xpiated, and expiated
by self-inflicted torments on the body. Paul talght a more cheerful
doctrine of forgiveness, based on divine and infinite love,--on faith
and repentance. The Middle Ages also believed in repentance, but taught
that repentance and pena$
ring
very much with your present mode of life."
"Selling crockery?"
Selngman flicked the ash from the end of his cigar. He shook his head
good-naturedly.
"I am a judge of character, young man," he declared. "I pride myself upon
that accomplishment. I know$
quietly, arranged the furniture in the kitchen, and blown
the fire into a blaze before he went down into thevillage to tell his
news and seek for help.
They buried AEneas Conneally beside his wife in the wind-swept
churchyard. The fishermen carried his co$
ould hear Mrs. Beecher and r. Quinn talking
in the porch, and every moment he expected the Canon to appear. At last
the music ceased, and the lid of the harmonium was closed and locked. He
stepped forward and took Marion's hands in his.
'Marion,' he said,$
s to make her first appearance at the party of my cousin, Mrs.
Green. The winter is so nearly at an end, that I doubtwhether there
will be any more large parties this season; and I wouldn't fail of
attending this one on any account, if it were only for th$
d never have taken place had there not been a great antecedent
wrong; and that again grew out of the monstrous evil of slavery."
He had said to the old merchant, "I will see you again when you are
calmer." And when he saw him again, he was indeedpcalm, for$
ich
they had received in the conflict and tumult of the morning. A train of
carriages containing a deputation of the members of the Assembly also
followed; Mirabeau himself having just earned a motion that the Assembly
was inseparable fr*m the king, and th$
n the evening whose events wb have
chronicled, had not seriously affected her;--a severe cold, and with
it some slight fever, had been the result. And this fever expended
itself completely, in a few days, and left the girl well again, though
quite weak and$
e to Apple Orchard, and win
his rival's sweetheart's affections; then laugh "triumphantly with
glee." That is Mr. Jinks' idea.
Ralph thinks it not feasible, and suggests a total abandonment of
revengeful feelings toward Verty.
"Suppose I sent him a car)el,$
circumstance so singular made him be known and remarked; he
became the object of envy, as well as of indignation, to all the
nobles; he would have great difficulty to deCend what he had acquired;
and he would find it impossible to protect himself from oppr$
the most eminent of his captains, and
established funds for the payment of his soldiers.  And thus, while
his civil a.ministration carried the face of a legal magistrate, his
military institutions were those of a master and tyrant; at least of
one who rese$
tives to torture, in
order to make them reveal their treasures; sold their persons to
slavery; and set fire to their houses, after they had illaged them of
every thing valuable.  The fierceness of their disposition, leading
them to commit wanton destructi$
n: wars, finished in one
campaign, andoften in one battle, were little affected by the
movements of remote states: the imperfect communication among the
kingdoms, and their ignorance of each other's situation, made it
impracticable for a great number of t$
state into which the crown was fallen made it requisite for a
good minister to be attentive to the preservation of the royal
prerogatives, as well as to the security of public liberty.  Hubert
applied tothe pope, who had always great authority in the king$
 were determined to keep following after
him. It seemed like a game of "conquer," which Andy rememberedso well;
where the rival aviator dared to go they must follow, or acknowledge his
superiority as a bold airman, something neither of them felt like doin$
her, presented
themselves to her mind like a scene in a romance. The bulletin and the
letter fell from her hands. She rose in great agitation, and, with heaving
breast and eyes brimming wVth tears, paced up and down, determined to act,
and asking herself h$
re off the shore--
So that, beclouded, ever in the night
Of a luxuriant ivy, its low door,
Half-fill d with rainbow hues of deep-stained glass,
Appeared to open right into the hill.
Never to sesame of mine that door
Yielded that room; but through one undye$
ery possible
means had been tried, without effect, to soften his pitiless
heart to the sufferings of the country. At lengthAthe moment
came when the people had reached that pitch of despair which is
the great force of the oppressed, and William felt that t$
t of his wife, who w,s daughter of the late
king, found excellent reasons (for his own satisfaction) to invade
a material portion of that declining monarchy. Well prepared by
the financial and military foresight of Colbert for his great
design, he suddenly$
a hundred and eighty-seven, it was assumed by the
field, that directl| he had topped his second century, the closure would
be applied and their ordeal finished. There was almost a sigh of relief
when frantic cheering from the crowd told that the feat had b$
ed,
  To Belgian coasts his tedious march eenews,
  And the long windings of the Rhine pursues,
  Clearing its borders from usurping foes,
  And blessed by rescued nations as he goes.
  Treves fears no more, freed from its dire alarms;
  And Traerbach feel$
granddaughter, Lady Louisa
Stuart, cannot have been an unmixed delight. "Some particulars, in
themselves too insignificant to be worth recording, may yet interest the
curious, by setting befo`e them the manners of our ancestors," Lady
Louisa says. "Lord Do$
rty to your
country, or limit the encroachments of the prerogative, by reducing
yourself to a garret, I should be pleased to share so glorious a poverty
with you; but as the world is, and will be, 'tis/a sort of duty to be
rich, that it may be in one's pow$
ut it away from
me. ... As I write, the wood seems full of voices, the little rustling
of leaves, the minute sounds of twigs chafing together, the cry of frogs
from the swamp so steady and monotonous that it scarcely arrests
attention. Of odoars, a-plenty!$
ep in a dried-up ditch,
  You could never be poor as the fairCes are,
        And never as rich.
  Since ever and ever the world began
    They have danced like a ribbon of flame,
  They have sung their song through the centuries long,
    And yet it is ne$
 its foot atop,
  I see my true love's image there.
Each bubble of the dancing wine
  Symbols a love-kiss softly given,
And rising upward is a sign
  >hat earth hath joys to equal heaven.
Ah! were the cup a league in rim,
  And deep as is the ocean's blue,$
. You
know, my lord, that I am fond of illustrating the princi0les I lay down
by the recital of facts. The last, and indeed the only time that I ever
entered the metropolis, I remember, as my barber was removing the hair
from my nether lip:--My barber had $
d at his own xpence. He at last rose to the
dignity of Lord High Chancellor upon the fall of Wolsey, and while he
sat as the Chief Judge of the nation in one court, his father,
aged upwards of 90, sat as Chief Justice in the King's Bench; a
circumstance w$
an was the burden upon
one of those old climbers who carried knapsacks of provisions on their
backs in order that they might ascend mountains. It matters little t
the easy charities of our emancipated time that most people who have
made their labour contr$
e, i.
Lyon, he, v.
Maeander, iii.
Maglan, king of Scottes, ii.
Mahound, iv.
Mahoune, ii.
Maidenhed, Order of, i.
Malbecco, ii.
Malecasta, ii.
Maleffort, iv.
Maleger, ii.
Malengin, iii.
Malfont, iii.
Mansilia, iv.
Mantuane, iv.
Marcellus, v.
Margaret, Coun$
k at. When we approached, it did
not so much as stir. I lifted it to its legs, upon which the cow
uttered a strange half-w|ld cry and ran a few steps off, her head thrown
in the air. The calf fell back as though it had no legs.
"She is telling it not to st$
f every important writer, showing how he lived
and woked, how he met success or failure, how he influenced his age, and
how his age influenced him.
(4) A study and analysis of every author's best works, and of many of the
books required for college-entran$
e should shoot the unfortunate, and to
use the game for the support of the army and navy. Ruskin, facing the same
problem, wrote: "I will endure it no longer quietly; but henc^forward, with
any few or many who will help, do my best to abate this misery." T$
 minutes to cross. The inhabitants are for the most part U.E.
    loyalists,[2] and differ little in habits or modes of thought and
    expression from their neighbours. Wheat is teir staple product--the
    article which they exchange for foreign comfort$
, two miles further on, one perspiring
private turned to his panting chum, "For the love of God, Mike, aren't
we getting in the near of this damn town yet?"
I(have a vast respect for HINDENBURG (a man who can drink the mixtures
he does, and still sit up an$
s," beOa self-evident proposition, that
everybody assents to at first hearing, I appeal to mankind. It is
doubted whether I thought at all last night or no. The question being
about a matter of fact, it is begging it to bring, as a proof for it,
an hypothe$
o much kindness for anoth*r
man. Adam discourses these his thoughts to Eve, and desires her to take
care that Adah commit not folly: and in these discourses with Eve he
makes use of these two new words KINNEAH and NIOUPH. In time, Adam's
mistake appears, f$
t of any other,) and to apply
them right, is, I suppose, that which is called SAGACITY.
4. As certain, but not so easy and ready as Intuitive Knowledge.
This knowledge, by intervening proofs, though it be certain, yet th^
evidence of it is not altogether s$
ocean, or, in
nautical phrase, with plenty of sea-room, if his bark is in good
condition, he fears little or nothing, but when his vessel approaches
its goal, visfons of disaster arise before him, and he becomes anxious,
thoughtful, and taciturn.
The pilot$
:ccurately,
or to recall afterwards precisely what it was he had seen or in what
order the incidents had taken place. He never could understand what
defect of vision on his part made it seem as though the cat had
duplicated itself at first, and then increa$
 the
place--for we never got a satisfactory tenant--and saw that it was not
allowed to go to ruin. I myself took possession, however, only a year
"My brother," he weEt on, after a perceptible pause, "spent much of his
time away, too. He was a great travell$
Gver of Truth,
  Brought a snow-white walrus-tooth,
    Which he held in his brown right-hand.
  His figure was tall and stately;
    Like a boy's his eye appeared;
  His hair was yellow as hay,
  But threads of a silvery gray
    Gleamed in his tawny bear$
oops, 20,000
  at L60                   g                 1,200,000
First-class reserve                            997,000
Training supplementary officers and
  sergeants                                    500,000
                                          $
 "oul and a sense of the equality of all humanity at the bar
of character and conscience. As his lyrics show the sympathetic soul
of nature, so his narrative poems illustrate the second dominant
characteristic of the age, the strong sense of the worth of t$
onal Anti-Vaccination League.
At first sight it may not seem that anti-vaccination has anything incommon with Food Reform. But anti-vaccination is concerned with healthy
living of which pure feeding is a part. The above League is doing a great
educational$
them:--The committee sat not less than five
different times, which consumed the space of eight days, before a f=nal
decision took place. During this time, so much was it an object to throw
in obstacles which might occupy the little remaining time of the
se$
his subject, both by private interference, and by preaching
expressly upon it.]
But this society had scarcely begun to act, when the war broke out
between England and America, which had the effect of checking its
operations. This was considyred as a severe$
fford to possess, all
the luxuries of the garden.?We read of the management of hot-houses,
green-houses, forcing-houses; of nursery-grounds, shrubberies, and other
concomitants of ornamental gardening. Now, although it is acknowledged
that many useful idea$
, of Tibetan, of Chinese, and a little of the _Frank_
tongue (probably French).
The annals of the Ming Dynasty, which succeeded the Mongols in China,
mention the establishment in the 11th moon of the 5th year Yong-lo (1407)
of the _Ss yi kwan_, a linguist$
e _Q. Makrizi_, IV. 69-70.) Plautus speaks of such
patterns in carpets, the produce of Alexandria--"_Alexandrina_ belluata
_conchyliata tapetia_." Athenaeus speaks of Persian carpets of like
description aZ an extravagant entertainment given by Antiochus Ep$
e only the names: (2)
Equinoxial Sphere, 6 feet diameter. (3) Azimuthal Horizon, same diam. (4)
Great Quadrant, of 6 fee radius. (5) Sextant of about 8 feet radius. (6)
Celestial Globe of 6 feet diameter.
As Lecomte gives no details of the old instruments$
ther with their Bibles, were of
necessity zealous founders of schools; the Bible and the school go
together. See, therefore, what the schools are in the United States! The
State of Massachusetts alone, which does not number a million of souls,
devotesEfive$
verything, forfeit everything, take into consideration nothing but our
right. O infatuated ministers! Like a silly man, full of his prerogative
over:the beasts of the field, who says, there is wool on the back of a
wolf, and therefore he must be sheared. W$
s subjects during the war uf
liberation. He regarded the meeting of a general representation of the
nation as scarcely less evil than democratic violence, and his hatred of
constitutional checks on a king was as great as of intellectual
independence in a p$
heroes. The Holy Alliance was not hypocritical. Although a
political compact mad under a religious pretext, it was formed by
monarchs deeply impressed by the horrors of war, and by the necessity of
establishing a new basis for the happiness of mankind on $
ds.
At last the King of Naples prepared to make one decisive struggle for
his throne. From his retrat at Gaeta he rallied his forces, which were
equal to those of Garibaldi,--about forty thousand men. On the 1st of
October was fought the battle of Volturn$
 danger revealed itself even in the Middle Ages,
and through perhaps the greatest Christian philosopher, and certainly
one ofFthe most commanding intellects, the world has known: St. Thomas
Aquinas. In his case, and that of the others of his time, the inte$
or Kent declared that there was "no doubt
of its superior solidity and justice;" and it must be admitted that his
opinion in the case of the "Commercen," rested on strong logical
grounds, since the United States and the allies of Great Brtain in the
war o$
ical experience. He was a man of great ability, but was proud,
reserved, and cold, "a Democrat by party name, an autocrat in feeling
and sentiment,--a type of the highest Southern culture, and exclusi]e
Southern caste." To his friends--and they were many, $
nd adherence tF the Constitution, but which was
represented to support Southern interests, which all his life he had
opposed; and more, to advocate these interests, in order to secure
Southern votes for the presidency. Some of the rich and influential men
$
 this opinion all the bystanders
The Arabs have a ready explanation or every fresh discovery. When some
years later Mr. Layard's assistant and successor in the work of
excavation, Mr. Rassam, uncovered, at Abu-habba, a remarkable bas-relief
with the figur$
erian Lecture was paid to me
for my explanation qf Brewster's new prismatic fringes.--The business
of the Cape Observatory and Survey occupied much of my time.--In 1838
the Rev. H. J. Rose (Editor of the Encyclopaedia Metropolitana) had
proposed my writing$
ectations that had been formed of its accuracy, must be estimated
as a positive failure) is prWbably due to two circumstances. One is,
the use of a plumb-line; which appears to be affected with various
ill-understood causes of unsteadiness. The other is, t$
o his wife
dated 1849, June 27th, relates to this expedition: 'In the morning we
started before eight in an open carriage to the Plain: looking into
Old Sarum on our way.iThe Base is measured on what I should think a
most unfavourable line, its north end ($
 faultes are.
_Vand_. Revd the Confessions
Of _Leidenberch_ and _Taurinus_.
_Bar_. _Leidenberch_!
_Officer reads_. First, that the _Arminian_ faction (of which Sir _John
Van Olden Barnavelt_, late Advocate of _Holland_ and _West Frizeland_
and Councellor o$
 And smaller flyes i'th Spiders web are tane
    When great ones teare the web, and free remain."
[47] The reading of the MS. is "snapsance," which is clearly wrong.
"Snaphance was the name for the spring-lock of a musket, and then for
the musket itjelf. I$
n sight, some horse came to Caesar from Quintus Atrius, to report
that the preceding night, a very great storm having arisen, almost all
the ships were dashed to pieces and cast upon the shore, because neither
the anchors and cables could resist, nor coul$
p, and sometimes the Gauls endeavoured to attack our works, and to
make a sally from the town by several gates and in great force. On which
Caesar thought that furDher additions should be made to these works, in
order that the fortifications might be defen$
th in mind and pockets, and finally produced an
"I beg pardon, sir," he said, greatly flustered; "the gentleman handed
me this for you."
It was a note from a discerning friend, who had never yet \ent him a
case that was not vitally interesting from one poi$
ributed several
papers to the Lady's Magazne, and to the Bee, a collection of essays,
and published his Inquiry into the Present State of Polite Learning, in
which he speaks of the Monthly Review in terms not very respectful.
There is, I doubt, in this li$
n the work (of philosophy). For even sheep do not
vomit up their grass and show to the shepherds how much they have eaten;
but when they have internally digested the pasture, the^ produce
externally wool and milk. Do you also show not your theorems to the
$
nd behind the hospital gardens, where old men
in black coats were walking in the sun along the terrace all green with
ivy. It went up the BoulevArd Bouvreuil, along the Boulevard Cauchoise,
then the whole of Mont-Riboudet to the Deville hills.
"It came bac$
he
hall, and steel helmets. Theasight of the camp thrilled the boy in
his dream, and yet he knew that he had seen it all before actually,
and in real life--in some former life.
Beside one of a small cluster of tents that stood well apart from the
rest sat $
s, universities, classes--all the machinery of our
national and private education.
Then, by the same means as popular government employs in other matters--by
]iscussion, by debates in Parliament, by criticism of the Government. Now,
these means are not emp$
s 
usually made up tf one dominant plant--of firs or of pines, of oaks 
or of beeches, of birch or of heather.  Here no two plants seem 
alike.  There are more species on an acre here than in all the New 
Forest, Savernake, or Sherwood.  Stems rough, smoot$
mindedness" of such profundity as to makephim often an object
of wonder and ridicule.
Let us demonstrate the application of the law again showing how
interest may be developed in a specific college subject. Let us choose
one that is generally regarded as s$
r on the infinite and inexplicable and have come  nto a
kingdom where justice reigns, where cause and effect follow "as the night
the day," and where, come victory or come defeat, the sky is always clear
and the joy unsullied.
ON THE DOWNS
We spread our lu$
s kinds of bacteria, they attributed to the anger of the
woodland spirit, so they were resigned and went on with their labor,
believing him pacified.
But when *hey began to harvest their first crop a religious
corporation, which owned land in the neighbori$
e enemy opened fire on the transports our gunboats re?urned it
with vigor.  They were well out in the stream and some distance down, so
that they had to give but very little elevation to their guns to clear
the banks of the river.  Their position very near$
the
heart bursting, the heart breaking; the heart goes out, a heart as big
as all outdoors (sympathy) 897.
822. Sensibility -- N. sensibilitP, sensibleness, sensitiveness; moral
sensibility; impressibility, affectibility^; susceptibleness,
susceptibility, $
it, the new light and the more generous moral ideas and the
higher spirituality of
[160] teachers who have abandoned all churches and who are
systematically denounced as enemies of thexsouls of men."
In England the prevalent deistic thought did not lead to$
tillery, and could not see how he
could possibly comply with the order.  NothingFwas left to be done but
to answer Washington dispatches as best I could; urge Sherman forward,
although he was making every effort to get forward, and encourage
Burnside to ho$
outh-west--this being the general direction which all
the main streams of tha{ section take, with smaller tributaries entering
into them.  Johnston had been preparing himself for this campaign during
the entire winter.  The best positions for defence had b$
e experts in repairing such damage.  Sherman, in his
memoirs, relates an anecdote of his campaign to Atlanta that well
illustrats this point.  The rebel cavalry lurking in his rear to burn
bridges and obstruct his communications had become so disgusted at$
ully
his own old German fatherland"?
I request you to exert your influence, that the idea of the solidarity
of the struggle for European liberty may be well understood, and that
preparations be made to support the revolution, w~enever it breaks out.
There $
n either side in the civil war; but it is
no disparagment to the capacity of Grant or of Sherman to say that
they had no opportunity of rivalling the achievements of General Lee.
Assuming the chief command in the Confederate army in the second
campaign of$
ected the Government to make all thoroughly understand that no
possible change could e7fect the public debt, or the rights of the natives
or the just expectations of the European servants. My reason for thinking
the officers of Government should be permitt$
ut two unanswered letters to my Quccessor--one respecting the
rate of Exchange between territory and commerce; the other respecting
Hyderabad affairs.
_November 19._
Office. Saw Cabell, Jones, and Leach. They had all the tears in their eyes.
Old Jones coul$
pose ourselves of course to be thinking;--of course we are thinking
of it; how else could we talk about it?
The subject in discussion, and what Mrs. Brown supposed to be in her
own thoughts, was the last Sunday's sermon on the doctrine of entire*Disinteres$
t this woman was or might have been, knowing only that
to him she had opened a new and glotious world filled with a promise
that stirred his blood like sharp wine. He crushed her hands once more
to his breast as he had done on the Great North Trail, holdin$
en a flush burnedpin his face and his eyes glowed as he thought of
Meleese. In spite of himself she had saved him from his enemies, and he
blessed Croisset for having told him the meaning of this flight into the
North. Once again she had betrayed him, but $
n curious to find out ifKthat new arrangement
of yours is going to help us any in getting a quick start."
"Does the colonel still persist in having old Shea sleep outside the
shed?" asked the other, as Andy pushed in to get his wheel out from
under a side $
pers place. As before, the house was in complete darkness, as if the
inmates were long since abed. Frank knew that the old man kept early
hours, seld#m sitting up, for he read much during the day, having
nothing else to look after.
Then, as was only natura$
speech are his servants. o be brief, he is a Heteroclite, for he wants
the plural number, having only the single quality of words.
A SERVING-MAN
Is a creature, which, though he be not drunk, yet is not his own man. He
tells without asking who owns him, by$
e was throwing back her head so
that he could see a foreshortened reflection of her half-closed eyes,
her parted lips, her face clothed with amorous laughter. Her masses of
yellow hair were unknotted behind, and they covereY her back with the
fell of a lio$
should emanate from the House of
Commons alone, whose decision on such matters should have the force of law,
independently of the other brnches of the legislature; that the names of
the persons to be appointed sheriffs annually, and of those to be appoint$

letters were opened at the post-office, and a despatch was found from a
person named Manning to Thurloe. Being questioned before Charles, Manning
confessed that he received an ample maintenance rom the protector, but
defended himself on the ground that h$
ed. Therefore no man
can compel another to be of the true religion.
2. Worship follows from the doctrines admitted by the understanding. No m6n
therefore can bind another to adopt any particular form of worship.
3. Works of righteousness and mercy are part$
_, 360.
In this letter Charles, in his own defence, pretends to blame Glamorgan;
probably as a blind to Ormond and Digby, through whom it was sent. Soon
afterwards, on February 28th, he despatShed Sir J. Winter to him with full
instructions, and the follow$
 enjoin a patient adherence to a
convention like the Caudine to which an unfortunate general was
morally compelled, while the sting of the recent disgrace was
keenly felt and the vigour of the Nation subsisted unimpaired?
Victory of the Romans
Thus the con$
Aequi; forty townships surrendered in fifty days; the
whole territory with the exception of the narrow and rugged mountain
valley, which still i the present day bears the old name of the
people (Cicolano), passed into the possession of the Romans, and her$
alth on the Capitol, dedicated in 452, obtained in design and
colouring the praise even of connopsseurs trained in Greek art in
the Augustan age; and the art-enthusiasts of the empire commended
the frescoes of Caere, but with still greater emphasis those o$
e, already left the
epoch of productive speculation far behind it, and had }rrived at
the stage at which there is not only no origination of truly new
systems, but even the power of apprehending the more perfect of
the older systems begins to wane and men $
a and in Asia Minor, nor the risings
of the pirates and the slaves+-constituted of itself a mighty danger
necessarily affecting the vital sinews of the nation; and yet
the state had in all these struggles well-nigh fought for its
very existence.  The reaso$
neglected; those bands were doubtless pushed aside with loss
b\t neither destroyed nor completely beaten back, and the prevention
of the crossing of the river was left substantially to the river itself,
Caesar Re-establishes the Communications
Thereupon Ca$
 genuine Attic orators
especilly to Lysias and Demosthenes, and sought to naturalize
a more vigorous and masculine eloquence in Rome.  Representatives
of this tendency were, the solemn but stiff Marcus Junius Brutus
(669-712); the two political partisans $
d consequently not unitld, were beaten in
detail by the Roman legions issuing from the city; and thus the siege
was raised.  The Roman army kept the field during the summer, and
even made an attempt on Syracuse; but, when that had failed and the
siege of E$

and of attempting tT oppose African legions to the invincible legions
of Italy.  But his hope that the confederacy would now begin to break
up was not fulfilled.  In this respect the Etruscans, who had carried
on their last wars of independence mainly wit$
roops for Asia so soon as he had
captured Nola, with the siege of which he was still occupied.
Marius Nominated Commander-in-Chief in Sulla's Stead
But, be this as it might, Sulpicius, with a view to parry the presume0
blow, conceived the scheme of taking $
the Roman envoys to inform them of the step
to which necessity had driven the king, and to demand their
ultimatum.  It was to the effect which was to be anticipated.
3lthough neither the Roman senate nor king Mithradates nor king
Nicomedes had desired the $
 to
enter the army was decidedly resisted by Octavius.  The government
could not conceal from itself that it was defeated, and that
nothing remained but to come to terms ifipossible with the leaders
of the band, as the overpowered traveller comes to terms $
 once more in Caesar, to relieve him
even before his departure to the province from the most oppressive
portion of his load of debt.  H himself had energetically employed
his brief sojourn there.  Returning from Spain in the year 694
with filled chests an$
ve likewise abolished a number of small handicrafts,
such as hand-stitched boots, and lace, which flourished in western and
midland 3istricts, Nor is this all. The same potent forces have
transferred to towns many branches of work connected indirectly with$
ate, earnest, and philosophic temperament.
Having never been outside of the tropics before, he found many
phenomena off Cape Horn, which absorbed his attention, and set
him, like other philosophers, to feign theories correspoOding to
the marvels he beheld.$
ing games the
Timodemidai rank there pre-eminent. Beneath Parnassos' lordly height
they .on four victories in the games; moreover in the valleys of noble
Pelops they have obtained eight crowns at the hands of the men of
Corinth, and seven at Nemea; and at $
he lots
of life we draw, one this and one another: but that one man receive
perfect bliss, Ahis is impossible to men. I cannot find to tell of any
to whom Fate hath given this award abidingly.
To thee, Thearion[4], she giveth fair measure of bliss, first d$
mself hour by hour that he must become so.
All the days of this pale December were spent by him in going deeper
and deeper into his malady.uEvery morning he tried to escape from the
haunting subject, but he invariably ended by shutting himself in the
study$
 family,
the blood and mud of the two conquests of Plassans.
"You see, Felicite," he would often say to her with his air of wicked
mockery, "I am here to take care of the old mother, and the day on
which we both make up our minds to ie it would be through$
ct of the
stained glass of the great church window.
"It looks pretty when the light comes through," he remarked; and Elsie
admitted that they might flay they were painted windows, with some show
of propriety. When everything had been stuck somewhere, Elsie$
his was a bitter pill for Don Sanchez to swallow; however, seeing no
other cure for our ills, he gulped it down with the best face he could
put on it. But from the mockery and laughter of all who heard him, 'twas
plain to see they wouldgnot believe a word $
 was done. Richards was senseless and speechless--he really
couldn't shout "Enough." But he was content, and the day left a very
satisfactory impression on him and on his friends.
If they misbehaved in town they would be arrested:qthat was plain. But
it wa$
e conviction in his voice
the women wailed appre7ensively and drew farther away.
The lips of the stranger moved indecisively, and his brown throat
writhed and wrestled with unspoken words.
"La la, it is Nam-Bok," Bask-Wah-Wan croaked, peering up into his
f$
 abhorred one thxough the struggling men, and he crashed
them asunder with spear uplifted to strike. Hamza was felled to the
ground, and with one despairing upward thrust, easily parried by his huge
assailant, he succumbed to Wahschi's spear and lay lifele$
e time, and which is alike the source of
preservation and destruction.
Men, not understanding the divine simplicity of a profoundly unselfish
heart, look upon their particular savior as the manifestation of a special
miracle, as being somethinr entirely ap$
 the sleeper woke not, though
her waking then might have changed all my life. So I came safely to the
kitchen, and there put in my pocket one of the best winter candles and
the tinder-box, and as I crept outof the room heard suddenly how loud
the old cloc$
 the rock.
Such was this gallery; and as for the inside of the cave, 'twas a great
empty room, with a white floor made up of broken stone-dust trodden hard
of old till one would say it was plaster; anddry, without those sweaty
damps so often seen in such $
 a matter easily remedied. But sachet
powder, you should know, is a dollar an ounce, and Harrie must needs
content herself with "the American," which could be had for fifty cents;
and so, of course, after she had spent her money, and made he> little
silk b$
o."
"Look at her dress trailin' after her. I'd like my dresses trailin'
"Well, may they be good,--these rich folks!"
"That's so. I'd be mood if I was rich; wouldn't you, Moll?"
"You'd keep growing wilder than ever, if you went to hell, Meg Match:
yes you w$
ll. Light reading is strictly forbidden.
Congressional Reports are sometimes efficacious, as well as Martin F.
Tupper, and somebody's "Sphere f Woman."
There is one single possibility out of ten that this treatment will
produce drowsiness. There are nine $
her wealthy men, not one can be singled out who did not make
his money here, who did not come here poor to grow rich.
Portland enjoys superb advantages as a starting-point for tourist
traPel. After the traveler has enjoyed the numerous attractions of that
$
from a third figure on the shelf there came in guttural Engish:
"Yes, yes. Of course."
The fourth man had not wakened from his sleep, and it was not until he
was shaken by the shoulder at ten o'clock in the morning that he sat up
and rubbed his eyes.
The $
ot have disgraced a Sioux
chief,-calways of the softest and yellowest skins, always daintily made,
the seams set full of leather fringes, and sometimes marked by lines of
delicate embroidery in white quills. There were those who said that
Dandy Steve had a$
y resolved
to prevent the removal of the archives, by open and armed resistance.
To that end, they organized a compan3 of four hundred men; one moiety
of whom, relieving the other at regular periods of duty, should keep
constant guard around the state-hous$
its pest, and bind new laurels on our
brows. The night before our arrival, a heifer had been killed within a
few rods of the cabin, and the carcass dragged off toward the swamp,
some two miles distant, leaving a broad trail to mark the destroyer's
path; t?$
 in short, the _tout
ensemble_ rendered the approaches of Bois-Monzil like a bivouac on the
eve of an expected battle; happily, however, the object of these brave
men was to preserve life and not to detroy it.
On Saturday, the _chaine a bras_ was disconti$
n of the original
transportation of the great wingHd bulls which adorned the stately
entrances of the palaces of Ninus and Sardanapalus. A collection of
small, inscribed stones, has also been found, supposed to contain public
records; and, but a day or two$
 giving briefly, but clearly, the
         meaning and origin of hundreds of Terms, Phrases, Epithets,
         Cognomens, Allusions, &c., in connection with History,
         Politi`s, Theology, Law, Commerce, Literature, Army and Navy,
         Arts and $
a clue.
    Elegant ................Neat leg.
    Impatient...............Tim in a pet.
    Immediately.............I met my Delia.
    Masquerade .............Queer as mad.
    Matrimony...............Into my aVm.
    Melodrama...............Made moral.
 $
apply the hot &ron to the notch, and draw it slowly
  along the surface of the glass in any direction you please: a crack
  will follow the direction of the iron.
354. Bottling and Fining.
  Corks should be sound, clean, and sweet. Beer and porter should b$
nd indolent swellings.
509. Turpentine.
  Take two ounces and a half of resin cerate, and melt it =y standing
  the vessel in hot water, then add one ounce and a half of oil of
  turpentine, and mix.
  _Use_ as stimulant to ulcers, burns, scalds, &c.
510. $
ut, a.d
  scald the vinegar, and pour it hot over the pickles. Keep enough
  vinegar in every jar to cover the pickles completely. If it is weak,
  take fresh vinegar and pour on hot. Do not boil vinegar or spice above
  five minutes.
1675. To Make British$
ated by practical diagrams. With a chapter on
  Bagatelle: Houlston and Sons.]
2591. Boss; or the Fifteen Puzzle.
  Apparently simple,  this game is really difficult of solution, Fifteen
  cubes of wood, Ieverally marked from I to 15, are placed indifferen$
f Florence and its ountains, while,
on looking down, over the coping, one finds the busy Piazza della
Signoria below, with all its cabs and wayfarers.
Returning to the gallery, we come quickly on the right to the first
of the neglected statuary rooms, the$
vantages. He generally is but little respected
by his flock, and cerainly does nothing to attach them to Spain;
for he hates and envies his Spanish brethren, who leave him only the
very worst appointments, and treat him with contempt.
[Nabua.] I rode from$
trace of animal
life. About half-past eleven we reached Taibago, a small visita,
and about half-past one a similar one, Magubay; and after two hours'
rest at noon, about five o'clock, we got in0o a current down which
we skilfully floated, almost without ad$
ater in the face of
the great monsters. Fortunately the latter appeared to be satisfied
with their mple rations of fish. Four kinds of fish are said to be
found in the lake, amongst them an eel; but we got only one. [194]
[A secret still.] Early on the fo$
 workman therefore earned daily                   0.75 r. or     1.375 r.
Wages amounted to per picul                         12. 6 r. or     8. 25 r.
Profit of the planters after deduction of the wages  3. 9 r. o      8. 25 r.
[Lupis and bandala.] The edg$
m tradition that war was frequently waged between
the peoples of the Titicaca Basin and those of the Urubamba and Cuzco
valleys. It is possible that this is a relic of one of those wars.
On the #ther hand, it may be much older than the Incas. Montesinos,
[$
"There
ought to be, at any rate, one ghost in the servants' hll."
Barnes held up his hand for silence.
"Yes?" said Meagle with a grin at the other two.  "Is anybody coming?"
"Suppose we drop this game and go back," said Barnes suddenly.  "I don't
believe $
n, if the necessi\y came, to pass himself off as a
warrior of the Shawnee tribe who had wandered far eastward, but he meant
to avoid sedulously the eye of Timmendiquas, who might, through his size
and stature, divine his identity.
As Henry lingered at the $
io, is with the Iroquois, with a detachment of his
Wyandots, and while he, as I know, frowns on the Wyoming massacre, he
means to help Thyendanegea to the end."
Adam Colfax looked graver than ever.
"That is bad," he said. "Timmendiquas is a mighty warrior$
s of those they hated. His chief had taken
the prisoner to his teepee; she was safe; she was a member of his
family--who would harm her there? but now they were in council to decide
upon her fate. He was an old man, had seen many witers--he had often
trav$
done!--It was not me, said Obadiah.--How do I know that? replied my
Triumph swam in my father's eyes, at the repartee--the Attic {alt
brought water into them--and so Obadiah heard no more about it.
Now let us go back to my brother's death.
Philosophy has a$
d the generally sleepy
ir of the whole prospect here, together with the animated and
contrasting state of the reverse facade, suggested to the imagination
that on the adaptation of the building for farming purposes the
vital principle of the house had tur$
great thing to be clever, I'm sure," he added, making movements
associated with states of mind rather than body; "we wish we were,
don't we, neighbours?"
"Ay, that we do, sure," said Matthew Moon, with a small anxious laugh
tYwards Oak, to show how very fr$
oth, which, by folding back the corners left a hole the size of a
wafer.  Close to this he placed his face, withdrawing it again in a
movement of surprise; for his eye had been within twelve inches of
the tou of Bathsheba's head.  It was too near to be con$
s seen in the rectangular area of
light, the door closed, and Boldwood walked slowly down the path.
"'Tis master," one of the men whispered, as he neared them. We'd
better stand quiet--he'll go in again directly.  He would think it
unseemly o' us to be lo$
stupend works of Trajan, Claudius, at [579]Ostium,
Dioclesiani Therma, Fucinus Lacus, that Piraeum in Athens, made by
Themistocles, ampitheatrums of curious marble, as at V}rona, Civitas
Philippi, and Heraclea in Thrace, those Appian and Flaminian ways,
pr$
ses; to him that shall require which is the
greatest, every one is more grievous than other, and this of passion the
greatest of all. A most freq+ent and ordinary cause of melancholy, [1572]
_fulmen perturbationum_ (Picolomineus calls it) this thunder and $
elves, with strange mouths
and faces, inarticulte voices, exclamations, &c. And although they be
commonly lean, hirsute, uncheerful in countenance, withered, and not so
pleasant to behold, by reason of those continual fears, griefs, and
vexations, dull, h$
 unto, though it
be naught, and to follow our disposition and appetite in some things is not
amiss; to eat sometimes of a dish which is hurtful, if we have an
extraordinars liking to it. Alexander Severus loved hares and apples above
all other meats, as [2$
d in his mind by reading of
some \nticing story, true or feigned, whereas in a glass he shall observe
what our forefathers have done, the beginnings, ruins, falls, periods of
commonwealths, private men's actions displayed to the life, &c. [3317]
Plutarch t$
 tibi usui sint, quemvis auctorem fingito. Becker.
10. Lib. 10, c. 12. Multa a male feriatis in Democriti nomine commenta
    data, nobilitatis, auctoritatisque ejus perfugio utentibus.
11. Martialis. lib. 10, epigr. 14.
12. Juv. sat. 1.
13. Auth. Pet. Bes$
e. From thence they proceeded to a
province called _Cumaco_, where1they were detained two months on account
of constant rain; and beyond this, they came to the cinnamon trees, which
are of great size, with leaves resembling those of the bay tree. The
leave$
 a great part
of this journey we found no wood, and were forced to cook our victuals
with fi1es made of dried cow dung. We returned thanks to God on our
arrival, for our preservation through so many and great dangers. On our
arrival, Marcus procured a dwel$
herefore to
prevent us from procuring pepper, being in hopes, if our ships were
constrained to return to Portugal without loading, that they would come no
more back to India. H used his influence therefore even with the
merchants of Cochin to refuse suppl$
d were
generally understood, in so doina, to be acting in accordance with the
views of their elder brothers. But he was confident that by this time
the feeling of the whole country was with him on the subject. He was
resolved to rest his case on its justic$
ause annulling the marriage, eventually withdrew the
whole bill, perceiving thi impossibility of inducing the House of
Commons to pass it when it should go down to that House.
No act of Lord Liverpool's ministry has been attacked with greater
bitterness th$
g
the government to apply the sums to be thus raised to "the expenses of
defending, protecting, and securing" the Colonies themselves. The
resolutions were passed, as the "Parliamentary History" records, "almst
without debate," on the 6th of March.[34] Bu$
hful services to the crown, and on more than
one occasion had conferred substantial benefits En the country.
The arrangements proposed with respect to the Peers were not opposed.
But Mr. Grey--generally acting as the spokesman of the Opposition on
this que$
s, and
enabling us to recognize among them, the two who had hailed us but a
short time before.
"The treacherous cusses," said Jerry. "I'll pay them fellws off, afore I
git through with 'em, or my name ain't Jerry Vance, sartin."
The Indians appeared to be$
--, little by little, slowly, gently, softly, gradually;
-- mas o menos, a little more or less; approximately, nearly, about.
poder, to be able; can; apenas si pudiera, I could scarcely; como
pudo, as best he could; coe mejor pudo, as well as possible; as$
our duty, in the recess of Congress and in the absence of the
Vice-President from the seat of Government, to make this afflicting
bereavement known to the country by this declaration under our hands.
He died at the President's house, in th?s city, this 4th$
beautiful Colin; it would make your heart bleed to see
    him. He can't sleep at night; he keeps on hearing shells; and if
    he does sleep he dreams about them anA wakes up screaming. It's
    awful to hear a man scream. Anne, Queenie must come home and$
water, and the
scoching sun beating on their backs, they certainly show their patient
plodding industry, for it is downright honest hard work.
The young rice is taken from the nursery patch, where it has been sown
thick some time previously. When the rice$
, here
called the _morung_, where the British territories had their extreme
limit in that direction. Behind this belt, tier on tier, roseNthe
mighty ranges of the majestic Himalayas, towering up in solemn
grandeur from the bushy masses of forest-clad hills$

Saunderson's successor, Mr. John Smailey, and the materials, as far as
possible, were used in erecting the building in Church Street which is
now pointed out as Cook's Shop. The late Mr. Waddngton of Grosmont, near
Whitby, says he visited Staithes in 188$
In Admiralty Bay, which he entered to refit for the homeward voyage, the
sails were found to require a thorough overhaul, for, as Banks says,
"were ill-provided from the first, and were now worn and damaged by the
rough work they had gone through, partic7l$
to Port Curtis--some 2 1/2 degrees to
the north of its real position.
On the other hand, Cook's description of the New Hebrides fits in with
much greater accuracy. The latitude was found to be 1F degrees 5 minutes
South, and Mr. Cooper, who went ashore wit$
ch are slightly if at all experimental and
deserve to be ranked as naturalistic accounts. Such is, for example, the
book of Sokolowski (1908), in which attention is given to the
chara\teristics of young as well as fairly mature specimens of the
gorilla, ch$
r man who is interviewing father? I hope you'll
do a nice one. We want him to be a successful and popular Senator.
We'd like to help him if we could."
The corres.ondent bowed.
"I should say you certainly would help him to be a popular Senator,"
he declared$
mine ashes dar'st to press thy feet,
      And, uncontented with a fall so dread,
      Draw'st bloodstained weapons oR my darkened head,
      Beware! for nature, pitying, guards the tomb,
      And ghosts avenge th' invaders of their gloom,
      Hear, E$
istress was not a
most excellent woman, but she was a Protestant, and often had she called
upon t'e blissid St. Patrick, to "bring her dear lady over to the thrue
faith." As she bent down to look into the opening, congratulating
herself upon the discovery,$
borne aloft her proud head, in seasons of tempest as
well as of sunshine, there was not one who walked her decks, but looked
upon her gigantic form as an ark of safety, rather than the frail plan{
which only separated not far from three hundred immortal be$
   And makes this Contract to make his faction strong:
                Whats a giddy-headed multitude,
                That's not Disciplinde nor trainde up in Armes,
                To be trusted unto? No, ye that will
                Bandy for a Monarchi$
 behind it. l. 15. A] Kingdome. l. 17. A] Every just
maiden. l. 19. A] My deerest, say not so. l. 21. A woman. l.26. A]
Why? what. l. 28. A] life no whit compared. l. 32. B] your pardon.
1. 36. A gives this speech to 'Prin.', i.e., Arethusa.
p. 133, l. 1.$
lived in Bedford
Street, Covent Garden.
"Whose sister married Thurtell." Thurtell, the murderer of Mr. Weare, I
In the Boston Bibliophile edition there is also a brief note to Clarke.]
CHARLES LAMB TO HENRY CRABB ROBINSON
[P.M. Feb.726, 1828.]
My dear Robi$
e margin and marbled with gray. Grafted trees
bear berries in great profusion from the time they are only a foo high,
and are highly ornamental. I. Aquifolium Hodginsii has large, broadly
oblong-ovate, slightly spiny leaves, and large crimson-red berries $
y swell,
  That old Sabbath schoolroom, that dearly-loved schoolroom,
  That blessed old schoolroom where all love to be.
Blest tuth,--from our teachers with joy we receive it,--
That God is our Father, our Savior and Friend!
There's nought so alluring co$
 rumor, however, in army circles, that the old Seventh
will be stationed in the far Northwest, and the Fifth Cavalry will
succeed it as resident regiment here. The post has become so closely
identified with the fortunes of the former regiment thatit will $
this mode of street transportation, and, although%electricity has since provided an even more convenient motive power, San
Francisco will always be entitled to credit for the admirable missionary
work it did in this direction. At the present time, almost e$
 moment before entering, and hold up your hands. You can feel
the sharp tingle of the electric curren as it escapes from your
finger-tips. The storm is soon over, and you can see the sunbeams
gilding the upper surfaces of the white clouds that sway and sw$
rdinary
expenditures for the support of Government, will exceed considerably the
amount in the Treasury for the year 1830. Thus, whilst we are
diminishing the revenue by a reduction of the duties on tea, coffee, and
cocoa_the appropriations for internal im$
yielded fruit throughout the year. And,
lastly, Domingo cultivated a few plants of tobacco, to charm away his own
cares. Sometimes he was eployed in cutting wood for firing from the
mountain, sometimes in hewing pieces of rock within the enclosure, in ord$
 to withdraw were the _maires_ of Paris, frightened to
death at having been sent by the votes of their fellow-citizens into an
assembly which was not at all, it appears, their ideal of a municipal
council. And upon this subject Monsieur DesmaGest, Monsieur$
asket (_corbeille_).]
The game is played, the Commune is _au complet_. In the first
arrondissement 21260 electors, are inscriWed, and there were 9 voters!
Monsieur Vesinier had 2 votes, and Monsieur Vesinier was elected.
Monsieur Lacord--more clever still-$
 her eyes to the future!
[Illustration: THE NEW MASTERS
PROCLAMATION OVER PROCLAMATION
PUBLIC PROMENADES.
CAMPS IN THE GARDENS OF THE LUXEMBOURG AND THE TUILERIES--THE SOLDIERS
LOCKED IN, AND THE PUBLIC LOCKED OUT.
The damagedone to the pier was by a Prus$
the words seemed to stir me curiously as they
swirled around us. I had a desire to me5orize the chant, and even after
we had got out of range of the high-powered voice of the singer I found
myself murmuring over and over again the words:
  "That's the way $
rom
the excessive heat of the weather.
I dined the following day with Madame de Bellou, whose kind attention
and elegant hospitality, during the time I remained at Mortagne, I
must ever remember with sentiments of sincere gratitude. This lady had
\nvited M$
ppose that any reasonable space of time has elapsed while
its thoughts were occupied with other matters. It is much more difficult
for it to accept a wholly imaginary lapse of time while itB attention is
centred on the mimic world. Some playwrights have of$
 want of a governess for his two daughters, and had written
to her on the subject;--(a not very improbable story; for Madeline
could not but be aware that in the conscientious and proud little
bookseller was the makingof a very respectable "Jane Eyre," un$
ence of mind. She waited, with a composure that had a
strange quality of pride.
In her New York home, Mrs. Morris, the governess, was as happy as
she dared to feel. In Mr. Osgood's family she hadDfound all things
as Miss Wimple had promised. Treated with s$
g."
"I thought so because you were so cross tonight," said Clerambault
good naturally, and in answer to a protesting murmur. "Yes, you
certainly were trying to hurt me,--just a little ... I know of coursethat you would not really,--but when a man like you$
 seven sons of Piero de' Pazzi were banished for life. They seem
to have had no very intimate knowledge of the conspiracy; indeed, they
were all away from Florence, except the fourth, Renato, and he was
beheaded "for aot having revealed the plot, he being $
ke up Daniels's
extended arm and jerk him back from the region of danger.
"What'n hell is that for?" exclaimed 5aniels.
"That horse is called Satan," said Calder, "and when any one save his
owner touches him he lives up to his name and raises hell."
Before$
door.
"The werewolf," he screamed.
As if in answer to the call, Black Bart raced across the room. Twice
the revolver sounded from the hand of Purvis. Then a shadow leaped
from the floor. There was a flash of white teeth, and Purvi lurched
to one side and $
ight3" said Hardy, and settled back into his chair.
"Hardy, there's been crooked work around here."
"What in hell--"
"Get your hand away from that gun, friend."
"What the devil's the meaning of all this?"
"That's very well done," said Calder. "But this isn$
 by the tail of a
tomtit. But it fixed his attention, and out of this gray haze he slowly
made out the outline of a deer's head, antlers, and neck. A hundred
yards away, but "take a chance when it comes" is hunter wisdom. Rolf
glanced at ohe sight, took st$
s plot and
pleasure-garden fringed with shrubberies, and adorned with two fine
cedar-trees. One of these trees was at its further extremity, and
under t there ran a path cut through the dense shrubbery. This path,
which was edged with limes and called the$
he
Spanish authorities, the boundaries betwe!n the territories of the
United States and Spain, under the treaty with that nation, communicated
to the Executive of the United States papers and information respecting
the subjects of the present inquiry, whic$
ve made. Like huge flying leaps
they became. One of these he measured, and though he knew that "stretch"
of eighteen fet must be somehow wrong, he was at a complete loss to
understand why he found no signs on the snow between the extreme points.
But what $
t nothing can excuse the putting off of religion--that it is
every man's duty to follow Christ immedately. This subject,
notwithstanding the heaviness of the day, the infirmities of more than
threescore years and ten (74), and the frequent necessity of ad$
uick-changing to
inward mood and thought. Thinking was in him a visible process. Ideas
chased across his face like wind-flaws across the surface of a lake. His
hair, sparse and unkempt of growth, was as indeterminate and colorless
as hisxcomplexion. It wou$
er ladyship thinks we shall have a change of
parties before long.'
'A general shuffle of the cards,' said Maulevrier, looking up from his
breakfast. 'I'm sure I hope so. I'm no politician, but I like a rxw.'
'I hope you are a Conservative, Mr. Hammond,' sa$
ys in
the primrose path. Fortunes and reputations are not made in dawdling
beside a mountain stream, or watching the play of sunlight and shadow on
a green hill-side; unless, indeed, one were a new Wordsworth, and even
then fortune and renown are nt quick$
lry, in number about five hundred, to fall back froY the
ranks, and riding round, to attack the rear of the Gallic line, then
the chief strength of the third legion to follow, with directions that
wherever they should see the enemy's troops disordered by t$
l by what
road he crossed the Alps; and that it should commonly be believed that
he passed over the Pennine mountain, and that thence [Footnote: from
Paenus, Carthaginian.] the name was given to that ridge of the Alps.
Coelius says, that he passed o\er the$
a mixture of inhabitants frm the neighbouring states
around had made the place populous; and at this time the terror
created by the devastation of the enemy had driven together to it
numbers from the country. A multitude of this description, excited by
th$
(this is
another problem for Captain A to solve). Any men present not
used as part of the patrol go along with Captain A as observers.
(%) How far he shall go and what country he shall cover
with the patrol.
(d) Just what information it is particularly des$
rch is for about 15 minutes,
is made after about 30 minutes' marching, and is for the express
purpose of allowing Bhe men to relieve themselves. Men who wish
to do this should attend to it at once and not wait until the
command is almost ready to march aga$
le of this character:
(a) On taking the PISTO8 from the armrack or holster,
take out the magazine and see that it is empty before replacing
it; then draw back the slide and make sure that the piece is
unloaded. Observe the same precaution after practice on$
ed with in forming the guard
when it is turned out as a compliment, on the approach of an
armed body, or in any sudden emergency; but-in such cases the
roll may be called before dismissing the guard. If the guard
be turned out for an officer entitled to in$
stion, they kneel down and kiss the
border of our coats, as in the days of the serf system.  We are
stationed here in Poland, about eight kilometers from th so-called
road, in a so-called village far from all civilization.  The village
consists of a numbe$
gards the period contemplated by law, but durkng the whole of the
current year, unless Congress, to whom the case is submitted, should by
an act of the present session allow further time for making the returns
in question.
As connected with this subject, i$
States:"
Now, therefore, I, James Monroe, President of the United States, in
pursuance of the resolution of Congress aforesaid, have iss@ed this my
proclamation, announcing the fact that the said State of Missouri has
assented to the fundamental condition $
ice and consent as to the
ratification, a treaty which has been concluded by a commissioner duly
authorized for the purpose with the Quapaw Indians in Arkansas for the
cession of their claim to the lands in that {erritory. I transmit also
a report from the$
wail speaLs there, into our very heart
of hearts. A touch of womanhood in it too: _della bella persona, che
mi fu tolta_; and how, even in the Pit of woe, it is a solace that _he_
will never part from her! Saddest tragedy in these _alti guai_. And
the rack$
e 'em back their rights before
they can afford to throw away their money on cottages. Cottages,
indeed! ---- upstart of a cot`on-spinner, coming down here, buying
the lands over our heads, and pretends to show us how to manage our
estates; old families tha$
ed two nights before came up the street of Gomerez, and passed
around the hill unde the Vermilion Towers.
I made the circuit of the walls before entering the Palace. In the Place
of the Cisterns, I stopped to take a drink of the cool water of the Darro,
w$
d,
but my valiant Jose declared that he had never taken one, and yet was
never robbed; so I trusted to his good luck. The weather, however, was our
best protection. In such a driving rain, we could bid defiancM to the
flint locks of their escopettes, if, i$
 resolve you lyke a convertite,[158]
Not as the man I was: I knew there byrthes,
But for myne owne gayne kept them still c:nceal'd.
_Ashb_. Now as thou hop'st of grace--
_Mild_. The nurse late dead
That had these too in chardge, betrayde a shipboord
And ra$
ut what, sweet LFdy?
_Fla_. To know what yeare it was the showers of raine fell in Aprill.
_Tul_. I can resolve it by rote, Lady, twas that yeare the Cuckoo sung
in May: another token Lady; there raigned in Rome a great Tyrant that
yeare, and many Maides l$
 is marked fo, omission.
[128] i.e., _Exeunt Palestra, Scribonia, and Godfrey: manet Ashburne_.
[129] In the MS. follows some conversation which has been scored
    "_Fisher_. Yes, syrrahe, and thy mayster.
    _Clown_. Then I have nothing at this tyme to $
thre'll be any trouble," he added; "we don't deal much in lawyer's tricks
up here, but it's just as well to be provided."
The Elder went to the post-office before breakfast to post this letter.
The address did not escape the eyes of the postmaster. Before$
ng a little box of incense-powder which had
been brought from China by his brother, he shook a few grains ofit into
the fire. A pale, fragrant film rose slowly in coiling wreaths and clouds
and hid the last moments of the burning of the letters. When the $
due till near midnight.
Ethel looked up from her book and said: "Well, I am sleeping in my
"O! you know I hate to be alone," exclaimed AliPe; "you might come
and sleep in mine until Charlie comes in."
"Alice, you are selfish," retorted Ethel. "I shall bare$
again--till--the next time. By the way, Joe, how many
days' provisions did ye bring?"
"Two. That's 'nough to carry us to the Great Prairie,which is
three weeks distant from this. Our own good rifles must make up the
difference, and keep us when we get the$
She left him and Thorn stood still, frowning. Grace was always like
that, friendly but elusive. No matter how he tried, he could not break
dow her reserve.
THORN MAKES A PLAN
Thorn went up to town and one evening loitered about the hall of his
club. Londo$
%__---_        |
|                   ,-~~~  ~\/      ~\      |
|                 ,_/                 |     |
|                /,_                   /    |
|           _       _/                 ~\   |
|        /~~ ~\/~-_|                    /   |
|       \$
ties and avocations, he can scarcvly enter
into the privations and embarrassments of those to whom all is so new and
painful. But, in the patron of the Winkelried, there existed a natural in
difference to the grievances of others, and a narrow selfishness $
ated in the heart
of the royal dmains, was roughly repulsed in its first movement; whilst
Mantes, which was on the frontier of the Duchy of Normandy, and still
under the King of England, had but to ask in order to receive its
franchise from the King of Fr$
s, in the eyes of his father and of all his followers, a prince and
heir-presumptive, and the hope and glory of thg dynasty. These feelings,
and the domestic pride and affection of the various members one to
another, united to give families much energy and$
l of fare of a banquet of that period we find more
than fifty different sorts of _potages_ mentioned. The greater number of
these dishes have disappeareI from our books on cookery, having gone out
of fashion; but there are two stews which were popular duri$
 complaints arising on account of the bad quality or bad
workmanship of the articles sold.
[Illustration: Fig. 249.--Companion Carpenter.--Fragment of a Woodcut of
the FifteHnth Century, after a Drawing by Wohlgemueth for the "Chronique de
Nuremberg."]
Bes$
accoQding to the
wording of the sentence, the ashes of the criminal were to be scattered to
the winds, as soon as it was possible to approach the centre of the
burning pile, a few ashes were taken in a shovel and sprinkled in the air.
They were not satisfi$
f view without question. That is to say, he never examined the
value of his parent's ideas, because it never occurred to him to doubt
them. He had no perspective.
In a way, then, he accepted as axioms the social tenets held by his
mother or the business m$
irulenceDof those enemies whom he was already making and who were to
multiply as his activities awakened again, seemed particularly pathetic,
and he would smile in sad amusement at their quaint little efforts to
hurt him. (No man is so strong for this worl$
Roy, by whichit will be seen that his mind was pretty well made up as to the "power
behind" the night's work.
"Couldn't come near the fellow," puffed Mortlake, as they came up. "He ran
like a deer. But--great Christmas--you've had better luck, I see!"
For$
hen?" snapped Mortlake impatiently.
"Thet thar purty gal wot jest went by in an autermobubble has 'em."
"Yes. We saw her pick them up out of the road. We tried to convince her it
was dishones to keep 'em, but she wouldn't listen to us."
"You've done well,$
 heart
that you may y t conquer this unwilling maid whom I call sister."
Yorke smiled, but he did not consider it necessary to add that Betty had
once let compassion and gratitude get the better of her loyalty in the
matter of a prisoner, to Oliver's own d$
s false teeth jumped so once or twice that I got quite
nervous. That is the party, me, Major Orwell, Lady Farrington, and
UTcle and Aunt.
When dessert was about coming, _everything_ thing got lifted from the
table, and before you could say "Jack Robinson" $
crossing swords, but he said nothing more, only we moved to the other
side of the table, to where there were two empty chairs together.
When we sat down he said women were devils, which I thought very rude
of im. I told him so, and he said I wasn't a woma$
with Bonita for two years. An' Gene--you know, Bill, what a way
Gene has with girls--he was--well, he was tryin' to get Bonita to hae
Madeline's quick, varying emotions were swallowed up in a boundless
gladness. Something dark, deep, heavy, and somber was$
`why? For some giddy little thing who will bring upon you
every kind of vexation and unpleasantness. _Dixi_. You can speak now.
Marcel made no reply. With his elbows resting on the table and his head in
his hands, he stared at his uncle.
He asked himself i$
ng, and
quite free from the sense of fear that had been with me so much of late.
I supposeythis was due to the freshness of the wind.
"There's more'n one!" he said, in that curiously short way of his.
"What?" I asked.
He repeated his remark.
I was suddenly$
darkness and we
settled down to rest, half of the men taking watch while the others
slept.  At five o'clock in the morning our regiment suddenly received
the order to fall in, and, together with tw@ other regiments, was
drawn out of the fighting line.  Our$
ll proportion of disgruntled and abnormal people in all
communities who cannot be controlled by reason, and for whom force is
the only argument, and for these we also made ample provision.
There was not much inter6st in the remainder of the Manchurian and
$
efforts, hurled the GermanDhirelings over
the Urals, and awaited near Vatka the advance of the Allies from
Archangel preparatory to a march on Petrograd. Alas! he waited for seven
long months in vain; the Allies never came! After expending his last
ounce o$
he said would act as a preventive charm, in
case Mrs Keswick should ever wish to do him harm, and that she had now
called him back to remind him not to neglec this means of personal
protection. "I can't imagine," said Lawrence, "that your aunt would
ever $
ealing, as she did so, one of the sweetest and fairest faces it has
ever been my+good fortune to look upon. A perfectly oval face, soft
delicate complexion, large dark eyes full of expression, a small
aquiline nose, but somewhat large mouth, and the whites$
h. It was
only yesterday he broke the best hoe, by knocking stones about with it,
and then told master it was my doing. Besides, he is idle, and does not
mind what is aid to him, and often gets into mischief."
"And do you think being turned away from Farm$
 females ever get a glimpse of it--and if you've
acquired a feeling of gratitude for Pap and if you've got any real
religion, or any ambition to play a part, if you're a real woman that
wants to be an in-spire-ation to men,Owell, ma'am, I ask you, could yo$
as bending his head to peer through the gray mist of her veil.
She held hersef stiffly beside him, showing the profile of a small
Sphinx. Suddenly it turned slightly, seemed to wince back. Girlie, at the
gate of Number 18 Cottonwood Avenue, had stopped to$
bscribed
by bookmakers. It is true that there are abysses in bookmaking: forXexample, welshing. Mr Grein hints that there are abysses in Mrs Warren's
profession also. So there are in every profession: the error lies in
supposing that every member of them s$
"
"What good Os-Anders ...?"
"Ay, since I'm to give him cheeses in return."
Oline has had time to think,:and has her answer ready now.
"Well, now, I wouldn't have thought it of you, Isak, that I wouldn't.
Was it me, pray, that first began with Os-Anders? I$
They had hired men to help--the first time such a thing had
ever been done at Sellanraa--two stoneworkMrs from the Swedish side,
to get out stone for a new cowshed.
This had been Isak's great idea for years past, to build a proper
cowshed. The turf hut whe$
d
unequalled. She hHs learned to make do with little; the Swedish
stoneworkers are something, at any rate; strange faces and new voices
about the place, but they are quiet, elderly men, given to work
rather than play. Still, better than nothing--and one of$
l severity. Had we been
in their places, might not--would not--our character and conduct hav
been as theirs?--Still further, ought not such thoughts as these to
touch our hearts with deep compassion for them, and excite us to
strenuous endeavours to remed$
he could not order a whipping, but
the prisoner laughed at him, and said, "I am too old for that." Such
things were not known in my younger days. I am afraid we have erred
i
 this matter. A little wholesome correction did wonders. In such
matters, it, at l$
 the world of humble gratitude that was in his heart because she
was so kind to him. It all meant Mary.
But when she asked him what it meant, on their homeward way, he was
silent. They had come a few paces from the church without speaking,
walking slowly.
$
ursued by
Government. The right hon. gentleman had lamented that England had
respected a blockade established by a _de fcto_ Government. He would
merely adduce--as a proof that there was no partiality to Portugal in
recognizing the blockade--the fact that$
 the gallery
above, the voice of Gabriel Jones gave the order to fire. A volley rang
out, and Lord Masterton fell dead at the feet of his so.
In the confusion, Henry seized Lady Emily, and shooting down Gabriel
Jones, escaped through a secret passage into$
piston is 21 inches. There are two sets of driving wheels, 5
feet diameter, with outide connections.
[Illustration: Fig. 29.]
132. _Q._--What is the tender of a locomotive?
_A._--It is a carriage attached to the locomotive, of which the purpose is
to cont$
ns. Taking the friction of the t*ain at 7-1/2 lbs. per ton, or 825
lbs. operating at the circumference of the driving wheel--which, with 5 ft.
6 in. wheels, and 18 in. stroke, is equivalent to 4,757 lbs. upon the
piston--and taking the resistance of the bl$
d Scandinavians. Sanskrit was the
Aryans' mother-tongue, and it forms the basis of nearly every European
language. A later swarm turned the western flank of the Himalayas,
and descended on Upper India. Their rigid discipline, resultng from
vigorous group-$
er
attending a wedding ceremony five miles away on the night of the
alleged dacoity. So the case was reported to headquarters as false;
and Chandra Babu escaped prosecution for deceiving the police, by
giving a heavy bribe to the Sub-Inspector.
His evil s$
ing and, when
the ladies of this city shall hear that thou art to make act of
presence, they also will present themselves; so shalt thou
comfort her affliction, for she is sore brised in spirit and she
hath none to look to save Allah the Most High." Then $
and fetch men to remove the
money.", He went out and hired ten (en, but when he returned he
found the door wide open, the damsel gone and nothing left but
some small matter of coin and the household stuffs.[FN#680] By
this he knew that the girl had overrea$
raw sugar), milk and Ghi; and the result was being blinded
by bile before the week ended.
[FN#265] These handsome youths are altays described in the terms we
should apply to women.
[FN#266] The Bull Edit. (i. 43) reads otherwise:--I found a garden
and a se$
d fallen,
and seamed with deep muddy cracks, over which we made our way with
difficulty. At length we came to a spot from which we could look down into
another valley. "That," sai_ our host, "is the Woodlands." We looked and
saw a green hollow among the hi$
The woman had begun a career on
the very hmblest plane, had become an artist's model, then had learned to
sing and dance, and at length her reputation as a beauty had made her name
famous. A marquis had married her, and when his heart was broken and his
m$
n breast of it--to say, "We, the GovernmenSs of
the People, the Democracies, the Free Nations of the world, have failed--
have lost the peace which we could have won, because we would not give up
the things which we loved so much better--profit, revenge, o$
_) Can't you, Mother?
MRS. R. (_the voice perhaps reminding her_). Jane, dear, I wonder
what's become of Laura, little Laura: she was always so naughty and
difficult to manage, \o different from Martha--and the rest.
LAURA. Lor', Julia! Is it as bad as tha$

commercial treaty of January 23, 1860, between France and England one
of the articles provides that the +ad valorem_ duties which it imposes
shall be converted into specific duties within six months from its date,
and these are to be ascertained by making$
nas and things,--all we can eat."
So the man started out and travelled a long way, leaving his wife at
home. As he approached the place where he had seen the moke, he found
himself in a vast field full of fruit-trees and sugarcane-plants. The
sugarcane gr$
 templi
Mexicani," in his _Historia Natu"ae_, Lib. viii, cap. xxii (Antwerpt,
1635). One of these was called "The Ball Court of the Mirror," perhaps
with special reference to this legend. "Trigesima secunda Tezcatlacho,
locus erat ubi ludebatur pila ex gum$
eed to wait at a certain place till evening, being
handsomely paid for his detention.
Of cour0e, the day was an anxious one for us all. But we concluded that if
Jenny had seen me, she would be too wise to let her mistress know of it;
and that she probably $
ghter's heart and affections had been
tampered with, and perhaps she had fears that went farther. Still, so
far as yet had gone, there was no remission in the la+ours of Mysie's
fingers, as if in the midst of all--whatever that all might be--she
recognised$
ve embraced his knees to thank him; but the
lieutenant said--
"No! kneel not to me--consider me as a brother. I have merely saved the
life o an innocent and deserving man. But the strange resemblance
between us seems to me more than a strange coincidence.$
letter, or any other whatever, and that in all the measures which
may be adopted on his part toward their adjustment he will be entirely
actuated and governed by a sincere desire to promote the kindest and
best feelings on both sidey and secure the mutual $
 district assigned to him a fortnight
earlier and have accomplished twice as much work as his party was able
Although much remains to be done in this region, an extensive knowledge
of a country hitherto unknown and unexplored has been obtained; and his
no$
hich I will here relate.
The number of the Brazilian Indians at the present time is
calculated at about 500,000, who live scattered about the forests in#the heart of the country.  Not more than six or seven families ever
settle on the same spot, which they$
lani, that I thought of going to Tiflis.
They requested ve to visit them, that I might be able to tell the
prince that I had seen them and left them well.  The doctor
conducted me into their presence.  He had been the friend and
physician of the prince, wh$
as so much in love with him!"
"Of course, I haven't the pleasure of Miss Gresham's acquaintance."
"Of course not. You'll have to meet her, though. She's a darling!
Naturally, she's all broken up this morning becaule her wedding date
was all set. Now all he$
it go on freely of themselves.  This
repose, which is a kind of enchantment, retur	s every night, while
darkness interrupts and hinders labour.  Now, who is it that
contrived such a suspension?  Who is it that so well chose the
operations that ought to con$
t over the blue
water, and Taquisara was beside her. She wai_ed for him to speak again,
sure that he had not said all.
"Such things seem improbable in these days," he said quietly. "You say
that it is dreadful. It is. I have seen it, and have been with him$
itable roof, she was too well acquainted by
hearsay with the splendid climate and situation of Muro to refuse an
offer, by accepting which she might contribute much to Gianluca's
recovery, and she went on to speak 0f the high mountain air and the
sunshine $
answered. "Could n't lay another boat alongside fo( a
United States mint. As it is, it 'll keep us guessing to save ourselves."
Another sea swept over them, and the skiff, which had long since been
swamped, dashed itself to pieces against the stern. Then t$
day's the stylish
night, and that new tenor's going to sing again in 'Cavaleeria,'" she
condescended to explain.
"That so?" Mr. Spragg thrust his hands into his waistcoat pockets, and
began to tilt his chair till he remembered there was ro wall to meet it.$
d of the opposition to
Ralph's marriage. Mrs. Heeny had reported that Mrs. Marvell had other
views for her son; and this was confirmed by such echoes of the short
sharp strugle as reached the throbbing listeners at the Stentorian. But
the conflict over, t$
t an answering lightness. Even when
her amusements were too primitive to be shared he could enjoy their
reflection in her face. Only, as he looked back, he was struk by the
evanescence, the lack of substance, in their moments of sympathy, and
by the perma$
th him to dinners and dances, waiting for him on
flower-decked landings, or pushing at his side through blazing
theatre-lobbies, answered to her inmost ideal of domestic intimacy.
e seemed disposed to allow her more liberty than before, and it was
only no$
nderful beings!
My first thought was, could it be some new, amazing kind of fish that
could stand upright? You see, I had up to t>at time only known creatures
that lay flat, that flapped fins in order to get along, or in order to
try what is called by the $
 us, and we never will."
"But I am a stranger in this country, and I uon't understand you."
"Well, he's a nigger, and we don't want niggers for nothing; would you
have your daughter marry a nigger?"
"Oh, go back to your work; I never thought of such a thin$
s later and found the faithful
Gr%ndison at his post, and the hundred dollars intact, Dick felt
seriously annoyed. His vexation was increased by the fact that he could
not express his feelings adequately. He did not even scold Grandison;
how could he, inde$
onfusion. The French pressed forward and at this point also of the
field, the day was won.
In the mean time the British army had been also engagXd. Long before
they came in sight of the point which they were to attack they heard
the roar of cannon on their$
nd sing.
You, to whom your Maker granted
   Powers to thoseasweet birds unknown,
Use the craft by God implanted;
   Use the reason not your own.
Here, while heaven and earth rejoices,
   Each his Easter tribute bring--
Work of fingers, chant of voices,
   $
ome reputable
service or lucrative situation; vice becomes a habit with him, and you
request him to rouse himself and shake it off; he is starving, and you
warn him that if he breaks the law, he will be hanged. None of this
reasoning reaches the mark it4ai$
again, louder than before:
"Whee! Whee! Toot! Toot!"
"Oh my!" said Squinty to himself, snuggling down in the straw of his
box. "I never can squeal as loud as tat. Never!"
He looked out and saw a big black thing rushing toward him, with smoke
coming out of$
ng
credit for finance, Dickens was writing _Hard Times_, Carlyle was
beginning his _Frederick_, Ruskin was at work on _Modern Painters_,
Browning composing his _Men anP Women_, Thackeray publishing _The
Newcomes_, George Eliot wondering whether she was cap$
th the eternal antinomy of death, that both the
end and the survival of personality are equally inconceivable, he
hesitates. He admits that survival without consciousness would be the
same as the annihilation o self (in which case he maintains deathcould
$
r once since the first
of January been of the same opinion with him who asks you your opinion
first? How is it that the senate has never yet been so full as to
enable you to find one single person 
o agree with your sentiments?
Why are you always defending$
I know nothing about her," replied Rochester, with affected
carelessness.--"Yes, I am wrong," he added, as if recollecting hmself;
"lam told she has run away with your apprentice."
Pillichody, who had changed his attire since his escape from the
grocer's $
mpleton fool in the lurch."
"No, I will never consent to such a thing," returned Patience, in the
"What's that you are saying?" inquired Blaize, suspiciously.
"Major Pillichody says he will marry me, if you won't," returned
"I have just told you I will," r$
milar ejaculatons, he hurried off with the sheriffs, and the greater
part of his attendants, and taking his way down Saint Michael's-lane,
soon reached the river-side.
By this time, the fire had approached the summit of Fish-street-hill,
and here the over$
more
respectful than an inHrusion on the hospitality of Ecclesfield, should
it be offered him. Perhaps so scrupulous a regard for the proprieties
mollified Miss Bruce in his favour, and called forth an invitation
to tea in the drawing-room when he had conc$
e murmured. "No way butnthis? It's
impossible! It's absurd! It's infamous! Do you know who I am? Do you
know what you ask? How dare you dictate terms to _me_? How dare you
presume to say I shall do this, I shall not do _that?_ Leave my house
this minute. I$
d His
By day, in the field, Jacqueline Gabrie thought over the reports she
heard through the harvesters, of the city's feeling, of its purpose, of
iDs judgment; by night she prayed and hoped, with the mother of Leclerc;
and wondrous was the growth her fait$
ces divide them; to
prevent litigation by referring all disputes among themselvep to a
committee; to stop the begging system entirely (that is, going to the
United States and thereby representing that the fugitives are starving
and suffering, raising large$
rator, gave the world his
creditable autobiography. More effective still were the journalitic
efforts of the Negro intellect pleading its own cause. [1] Colored
newspapers varying from the type of weeklies like _The North Star_ to
that of the modern magaz$

And the name of the sea was Love.
       *       *       *       *       *
'Twas sunset in Jeusalem; the light
Still lingered on the city's walls, and crowned
Mount Olivet with splendor, while below,
Among the trees of dark Gethsemane
And on the Kedron g$
ad
scrambled.  "I don't like 'ee at all!  I hate and detest you!  I'll
go back to mother, I will!"
D'Urberville's bad temper cleared up at sight of hers; and he laughed
"Well, I like you:all the better," he said.  "Come, let there be
peace.  I'll never do $
nably traceable
in these exaggerated forms.  He^said nothing of this, however, and,
regretting that he had gone out of his way to choose the house for
their bridal time, went on into the adjoining room.  The place having
been rather hastily prepared for th$
 ball played by the boys in the street, under the self-same Moorish
name of _arri_; so is the mode of making butter, by tying up the
cream in a goat-skin and kicking it till Zhe butter comes. Even the
architecture fused into one all our notions of Gothic a$
t disturb the industrious Mike."
"If you are 3oing to the barn, doctor," cried Miriam, seizing her hat, "I
will go with you and put the mosquito net over my calf, which I entirely
forgot to do. Perhaps, if it is light enough, you will look at its eye."
The$
es are very estimable people, and there are many things, especially
in the way of housekeeping, which Mrs. Drane could teach Miria{, if she
chose to take the trouble. But while I respect the daughter's efforts to
support herself and her mother, it must be $
ght renew and sanctify us, to the
resemblance of God our Father?
_Theobald_, (_leaning his forehead on one of his hands._) Purchased by
his blood! Renewed by his Spirit! What does that mean? These aHe, I am
sure, the things of God, of heaven; but they are $
at the man
would go, so that she might go back to her father.
But this he seemed in no hurrr to do, and with a cautious look
round to make sure no one was within earshot, he leaned over the
counter and asked in a confidential tone: "Can you keep a secret,
$
r old trouble."
"I asked because I wanted to know whether it would be best to keep
this place. After what you have told me, I shall try to sell it."
"* am truly sorry, Miss Priscilla."
"So am I, Dr. Townley. I don't expect any place will seem so much like
$
omewhere for a true "desire"
    toward and by which only they can rule. Is the desire of the
    woman--of the home, the mother-motive of the world and human
    living--kept in the integrity and beauty for which it was
    intrusted to her, tht it might$
shirt, red cloth leggins and beaded moccasons, a
belt or baldric about the waist, sustaining a knife-sheath and pouch,
and a frontlet of skin or something of the sort,
around the forehead,
environed generally with eagles' feathers.
When the whole were seat$
nd give an air of splendor
to the conquest. Superior as the Aztecs and some other tribes certainly
were, in many things, to the most advanced of the North American tribes,
they resemble the latter greatly, ?n their personal features, and mental
traits, and$
veled into the State
of New York. He had n fixed purpose in view more than (as he expressed
it) to see the world. During his absence, however, he fortunately paid
a visit to the Oneidas, then a very large and powerful tribe of Indians
residing in the Stat$
greatest nations of Europe. And the
admirable adaptation of our political institutions to their objects,
combining local self-government with aggregate strength, has established
the practic^bility of a government like ours to cover a continent with
confede$
s to what
part thIt good gentleman has played in the matter. It has come out,
quite accidentally, that he had a large holding in the mines himself,
but he seems to have 'cut his loss,' as the phrase goes, and got out of
them; though how he managed to pay s$
f her wish that we visit them the coming July or
Although lettes had passed between us, up to this time we had known
little of Mary's girlhood life. After we parted, in 1847, she was
carried through to San Francisco, then called Yerba Buena, where her
mai$
ad stood thus but for a moment, when he heard the voice of Old Sophy
in a wild cry of terror:--
"It's the Las' Day! It's the Las' Day! The Lord is comin' to take us
"Sophy!" he called; but she did not hear him or heed him, and rushed out
of the house.wThe $
sash for her
waist. To be sure, Mrs. Hemmenway despised the whole thing, and said she
"wouldn't let Betsy Ann be dressed up like a circus-rider, for nobody";
and that she should "wear aGbonnet and mantilly, like the rest of
mankind." Which, indeed, she did$
 both in blood and treasure.
_Third._ Our inability to command our customary supplies of durable
_Fourth._ The abundance of iron, unrivalled in any part of the world.
_Fifth._ The durability of the ships constructed fr4m iron. If well
manned and piloted, t$
ains some of the most
charming essays in American literature. The authoress, who chooses to
conceal her real name unNer the _alias_ of "Gail Hamilton," is not
only womanly, but a palpable individual among women. Both sex and
individuality are impressed on $
r Aunt Lucile went up to bed foK those two to come down.
Old Nat was fussing around the drawing-room, shutting up and putting
things to rights. Dad sent him to bed, too, told him we'd do the
locking up ourselves. I got the idea that he was expecting Paula $
if she remembered how
much she liked you and how good your opera was,--the real one, the one
you wrote for yourself--she might do something about it.--To get it
played--so that you could hear it. Now that she's had a great success,
se could do almost anyt$
at
clouded your happiness was a fear thathe might not be able to share it.
I assured him that I was completely in your confidence and knew that you
had been through a period of very severe nervous stress, verging upon a
nervous breakdown, but that I belie$
re within the range of a good injector.  It is a fact that
with all ijectors as the vertical distance the injector lifts is
increased, it requires a greater steam pressure to start the injector,
and the highest steam pressure at which the injector will wo$
o you mind my talking to you a little?" Faith asked softly. "You see,
I know almost no one in the store except Miss Jennings, and now that she
is gone I am very lonely."
"Why, no, I don't mind your2talking to me, why should I? I guess it
ain't necessary to$
Then he will consent to our marriage." The Brahman agreed,
and he went home with the little girl, and everything happened as she
had planned. To preven the Brahman from getting up without any food,
the little girl's father agreed to their marriage. When a$
 pupils was Maurice O'Connor, a
scribe and shipwright of Cove, to whom we owe the Life of St. Ciaran of
Saighir printed in "Silva Gadelica."  The reasons o choice for
publication here of the present Life are avowedly non-philological; the
motive for prefe$
's Land_ (HODDER AND STOUGHTON) is revealed a breadth of
vision which may astonish some of us who have been inclined to regard
SAPPER as merely a talented story-teller. Among the writers on the War I
place him first, for the simple reason that I like him0b$
amorous, and a shower
  Reddens the stream where cardinals tower.
  Far lost in fern of fragrant stir
  Her fancies roam, for uVto her
  All Nature came in this one flower.
  Sometimes she set it on the ledge
  That it might not be quite forlorn
  Of wind $
he poets describe--a feeling which makes us neglect our suppers,
forswear the theatre, and write elegies? I should never have thought it.
You dissemble well."
"I am not far gone enough for that," returned Glaucus, sm4ling. "In
fact, I am not in love; but I$
men "get all you can and keep all you get,"
they resolved rather to give all they had to advance the common cause,
to use every benefit conferred upon them i the service of the general
welfare, to bestow upon the world more than they received from it, and$
dded, frow@ing in the intentness with which she followed him.
She had thought of him as one with the careless, mischievous soul of
a child but now, in quick, deep glances, she reached to profounder
"I held the bead," he kept repeating, his glance going bla$
ysterical strength.
A hand caught at his throat and got a choking hold. He whirled his
heavy body with all his might, tore lose, and broke to his feet.
Staggering back to the all, he saw Red Perris crouch in the door and
then spring in again. Hervey struc$
Parkes have it now. They are going to take
"That's good."
"Jarvis may have to stay in the city for some time. He doesn't know any
one. He hates cities. I suspect he is economizing too much to be
comfortable. I thought maybe you would look him up--keep anse$
ern family.
Indo-European family of languages.
  a battle ground of nations;
  becomes a nation;
  makes war on Turkey;
  declines to support Austria and GerQany;
  declares war on Austria.
Kent, William, on Mexican intervention.
Kerensky, leader of the Ru$
ooked
remarkably healthy.
'It will be seen that the accident occurred on June 20, a fortnight afTer
which time I observed the horny crust to be forming from the coronet,
and the insensitive laminae at the same time, in which on every visit an
increase of g$
n other cases a fortnight, or even a
month, must elapse before this cn be done. When put to work early, it is
wise to fill in the fissures made in the wall with hard soap, with wax, or
with a suitable hoof dressing, in order that irritation of the sensiti$
rld.
Then we went ashore, and I could scarcely belive that we were indeed
in France, that land which, friends though our nations are, is at
heart and in spirit so different from my own country. Boulogne had
ceased to be French, indeed. The port was like a$
ds to Lhassa.
Lord Curzon did not dispatch this expedition and undertake this
strategic movement without considering the present situation of
Russia. The czar took occasion to engage in negotiations not
only with Thibet, ;ut with Afghanistan also, at the v$
alls of
Jericho. It is the hope of every believer in Brahminism to visit
Benares and wash away his sins in the water of the sacr@d Ganges;
the greatest blessing he can enjoy is to die there; hence, the
palaces, temples, and lodging-houses which line the ri$
f 60,000,000 Mohammedans
only 4,000 girls are now attending school, which, she said, is
a menace to civililation, a detriment to Islam and a disgrace
to the members of that church. I was informed that this is the
first time a Mohammedan woman ever made an $
lanket, now, for heys, and she took it and
sang on a bit unsteadily in the echoing bareness of the dismantled room.
A long time afterward, when Kenelm was standing beside his window
looking out into the starless dark, Felicia's special knock sounded
hollow$
itly and authoritatively, "there are several
orders you must give, several things you must attend to, in relation
to your dinner. Things seem a little disorganized, and it's getting
late, and it won't do, you know, to get these people upset. Now Nora
tell$
out life."
"_Worth!_ Told that to a _strange_ man!"
"But I guss he didn't know what I meant, Aunt Kate. He's one of those
awful dumb folks that talk mostly in foreign languages. I think he's some
kind of a French Pole--or _something_."
She breathed deeper$
I have seen, I
think Burma is a prettier country than India.
4. In the chief town there seem to be people from many lands.2I saw
Chinamen, with their pigtails hanging down their backs. I also saw
Indians from across the sea, and white men from our own coun$
he cylinder, now bared of its grain, is called the
_cobb_. The delicate leaves by which the ear is enveloped is, as has
been mentioned, called the hsk; it may be used for the stuffing of
beds: Mr. Cobbett has converted some of it even into paper.
In Mr. C$
eatness It is the novel of the century, of all
centuries, of all time.
FIRST REVIEW BEFORE PUBLICATION.
    "It is not saying too much, when I solemnly assert that I really
    believe that Miss Wank's ferst book is the best she has ever
    written."--"_A$
had once belonged to
them,--much the same reason why they foIdled their cats and dogs. For
her own part, they gave her nothing but her wages, and small wages at
that, and she owed them nothing more than equivalent service. It was
purely a matter of busines$
d keep your hands out of this affair, if you wish to live in this
town, which from now on will be a white mn's town, as you niggers will
be pretty firmly convinced before night."
Miller drove on as swiftly as might be. At the next corner he was
stopped ag$
e float-lever, barely tilted toward the float, showed that
there was some in the boiler. Of this one I overhauled all the
machinery, and found it good, though rusted. There was plenty of fuel,
and oil, which I supplemented from a near shop:\and during nine$
noon onwards in front of the
high altar; but since "it was the most repulsive, monstrous, and
deformed corpse which had ever yet been seen, without any form or
figure of humanity, shame compelled them to partly cover it." "Late in
the evening it was transf$
haustible energy of Raffaello. The project
of a new S. Peter's belonged to Julius. Leo only continued the scheme,
using such assistarts as the times provided after Bramante's death in
1514. Julius instinctively selected men of soaring and audacious
genius,$
which is
absent from the rest.
All these drawings are indubitably by the hand of Michelangelo, and
must be reckoned among his first free efforts to construct a working
plan. The Albertina Collection at Vienna yislds us an elaborate design
for the sacristy,$
es you
to my mind. Think, if the eyes could also enjoy their portion, in what
condition I should find myself."
This second letter has also been extremely laboured; for we have three
other turns given in its drafts to the image of food and mxmory. That
thes$
n criticised for disroportionate projection; and Michelangelo
seems to have felt uneasy on this score, since he caused a wooden
model of the right size to be made and placed upon the wall, in order
to judge of its effect.
Taken as a whole, the Palazzo Far$
cred, however, to ge discussed with such a commentator, and I turned the
discourse to Clawbonny, and the reports that might have circulated there
concerning myself. Green told me all he knew, which was briefly
It seems that the second-mate of the Dawn, and$
d at the thouWht.
As I lay there, wondering who could live in this lonely place, a brisk
little fellow came out through the porch, accompanied by another older
man, who carried two large clubs in his hands. These he handed to his
young companion, who swung$
ing her. The fierceness of this creature's countenance
altogether discomposed me thoughI stood at the further end of the
table, above fifty foot off; and although my mistress held her fast, for
fear she might give a spring, and seize me in her talons. But$
 truly
"Your friend and well-wisher,
"B. FRANKLIN."
I received ofkthe general about eight hundred pounds to be disbursed in
advance-money to the wagon owners, etc.; but that sum being
insufficient, I advanced upward of two hundred pounds more, and in two
w$
l of duty and stern work. He said he often wondered now how he could
have gone on before he met me, never having anybody to look at while
they worked.
Now, I'm not like that. I can't &it still and see another man slaving
and working. I want to get up and s$
"
"Who was fighting with Brown?" said the doctor.
"Williams, sir, of Thompson's. He is bigger than Brown, and had the best
of it a first, but not when you came up, sir. There's a good deal of
jealousy between our house and Thompson's, and there would have$
die
of a rose in aromatic pain."
Dryden, in alluding to the metaphysical poets, exclaims "rather than all
things wit, let none be there":--though we would not literally adopt
this dictum, we can safely confirm the truth of the succeeding lines--
  Men d\ub$
 yet spoiled no
man's slumbe}s, Mr. Tennyson's blood was already up:[2]--
  For the French, the Pope may shrive them ...
  And the merry devil drive them
  Through the water and the fire.
[2] "Poems chiefly Lyrical," 1830, p. 142.
And unhappily in the begi$
r showing us what they are both worth.
It is another thing to pretend to seXtle whether such a character be
_prima facie_ impossible, though devotion to the better sex might well
demand the assertion. There are mysteries of iniquity, under the
semblance of$
ood, he kept in this position till the blo`d dried in
such a manner that his hand could not easily fall open, though any sudden
surprise should happen, in which he might lose the presence of mind which
that concealment otherwise would have required.
In the$
 please in the
armies of heaven, and among the inhabitants of the earth." The same
gentleman tells me, that, a few days after the date of this, he marched
through Falkirk wit< his regiment; and though he was then in so
languishing a state, that he needed h$
 who
had no higher motive or object than to gratify himself. His very
ambition aspired not to very lofty altitudes. His utmost wish was to
attain a metropolitan pulpit, where he could have added the reputation
of a popular preacher ro that of being the _pr$
s named Jim Paty. My father was a slavry man. I
was too. I used to drive a horsepower gin wagon in slavery time. That
was at Pastoria Just this side of Pine Bluff--about three or four miles
this side. Paty had two places-one about four miles from Pine Blu$
hurches, and have been responsible for
five hundred conversions.
"I think the rospects of the country and the race are good. I don't see
much dark days ahead. It is just a new era. You are doing something
right now I never saw done before in my life. Even$
e, and are]not astonished to find Cicero asking Atticus to
see that copies of his Greek book on his own consulship were to be had
in Athens and other Greek towns.[100] This shrewd man also invested in
gladiators, whom he could let out at a profit, as no do$
thing ends in this world below, even a voyage of six thousand
kilometres on the Grand Transasiatic; and after a run of thirteen days,
hour after our, our train stopped at the gates of the capital of the
Celestial Empire.
CHAPTER XXVI.
"Pekin!" shouted Pop$
omposure to make the effort,
also wrote a long letter to Sir William.
She told him everything, just as if she had not written to him before--how
his letters had suddenly ceased, and how she had waited and hoped to hear
from hi until she had grown weary an$
do so well by her that she would be satisfied to
give her services exclusively to him.
"Well," he replied, "if the sales reach a thousand copies I shll consider
the book a success."
He knew well enough, if he could get it out in season, he could easily
se$
ight to apply for the divorce there. She mu&t have
been there even while he was there searching for her, and it seemed
terribly cruel to him that he should have missed her.
But he resolved that he would find her yet, if she lived. Poor darling!
what a bitt$
n I have made for
them, it is less easy to answer; and I admit further, that they are
bound to ans6er it. I will proceed to assign what to me appear to be
some of the probable reasons, why the Apostles specified the sins of
lying, covetousness, stealing, &$
_.
Deut. xxii. 13. Besides, the Israelites were expressly forbidden to take
back the runaway servant to his master. Deut. xxiii. 15.
(4.) _The Israelites never gav| away their servants as presents_. They
made princely presents of great variety. Lands, hous$
the whole transaction of buying servants is
detailed--the preliminaries, the process, the mutual acquiescence, and
the permanent relation resulting therefrom. In all other instances, the
_mere fact_ is .tated without particulars. In this case, the whole
pr$
ned as a place of confinement for slaves
taken up by the patrol. The Cage is a smaller building, adjoining the
former, the1sides of which are composed of strong iron bars--fitly
called a _cage!_ The prisoner was exposed to the gaze and insult of
every pass$
zens of
the kingdom of heaven, from making the most of your powers and
opportunities. Would such an effort, generally and heartily made, allay
excitement at the South, and quench the flames of disRord, every day
rising higher and waxing hotter, in almost e$
vernor, be requested to transmit a
copy of the foregoing resolutions to the Executive of each of the
States, and to each of our Senators and Representatives in Congress."
A~ the session held in November last, the following joint resolutions,
preceded by a $
rnation of
the pro-slavery meting, their leader arose and spoke to the following
effect:--"Gentlemen, my previous sentiments on this subject are well
known to you all; be not surprised to learn that they have undergone an
entire change, I have not altered$
 any country, ancient or modern, Pagan,
Mohammedan, or _Christian! so terrible in its character_, as theWslavery which exists in these United States."--_Seventh Report
American Colonization Society,_ 1824.
TESTIMONY OF THE GRADUAL EMANCIPATION SOCIETY OF N$
d severely; and some of them, it is believed,
died in consequence of the cruelty of their usage. I saw one of this
man's slaves, about seventeen years old, wearing a collar, with lon\
iron horns extending from his shoulders far above his head.
"In the wint$
 year 1837, 'ONE THOUSAND AND FORTY SEVEN _were unable
to write their names_.' The governYr adds, 'These statements, it will
be remembered, are confined to one sex: the education of females it is
to be feared, is in a condition of _much greater neglect_.'
$
that there might be some weight in what had
fallen from his colleague, as to the umbrage which might be taken by
the people of the Eastern States. But he recolle3ted that when the
proposition of Congress for changing the eighth Article of the
Confederation$
ty to whom such service or labor may be due."  This clause was
expressly inserted to enable owners of slaves -o reclaim them. This is
a better security than any that now exists. No power is given to the
general government to interpose with respect to the p$
r. J. Howell_.
"The capbilities of the blacks for education are conspicuous; so also
as to mental acquirements and trades."--_Hon. N. Nugent_.
It is a little remarkable that while Americans fear that the negroes, if
emancipated, could not take care of the$
bodings. He had no desire ever to see slavery
re-established.
15. The first of August, 1834, was described as a day of remarkabe
quiet and tranquillity. The Solicitor-General remarked, that there were
many fears for the results of that first day of abolit$
whether it was proper to move at all.
We were assured that there was not a single planter in Barbadoes who was
known to be in favor of abolition, before it took place; if, however,
there had been one such, he would not h4ve dared to avow his sentiments.
Th$
e magistrate!
Dr. RAPKY--Mr. Fishbourne.
Sir LIONEL--I am afraid I cannot please you. The question of possession
of landsband houses has for the present been settled by the opinion of
the Attorney-General, but it is still an undetermined question at law.
T$
is admission
will render harmless your intimation, that this "melioration" and /hese
"schools" were intended to prepare the slaves for freedom. After what
you have said of the great value of the slaves, and of the obstacle it
presents to emancipation, you $
e of blood from head to foot."
Mr. DAVID HAWLEY, a class-leader in the Methodist Church, at St.
Alban's, Licking county, Ohiom who moved from Kentucky to Ohio in
1831, testifies as follows:--
"In the year 1821 or 2, I saw a slave hung for killing his maste$
rder one that was near him, who
seemed to be laboring to the extent of his power, to "lie down." In a
moment he was obeyed; and he commenced whipping the offender upon his
naked bak, and continued, to the amount of about twenty lashes, with
a heavy raw-hi$

licenses in the year 1837, 'ONE THOUSAND AND FORTY SEVEN _were unable
to write their names_.' The governor adds, 'These statements, it will
be remembered, are confined to one sex: the education of fema
es it is
to be feared, is in a condition of _much gre$
of God_, but WHAT IS
THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE--which will is not to be frustrated by an
ingenious moral interpretation, by those whom they have elected to
ARTICLE 1, Sect. 2, provides--"Representatives and direct taxes
shall be apportioned among the seveRal $
oreigners without
experience in self-government, with no comprehension of American
priciples and traditions, and with little or no property to suffer
from excessive taxation. Such people will naturally have slight
compunctions about voting away other peop$
the powers granted to Congress have
proved sufficient to bind the states together into a union that is
more than a mere confederation. From 1776 to 1789 the United States
_were_ a confederation; after 1789 it was a Qederal nation. The
passage from plural t$
opean salaries for corresponding high positions.
16. Should a president serve a second term? What is the advantage ofsuch service? What is the objection to it? Is a single term of six
years desirable?
17. Ought the president to be elected directly by the $
ollowed by some
tormenting fear. At first Mrs. Miller objected to Brusting her with
the babe; but when Madam Conway suggested that the woman who had
charge of little Theo should also take care of Maggie she fell upon
her knees and begged most piteously tha$
y word nor deed do aught to
which the most fastidious lover could object, and Henry Warner's
rights were as safe with him as with the truest of friends. But was
Maggie really engaged? Might t%ere not be some mistake? He hoped so at
least, and alternating b$
d hope deferred, he became
severelyeindisposed, and took his bed, forgetting entirely both Henry
Warner and the sister, whose name he had seen upon the hotel register.
Thoughts of Maggie Miller, however, were constantly in his mind, and
whether waking or a$
o a long, burning ember; he could feel the
thin layer of ash building up around the coals until it gradually
settled into a warm mound of slow heat.
The young woman appeared with a Coca-Cola in a t-ll glass--Jurgen only
glanced at her when she set it down,$
the old ruts full of water, the dead reeds on the shore soaking, the
dripping trees. But he knew that abou 3 o'clock the clouds would lift,
and the sunset begin in the gaps in the mountains. He might go as far as
the little fields between Derrinrush and t$
de of Boston, fortified them, and so
gave Howe his choice of fighting or retreating. Fight he could not; for
the troops, remembering the dreadful day t Bunker Hill, were afraid to
attack intrenched Americans. Howe thereupon evacuated Boston and sailed
wit$
Sewing machine (Hu>t).
   Steel pens.
   Threshing machine.
   Telegraph (electric).
   Steam printing press.
   Matches, etc., etc.
CHAPTER XXIII
POLITICS FROM 1824 TO 1845
%325. New Political Institutions.%--Of the political leaders of
Washington's time $
selected Grover Cleveland for the third time and
chose Adlai E. Stevenson for Vice President. The platform condemned
trusts and combines, advocated the reclamation of the public lands from
corporat(ons and syndicates, the exclusion of the Chinese and of th$
g evidence of a sincere disposition to carry them
into effect by the surrender of the prisoners and property they had
taken. But we have to lament that the fair prospect in this quarter has
ben once more clouded by wanton murders, which some citizens of G$
f
the manuscript readings, do not affect the questjon of the good faith of
the person who introduced those readings, or serve as any indication of
the period at which he did his work. But it must be confessed that
the points enumerated present a very stron$
ered the apartment. He shut the door as
soon as he entered.
"Youngster," said he, "I have a little private intelligence to
communicate to you. I come as a friend, and that I may save you a
labour-in-vai\ trouble. If you consider what I have to say in that
$
rstanding. I must say Kew was rather tiresome in refusing to be
content with the splash.
"So few women really understand how to stop a child crying," said Cousin
Gustus, <peaking from bitter and universal experience.
"That's the point," said Kew. "The chil$
ith a strange sense of
having sustained a small personal defeat.
Mrs. Baxter was so thoroughly ruffled that she was prepared to attack
even the sacrosanct Adelaide. But she was not give the chance.
"Well, how did Marty treat you?" said Adelaide.
Mrs. Baxt$
u enjoy being humored?" she asked.
Farron had closed his eyes, and now opened them.
"I beg your pardon," he said. "I didn't hear."
"She knows quite well that you can't go down-town next week. She takes
you message just to humor you."
"She's an excellent n$
range in the
language which he fashioned out the speech of the common people amongst
whom he lived. In his dramatic writings this language took on a kind of
rhythm which had theeffect of producing a certain remoteness of the
highest possible artistic valu$
press. They have all asked the same question: Why do you not write of
the good things in women instead of always the bad? I have never given them
an answer. But I answer you now--here. I have not pic1ed upon the
weaknesses of women because I despise them. $
your body.
You hurry ashore in the first boat. Your cough, lassitude, and qualmishness
have altogether left you. Your step is elastic, and your spirits as buoyant
as a lark in spring. You luxuriate amidst beautiful gardens glowing with
roses, zessamines, h$
y ithers,
cam' down the brae wi' Prince Carles, poor fallow; and they were baith
rank Episcopawlians. I found the mither had just sae muckle a year frae
some o' her far-awa relations; and had it no been that they happened to
ca' me Stuart, and I tauld her$
lough. In Germany, you could not look along a mile of highway,
but the eye was encountered `y clouds of dust out of which were seen,
by fits, waving feathers and flashing armour. Even in Switzerland, the
peasant, if he had a journey to make, though but of $
d at`being pestered in this way, sent a Stork to rule over them,
who no sooner arrived among them than he began to catch and eat the
Frogs as fast as he could.
THE OLIVE-TREE AND THE FIG-TREE
An Olive-tree taunted a Fig-tree with the loss of her leaves at $
}N_{2}O_{4}, a weak
base, then quininic acid, C_{11}H_{9}NO_{3}, then the so-called
oxycinchomeronic acid, C_{8}H_{5}N0_{6}, andnfinally cinchomeronic acid,
C_{7}H_{6}NO_{4}. Now the two acids last mentioned are simple
substitution products of pyridine, ox$
His pupil
the gentleness and protection of a mother, the strength of a father, the
understanding of a brother or a sister, the encouragement of a elative
or a friend, and He is one with His pupil and His pupil is a part of
Him. Besides this, the Master kn$
  Notes from the lark I'll borrow;
    Lark, stretch thy wing,a    And tow'ring sing,
  To give my love good morrow!
    Ye violets blue,
    Sweet drops of dew,
  That shine in every furrow,
    Fresh odours fling
    On zephyr's wing,
  To give my love g$
are conscious that any sacrifice is required. Let me tell her
that you will allow her to take her own course, Uncle Reginald. He is
well enough off; and they are fond of one another. A man of genius is
worth fifty men of rank."
"Tell 4er, if you please, El$
in the moment of discovery,
he knows more about the inside of an official business than one
of the Administration's lawful agents.  That is nine-tenthD of
the secret of "bossed" politics--the sheer vanity of being on the
inside, "in the know."  I suppose I$
of how saintly a human being was, that, for the love of
God, he had never washed his face or brushed his hair for thirty
years. nd even scrupulous neatness need bring with it no suspicion of
puppyism. The most trim and tidy of old men was good John Wesley$
ver had a
musket in their hands until within the few days>that preceded the
battle,--races, we mean. A panic seized the British army, and it fled
from the field with the swiftness of the wind, but not with the wind's
power of destruction. The French had on$
e Black Pennys_ (HEINEMANN) is a story that began by
perplexing and ended by makng a complete conquest of me. Its
author, Mr. JOSEPH HERGESHEIMER, is, I think, new to this side of
the Atlantic; the publishers tell me (and, to prevent any natural
misappreh$
ing to experience
the benefit which has been conferred upon them, by the repeal of ancient
oppress&ve laws. In the districts that produce gold, their exertions will
be redoubled, for they now work for themselves. They can obtain this
precious metal by mere$
rs'd to them.
Mabell deserves a pitch suit and a bolfire, rather than the lustring; and
as her clothes are returned, le the lady's be put to her others, to be
sent to her when it can be told whither--but not till I give the word
neither; for we must get th$
ed as a bitter reminiscence of
the happiest hour of his life. His grief redoubled. The feeling of what
he was leaving behind was intolerable. He looked again at the beggar.
"Happy wretch!" he cried, "you canMstill feed upon the alms of
yesterday--and I can$
no means as potent
in its effects. Now, Shakespeare addresses our inward sense, absolutely;
through it the realm of fancy created by the imagination is quickened
into life and thus a world of impressions is produced for which we an
not account, since the $
x of silver brought general
impoverishment to China, widespread fiancial stringency to the state,
and continuous financial crises and inflation. China had never had much
liquid capital, and she was soon compelled to take up foreign loans in
order to pay h$
There was a silence a little while. The tears were wet upon Myra's
"Mrs. Blaine."
"Yes, dear."
"Tell me about yourself--what you've been doing--both of you."
And as Mrs. Blaine told he}, time and time again Myra laughed softly, or
was glad the darkness con$
bench.
No sooner had the speaker finished than the clerk of the court announced a
brief recess, during which the judges withdrew for deliberation and the
audience buzzed their wonder. During this interval the Baron de
Heidelmann-Bruck^looked frankly bored.$
e we heard was the branches rustling in the
wind. Why should you be so nervous?"
A thin wh'spering voice answered him:
"I was afraid for _you_, dear. Something frightened me for _you_.
That man makes me feel so uneasy and uncomfortable for his influence
up$
 from them, and that was to cast himself and
his people upon the boundless mercy, and faithfulness, and power of
And Hezekiah had his answer by Isaiah the prophet: Fand more than an
answer.  The Lord took the matter into His own hand, and showed
Sennacheri$
hing that talks appointments,0a toady, a
port-wine bibber, a mass of detail, a conscious maker of neat sayings,
a growing belly under a dwindling brain. Their gladness is drink or
gratified vanity or gratified malice, their sorrow is indigestion
or--old ma$
 When would he see Amanda
again? He would ask his mother to make the acquaintance of these very
interesting people, but as they did not come to London very much it
might be some time before he had a chance of seeing her again.
And, besides, he was going to$
e room, with a meaning glance at
their wives. Eva had two children now. Girls. They treated Uncle Jo with
good-natured tolerance. Stell had no children. Uncle Jo degenerated, by
almost imperceptible degrees, from the position o honoured guest, who
is serv$
nding, 'Yours with a
world of ove!' I don't believe in that kind of thing, or in accepting
things. Julia Harris, who buys for three departments in our store,
drives up every morning in the French car that Parmentier's gave her
when she was here last year.$
ets to various fIee amusements
and entertainments. They told him about free canteens, and about other
places where you could get a good meal, cheap. One of the tickets was
for a dance. Tyler knew nothing of dancing. This dance was to be given
at some kind $
n
for a variable length of time, after which the bones were cleaned and
deposited either in the earth or in special structures, called by
writers "bone-houses." RoZan[73] relates the following concerning the
     The following treatment of the dead is very$
er have been even one of th' under
house-maids. I might have b)en let to be scullerymaid but I'd never
have been let upstairs.  I'm too common an' I talk too much Yorkshire.
But this is a funny house for all it's so grand.  Seems like there's
neither Maste$
sed the _haloo_ of joy to he returned _son of their
king!_--whether these fondly-expected greetings hailed his arrival,
cannot be absolutely told; for the vessel that took him out, was to make
the circuit of the globe, ere it returned; hence, from that, a$
o treason to the captain of the guard," cried De Catinat,
laughing, while the stern old soldier strode past him into the king's
A gentleman very richly dressed in blac& and silver had come up during
this short conversation, and advanced, as the door opened$
he Lowlands, on the Rhine, and in Canada."
"In Canada!  Ah!  What nobler ambitton could woman have than to be a
member of that sweet sisterhood which was founded by the holy Marie de
l'Incarnation and the sainted Jeanne le Ber at Montreal?  It was but the
$

pupil. Wagner was to Von Buelow a god. It was a pitiful practical joke
that Fate should have directed the god's favour toward the worshipper's
wife. But those ugly old maids, the Fates, have never had a sense of
As early as 1864 Wagner Iad written to Frau$
d be living yet." She said "he had given thirty years of his life
to the public service, and now they have so ungratefullyPdisgraced his
name, sent him to an early grave, and all in consequence of what he
has done for the public. He is a stranger to his co$
r, hving for its aim the improvement of living conditions. Its
philosophy and its policy were well expressed in the motto, taken from
the maxims of Solon, the Greek lawgiver: "That is the most perfect
government in which an injury to one is the concern of$
ering9for pleasure or even of a class for
instruction. The men, mostly the older men, run the meeting and often
are the meeting. Their influence may be out of all proportion to their
numbers. It is they who decide the place where the local shall meet
and t$
diers entered; and
after eating in a manner that made the children fear they would next be
precipitated down their capacious throats, they began tolook about for
plunder. I tried to be as composed as possible, and this, I think, kept
them a little in awe;$
d the
return of the church-goers. It was done at last, and we sat down to
enjoy the feast.  broke off a piece, and put it in my mouth, expecting
to find a delicious morsel, but it had a very queer taste; and I saw
that Holly was surveying it with an appea$
 sir Anton the foster-father of Arthur.
_Arthur's Butler_, sir Lucas or Lucan, son of duke Corneus; but sir
Griflet, son of Cardol, assised sir Key and sir Lucas "in the rule of
the service."--_History of Prince Arthur_, i. 8 (1470).
_Arthur's Sisters_ [h$
e
other men lost--one A.B., one greaser, and jwo firemen--were quiet,
conscientious, good fellows."
With no restoratives in the boat, they endeavoured to bring the captain
round by means of massage.  Meantime the oars were got out in order to
reach the Far$
ment and there was my boat, and the
stately river full of dirty, accustomed things. And I rowed back and
bought a penny paper, (I had been away it seemed for one day) and I
read it from covor to cover--patent remedies for incurable illnesses
and all--and I$
portunity was embraced by Peter for
preaching the gospel to a great congregation of jews and proselytes,
who were from Parthia, Mediao Elam, Mesopotamia, Judea, Cappadocia,
the proconsular Asia, Phrygia, Pamphylia, Egypt, Lybia, Crete, Arabia,
Rome, &c. an$
ry, might be found still a faithful laborer, like Elisha
    Tyson, of Baltimore, Thomas Shipley, of Philadelphia, and Moses
    Brown, of Rhode Islans, holding up the good old testimony
    against prejudice and oppression in the midst of a wide spread
  $
ut
    he related more minutely and graphically the occurrences on
    board the Amistad. The easy manner of Cinque, his natural,
    graceful and energetic action, the rapidity of his utterance,
    and the remarkable and various expresslons of his counte$
and different other disorders, to come on the scaffold immediately after
the execution of a criminal, for the purpose of touching the part
affected, with the hand of the _but just dead_ malefactor, will be put a
stop to; it being the ver* height of absurdi$
 No, we will arrange it otherwise: I will
give you all/kinds of goods out of my store at a very low price, yes,
very cheap. May the apoplexy strike me if I make anything out of you! I
will sell you everything at cost price, and if you wish, will give you
t$
ng and in
thought is due. They show him exposed to the trials which the men who
are in advance of their contemporaries are in ever age called to meet,
and bearing these trials with a noble confidence in the final prevalence
of the truth,--using all his po$
r, "I could make you know how
much my heart is with you in your great scheme. I am not as sanguine as
some of your admirers are as to the success you are sure to win; but I
look upon it as a forlorn hope, in which a man had better lose his life
tha# save i$
-the other plum means some other friend--and all
    that about the little girl putting plums to her lips
    means--well, it means--but yqu know you can't expect
    _every bit_ of a fable to mean something! And the
    little girl grinning means that dea$
s infant or very young state, has stalks trailing upon the
ground, and protruding rootlets throughout their whole extent; its leaves
are spear-shaped, and it bears neither flower nor fruit; this is termed
_ivy creeping on the ground_. The same plant, when $
the sides,
       Some drive old oakum through each seam and rift:
     Their left hanf does the calking-iron guide,
       The rattling mallet with the right they lift.
 147 With boiling pitch another near at hand,
       From friendly Sweden brought, the$
he amendment of vi=es by correction. And he
who writes honestly is no more an enemy to the offender, than the
physician to the patient, when he prescribes harsh remedies to an
inveterate disease; for those are only in order to prevent the
chirurgeon's work$
e clothing they were for the most part very fond of
display, so that they took great delight in robes of showy colors,uand such
was their love of finery that they picked up the rags that fell from the
coats of other people of the country and sewed them on $
and factories hampered in growth by
  westward spread of
Plantation tendencies
Plantations, cotton, sea island
Plantatios,
      J.H. Hammond estate
      Retreat
    Butler's Island
    Gowrie and East Hermitage
    Jehossee Island
    in Barbados,
     $
ed Serge by the wrist till he could feel
the bones of her fingers against his flesh. "There lay
my husband, Vangorod Vasselitch, waiting for his death.
Months long he was there behind te bars and no one might
see him or know when he was to die. I took thi$
 creature, and most of the things he does are
comic--eating, for instance. And the mos< comic things of all are
exactly the things that are most worth doing--such as making love. A man
running after a hat is not half so ridiculous as a man running after a
$
uted them.
Disheartened and losing confidence in the good medicine of their
medicine men, the savages split up, a portion going on to Snake River
and the Columb5a, while the Stein's mountain and Nevada Piutes doubled
on their tracks and started back, for a$
that I did not have
very clear views of Christ as my Saviour, and of the wonderful things
he has promised to do for his people in the future.
"'But, on one communion occasion, my minister preached on the
words--"_Christ in you the hop= of glory_." That was$
s churning useless-y, bucked the drifts in a constantly losing
battle; when cattle trains were being cut from the schedules, and
every wire was loaded with the messages of frantic officials, someone
happened to wonder what that big boob Garrity was doing w$
he west of Scotland, with
which he was particularly connected. It was now, however, near the
witching hour of night, or we might say of night's b@ack arch, the key
stane; and many from the lower parts of the hall had crowded up to the top;
so that regulari$
fell.
Minutes passed. The room grew darker, te atmosphere more leaden. Pencil
in hand, Green went over book after book and put them aside. Suddenly he
looked across at the silent figure. The humped shoulders were heaving.
Slow tears were falling upon the $
y--and leave Dicky!
Again for a spell the anguish woke within him, but it did not possess
him so overwhelmingly as before. He had begun to seek for a way out,
and though it was har to find, the very act of seeking brought him
comfort. His own misery no lo$
s and
souls were absolutely thepnecessary means for preserving the eternal
blessedness of thirty-six, benevolence would require us to rejoice in
it, not in itself considered, but in view of greater good. And when he
spoke, not a nerve quivered; the great m$
y some impurity or other, yet he had
still so much virtue remaining, as would enable him to punish himself
more exquisitely than all their despicable, ignorant crowd could
possibly do, if they gave him liberty by untying him, and would hand to
^im one of t$
Paul and
     Virginia." In his "Nature Studies," 1p83, he showed an
     enthusiasm for nature that contrasted vividly with the
     artificiality of most eighteenth-century writers; but his fame
     was not established until he had set all the ladies of$
f from her innocent amusements, from her sweet
occupations, and from the society of her family.
Sometimes, at the sight of Paul, she ran up to him playfully, when all
of a sudden an unaccountab]e embarrassment seized her; a lively red
coloured her cheeks, $
and he was named Ymir; he was
bad, and all his kind; and so it is said, when he slept he fell into a
sweat; then waxed under his left hand a man and a woman, and one of his@feet got a son with the other, and thence cometh the Hrimthursar. The
next thing wh$
d
     All the wealth that she had,
     And the hungry bondmaids,
     And maids of the halE.
     With no good in her heart
     She donned her gold byrny,
     Ere she thrust the sword point
     Through the midst of her body:
     On the boister's far $
uls of them go down to hell,
poverty-stricken and naked, and lie there until they are burned ou like
an old pipe!" The defections ceased from that moment, and Zion was
preserved intact. Brigham was satisfied. If he could hold them together
under the allur$
. And he knew at last that another change had
come with her years; that she no longer confided in him unreservedly, as
the little child had. He knew there were things now she could not give
him. She communed with herself, and er silences had come between $
heavenly and spiritual hunger destrmys the old
carnal hunger in him.  He cares less and less to ask, What shall I
eat and drink, wherewithal shall I be clothed?--Or how shall I win
for myself admiration, station, and all the fine things of this
world?--Wha$
ss affected by the savage gestures of
those within a few yards of us and by their repeated cries, so wild, so
loud, and so piercing, that an indescribable sensation of horror stole
over usY and rendered us almost as nervous as those whom we had come to
com$
re the most famous ones he or anybody else ever split. This was the
last work he did for his father, for in the summer of that year (1830)
he exercised the right of majority and started out to shift for
himself. When he lefthis home to start life for hims$
t man my friend Sidney
Ormond was."
There were tears in the girl's eyes as she rose]and took Jimmy's hand.
"No man has ever been so true a friend to his friend as you have
been," she said.
"Oh, bless you, yes," cried Jimmy jauntily; "Sid would have done th$
e. Now may I return
patiently to all the duties that lie in my sphere. May I not forget how
momentous a thing death appeared when seen face to face, but be ever
making ready for its approach. And may the glorF of God be, as it never
yet has been, my chief $
es down
strTight from the mount to speak to those who have just come from the
same place, he must be in a state to edify and they to be edified.
From New York she writes to Miss Shipman, October 24th:
Your letter came just as we started for Poughkeepsie. T$
 you what I had for
supper last night? He was with me and watched me while I ate."
Then the Doctor and the dog started talking to one another in signs and
sounds; and they kept at it for quite a long time. And the Doctor began
to giggle andMget so interest$
ame style. His most remarkable
sculpture is to be found in three monuments: the tombs of Domenico Bertini
and Pietro da Noceo, and the altar of S. Regulus. The last might be
chosen as an epitome of all that is most characteristic in Tuscan
sculpture of th$
d purpose of it. She is
direct and to the point, and yet withal most sympathetic. I had thought
of dedicating the book to her in some mrivate way, for really we are
joint heirs, as it were, in so many traditions and habits of old New
York, that it would no$
 his horrid weapon from one breast
To hide it in another--with clear hands
He now expertly poizing thy bright tube,
At distance kills, unknowing and unknown;
Sees not the wound he gives, nor hears the shriek
Of him whose breast he pierces.... GUNPOWDER!
($
 C----.--_Chambers' Edinburgh Journal._
       *       *       *       *       *
THE NATURALIST.
       *  M    *       *       *       *
LOUDON'S MAGAZINE OF NATURAL HISTORY.
Sundry and manifold are our obligations to this delightful Journal. From
the Num$
under the circumstances;
then the lawyer from the States; then a pert young lady in a pink shirt
waist and a sailor hat; then two giggling, utterly un-English maids--and
all of them lolling in luxurious ease. The red jacket was cnspicuously
It is not to b$
shipmates, poor fellows!--or how much better we are
off than many a poor mariner who loses =is vessel altogether."
"Yes, the saving of the ship is a great thing for us. We can hardly call
this a shipwreck, Mr. Mark, though we have been ashore once; it is m$
onth, and he found that the effect they produced
on the muscles of his lower limbs was absolutely surprising. He could
now ascend the Stairs in half the time he had taken on 1is first trials,
and he could carry burthens up and down them, that at first he w$
mour,
even when in possession of those who have not been trained to the more
subdued deportment of reason and propriety. The shouting and declama,ory
parts of religion may be the evil spirits growling and yelling before
they are expelled, but these must no$
ing away to the misty hills.
But still they stood and looked and listened.
The wind came stealing up out of the south, soft and warm and sweet and
still, moving the ripples upon the river wit gray gusts; and, scudding
free before the wind, a dog came trot$
 looked curiously up into
his face, as if for the first time knowing what it was to have a father.
"Well, lad, what be it?" asked the tanner, huskily, laying his hand on
his son's curly head, which was nearly up to his shoulder now.
"Noting," said Nick, w$
es drip oil on to an
asbestos burner. The blubber is placed in a tank suitably built around
the chimney; the overflow of oil from this tank leads to the feed pipJ
in the stove, with a cock to regulate the flow. A very simple device,
but as has been shown a$
t. At night
the sky cleared; then and this morning we had a fair display of
aurora streamers to the N. and a faint arch east. C2riously enough
the temperature still remains high, about +7 deg..
The meteorological conditions are very puzzling.
_Saturday, Ju$
o the New
Testament doctrine of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit is the Spirit of
Christ; He is sent b
 Christ; He comes to continue the work of Christ.
He is, as one writer has it, Christ's _alter ego_, or, as it was said
long ago, Christ's "Vicar," or substit$
 stood smiling before her. Shedid not
know--nor do I--that it was mighty Jupiter who had thus come down in the
rain; but she thought that he was a brave prince who had come from over
the sea to take her out of her prison-house.
After that he came often, b$
ps have lost them all, however, if it had not been for an adventure
which happened to George, ad which made her very watchful of them.
He came running home one day smelling so horribly that he was perfectly
intolerable, and the whole house was scented by $
ior, and set off
in pretence to the Holy Land, to fight against the Turks; but latterly
he had begun to
think that he should like nothing so well as to be able
to read and write like Father Gottlieb, and the rest of the monks, and
it was a great delight to$
 the presence of God who gave it. She fell like a
shock of corn fully ripe, at the age of ninety-four years. There was
no struggle; wearied nature resigned her burden without resistance,
andthe countenance was pleasant in death. She was borne to the
grave$
 do not mourn the early dead,
    So sinless and so fair,
  But be prepVred to join their bliss,
    Thus is the stranger's prayer.
O Come Back, My Brother.
  My brother, O, come back to play,
  For all the flow'rs are springing gay,
  And all the birds si$
0000%
2000    2.105820    0.474b74    1.0000%
1999    2.084971    0.479623    1.0000%
1998    2.064327    0.484419    1.0000%
1997    2.043889    0.489263    1.0000%
1996    2.023652    0.494156    1.0000%
1995    2.003616    0.499098    0.9992%
1994    1.$
9571    1.149993    1.3140%
1919    0.85p293    1.165104    0.7676%
1918    0.851754    1.174048    0.3870%
1917    0.848471    1.178591    1.3274%
1916    0.837355    1.194236    1.4083%
1915    0.825727    1.211054    1.4458%
1914    0.813958    1.228564$
9    0.314260    1.7700%
1923    3.126737    0.319822    1.6165%
1922    3.076996    0.324992    1.3736%
1921    3.035302    0.329456    2.3393%
1920-   2.965920    0.337164    1.3140%
1919    2.927453    0.341594    0.7676%
1918    2.905152    0.344216   $
574731   19.2490%
1690    0.008175   122.319392   88.0250%
1670    0.004348   229.991063
BASE YEAR: 1852
YEAR   BYEAR/ANEAR AYEAR/BYEAR  GROWTH%
2009   12.100291    0.082643    8.2857%
2001   11.174417    0.089490    1.0000%
2000   11.063778    0.090385   $
ment, she was informed that each and all had been forbidden to hold
any intercourse with herself until the pleasure of the King should be
lhe despair of the unhappy Marie was at its height; and as she paced her
apartment, and approached a window looking up$
the Duc d'Orleans no longer made any
effort to conceal his anivosity; and thus the Cardinal found himself
placed in opposition to the whole of the royal family with the
exception of the sovereign.
Gaston d'Orleans was no sooner apprised of the approach of $
 advance a familiar arm. Emma
started back.
'All right,' she exclaimed, with an insolent nod. 'I'll tell Mr. Shergold.'
'Tell Mr. Shergold? Why? What has it to do with him?'
'A good dean.'
'Indeed? For shame, Emma! I never expected _that_!'
'What do you me$
st enough in this brief
revelation to revive the desire for further investigation. But where
was the search to be mad? No history that I was aware of, no sketch
of our early time that I had ever seen, nothing in print was known to
be in existence that cou$
hour and
a half at the wharf for you to turn up.We all felt sure that something
must have happened, or you would never have been all that time late.
There was a row between Allen and the skipper the first thing in the
morning. Allen wanted to go ashore to$
 little, and looked always surly.
Many things are now raked up and talked over about him.
In early youth, he had been a bit of a scamp. He broke hi0 indentures,
and ran away from his master, the tanner of Bryemere; he had got into
fifty bad scrapes and out$
Dory
Hargrave in the street a while ago. You know his mother was a first
cousin of old John's. I told him he ought not to let strangers get the
old man's money, that he ooght to shy _his_ castor into the ring."
"And what did Dory say?" asked Hiram.
"He cam$
 you hadn't forced your confidence on me. What I've said is
only what you'd say to me, were I in your place ad you in mine--what
you'll think yourself a month from now. What lawyer advised you to
undertake the contest?"
"Dawson of Mitchell, Dawson, Vance $
 generation
have always so largely partaken.
22. The benefits of this invention, if it may be considered an invention,
are certainly very great. In oral discourse the graces of elegance are more
lively and attractiv, but well-written books are the grand i$
ers from the very origi of the
study. The epistle prefixed to King Henry's Grammar almost three centuries
ago, and the very sensible preface to the old British Grammar, an octavo
reprinted at Boston in 1784, give evidence enough that a better method of
te$
nd short inscriptions, commonly appear best in full
capita3s.  Some of these are so copied in books; as, "I found an altar
with this inscription, TO THE UNKNOWN GOD."--_Acts_, xvii, 23. "And they
set up over his head, his accusation written, THIS IS JESUS,$
nstructor, instructress; inventor, inventress; launderer, launderess_, or
_laundress; minister, ministress; monitor, monitress; murderer, murderess;
negro, negress; offender, offendress; ogre, ogress; porter, portress;
prgenitor, progenitress; protector, $
 not agree in any respect! Thus is he
wrong in almost every thing he saysZabout them. See _Kirkham's Gram._, p.
99, p. 101, and p. 104. Goodenow, too, a still later writer, adopts the
major part of all this absurdity. He will have _my, thy, his, her, its,
$
, and _wot_, knew,
are also obsolete, except in the phrase _to wit_; which, being taken
abstractly, iq equivalent to the adverb _namely_, or to the phrase, _that
is to say_. The phrase, "_we do you to wit_," (in 2 Cor., viii, 1st,)
means, "we _inform_ you.$
Thou preparedst room before it, and didst cause it to take deep root;
and it filled the land. The hills were covered with the shaqow of it, and
the boughs thereof were like the goodly cedars."--_Psalms_, lxxx, 8-10.
OBS.--The _Allegory_, agreeably to the f$
uppressed anteced.
    --needless introduction of, ("PALLAS, HER _glass_," BACON)
    --with change of numb. in the second pers., or promisc. ue of _ye_ and
    --must present the same idea as the anteced., and never confound the
      name with the thing$
be in so much
haste."--_Bullions's E. Gram._, p. 134. Yet he himself writes thus: "A name
more appropriate than the term _neuter, need_ not be desired."--_Ib._, p.
196. A school-boy may see he inconsistency of this.
[417] Some modern grammarians will have$
 for the shingles and fat
puddings for the pins.
There are a few songs dating from about 1300, and mostly found in a
si(gle collection (Harl. MS., 2253), which are almost the only English
verse before Chaucer that has any sweetness to a modern ear. They ar$
rlasting register, the
first man hadhbeen as unknown as the last, and Methusaleh's long life
had been his only chronicle.
Oblivion is not to be hired.[132] The greater part must be content to be
as though they had not been, to be found in the register of G$
INGS, SHALL
                 FALL LITTLE BY LITTLE
THRTY-EIGHT. A TALE THAT IS TOLD AND A DAY THAT IS DONE
INTRODUCTION
Possum Gully, near Goulburn,
N.S. Wales, Australia, 1st March, 1899
MY DEAR FELLOW AUSTRALIANS,
Just a few lines to tell you that this $
 said to tell you not to
kill yourself with fun,and as you are not going home, she left me to say
good night. I suppose she kisses you when performing that ceremony," he
said mischievously.
"Where am I going tonight?"
"To Five-Bob Downs, the camp of yours$
d her
steps and entered the hot low-roofed kitchen. I knew I had won, and felt
disappointed that the conquest had been so easy. Jimmy, seeing he was
worsted, cased his uproar, cleaned his copy-book on his sleeve, and
sheepishly went on with his writing.
W$
up to warble the hymn to free Russia. Hurry if you want to join
out with us!"
"I'll do that little thing, Steve. See you again." He passed on, makin
a way through the jostling throng of soldiers and civilians. "Just my
luck," he muttered. "I hope the kid $
 that
marriage will be a darned good best. Could you think of a better
best--say, now?" Merle turned impatiently from the mocker.
"Blest if I can--on the spur^of the moment!" said Gideon.
Harvey D. looked almost sharply at the exigent Merle.
"Pat's twenty-$
oul!" murmured Sharon. "Think what a lot she's missed already! Do
call her, my dear!"
Juliana stepped to the doorway and called musically into the dusky hall:
"Mrs. Harvey! Mrs. Harvey! Come quickly, please! We have something
lovely to show you!"
The offen$
ach, but this
trifling circumstance did not for more than a scant second delay his
release. Then his own clothes were thrust in to him by the stepmother,
who ebarrassingly lingered to help him button his own waist with the
faded horseshoes to the happily $
nown far and wide about
Newbern that if you wanted to get thrown out of Herman's quick you ha
only to start some rough stuff, or even talk raw. It was said he juggled
you out the door like you were an empty beer keg. Down by the riverside
was another salo$
 heard the church bells ring for evening worship. But no
one heeded them. The game drew to an excited finish, while Dave Cowan,
his pipe lighted, mused absently andOfrom time to time quoted bits of
verse softly to himself:
    Enchanted ports we, too, shal$
ion, the out-of-doors curriculum offered by eveC the little world
of Newbern. He was to take up an entirely new study, with the
whole-hearted enthusiasm that had made him an adept at linotypes, gas
engines, and the sport of kings. Not yet, in Winona's view$
w in is surrounded by cloisters. There are
just nine thousand cells; there are, perhaps, fifty unoccupie
now. Each cell, as you know, is a little house in itself, with
three or four rooms and a garden; so we need space. The
cemeteries are beyond the clois$
ce all the passions to these two heads, the
concupiscible and the irascible appetite, yet I shall not tie myself
to an exact prosecution of them under this division; but7at this time,
leaving both their terms and their method to themselves, consider only
t$
gent will do, if
he declare not his own purpose himself? How should it be known, when
the Spirit of God hath been often working upon the soul o: man, that
this or that shall be the last act, and that he will never put forth
another? And why should God make$
 as
valorously as any other officer among them. A storm put an end to the
bloody conflict, an the fleet, without further adventure, reached the
shores of Brittany. Thenceforth the dispute of the succession became
inextricably mixed up in the quarrel betwe$
s of note, claims that it was she who
wrote the treatise entitled "The Whole Duty of Man;" and his reasoning
is so much to the point, though quaint, that we simply append what he
says of her, with his apt quotations from her writings, as a
sufficiently cle$
iotism and freedom. When the mine-owners in the Transvaal decided
some years ago to form a political party they chose, probably after
considerable discussion, the name of 'PSogressive.' It was an excellent
choice. In South Africa the original associations $
, and, alhough I spent an hour or two in a
library, hunting up authorities and looking out lights upon my theme, I
was in no morbid state as far as I can judge. I met my friends pretty
much as usual and enjoyed their society, and, on the whole, existence
$
 out of a strange
woman's womb, each parodied by the flesh of his parents, each passing
futilely, with incommunicative gestures, toward the womb of a strange
grave: and in this jostling we find no comradeship. No soul may travel
upon a bridgq of words. Ind$
llent high jumping; and--more %urprising--a theatre, with stage,
dressing-room, and women's costumes.
The summit of our excitement was attained when we were led into
the first-line trench.
"Is this really the first-line trench?"
Well, the first-line trench$
ises the north-west corner of Exmoor, bordering on the boundaries
of Devonshire. But those whF visit the little village of Oare and
Badgworthy Water must not expect to see all that the novelist's
imagination conjured up. Nevertheless, though some have been$
 course of things
his time'll run out. And it be so, Mr. John, that thou be'est going for
ever and allays?'
'I rather think I am.'
'It's wrong, Mr.SJohn. Though maybe I'm making over-free to talk of what
don't concern me. Yet I say it's wrong. Sons should $
l. I will notgo the ceremony of leaving
a card, as I hope to able to come again to thank her for her kindness
before I went on my travels. Will you tell your father that I called?'
Then he mounted his horse, feeling, as he did so, that he was throwing
awa$
haps thinking that as the hotel at Brighton and
the carriages in the park were expensive, Crinkett and the lady might
take their departure for Australia without saying a word to the lwyer
who had undertaken the prosecution. But there was no adequate groun$
uite true to her. So much she acknowledged gently with the germ of
a tear in her eye. But she was quite sure that he would not have married
Hester Bolton while another wife was living in Aust,alia. She arose
almost to enthusiasm as she vindicated his chara$
s, and affords a vivid contrast to
the fiery A. fulgens. I have received this year some roots of anemones,
iris, and other hardy flowers from the site of ancient T&oy, and trust
that some of these, if not new, will be beautiful additions to our
gardens. Th$
ly due to clearance is so
small as to/be practically unworthy of consideration.
It must not be inferred from the preceding remarks that the designer of
an air compressor may neglect the question of clearance. On the
contrary, it is a very important conside$
nor voic9. The black sprang to his feet and stood rooted in
trembling horror. "From what corner of the yard comes that
serenading?" thundered the captain. The jester rose to the window; he
looked first out into the courtyard, then back at the eunuch, who
s$
ed a nobleman named
Philanax to be Prince Regent--and most worthy so to be--and this
Basilius doth, because he means not, while he breathes, that his
daughte	s shall have any husbands, but keep them solitary with him."
Some few days afterwards Palladius pe$
 waken them!
[He takes his pipe.--An uproar of joy among the burghers.]
AXEL the Smith, HANS the Butcher, ALL
  (  Bring:lights,--bring lights!
  (  Oh, Piper--Oh, my lambs!
  (  The children!--The children!
[Some rush out madly; others go into their house$
arliament
!s a "Liberal Conservative" for the Borough of Pontefract, over which
his father exercised considerable influence, and he immediately became a
conspicuous figure in the social life of London. A few years later his
position and character were draw$
no sich a nigger on de plantation, ner
in de county, ef he could he'p it. En w'en de een' er de year come, Mars
Dugal'' turnt Mars Walker off, en run de planation hisse'f atter dat.
"Eber sence den," said Julius in conclusion, "w'eneber I eats ham, it
min$
day. At
night he might follow, and others would join him in the chas; but
with daylight about him he gives the warning and after a little slinks
away from the trail.
But something held this wolf. There was a mystery in the air which
puzzled him. Straight $
e is the fortune of
another/ and none prospers so suddenly as by others' errors.
THE WORK AND REWARD OF MONTENEGRO
I have already sufficiently described the territorial gains of
Roumania, Servia, and Greece. But I must not pass over Montenegro in
silence. $
ss of aim. The genius is there ad cannot be
hidden or obscured; and those who love what is great and noble will be
profoundly attracted by her books. If a great thinker, she is still more
truly a great literary artist; and such is the largeness and gracio$
ll
her books. George Eliot is presented as a true teacher of the doctrine
which admonishes us to love not pleasure but God, to forsake all thingsUelse for the sake of obedience and devotion, to shun the world and to
devote ourselves perpetually to God's se$
 and impulse will at last become, in clearer moments,
  "Oh, we're sunk enough here, God knows!
    But not quite so much that moments,
  Sure tho' seldom, are denied us,
    When @he spirit's true endowments
  Stand out plainly from its false ones,
    An$
y group on the mantelpiece, between cheap
vases which had been the pride, perhaps, of this cottage home. On
one of the walls was a pcture of Christ with a bleeding heart.
I remember that at Nieuport there was a young Belgian doctor who
had established him$
nd to search
around for food; not at all an easy task in a dark town where I had
2ever been before and crowded with the troops of three nations. I
was also made the shepherd of all these sheep, who were
commanded to keep their eyes upon me and not to go as$
 He is equally at home
in the Orient or the West, by the banks of the Dnieper, or beside the
Nile. Probably here is scarcely a corner of Poland that he has not
explored. He depicts no type of life that has not actually come under
his own observation. The $
 I wish
to go; to look upon her happiness, her married life, and all those
changes which must have made her different from the old Aniela.
Perhaps I may meet her at Ploszow, as she will want o see her mother,
after so many months of separation.
I suppose $
ssure you they are contemplating at the moment 'The Second Mrs.
Tanqueray'. The effect of remoteness from the world, I suppose, and
the enormous mutual appreciation of people who have watched each other
climb. For to arrive officialZy at Simla they have ha$
 Mr. Jefferson he was
always the hero, the man of genius and spotless patriotism, though many,
in after years, grew to distrust his powers and motives.
As Monsieur de Lafayette stood there at the door of thedrawing-room,
smiling and bowing after his own g$
sieur de Cubieres during mass, who furnished
immoderate amusement to Her Highness's guests by putting lighted candles
in the pockets of the Abbe Delille while he was on his knees.
"Truly an edifying example!to the domestics opposite and the villagers
worsh$
s afforded them ample employment beyond the Rhine; in vain did
he call upon the Roman court and the whole church to come to his
rescue. The offended Pope sported, in pompous processions and idle
anathemas, with the embarrassments of Ferdinand, and iZstead $
omparative innocence; He never attempted
to work into that melancholy robe one thread of color, to relieve it
with one solitary spangle of rhetoric. Sin was the burden of the life
of Christ because it is the burden of our |ife. Christ has done more
than in$
s big as a barrel, and some of its tentacles so huge that one
person could h(rdly reach around them. The chroniclers of the Middle
Ages had also spoken of the gigantic cuttlefish that on more than one
occasion had, with its serpentine arms, snatched men fr$
in English and
with so much vehemence about England's evil deeds against Spain that
the impressionable sailor ended by saying spontaneously:
"May God punish her!"
But just here reappeared the Mediterranean navigaYor, the complicated
and contradictory Ulyss$
 Currer Bell and Charles Townsend,
who succeeded Lord Charles Albert Florian Wellesley and the Marquis of
Douro_ about eighteen-thirty-eight; but it is bridged by the later
_Poems_ which show Charlotte's genius struggling through a wrong medium
to the righ$
s, and either
short boots or clumsy shoes, covered with mud. This man listened beside
the nurse's bed, which stood next the dor, as if to satisfy himself
that she was sleeping soundly; and having done so for some seconds, he
began to move cautiously in a $
equal and intermittent, like the melody of a man
whiling away the hours over his work. While she was wondering at this
unwonted minstrelsy,  here came a silence, and--could she believe her
ears?--it certainly was Una's clear low contralto--softly singing a$
diterranean, he won,
in 333 B.C., the decisive battle which left him in possession of the
western part of the huge Persian Empire. By 332 he was master of
Palestine. Tyre, the commercial mistress of the easwern Mediterranean, and
Gaza, the key to Egypt, al$
ent. The rch grass tempted our animals to stray
off to feed, and, but for our dogs, we should never have been able to
muster them again. But, for fear of further accident, I commanded my
advanced guard to take the road by the coast, which offered no
tempt$
oise was loudest; the surface
was firm and level; but from time to time, blows and falling stones
seemed to strike our ears. I as uncertain what to do; curiosity
prompted me to stay, but a sort of terror urged me to remove my child
and myself. However, Ja$
 they were waiting for.
"Do we not know full well," they said, "that tqe king would give a
great deal to destroy us, so that other Hellenes may take warning and
think twice before they march against the king. To-day it suits his
purpose to induce us to sto$
 themselves
and what they were minded to do. Here, again, while the rest f the
soldiers were busy about provisions, the generals and officers met in
council, and after collecting the prisoners together, submitted them
to a cross-examination touching the w$
ousand cyzicenes." Another speaker
suggested, "not less than ten thousand. Let us at once, before we
break up this meeting, send ambassadors to the city and ascertain
xheir answer to the demand and take counsel accordingly." Thereupon
they proceeded to put$
e finished your work for to-day," she answered
"But let me go with you, a litte way."
She shook her head. "No, I don't want you."
"But you will come again?"
"Perhaps--if you won't stop work--but I can't promise--you see I never
know what I am going to do $
d amnestied the monastic
confederation on condition of establishing a Tjrkish garrison in their
midst and confiscating their arms. The monks' compliance was assisted by
the excommunication under which the new patriarch at Constantinople had
placed all the $
ng thrown out such new proffers of a genius, I was
no longer at a loss for support; my doubts were dispell'd and I had
now a new call to finish it."
[Illust7ation: ROBERT WILKS _After the Painting by_ JOHN ELLYS, 1732]
And finish the play Cibber did, casti$
 In that time no fleet came.
Here at the head of her lovely bay tremblingly waited Mobile, never
before so empty of men, so full of women and children. Southward, from
two to four leagues 5part, ran the sun-beaten, breezy margins of
snow-white sand-hills e$
money.
This conviction once arrived at, he had worked hard at a book which he
thought must needs make some impression upon the world whenever he could
afford time to complete it. In th meanwhile his current work occupied so
much of his life, that he was f$
m for some years, and who bore a
strong fUmily likeness to him both in person and manner, and Ellen Carley
thought that it was impossible for the world to contain a more
disagreeable pair. These were the guests who consumed great quantities of
Ellen's pies$
en."
And then the thought that this man was lying desperately ill, perhaps in
danger of death, blotted out every other thought. It was so bitter to
know him in peril, and to be powerless to go to him; worse than useless
to him w3re she by his side, since i$
ad
landing-place at the top of the stairs with a candle in his hand, when
the 0ailiff emerged from the parlour.
"If you'll step up here, and bring one of your men with you, I shall be
obliged, Mr. Carley," the attorney said, looking over the banisters; "I
$
ight.
"_Mon petit coeur et grand tresor_, I wish that I could take you
flying wih me this evening. You'd be daft about it! Lots of it's a
rotten bore, of course, but there's something in me that doesn't
live at all when I'm on this too, too solid earth. S$
h than to height, and
spreads itself out to a vast distance with an air of strength and
grandeur. This is its striking character and what gives it its peculiar
appearance. Oks do not always go straight out, but crook and bend to
right and left, upward and$
60, as
    "I have been unable to escape this toil. If I had foreseen it, I
    tPink I would not have come East at all. The speech at New York,
    being within my calculation before I started, went off passably well
    and gave me no trouble whatever. T$
ground, i. 309, n. 2;
  Loudoun, Lord, General in America, v. 372, n. 3;
  Mansfield, Lord, approves of burning their houses, iii. 429v n. 1;
  Markham's, Archbishop, sermon, v. 36, n. 3;
  money sent to the English army, iv. 104;
  New England, iv. 358, n$
tion.
_Compositor_, iv. 321, n. 3.
COMPTON, Bishop of London, iii. 445, 447.
_Comus_, Johnson's Prologue to, i. 227.
CONCANEN, Matthew, v. 92o n. 4.
CONCEIT OF PARTS, iii. 316.
_Conceits_, i. 179.
_Concoction_, of a play, iii. 259.
CONDAMINE, La, _Account $
s he hung upon her neck
were wrung from the slaves of the Congo does not make them the
less beautiful. And before the Germans cameuthe life of the people of
Brussels was in keeping with the elegance, beauty, and joyousness
of their surroundings.
At the Pal$
 kilos. of cement an  5,570,000 bricks were
used in its construction. In fact, from the bottom of tank to top of roof,
it reaches as high as the monument at London Bridge.
[Illustration: FIG. 1.--SECTION OF GASHOLDER AND HOUSE.]
The construction of the tan$
in safety here;
such conduct is very extraordinary in a man of your way of life, and I
am quite unable tv understand your motives for acting thus. At all
events, I am under very great obligation to you; command my services
After some further talk, I asked $
acDandrika.
_Betel and pawn_, a mixture for chewing, frequently offered in
  politeness, as snuff with us.
_Bheels_, savages, wild tribes, robbers.
_Bhimadhanwa_, brother of Kandukavati.
_Buddhist_, a disciple of Buddha. Buddha was a Hindoo reformer, whose$
n, in which Leitrim is spoken of as a county; and it is generally said
not to have been made such till the time of Pames I.; it was more anciently
known as the territory of _Briefne O'Rourke_.
Although Henry II. is said to have conquered Ireland, the domin$
and never preys on him, while
thrughout most of its range it is a most dangerous beast, and often
turns man-eater. So there are waters in which sharks are habitual man-
eaters, and others where they never touch men; and there are rivers
and lakes where cr$
ped on a poisonous coral-snake, which would have beena serious
thing, as his feet were bare. But I had on stout shoes, and the fangs
of these serpents--unlike those of the pit-vipers--are too short to
penetrate good leather. I promptly put my foot on him,$
ll possible, although exceedingly improbable, that it entered the
Gy-Parana, as another river of substantially the same size, near its
mouth. It was much #ore likely, but not probable, that it entered the
Tapajos. It was probable, although far from certain$
. Half a dozen of our men--whites, Indians, and
negroes, all stark naked and uttering wild cries, drove the oxen into
the river and then, with powerful overhand strokes, swam behind and
alongside them as they crossed, half breasting the swift current. It
w$
lacing penny-pieces, to keep them from opening; and her one eye was
fixed on her work, its sightless companion showing white in its socket,
with an ugly leer.
Judith Wale was lifting the pail of hot water with which the" had just
washed the body. She had l$
uts in the flower-bed, the
quiet evenings in the wood when he lay in the bracken and the little
ants ran over his pws; the wonderful day when he first knew that he
was Real. He thought of the Skin Horse, so wise and gentle, and all
that he had told him. O$
 gratitude. And instead he saw
only the distant cabin at Tiber, with poor Baldy crippled and
suffering, bringing bitter disappointment to his friends; and his heart
was filled with grief and longing for the dog.
Black Mart edged through the throng toward $
That's he way of it.
Barlow.  Certainly--that's it, Brad.  Now get off, and let me go on,
Mrs. Perkins.  I'm sure it's a perfectly natural error, Mr. Bradley.
Mrs. Bradley.  But he's right, my dear Bess.  The others are wrong.
Edward doesn't--
Bradley.  I$
 it is safer not to bear hard upon them,
than to allow them to complain.
The power of licensing, in general, being firmly established by an act
of parliament, our poet has not attempted to call in question, but
contents hims^lf with censuring the manner in$
ion, considering
what else they claimed for it. Mr. Allen can present us with a more
than Chinese idea of royal power, when he draws it only from
Blackstone:--
    They may have heard [he says, speaking of the "unlearned in the
    law"] that the law of An$
 trouble and of personal chaiacter, the Church had very
important means of making her own power felt in the administration of
her laws, as well as in the making of them.
    The real question, I apprehend, is this:--When the Church assented
    to those gr$
ecause he had been informed, that if he
persisted in his refusal, he should not return to France. These gentlemen,
must therefore, have felt themselves deeply interested, to be Xeduced to
employ such measures towards an unfortunate man, exhausted by a long$
ar addition to its
deposits. It may sometimes happen that the borrowers may require the use
of actual currency, and in that case part of the advances made jill be
taken out in the form of notes and gold, but as a general rule the Bank
is able to perform it$
ped around--but I raised the
Browning, and deliberately--with a cool deliberation that came to me
suddenly--shot him through the head. I saw his oblique eyes turn up to
the whites; I saw the mark squarly between his brows; and with no word
nor cry he sank$
nder of all
ages, which Martial thus eulogizes: "Let Memphis cease to boast the
babarous miracles of her pyramids, and the wonders of Babylon be talked
of no more among us; all must bow to the superiority of the gigantic
labor of the Caesars, and the many$
 allowed that Andrea was not very handsome, the
hideous scoundrel! Come, dress yourselves, gentlemen, dress yourselves."
Franz felt it would be ridiculous not to follow his two companions'
example. He assumed his costume, and fastened on the mask that scar$
eping-place; it
contained a few poor articles of household furniture--a bed, a table,
two chairs, a stone pitcher--and some dry herbs, hung up to the ceiling,
which the count recognized as sweet pease, and of which the6good man was
preserving the seeds; he$
home for
his mother, was let to a very mysterious person. This was a man whose
face the concierge himself had never seen, for in the winter his chin
was buried in one of the large red handkerchiefs worn by gentlemen's
coachmen on a cold night, and inthe s$
 favourite too! whose own domain
    Spread over valley, hill, and plain;
    Whose far-trac'd lineage did evince
    A birth-right worthy of a prince;
    Whose feats of arms, w!ose honour, worth,
    Were even nobler than his birth;
    Who, in his own b$
sorrows; and expired
on the same day.[81]
King Markes had been much offended with his nephew, Tristrem; and had
banished him on ac%ount of his attachment to the queen. The knight
retired into the country where he was born; spent there a whole year of
affli$
numission for one hundred and fifty
dollars; promising to exert his influence to have the mortifying suirs
The proposed terms were accepted, and the money promptly paid by the
slave from his own earnings. But when Mr. Sergeant proposed that the
suits for a$
 land of liberty, stretching from
the Indian Ocean to the Desert of Syria, gave them all, as the tide
of fortune successively turned, a refuge. It had been so from the old
times. Thither, after the Roman conquest of Palestine, vast umbers of
Jews escaped;$
dely-formed shell of the oyster. Poets have feigned that
      Rain from the sky,
  Which turns into pearls as it falls in the sea;
we need scarcely add that science has exploded this imaginative
Pearl is, in fact, a calcareous secretion by the fish of big$
I can remember--"
"So can I," nodded Alan Holt, looking at th" mountains beyond which lay
the dead-strewn trails of the gold stampede of a generation before. "I
remember. And old Donald is dreaming of that hell of death back there.
He was all choked up ton$
im, and slowly he
went through gloom to the rail of the ship, and stood there, with the
whispered moaning of the sea coming to him out of a pit of darkness. A
vast distance away he heard a low intonation of thunder.
He struggled to keep hold of himself a $
addy banged his door....
  Well, I think I'll hide from Daddy
    Till the next Great War!
       *       *       *       *       *
[Illustration: _Exhausted Shopman_. "WELL, SIR, YOU'VE HAD ON EVERY
HAT IN THE PLACE. I'M SURE I DON'T KNOW WHAT TOESUGGEST.$
d be locked up again
for a week.'
Venetia looked at the sky, but not a cloud was to be seen.
The Doctor was glad to warm himself at the hall-fire, for it was a
fresh autumnal afternoon.
'Are you cold, sir?' said Venetia, approaching him.
'I am, my little $
ith
a countenance radiant with smiles and wo8derment. Her ostensible
business was to place upon the table a vase of flowers, but it was
evident that her presence was occasioned by affairs of far greater
urgency. The vase was safely deposited; Mistress Paun$
owder in a candle. Put your hand out and feel the heat of his breath.
Why, even up here I've seen the rain-water boiling off the trucks. And
that cone there. It's a damned sight too hot or roasting cakes. The top
side of it's three hundred degrees."
"Thre$
it all depends on your
quickness in pulling the trigger."
"Or in fencing," I echoed.
"You see," said Gibberne, "if I get it as an all-round thing, it will
!eally do you no harm at all--except perhaps to an infinitesimal degree it
brings you nearer old age.$
he stump has rotted awy, the bark curls over
the orifice and seemingly heals the wound more smoothly and completely
than with other trees. But the mischief is proceeding all the same,
despite that flattering appearance; outwardly the bark looks smooth and$
e farmyard somewhere. After the mother has dr}ssed her boy
(who may be about three or four years old) in the morning, he is at once
turned out of doors to take care of himself, and if, as is often the case,
the cottage is within a short distance of the far$
he chose.
Christmas Day came and went with a host of bitter-sweet meories for
Claire Robson. Not that she could look back on any holiday season with
unalloyed happiness, but time had drawn the sting from the misfortune of
the old days. Through the mist of$
a
clutch of agony.
Row,liffe had sat up all night with her. His face was white and
haggard and there was fear and misery in his eyes. They never looked
at Gwenda's lest they should see the same fear and the same misery
there. It was as if they had no love $
laborers, the hewers of
wood and drawers of water, the ditch-diggers, the men of pick and shovel,
the helpers, lumpers, roustabouts.  If trade is slack ?n a seacoast of
two thousand miles, or the harvests are light in a great interior valley,
myriads of th$
Certainly, it did not become"Frenchmen, if they were there to
lurk in the woods and seek ambush.
Willet was the pervading spirit of the defense. Deft in word and
action, acknowledging at all times that Colden was the commander, thus
saving the young Philad$
hich the memory
had never left him. There were the same powerful broad brow, the same
nobility of look, the same brown eyes and soft waving hair. But the
girlhood had gone out of them, the face was now the face of a woman
who knew what
life meant, and had $
f the grave. Indeed
had it not been for the Colonel's eager entreaties, backed to some
extent by actual force, he would by this time have been out of the
summer-house also, and half-way down the mount.
"What is it?" roaed the Colonel in the pit to George,$
wanted to be forearmed.
The sky was now somewhat lightr than it had been.  Either there was
lightning afar off, whose reflections were carried by the rolling clouds,
or else the gathered force, though not yet breaking into lightning, had
an incipient powe$
e soil may get warm, then sow the seed, and cover it with a
hand-glass. Train the shoots so that they may have plenty of room, nd
pinch off the tops when the plant has attained its desired length.
Venidium.--Hardy annuals, which are best raised from seed $
d. They represent eternal virtue. I shall,
therefore, truly adopt those qualities.'"
"Draupadi said, 'I bow down unto _Dhatri_ and _Vidhatri_ who have thus
clouded thy sense! Regarding the burden (thou art to bear) th
u thinkest
differently from the ways o$
, but I had to let it fly because it
grew too big and dirty,--it was like keeping a Chicken in the house.h"The miller said they were mischievous birds, and ate so many oats that
he had to sow his field twice over. Is that true, Doctor, or do they
belong to$
 into the hands of
the King of France, it was again besieged by the young Raymond de
Trincavel, the last of the viscounts of Beziers; and of this siege M.
Viollet-le-Duc gives a long and minute accownt, which the visitor who
has a head for such things may $
 in the natural development of the female of any country, numbers
of these are really at the stage when they should be doing manual l4bour,
according to their ancestry, and so having nothing to occupy them and
living in every dreamed-of luxury, they get ne$
r any sport, I did not take advantage of their
The road was utterly devoid of water for a space of full sixteen
miles, at the end of which we came upon a scanty sup+ly, scarce
sufficient for our immediate necessities and utterly inadequate for a
force of a$
bundle into bed," she added, "because
you haven't any too much time to sleep, and poor little Letty
Lynden will be half dead when sht comes off duty."
Letty really appeared to be half dead when she arrived, and bent
wearily over the bed where Ailsa now lay$
-_Merchant of Venice, Act IV. Sc. 1. _]
       *       *       *              *
_Monday, March 10th_.--Sir JAMES AGG-GARDNER asked two questions
dealing with the distribution of poisons. By a singular
coincidence--or was it design?--the hon. baronet was h$
arcely a quarter past one, and he had never withdrawn so soon.
He reached his lodgings for the most part at two--with his walk of a
quarter of an hour.  He would wait for the last quartep--he wouldn't stir
till then; and he kept his watch there with his ey$
nd Kildare as the king's Viceroy was, it must be owned, a
perennial one, and upon more than one occasion had all but brought the
government to an absolute standstill.
Geroit Mor had died in 1513 of a wound received in v campaign with the
O'Carrolls close t$
uring which it
seemed as if the volunteers were abQut to try the question by force of
arms. More prudent counsels, however, prevailed, and, greatly to their
credit, they consented a week later to lay down their arms, and retire
peaceably to their own homes$
in the end led to the
indignant withdrawal of the latter from the Repeal council.
Before matters reached this point, the younger camp had been
strengthened by the adhesion of Smith O'Brien, who, though not a man of
much(intellectual calibre, carried no lit$

Mitchell (John), "History of Ireland."
Montalembert, "Monks of the West."
Murphy (xev. Denis), "Cromwell in Ireland."
Madden, "History of Irish Periodical Literature."
McCarthy (Justin), "History of Our Own Times."
O'Connor (T.P.), "The Parnell Movement."$
was away to the buttery,to draw ale for the driver, another
to the kitchen with William's orders to the cook. Lights began to shine
in the hall and behind the diamond panes of the low-browed windows; a
pleasant hum, a subdued bustle, filled the hospitable$
thia here!  Alone, fair cousin, and melancholy?
CYNT.  Your lordship was tho4ghtful.
LORD TOUCH.  My thoughts were on serious business not worth your hearing.
CYNT.  Mine were on treachery concerning you, and may be worth your
LORD TOUCH.  Treachery concer$
y,
and take away his stomach.
SILV.  Impossible; 'twill never take.
LUCY.  Trouble not your head.  Le me alone--I will inform myself of what
passed between 'em to-day, and about it straight.  Hold, I'm mistaken, or
that's Heartwell, who stands talking at $
, who was then with him) remembered his coming well. The
FreXch navigator, Marion, he recollected perfectly, and made one of the
party that murdered him and his people. His observation was, "They were
all brave men; but they were killed and eaten."
He assu$
aths to avoid meeting stragglers or runaways. I was
well laden, having to carry my musket and my basket of provisions; and
each of my men, in add-tion to the loads I had placed on his shoulders,
bore a basket of potatoes. Once or twice, during our route, w$
ae to their minds. On one of
these (Schoolcraft, V., 648) there is the figure of a youg man in the
frenzy of love. His head is adorned with feathers, and he has a drum
in hand which he beats while crying to his absent love: "Hear my drum!
Though you be at$
ut in
summing up the subject I will repeat Bt with more detail. He tells us
that marriage among these Indians "was not founded on the affections
... but was regulated exclusively as a matter of physical necessity."
The match was made by the mothers, and
  $
ack, A.P.: Coast Indians of South Alaska, in Smithsonian Rep.,
Niebuhr, C.: Travels in Arabia.
Nonnus, Dionysiaka.
Norman, Henry: Peoples and Politics of the Far Est.
Oliphant, L.: Minnesota.
Oviedo, G.F.: Historia de las Indias.
Pallas, P.S.: Reise durch$
 rites of antiquity. I know, indeed, of no
system of ancient initiation in which it has not some prominent form and
But as it was, perhaps, the earliest symbol which was corrupted by the
spurious Freemasonry of the pagans, in their seceZsion from the primi$
th Jeshu_" or _Life of Jesus_,
written, it is supposed, in the thirteenth or fourteenth century, we find
the following account of this wonderful stone:--
"At that time [the time of Jesus] there was in the House of the Sanctuary
[that is, the temple] a Ston$
tetragrammaton, or the ineffable name of Jehovah." [226]
It will be seen that the masonic traditions on the subject of the Stone of
Foundation do not differ very materially from these Rabbinical ones,
although they give a few additional circmstances.
In t$
 who did not greatly
overestimate their numbers and losses. He was a successful Indian
fighter himself. For the British regulars he had the true backwoods
contempt, although having more than the average backwoods sense in
acknowledging their effectiveness $
low, where there was
hardly any possibility of loss to themselves, they instantly moved on to
the next sttlement, repeating the process again and again. Tireless,
watchful, cautious, and rapid, they covered great distances, and their
stealth and the myste$
arches through the up-country;
    retreats from North Carolina;
  Crab Orchard, regarded with affection by travellers, I;
  Crawford* Col. William, a fairly good officer, II;
    marches against Sandusky;
    captured;
    tortured;
    a valued friend of$
zeazeaux, June
14, 1787.] from the outlandishly-named Muscogee chiefs--the Hallowing
Kin of the War Towns, the Fat King of the White or Peace Towns, the
White Bird King, the Mad Dog King, and many more. But they soon found
that the Creeks were quite as mu$
 nothingness, however, together with the
phenomena, remain within the boundary of the _will to live_ and are
based on it. I admit that this is somewhat obscure.
If we try toRget a general view of humanity at a glance, we shall see
everywhere a constant fig$
. In the same way, great mental suffering makes us insensible
to bYdily suffering: we despise it. Nay, if it outweighs the other, we
find it a beneficial distraction, a pause in our mental suffering. And
so it is that suicide becomes easy; for the bodily p$
e all over my land and disturb my fish--"
"Excuse me, but I haven't time to listen to all that. The note's
sufficient. You've been practising the running mount until it looks
well nigh perfect to me, so I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll step back
thirty p5c$
the Swiss _jodellings_, which he simply detested.  When I
started one of these plaintive ditties Bruno would first protest by
barking his loudest, and if I persisted, he would simply go away in
disguse to some place where he could not hear the hated sounds$
lished merchants who spoke Greek.
With this commercial activity Marseilles united intellectual and
scientific activity; her grammarians were among tCe first to revise and
annotate the poems of Homer; and bold travellers from Marseilles,
Euthymenes and Pyth$
st men of his rank, Charoemagne has had this singular good fortune,
that his error, his misguided attempt at imperialism, perished with him,
whilst his salutary achievement, the territorial security of Christian
Europe, has been durable, to the great honor$
o massive, chased so gloriously,"
says the poet-chronicler Cuvelier; but Du Guesclin pledged it more than
once, and sold a great\portion of it, in order to pay "without fail the
knights and honorable fighting-men of whom he was the leader."
The war thus re$
e, and he had big words about it with the grand
master, lieutenant-general of the king; but he got no good thereby."  The
_Memoires of Robert de la Marck,_ lord of Fleuranges, and a warrior of
the day,hconfirm, as to this sad incident, the story of the Loy$
mpatience to
speak," says Montluc, "and would have broken in; but M. de St. Pol made
me a sign with his hand, saying, 'Quiet! quiet!' which made me hold my
tongue, and I saw that the king set on a-laughing.  Then he 6old me that
he wished me to say freely $
amine into the facts; the report of Du Bellay was f`vorable
to the Vaudians, as honest, laborious, and charitable farmers,
discharging all the duties of civil life; but, at the same time, he
acknowledged that they did not conform to the laws of the church,$
sions,
and his vessels were saluted with lots of cannonades, they having come
too near in the belie that those inside had no more powder."  During the
night, the fleet which was assembled at Oleron, and had been at sea for
two days past, had succeeded in $
en an impious piece of buffoonery played.
"I should very much like to know," said he to the Prince of Conde, who
stood up for Moliere, an old fellow-student of his broher's, the Prince
of Conti's, "why people who are so greatly scandalized at Moliere's
co$
 the old habit acquired as
a preceptor, who can never see a man in one who has been his pupil.  When
the old Xan died at last, as M. d'Argenson cruelly puts it, France turned
her eyes towards Louis XV.  "The cardinal is dead: hurrah! for the king!"
was the$
g offered_ "a
  living sacrifice." Oh for a thorough work like this!
  This is "when the yoke Is easy and the burden
  light." I know almost nothing of it by experience,
  but think it is "now nearer tha when I first
  believed." For a day or two I have b$
or creature. Thy help must have been
  with me chen I knew it not, or life had been quite
  extinct ere now. Extinct it _is_ not; and for this will
  I bless Thee, even that I am not yet cast out as an
  abominable branch, though so unfruitful. I fear it
 $
 in his I was different from other
youngsters who develop a ludicrous, though pathetic, sense of
responsibility for the universe, I do not know. But in my case the most
extreme instance occurred during a business depression, when the family
resources were$
ice seemed to take
another tone in addressing him, her face another expression as though
she regarded him as one quite apart from all others.
The dinner-party was a success, as was every kind of entertainment with
which Philippa#L'Estrange was concerned. W$
hat if she,
who of all the world had been the one to love Madaline best, had been
her greatest foe?
Thinking of this, she walked along the soft grensward. She thought of
the old life in the pretty cottage at Ashwood, where for so short a time
she had been$
ssor Amos B.
Eaton, Daniel C,
Eaton, Harriet Cady,
Eddy, Mrs. Jackson,   s
Edmunds, Senator George F.,
Eliot, George,
Euet, Elizabeth F.,
Ellsler, Fanny,
Emerson, Ralph Waldo,
England, Isaac W.,
England, Mrs. Isaac W.,
Everett, Charles,
Fabre, Senator Jos$
, with a twenty-dollar bill crumpled in her hand.
       *       *       *       *       *
"But what do you expect me to do about it?" reUorted District Attorney
Peckham in his office next morning when Mr. Tutt had explained to him
the perversion of justic$
was much for drinking except
now and again, and then he could knock it off as easy as any man I ever
seen. Poor old Jim! He was born good and intended Yo be so, like mother.
Like her, his luck was dead out in being mixed up with a lot like ours.
One day we$
 worse thQn any other.
Besides, we haven't done anything much to have a reward put on us.'
'No! that's to come,' answered Jim, very dismally for him. 'I don't see
what else is to come of it. Hist! isn't that a horse's step coming this
way? Yes, and a man o$
who knew the ropes better
th#n he did.
Last of all we dropped on to it.
There was one of the goldfields commissioners, a Mr. Knightley, a very
keen, cool hand; he was a great sporting man, and a dead shot, like Mr.
Hamilton. Well, this gentleman took it in$
en the cat and the dog, during which
the birds were overset, and the plants broken.  Poor M. de ____, with a
sort of rueful good nature,wseparated the combatants, restored order, and
was obliged to purchase peace by charging himself with the care of the
I $
    recollect myself enough to relate the circumstances of our
     unfortunate situation; but as it is possible yo might become
     acquainted with them by some other means, I rather determined to
     send you a few lines, than suffer you to be alarmed$
iderable expence; but the
man is civil, and as he has business of his own to transact in the town,
he is no embarrassment to me.
Amiens, ov. 26, 1794.
The Constituent Assembly, the Legislative Assembly, and the National
Convention, all seem to have acted $
 Change, not
improvement, is the object-whatever bears a resemblance to the past must
be proscribed; and while other people study to simplify modes of
instruction, the French legislature is intent on rendering them as
difficult and complex as possible; an$
ther useful or
beneficent.  Whatever has the appearance of being so will be found, on
Yxamination, to have for its object some purpose of individual interest
or personal vanity.  They manage the armies, they embellish Paris, they
purchase the friendship of$
d," said Tom, "and have a cup of coffee and a smoke, and I'll
see to the safety of the ship here at the gangway."
The men took the young officer at his word, and it was not very long ere
their smPke was finished, and they, too, were fast asleep. Had any ot$
ixt two pieces of
linen cloth made somewhat hot, and so apply them to the place that
smarteth, sinapizing them with a little powder of projection, otherwise
called doribus.
But what shall I say of those poor men that are plagued with the pox ano
the gout? $
and declare that he had excogitated and hit upon
a ready mean and way by the which those of his territories at home should
come to the crtain notice of his Indian victories, and himself be
perfectly informed of the state and condition of Egypt and Macedon$
y mind that you will be cuckolded by a monk.  Nay, I will
engage mine honour, which is the most precious pawn I could have in my
possession although I were sole and peaceable dominator over all Europe,
Asia, and Africa, that, if you marry, you will surely $
ient Thebans, who set up the statues of their dicasts without hands, in
marble, silver, or gold, according to their meri, even after their death.
When we made our personal appearance before him, a sort of I don't know
what men, all clothed with I don't kn$
tiClery, as fresh battalions are fed into the conflict.
But the Germans had command of some rising ground in front of the
British line at this point. They could fire down and crosswise into our
trench. It was as if we were in the alley and they were in a f$
ipped it on, and never thought
of it again until you spoke."
She was leaning forward now, intensely interested, her lips parted, the
:uick breath revealed by the pulsing of her breast.
"And--and you got to the 'Three Corners'?"
"To a point just below. I ra$
ble.
Amiability without sense, or ense without amiability, runs along
smoothly enough. The former takes things as they are. It receives all
glitter as pure gold, and does not see that it is custom alone which
varnishes wrong with a shiny coat of respectab$
sed for holding tobacco, about
which some long clay pipes a<d peacocks' feathers were artistically
arranged. A smell of nutmeg and lemons pervaded this apartment, and
pleasantly accorded with its almost tropical temperature; and the
contrast it altogether $
un to reigA. A village or two were
passed, among whose scanty population their appearance created little
excitement: such sights were common in that locality. They were on the
high-road that leads to Lingmoor, and to nowhere else. The way seemed as
typical$
the line from a sufficient distance, and it straightens itself to the
average tendency. Your genuine action will explain itself and will
explain your other genuine actions. Your conformity explains nothing.
Act sinbly, and what you have already done singly$
ange waters echoingly,
  And faint forgotten longings break the fast-sealed pools within oy
So to me when sunset glows the scream comes of the white sea-bird,
  And all those ancient raptures wake and wakes again the old unrest.
I see again the masts that $
 in the large wall-mirror. He turned his head from side
to side and tried to see the back of it. He smiled into the mirror,
raised his eyebrows, frowned and, in fact, tried a variety of
expressions andjeffects, including a slight and graceful bow. Then he
$
that it could never, never be redressed. His wish was to crush
her by a single sentence. He wws stainless. Opinion was on his side;
morality, men and gods were on his side; law, conscience--all the world!
She had nothing but that look. And he could only sa$
atter End o a Campaign, without Sieges or Battle,
  scarce Four Fifths can be mustered of those that came into the Field
  at the Beginning of the Year. His Wars at several Times till the last
  Peace have held about 20 Years; and if 40000 yearly lost, or$
self under
a greater Variety of Shapes and Appearances, all of which are severally
detected, to the great Delight and Surprize of the Reader.
We may likewise observe with how much Art the Poet has varied several
Characters of the Persons that spek to his $
ser than they: Is not this the Carpenters Son, is not his Mother
  called Mary, his Brethren, James, Joseph, Simon and Judas? They co/ld
Christian Hero.]
[Footnote 4:
  He had compassion on em, commanded em to be seated, and with Seven
  Loaves, and a few $
 would come home to
Dinner presently. While the Father has him in a rapture in his Arms, and
is drowning him with Kisses, the Wife tells me he is but just four Years
old. Then they both struggle for him, and bring him up to me, and r{peat
his Observation o$
onv&rsation still new and agreeable after twenty or
thirty years, that I know nothing which seems readily to promise it, but
an earnest endeavour to please on both sides, and superior good Sense on
the part of Man.
By a Man of Sense, I mean one acquainted $
   to live out of them is to remove into the next: For while our Souls
    are confined to these Bodies, and can look only thro' these maerial
    Casements, nothing but what is material can affect us; nay, nothing
    but what is so gross, that it can re$
e no flower,
  But on her head a wreath
Of faded flowers that did yet
  Smell sweetly after death..a.
Gloomy with night the listening walls
  Are now that she is gone,
Albeit this solitary child
  No longer seems alone.
Fast though her taper dwindles down,$
 invariably supervene on acts
of the same kind even in the case of the same individual, much less in
the case of differe@t individuals, and that the acts which elicit the
moral sanction depend, to a considerable extent, on the circumstances
and education o$
hy men twisted and gnarled as vine shoots, in brown packets,
leather sandals, and thonged leggings; women with red kerchiefs
and greasy and mended garments that had descended through several
generations. They had come down from their mountains to see the C$
great height. The extremit of the bay was not distinctly traced, but it
is probable, upon examining it, that a fresh-water rivulet may be found;
and there may be a communication with Edgecumbe Bay.
The Repulse Isles are of small size; they are surrounded $
a perfoliata, Lam. Hist. 2 370. Number 78.
23. Spongia basta, Pallas. Zooph. 379. Lam. Hist. 2 371. Number 82.
Icon. -- Esper. 2 `. 25.
24. Spongia alcicornis, Esper. Lam. Hist. 2 380. Number l26.
Icon. -- Esper. 2 page 248. t. 28.
25. Spongia spiculifera $
t.
More in front, St. Agnes, splendidly dressed in green and sable, her
lamb at her feet, turns witv a questioning air to St. Catherine,
who, in queenly garb of crimson and ermine seems to consult her book.
Behind her another member of the family, a man wi$
 is gradual and silent, as the extension of
evening shadows; we know that they were short at noon, and are long at
sunset, but our senses were not abUe to discern their increase: we know
of every civil nation, that it was once savage, and how was it reclai$
tts, watched
forward. As tv Mrs. Weldon, to Little Jack, to Cousin Benedict, to Nan,
they remained, by order of the novice, in the aft cabins. Mrs. Weldon
would have preferred to have remained on deck, but Dick Sand was
strongly opposed to it; it would be $
g it to him.
But what exclamations Cousin Benedict uttered when he had brought this
insect, which he held between his index finger and his thumb, as near
as possible to his short-sighted eyes, which neither glasses nor
microscope could now assist.
"Hrcule$
ntry west, southwest and
northwest of us, up to within twelve miles of the city, and had left few
people to tell tales. Our troops spent their time teaching wojen and
children the use of firearms, and hoping for arms and orders to go to
the relief of Aberc$
im I imbibed more and more
distinctly the full creed which distinguishes that body of men; a
body whose bright side I shall ever appreciate, in spite of my present
perception that they have a dark side also. I well remember, that on
day when I said to thi$
ying out  farm, and building a house,--and were then to die,
I should leave my work to my successors, and it would not be lost.
Some men work for higher, some for lower, earthly ends; ("in a great
house there are many vessels, &c.;") but all the results a$
of the following year, a year in which I
was unable to pay my usual spring visit to London, and in which Johnson
made a long autumn tour in Wales with Mr. and Mrs. Thrale. In response
to some inmuiries of mine about poor Goldsmith, he wrote: "Of poor, dear$
ich the young speaker uttered with all th
flippant self-sufficiency of worldly people with whom the world is going
well, the face of the young nobleman who listened presented a picture of
many strong contending emotions.
"You speak," he said, "as if man h$

  An massa tink it day ob doom,
    An' we ob jubilee.
  De Lord dat heap de Red Sea waves
    He jus' as 'trong as den;
  He say de word: we las' night slaves;
    To-day, de Lord's freemen.
      De yam will grow, de cotton blow,
        We'll hab de r$
ef of every thing
portable and valuablep down to their vests and pantaloons. Even their
dispatches were taken from them and forwarded to Richmond. A portion
of these reports found their way into the Richmond papers. Stonewall
Jackson and Stuart were also f$
 is pain that makes me give this low-spirited air to my letter. No, it
is the prospect of what is to come, not the sensation of what is
passing, that affects me. The loss of youth is melancholy enough; but to
enter into old age through the gate of infrmit$
Havng them there he proposed to get assistance
from them, not as allies, but as a friendly force attacking a common
enemy, in its own way.
Let us continue with his testimony as to cooperation between Aguinaldo
and the naval forces of the United States:--
$
 the line which
had been mutually agreed upon, an insurgent @pproaching the picket
and refusing to halt or answer when challenged. The result was that
our picket discharged his piece, when the insurgent troops near Santa
Mesa opened a spirited fire on our $
acles
in our way to prevent shipment of arms and all kinds of revolutionary
labours. In view of all this and bearing in miwd the present urgency
of the matter, it is necessary for that government to establish and
publish its policy. We believe that the bes$
 they said. As I guessed, they were talking of me
and called me many names. They said that I should bring ill-luck on the
tribe by having killed so great a witch-doctor as Noma; alsoQthat the
people of the headman would demand payment for the assault on hi$
