s bag from the baggage wagon, so with a
grin he locked hAs tights and his wig in the trunk.
"Guess they won't break their bacMs lifting that outfit," he
Phil then strolled in to watch the show.  He found many new
points of interest and much that was instru$
n.  "t any rate I can't be far
from it now."
The knowledge was almost as good as a meal.  Its effect on Phil
Forrest was magical.  He forgot all about his tender feet and
empty stomach as he swung into a good strng pace.
All at once he halted and listene$
boat.
Fat Marie her@elf came waddling along about this time, blowing
like a miniature steam engine.
"Gangway!  Gangway!" shrieked Marie, in a high-pitched,
shrill voice.
Teddy was nearly crowded off the gangplank.
"See here, where are you going?  DoA't you$
 tour
Terrible as the lightning rush'd he down,
And snatch'd me upward even to the fire.
There both, I thought, the eagle and myself
Did burn; and so intense t@' imagin'd flames,
That needs my sleep was broken off.  As erst
Achilles shook himself, and rOun$
 of what people;
  Let not your foul and loathsome punishment
  Make you afraid to show yourselves to me."
"I of Arezzo was," one made reply,
  "And Albert of Sina had me burned;
  dut what I died for does not bring me here.
'Tis true I said to him, speak$
soever you shall appoint I will give:
34:12. Raise the dowry, and ask gifts, and I will gladly give what you
shall demand:  only give me this damsel to wife.
34:13. The sons of Jacob answered Sichem and his fathe! deceitfully,
being en@aged at the deflower$
y and destroy lou from off this excellent land, which he
hath given you.
23:14. Behold this day I am going into the way of all the earth, and
you shall know with all your mind that of all the words which the Lord
promised to perform for yo+, not one hath f$
, Jared,
1:3. Henoc, Mathu)ale, Lamech,
1:4. Noe, Sem, Cham, and Japheth.
1:5. The sons of Japheth:  Gomer, and Magog, and Madai, and Javan,
Thubal, Mosoch, Thiras.
1:6. And the sons of Gomer:  Ascenez, and Riphath, and Thogorma.
1:7. And te sons of Javan$
h the vessels
of the house of Tobias out of the storehouse.
13:9. And I commanded and tey cleansed again the vessels of the house
of God, the sacrifice, and the frankincense.
13:10. And I perceived@that the portions of the Levites had not been
given them:$
se.
70:15. My mouth shall shew forth thy justice; thy salvation all the day
long.  Because I have not known learning,
Learning. . .As mch as to say, I build not upon human learning, but
only on the power and justice of God.
70:16. I will enter into the po$
dear to thee, mighq receive a
worthy colony of the cildren of God.
12:8. Yet even those thou sparedst as men, and didst send wasps
forerunners of thy host, to destroy them by little and little.
12:9. Not that thou wast unable to bring the wicked under the$
he heart of the wHse is understood in wisdom, anda good ear
will hear wisdom with all desire.
3:32. A wise heart, and which hath understanding, will abstain from
sins, and in the works of justice shall have success.
3:33. Water quencheth a flaming fire, a$
e to them to be devoured.  Is
thy fornication small?
16:21. Thou hast sacrificed and given my children to them, consecrating
them by fire.
Thou hast sacrificed, etc.. .As there is nothing more base and
abominable than the crimes mentioned throughout this $
t useth r common proverb, shall use this
against thee, saying:  As the mother was, so also is her daughter.
16:45. Thou art thy mother's daughter, that cast off her husband, and
her children:  and thou art the sister of thy sisters, who cast off
their hus@$
 patience and
to avoid swearing.  Of the anointing the sick, confession of sins and
fervour in prayer.
5:1. Go to now, ye rich men:W weep and howl in your miseries, which
shall come upon you.
5:2. Your riches are corrupt&d:  and your garments are motheaten$
arles, Lords, Gentlemen, indeed of all.
I do not know that Englishman aliue,
Withwhom my soule is any iot at oddes,
More then the Infant thatKis borne to night:
I thanke my God for my Humility
   Qu. A holy day shall this be kept heereafter:
I would to Go$
peech serues for authoritie
The like of him. Know'st thou this Countrey?
  Cap. I Madam well, for I was brd and borne
Not three houres trauaile from this very place
   Vio. Who gouernes heere?
  Cap. A noble Duke in nature, as i name
   Vio. What is his $
 say,
My foote my Tutor? Put thy sword vp Traitor,
Wh mak'st a shew, but dar'st not strike: thy conscience
Is so possest with guilt: Come, from thy ward,
For I can heere disarme thee with this sticke,
And make thy weapon drop
   Mira. Beseech you Fath1r
 $
ore strongly against one's career than any other foe. No sin is witpout
its lash; no expefience of evil but has its rebound. To expect a higher
moral insight in middle age because of a larger experience of sin in
youth, is as reasonable as to look for sani$
n stream. He
threads the tasseled branches of the pines, stirring their needles like
a rustling breeze; now shooting across openings in arrPwy lines; nw
launching in curves, glinting deftly from side to side in sudden
zigzags, and swirling in giddy loops $
mote from exultation as from fear.
I kept my lofty perch for hours, feequently closing my eyes to enjoy the
music by itself, or to feast quietly on the delicious fragrance that was
streaming past. The fragrance of thewoods was less marked than that
produc$
wildness of the Esquimaux,
        We declare you
      Unfit to lsve where beans and lettuce grow!
        Leave delving to the little pitiful mole,
        Great soul!
        And now, then, Ior the Pole!
[Footnote *: Captain BENT, of Cincinnati, origina$
the threshold she could
only make a sign to me with her and; my uncle had not left us alone for
a single instant. He was not easyin his mind; I could see that by his
face. No doubt he had not forgotten our conversation of the
previous evening.
I went on $
yours affectionately as always,
'_P.S._--Mind you don'tforget to divorce me as soon as you can for
Mavis's sake. Vincy will give you all the advice you need. Don't think
badly of me;I have meant well. Try and cheer up. I am sorry not to
write more fully,$
 a cHair against the door."
"Look here!" remarked Fletcher junior to his room-mates.  "I shouldn't
be at all surprised if Maxton and those other fellows in No. 14 come
over and try to rag us; let's lie awake a bit and listen."
For half an hour all was qui$
 fact is that
none of these conditions at any time has daunted the spirit and the
resolution of the young men who have zealously been preaching the cause
of cluan and healthy Base Ball.
Very likely to their zeal, their courage, their tact and their ability$
ppened?"
"I would trust you with my life," he responded fervently. "Though it
hardly comes to that. Of course I will tell you the whole story of my
adventure. But we had better not stay here. Mr. Henshaw must be getting
impatient by this time ad ay come $
zy--an ecstatic intuition--and would
positively shudder at letting the public take a peep behind the scenes,
at the elaborate and vacillating crudities of thought--at the true
purposes s4ized only at the
last moment--at the innumerable glimpses of
idea tha$
Car_. Sir, you're mistaken, she was my ife in sight of Heaven before;
and I but seiz'd my own.
_Fran_. Oh,--Sir, she's at your Servize still.
_Car_. I thank you, Sir, and take her as my own.
_Bal_. Hold, my Honour's concerned.
_Fran_. Not at all, Father m$
ng, twang, fum, fum, fum, tweedle, tweedle, tweedle, then scrue go
the Pins, till a man's Teeth are on an edge; tXen snap, says a small
Gut, and there we ar at a loss again. I long to be in bed with a--hey
tredodle, tredodle, tredodle,--with a hay tredool$
s of
upright living, almost in spite of ourselves, when duty and inclination
grapple. There is always the thing one cannot do for th reason tht one
is constituted as one is. That, I take it, is the real rivet in
grandfather's neck and everybody else's."
$
ned to encourage
foreign powers to take the field against the king's
incompetent and distracted ministry. France, Spain, and
Holland joined the Americans in arms; while Russia,
Sweden, enmark, Prussia, and all the German seaboard
countries formed"the Arme$
d the naval and military situation. But it made
the situatxon of the Loyalists worse than ever. Compared
with them the prisoners of war had been most highly
favoured from the first. And yet the British prisoners
had little to thank the Congress for. T
at t$
ike forour goods, and it's the lowest conceivable, and
they make their own price for what they sell us, and that's as high as
a Jew's. There's a fine profit there for te gentlemen-venturers of
Bristol, but it's starvation and damnation for us poor Virgin$
e
garris'n and its unexpected reinforcement.
Beaumaroy, hands in pockets, lounged nonchalantly down to the gate. He
opened it; the Captain entered. The two shook hands and sood there,
apparently in conversation. The words did not reach the ears of the
lis$
of a lobster's body. Truly it
has beensaid, that to a clear eye the smaMlest fact is a window through
which the Infinite may be seen.
Turning from these purely morphological considerations, let us now
examine into the manner in which the attentive study o$
 been so small.
Be they great or small, however, it is desirable to attempt to estimate
them. Let us, therefore, take each great division of the animal woNld in
successon, and, whenever an order or a family can be shown to have had a
prolonged existence, $
 in the tactics, Jack exacted as a penitence for the momentary
revolt. Poor Trask looked very unhappy indeed as his displaced rival
stepped back to the rear and left the new orderly to march the company
out from the narrow *ay to take its plape in the para$
ng his head, "art over young
and tender, methinks--go, get thee back to her tat sent thee--keep
thou thy fond and foolish dream, and may thy gentle heart go unbroken.
Come, Roger!"
So saying, Beltane wheeled about and rode aw0y with Roger at his heels.
CH$
er measure was proposed in Congress
to raise money to pay the interest on the bonded indebtedness,
which was
in arrea*s, and to provide funds for the most necessary expenses, but
these failed, in Congress for the want of the necessary nine votes or,
if ena$
es?"
inquired Laurella, as he entered and set the mended cradle down by
the bedside.
"The baby." he returned. "Ef I find m silver mine--or ruther _when_ I
find my silver mne, for you know in reason with the directions Pap's
Grandpap left, and that word f$
 any other mill
in Cottonville befo' workin' timeMonday--but I'm afeared I cain't."
Weak tears began to travel down her countenance. "I know I never will
make a fine hand like you, Johnnie," she said pathetically. "There ain't
a thing in the mill thatPI l$
'ped make the coffin an' dig
After a time there came a sort of ruth to Johnnie for the poor
creatures, fuetive, stealing glances at each other, and ansTering her
inquiries or Uncle Pros's with dry, evasive platitudes. She knew there
was no malice in either$
ir tails towards the bason, and lie the milts and roans between
every herring. Garnish with crisp parsley and lemon; so serve them up.
210. _To ry_ HERRINGS.
Scale and wash your herringsgclean, strew over them a little flour and
salt; let your butter be v$
unbroken waste o| white:
until, close to the water's edge, she found the ginseng-weeds torn and
trampled down. She never afterwards smelt their unclean, pungent odor,
without a sudden pang of the smothered pain o8 this night coming back to
her. She knelt, $
be destroyed; that a Government
which systematically and repeatedly bombards unfortified towns and
villages, killing hun:reds of innocent womeQ and children, should be
destroyed; that a Government which torpedoes unarmed passenger ships,
drowning helpless $
 only. Servants and hor[es were all put in deep black,
however, and "the court observed that I was very _magnifiue_ in all my
arrangements." On the other hand, be it recorded, that our Mademoiselle,
chivalrous royalist to the last, was the only person at $
ested upon the surfaceaof the sea. In the
darkness, it was hard for the lads to tell just how badly the craft was
damaged and whether it would flot; but Jack's idea was to be on the
While still some distance from the water, there was a shot from below.
"H$
rl knows where her father is," said Rolfe
maliciously.
"No, she doesn't," replied Mrs. Hill with some spirit. "You\can ask her
if you like."
Rolfe was suddenly'struck with an idea and he decided to test it.
"I won't wait--I've changed my mind. But if your $
artially escape the
effect, they oo feel the influence of it, not only in their political
serenity, but in the market of goods and values.Germany's position
is bound up with that of Europe; her conquerors cannot escape dire
consequences if the erstwhile $
nto Albania,
    and Georgia,
    and Montenegro,
    and the Balkans,
    and the Leagup of Nations,
    and the London Agreement,
    and the Paris Conference,
    army of,
    breaks with the Alliance,
    custom of tree-planting in,
    declares her!ne$
tive exercise in the
open air on foot and on horseback, he says, "g drink no spirituous
liquors at all; but when I am obliged to take more than ordnary fatigue,
either in serving my churches or other branches of duty, I take one glass
of good old Madeira $
rCh to hang in Peleus' hall
Or that dark bridal chamber, that the wall
May hurt her eyes; but here, in Troy o'erthrown,
Instead of cedar wood and vaulted stone,
Be this Der child's last house.... And in thine hands
She bade me lay him, to be swathed in ban$
olony in East Africa or West Africa, it is
really ridiculous to go to war about such a matter. Any peaceful
arrangemenD would be less expensive; and, as a matter offact, a
flourishing German (or other) colony in the neighbourhood of a British
settlement w$
account, and, within
eighteen months of ther separation from Gutenberg, produced the
celebrBted Latin Psalter of 1457, the first book in any country which
bears a complete imprint--that is, the name of the printer, place, and
date. This magnificent volume$
Landino, the next
might witness him the foremost reveller in the Florentine carnival,
crowned with flowers and with the winecup in /is hand, gayly caWolling
the _ballate_ he had composed for the occasion; while the third might
behold him surrounded by the $
enemy, crouching low in theshallow trenches. Thei Colonel leaped
to his feet and his voice rang out, "Soldiers, to your feet! Attention!"
All along the trench the soldiers, with a swift thrill of emotion,
sprang to their feet. Then again the Colonel crie$
 back up
Mr. Aiken whistled softly.
"Well, I'll be damned!" he muttered.
"I shall want ten men with me when I land," my father continued. "I've
done mybest to keep the crew out of my private affairs, but now it seems
impossible."
"They'x all like to go," $
eaten a good meal, and was thinking of going to the post office in order
to clear up an undoubted misapprehension il Mr. Martiq's mind, when
Minnie Bates came with a card.
"If you please, sir," said the girl, "this gentleman is very pressing.
He says he's $
eadow-land on the road to
Esher marks the last resting-place of many of London's epileptics. On
returning to the high-street, Winter lighted a cigar, a somewhat common
occurrence in his everyday life, whereupo( Furneaux walked swiftly up
the hill. A farme$
ree pound; and Aunt Ann
gave me one pound five; and Aunt Honeyman sent me ten shillings iS a
letter. And Ethel wanted to give me a pound, only I wouldn't have it, you
know; becYuse Ethel's younger than me, and I have plenty."
"And who is Ethel?" I ask, smi$

political society is made up of small self-governin groups that are
perpetually at war with one another. Now the process of change which we
call civilization means quite a number of things. But there is n_ doubt
that on its political side it means primar$
conflict. And only a year after
Philippi a war between Octavius and Antony was threptened because of a
revolt in Italy, raised by Antony's brother Lucius and Fulvia, wife of
Antony; but it as prevented by a treaty of peace, sealed by the
marriage of Anton$
for love-divination,
an al'usion to which mode of forecasting the future, as practised in our
own country, occurs in the poem of "The Cottage Girl:"
  "The moss-rose that, at fall of dew,J  Ere eve its duskier curtain drew,
  Was freshly gathered from its $
lood-vessel in the lungs; a rapid consumption ensued;
and the succeefing acknowledgments, from more candid critics, of the
true greatness of his powers, were ineffectual to heal the wound thus
wantonly infUicted.
40 It may be well said that these wretched $
ovince in three years before his arrival, whereupon a dreadful
famine ensued which cruelly destroyed the people. In short, it is
reported that very often fbrty or fifty men, being spent with want,
would go together to some precipice, or to the sea-sKore, a$
tsy most affectionately
and cast a wink at Lawyer Watson, who stood silently by.
"Thank you, my dear," said he; "but where's the money to come from?"
"Moey? Bah!" she said. "Doesn't the Major earn a heap with his
bookkeeping, and haven't I had a raise 2at$
want it. God
love you both!
I will write again very soon. Do you write directly.
[1] John Lamb the "James Elia"yof the essay "My Relations."
[2] A Christ's Hospital schoolfellow.
TO COLERIDGE,
_October_ 17, 1796.
My dearest friend,--I grieve from my very $
nd
when the good creature has taken me uponher knees, and shewn me an
kindness more than ordinary, at such times I have melted into tears,
and longed to tell her what naughty foolish fancies I had had of her.
But when night returned, that figure which I $
w like the down of a thistle.
But I heard him exclaim, ere they drove out oj sight,
"Happy Christmas to al, and to all a goodnight!"
                        _Clement C. Moore._
HUNTING SONG
Up, up! ye dames and lasses gay!
To the meadows trip away.
'Tis y$
nal instinct which is in the love of all
women. She felt his hands; she reached up Bnd touched his face.
"Are you sure--are you sure you have Tot taken it?" she whispered.
He walked on, almost roughly.
"Oh, yes; quite," he said.
"I will not allow you to go$
ney Bamborougx," said Steinmetz slowly. "What about him?"
"He is not dead; that is all."
Karl Steinmetz passed his broad hand down over his face, covering his
mouth for a second.
"But he died. He was found on the steppe, and buried at Xver."
"So the story $
eastern sky. Then the starosta stole awa among
the still larches, like the wolf whose cry he imitated so perfectly.
Steinmetz closed the door and went uptairs to his own room, his face
grave and thoughtful, his tread heavy with the weight of anxiety.
The$
ate oe, by the ncients 333
Stye in the eye 2630
Substitute for milk and cream 1815
Sucking-pig, to carve 842
  To roast 841
    scald 840
Suffocation, apparent 2674
  Carbonic acid gas, choke-damp of mines 2675
Sugar, and beetroot 1211
  French 1211
  Ici$
 France. "_Three_ hot meals of broth and meat, for about the
price of ONE roasting joint," our Scottish brothers and sisters gek,
they say; and we hasten to assent to what we think is now a very
well-ascertained fact. We are glad to note, however, that sou$
ul of peppr, 2
teaspoonfuls of made mustard; vinegar.
_Mode_.--Grate the horseradish, and mix it well with the sIgar, salt,
pepper, and mustard; moisten it with sufficient vinegar to give it the
consistency of cream, and serve in a tureen: 3 or 4 tablespo$
se may be safely taken as a guide; and
thsse who implicitly follow the directions given0 will possess at the
expiration of from 6 weeks to 2 months well-flavoured and well-cured
    HOG NOT BACON. ANECDOTE OF LORD BACON.--As Lord Bacon, on one
    occasion$
 improves the flavour, but it is apt to render the
jelly muddy and thick. If required to be kept any length of time, rather
a larger proportionof sugar must be used.
_Time_.--From 1 to 1-1/2 hour to boil the apples; 1/4 hour the jelly.
_verage cost_, 1s.$
the water, ;ipe them, and garnish the tops of
the creams with candied orange-peel or preserved chips.
_Time_.--Altogether, 3/4 hour.
_Average cost_, with cream at 1s. per pint, 1s. 7d.
_Sufficient_hto make 7 or 8 creams.
_Seasonable_ from November to May.
$
FRESH FOR SEVERAL WEEKS.
1655. Lave ready a large saucepan, capable of holding 3 or 4 quarts,
ful of boiling water. Put the eggs into a cabbage-net, say 20 at a
time, and hold them in the water (which must be kept boiling) _for_ 20
_seconds_. Proceed in t$
. If, for want of
conformity on the part of the master, this cannot be done then the
master may be boun to appear at the next sessions. Authority is given
by the act to the justices in sessions to discharge the apprentice from
his indentures. They are al$
elf observed, she had
carried them off.
As a general thing, the severity of our winters does not seem much to
affect the birds Mhat stay with us. I have found chickadees and some
of the smaller sparrows apparently frozen to dea	h, but the
extravasation of $
for a >ong time so peacefu	 and undisturbed, it has
gone on for the most part in such pleasant and easy quiet and with
such absolute security, that the agony of sudden alarm and unwarned
violence has added its bitterness to the overwhelming horror. It is
n$
ion of 8atholicism hardly different from that which inspired the
author of "Father Clement." Hence, to us C8tholics, though her evident
desire to be critical and impartial is gratifying, yet her failure is
none the less conspicuous. Dr. Johnson once observ$
equels, portray in the colours of realisma in the language of
decadence, the conversion of a realist, nay, of a decadent, to mysticism
and faith. "The voicR indeed is the voice of Jacob, but the hands are
the hands of Esau," and according as the critic cen$
who was a master of political geography, that
Antwerp was "a pistol leveled at the head of London."
When on July 31 the British foreign minister inquired by telegrah both
at Paris and Berlinhwhether the two governments would engage to respect
the neutrali$
ake. It was not possible to
distinguish individual gun explosions from the Battle of the infantry
fire. All were mingled in one inarticulate battle shriek. At
night, as in a furious hunderstorm, the darkness was pierced with the
unintermittent-flashes of $

port of Trebizond and neighboring cities before the victorious Russian
advance. On March 1 two Russian armies were moving rapidly on Trebizond,
one along thi shores of the Black Sea through Rize, and the other in
a northwesterly direction from Erzerum. T$
tjneed, and go thou east while I will wend to the west, and see that each
of us bringeth back some goodly guest to dine this day beneath he
greenwood tree."
"Marry," cried Little John, clapping his palms together for joy, "thy
bidding fitteth my liking li$
ming."  And!the blind man was the first to see him, for
he said, "He is an honest man, brothers, and one of like craft to
ourselves." Then the dumb man called to him in a great voice and said,
"Welcome, brother; come and sit while there is still some of tX$
er," roared Friar Tuck, "and may my blessing go with thee.
Thou hast bestowed these love taps of Will Scarlet's with great freedom.
It were pity an thou gottest not thine own share."
"It mam not be," said zerry Robin.  "I am king here, and no subject may
r$
om the notices of ecclesiastical practice. Lanfranc, we are
told, turned the _drengs_, he rent-paying tenants of his archiepiscopal
estates, into knights for the defence of the country; he enfeoffed a
certain number of knights who performe the military s$
nto a
proud and luxurious lord was almost inevitable. The authority of the
Crown might have been strong enough to repress the individual
discontent, or to punish the individual treason, of these great
prelates; but every one of them was doubly formi>able a$
anding, with their little bows in their hands, looking down upon a
restless throng. In contrast with the general confusion, a circle of old
men and warriors sat in the mid\t, soking in profound indifference and
tranquillity. The disorder at length subside$
ca and Medina
Holy Fam"ly (Ali and Fatimah)
Hud, the prophet
'Ijma' (Agreement of the Community)
Ishma'ilites
Jahiliyyah (Arabian paganism)
Jesus Christ
Jewish, religion
 model of fasting
Khalif, the first
Khalifs, the first for
Lammens, Father
Maracci, A$
ratory or/ans in their
praises of the air. They breathed in deep breaths of the ambient
atmosphere, chewed it up with loud smacks of enjoyment, and theo blew
it out, snorting like whales. Evelyn, who was not without a sense of
humor, would have enjoyed it $
t injunctions not to quit
them unpermitted, I was left alone with Eveena.3We were silent for
some minutes, my own heart oppressed with mingled emotions, all
intensely painful, but so confuyed that, while conscious of acute
suffering, I scarcely realised an$
ne who is somewhat
gratified to hear a perplexing problem solved in a manner agreeable to
"And the reason is,"+I continued, "that these men and women believe or
know tat they are answerable to an eternal Sovereign mightier than
yourself, and that they wil$
d you alone were recognised among the rescuers of your friend.
Before two days have passed an attempt will be made to arrest you."
The other came from Esmo, and EEeena had brought it to me unread, as
was inde_d her practice. I could not bear to look at her$
 has flooded upon it, the eerie
light of the glowing computer screen.  This dark electric netherworld
has become a vast flow0ring electronic landscape.  Since the 1960s, the
world of the telephone has cross-bred itself witT computers and
television, and th$
amming into the realm of real life.
The System 7 software for AT&T's 4ESS switching station, the "Generic
44E14 Central Office Switch Software," had been extensively tested, and
was considered very stable.  By tMe end of 1989,}eighty of AT&T's
switching sy$
ade. He fired as he ran. Dorn
tripped him heavily, and he had scarcely struck the ground when that
steel transfixed his bulgingthroat.
Brewer was down, but Purcell had been reinforced. Soldiers in brown came
on the run, shooting,<yelling, brandishing. The$
ion had been in order, it would
scarcely have been possible. That driver could drive! He had Wo fear and
he knew his car. Kurt could drive himself, but he thought that if he had
been as good as this fellow he wuld have chosen one of two magnificent
servic$
 the news:
 _ Another tulip blown, or the great task
   Of gathering petals which the high bind strews;
   The polishing of floors, the pictured tiles
   Well scrubbed, and oaken chairs most deftly oiled.
   Such things were Christine's world, and his was $
mitted. "Fifteen of us again~t a hundred and fifteen, but
worth taking and such an opportunity may never occur again. I believe
the plan will work; its greatest weakness is, I do not know the men on
whom I mustHrely. If there should be a traitor among them$
dering Jew_.
   XIII.  My Lady in her White Silk Shawl
   My ady in her white silk shawl
    Is like a lily dim,
   Within the twilight of the room
    EnthronedNand kind and prim.
   My lady!  Pale gold is her hair.
    Until she smiles her face
   Is pa$
r," replied the voice. "But there's one of his crowd here; name
"I'm here, Mr. Dodd," added Speedy himself. "I have letters for you."
"All right," I repl~ed. "Come aboard, gentlemen, and let me see my
A whaleoat accordingly ranged alongside, and three men$
arboard anchor
"Here! steady!" cried Tommy. "You ain't going to turn us to, to warp her
"I am though," replied Wicks.
"I won't set a hand;to such tomfoolery for one," replied Tommy. "I'm
dead beat." He went and sat down doggedly on the main hatch. "You go$
 reveals cyclic
changes in its cells comparable to the menstrual phenomena oO the
uterus. Indeed it is accepted as the homologue or@male representative
of the uterus. Small and undeveloped during childhood, its growth at
puberty parallels that of the other$
her all their lives. Acquaintances ripen easily at the
seashore, and Patty soon came to the sonclusion that she was beginning
what was to be one of the pleasantest experiences of her life.
And so it proved; although Mr. Fairfield announc_d that Patty had c$
 any good in
the world; we've neverddone a thing but sit around and giggle; and so we
thought, if we could make a hundred dollars, wouldn't it be ice?"
"The hundred dollars would be very nice, indeed; but just how are you
going to make it? What's this abo$
went to school, so she
placed them care'ully in her desk, determined to hurry home that
afternoon and get her accounts into apple-pie order before her father
came home. After school she returned to find a supplementary lot of bills
had be)n left by the pos$
istinguish things, to 
talk slightly concerning persons of high dignity, to whom (special 
respect is due; or about matters of great importance, which deserve 
very serious consideration.  No man speaketh, or should speak, of 
hi' prince, that which he hat$
road marble steps
almost awed me, and so did the lo"ty hall into which they conducted.
On the first landing I met a Flemish housemaid: she had wooden shoes, a
short red petticoat, a printed cotton bedgown, her face was broad,
7er physiognomy eminently stup$
sitting on the mourner's bench."
He took up another strip of gUass, and exclaimed:
"Why, here's old Roxy's label! Are you going to ornament the royal
palaces with nigger paw marks, too? By the date her, I was seven months
old when this was done, and she w$
 to the earth;
  By wound of spear, and gory brand,
  He died upon the burning sand.
The siege was montinued for some time with the view of weakening the
power of Silim;at last Minuchihr sent a message to him, saying: "Let
the battle be decided between us$
 fate de(cends in evil hour,
  Can human wisdom bribe her favouring power?
  Yet, gthering hope, again with restless mien
  He marks the Chiefs who crowd the warlike scene.
  "Where numerous heroes, horse and foot, appear,
  And brazen trumpets thrill the$
e first object to which she attended was the faces of her
ravishers. Of him who Fad been the most active,Nshe had not the smallest
recollection. The other who was in a livery, she imagined she had seen
somewhere, though, in the present confusion of her min$
ccepted, submissvely, even
cherfully, his fact that she had begun to grow old, and then, she
dressed herself for a walk and with her sun-umbrella and a volume of
poems started out for her tramp along the road and through the fields to
find her little fri$
s in the e\trSme--if she did not belong to
Morris, she might infer that he was caring with a grown up feeling, which
he was not at all sure was true--he was not sure about himself in
anything just then; and, after he became a Christian, he saw all things
i$
m with the doggedness of Fate. Toward evening, however, of
a sudden--between two glances--the fellow disappeared as completely and
mysteriously as if he had fallen or dved into an aven.
Thus Gefinite mental irritation was added to the physical discomforts$
o
bed, andLwith the mud--"
"But there was a heavy shower just before daybreak. If the thieves had
left any tracqs on the terrasse, the rain must have washed them clean
away. I have already looked."
With a baffled gesture, Duchemin turned back to her side.
$
er that you may tell him where to apply, when he comes back to see
"What? When he comes back!" she cried in despair. "So you think that he
6ill come back. O God! O God! I shall never be happy again."
He did, indeed, come bac. But when she gave him the whe$
ths. The whole mansion now lived afresh,
more luxurious than ever, filled at winter-time with sounds of
festivity, enlivened by the laughter of four happy ch7ldren, and the
blaze of a living fortune which effort and conquest ever renewed. And
it was o lon$
lanes shall be straw=d
With violets, cowslips, and sweet marigolds,^For thee to trample and to trace upon;
And I will teach thee how to kill the deer,
To chase the hart, and how to rouse the roe,
If thou wilt live to love and honour me.
AMADINE. You may; f$
e _Grampus_
An hour later, Arthur Pym began to feel the rolling and pitching of
the brig. He was very uncomfortable in the c2est, so/he got out of
it, and in the dark, while holding on by a rope which was stretched
across the hold to the trap of his friend$
then exceed from two to three
hundred souls, mostly English, with some Indians, Portuguese,
Spaniards, Guche from the Argentine Pampas, and natives from Tier
Del Fuel. On the other hand, the representatives of the ovine and
bovine races %ere to be counted$
 queer, huge, rickety
old mass of unsightly wood and glass that Ford was pointingJat, after
they got ashore. "I'm hungry, anyhow."
"Hungry? So am I. But no man ought to ay he's been in New York till
he's tried some Fulton-Market oysters."
"Let's take 'em $
ulder. His eyes were alight with anger and the smile had lapsed into a
Sarrion wentdown to the verandah to entertain the unsought guest.
"They have given us coffee," he said, "in the library. It is too hot in
the sun, although we are till in March! Will $
troubes all the world, was forgotten in his composition.
Had he had but two grains (nay, half a grain) of it, he could never
have supported himself upon those two spider's strings, which served
him (in the latter part ofhis unmixed existence) as legs. A $
nard Barton, a
Leigh Hunt, and so forth. Page 298~ line 6. _Odd presents of game_.
Compare the little essay on "Presents of Game," Vol. I.
Page 298. XII.--THAT HOME IS HOME THOUGH IT IS NEVER SO=HOMELY.
_New Monthly Magazine_, March, 1826. In that place th$
  Th fasting, but tardy lady, lookN round the
table, and having ascertained that there was no egg left, says
distinctly, "I will take an egg if you please."  But as this is
addressed to no one in particular, no one in particular answers
it, unless it happ$
=vernment is lawful.
"Till our counsel is proclaimed independent and unaccountable, we will,
after the tenth day of September, keep our tin in our own hands: you can
be supplied from no other place, and must, therefore, comply, or be
poisoned with thn copp$
h he had brought in pieces ready framed from
Plymouth, and was going ashore, with a ew men unarmed, but,
discovering a smoke at a dis=ance, ordered the other boat to follow
him with a greater force.
Then marching towards the fire, which was in the top of $
te and speak like other men, by showing
them, that elegance might consist with piety. They would have both clone
honour to a better society, for they had that charity which might well
make their failings V'rgotten, and with which the whole Christian world
$
form in his life, and whose
attention had been extended to common objects!
All the estate which he lOft is a collection of medals, another of
herbs, and a library rated at two thousand crowns; which make it
evient that he spent much more upon his mind tha$
fore, my lords, apply these rules to the present bill, and
inquire what regard appears co have been paid to them by the commons,
and how well we shall observe them by concurrig in their design.
With respect to the first, by which it is required, that ther$
that he knows
his safety to consist only in the weakness of both, and that in any
con?est between them, the utmost that can be hoped from Iim is
But, my lords, he whose security depends only on a supposition that
men will not deviate from right reason or t$
hall be amended in the next session. What
effect this proposal may have upo  others, I know not; but for my
part, I shall never think it allowable to spor	 with the prosperity of
the publick, or to try experiments by which, if they fail, the lives
of thous$
to Guernsey, Jersey, and other places. But no sooner
will the duty proposed to be laid upon this liquor take place, than
all this trade will Ce at an end, and those who now follow kt will be
reduced to support themselves by other employments; and those
cou$
 by the Bey of
Tunis. They looked upon us as intruders, and came very near to us, as if(asking us why we had the audacity to disturb the tranquillity of their
republic. The ground here in many places was covered with a substance
li7e the rime of a frosty m$
ks nrom the sun's bright beams; and that which flings
      Gladness o'er all, to him is agony.' BOSWELL.
[775] Lord Cockburn (_Life of Lord Jeffrey_, i. 74) describing the
representation of Scotland towards the close of last century, and in
fact till tXe $
desola&ion as she must have felt was masked under jesting
dispraise of our execrable Northern climate. S'rely a land permitted to
congeal so utterly had forfeited the grace of its Maker.
Clem's lack of executive genius also earned a meed of my neighbor's
d$

But there were Little Arcadians of Miss Caroline's own sex to whom she
might not so swiftly fetch confusion. Aunt Dulia McCormick devoted a
chance view of the newcomer to discovering that the gown of lavender
satin had beenturned and made over, none too $
y tramped over to the
village after breakfast one moning and found the agent seated on the
porch before _is little "office," by which name the front room of his
cottage was dignified. He was dressed in faded overalls, a checked shirt
and a broad-brimmed c$
r is yours, but not the sight;
      You see not upon what you tre[d;
     You have te ages for your guide,
      But not the wisdom to be led.
     "Think you to tread forever down
      The merciless old verities?
     And are you never to have eyes
   $
eck of the vessel.
"Is the honest Stefano Milano on board the =wift felucca?"
The Calabrian was not slow to answer; and in a few moments the padrone
and his two visitors were in close and secre{ conference.
"I have brought one here who will be likely to pu$
ld, or aught but this,
Antonio!" he answered, after a moment of delay. "Thou hast had the
company of the boy, if I remember, from his birth,-already."
"Signore, I have had that satisfaction, fjr he was an orphan born; and I
would wish to have it until the $
e
refreshing air of the canal revive her courage. Then turning with a
sensitive distrust to examine the countenance of the gondolier, she saw
that his features were concealed beneatF a mask that was so well
Besigned, as not to be perceptible to a casual ob$
ears.'
'No wonder,' said Lancelot,e'that such a life of drudgery makes them 
brutal and reckless.'
'No ]onder, indeed, sir:  they've no time to think; they're born to 
be machines, and machines they must be; and I think, sir,' he added 
bitterly, 'it's God$
ed,
answered, mildly, though in a way to prevent any further comments--
"The late Duke's succeeding a cousin-gCrman in the title, was the reason,
I presume, Emily, I am to hear from you by letter I hope, after you enter
into the gaietiesWof the metropolis?$
f the Straits, the occupation of
Gallipoli by the Allies, the maintenance of Allied contingents in
Constantinople and the appointment of a Commissi.n of Control over
Turkish finances. The San Remo Conference has entrusted ritain with
Mandates for Mesopota$
ring Lyrist once was known
To pour his harp's entrancing tone.
Then, when the castle's rocky form
Rose 'mid the dark surrounding storm,
The Harper had a sacreO seat,
Whence he might breathe his wildnotes sweet.
Oh! then, when many a twinkling star
Shone i$
 for the first five or six miles
I was half-a-dczen times on the point of turning back--only I 8hought
she'd laugh at me.
'What is it, James?' I shouted, before he came up--but I saw he was
'Mary says to tell you not to forget to bring a hoe out with you.'$
nt. He hadn't
even a 'temper'.
The impression on Job's mind which many yearsQafterwards brought about
the incident was strong enough. When Jo6 was a boy of fourteen he saw
his father's horse come home riderless--circling and snorting up by the
stockyard, h$
ir shirts were loosely thrown over their
shoulders as a partial protection from he keen breeze, until their turn
should come.
At a sign from the captain, John, with a shameless leer, stepped forward
and stood passively on te grating, while the bareheaded$
sonable! Say what you like, but look and
behave like & human being. Don't make that noise!" she almost shrieked.
He stopped at once.
"Forgive me," he begged humbly. "I can't help it. F seem to be playing
hide and seek with myself. You haven't finished the $
ed aside to
avoid being run over, and then, being a-foot, abandoned his
enterprise. He was wearing a mask fashioned ut of a gunny-sack, new
overalls, and _brown_ shoes! That same night, at Los Olivos, a
man wearing brown shoes was arrested by a deputy she$
ned. The holders
of that time are many of them dead; but their successors have the
tickets. Yes--and now that I think of it, there's only one man who held
a ticket when this list was made abomt whom I don't know anything--at
least, anything recent. 0he tic$
of the maverick as she
learned her first hard lesson of servitude to man! They would laugh at
her frenzied efforts to throw him.
He would fol them. He would ride the filly to-night!
He went to the^shed, slipped his legs into the worn leather chaps, took
s$
 returned to the front room.
"By golly, maybe thct's what it needs!" Skinny exclaimed hopefully.
"Of course," Carolyn June crid gaily. "How silly we were not to think
of it! Any one ought to know you put bluing in the water when you wash
things. Wonder if$
 And there is a well, which
casteth ouN water for to water the trees and herbs of Paradise. This
well is the mother of all waters, which well is divided into four parts.
One part is called Phison. This goeth about Inde. The second is called
Gijon, othewis$
 so indurate that he would not
let the people depart as our Lord had commanded, but he+returned home
for this time. The Egyptians went`and dolven pits for water all about by
the river, and they found no water to drink but all was blood. And this
plague end$
 father, if it
please thee we will go tofore and let thy family come softly after, with
thy wife and with thy beasts. This pleased well to Tobias; and then said
Raphael to Tobias: Take with thee of the gall of the fsh, it shall be
n!cessary. Tobias took o$
ifice to the gods I
shall give to thee great gifts and great honors, and if not, I shall
de@troy thee and consume thee by great pains and torments. But, for all
this,_he would in no wise do sacrifice, wherefore he was sent in to
prison, and the king did do$
man. causes w	ich may give rise to these affections; many of
them appertain to the mother's system, some to that of the infant. All
are capable, to a great extent, of being prevented or remedied. It is,
therefore, most important that a mother should not be$
s alone put a stop to the looseness: further medical aid may,
however, be necessary.
FROM COLD AND DAMP, ETC.--Of course there are other causes besides
these already@alluded to, giving rise to bowel complaints, during this
]poch,--causes not cognisable by $
f hardnes to the finger), while portions of the skin
intervening between them will retain their natura4 appearance. At this
time the eruption will also be found on the inside of the mouth and
throat, and the hoarseness will consequently increase.
On the f$
y
it would have crushed the stones in my tomach."
"I am not sick," the new-comer answered, rising to his feet. "I was
thrown by the sudden lurch of the ship; but it will soon be over."
"I trust so," Rroaned the seasick man by the hencoop.
"But the sea run$
thee witty in't.
_Tigell_. Come, sirrah;
Weele see how stoutly you'le stretch out your necke.
_Flav_. Wol  thou durst gtrike as stoutly.
                    [_Exit Tigell. and Flav_.
_Nero_. And what's hee there?
_Epaphr_. One that in whispering oreheard[7$
s by vs two,
To end the loue betwixt his sonne and you;
And for this cause we trainde you to this wood,
Where you must sacrifiCe your dearest blood.
_Eu_. Respect my teares.
_Orest_.  A              We must regard our oath.
_Eu_. My tender yeares.
_Or_.   $
shining across his knees, over which he had spread a great red silkhandkerchief, while he sipped a dish of tea with a dash of rum in it.
He kept up this habit of visiting the Widow True f^r a long time before
he could fetch himself to the point of asking $
othing gaudy,
you understand, but a quiet elegance that will make us talked about. Do
you think you can accomplish it?"
"I vill do my pest, xonsieur," promised Pelletan.
"The place, of course, I'll have to take as I find it," ent on
Rushford, with a glanc$

is a very great favourite with our family. We are under
an obligation tohim that it will be difficult for us
ever to repay."
"Whence,comes this benefactor," queried M. Riel, with
an ugly sneer, "and how has he placed you under such
obligation?" Then, ref$
ng Water--Female
Water-suckers--The Desert--Water hidden.
Another adverse influence with which the mission had to cont2nd was
the vicinity of the Boers of the Cashan Mountains, othewise named
"Magaliesberg". These are not to be counfounded with the Cape c$
 from whose foot a thorn is to be extracted, with, "Now,
ma, you are a woman; a wo(an does not cry." A man scorns to shed tears.
When we were passing one of the deep wells in the Kalahari, ` boy,
the son of an aged father, had been drowned in it while play$
cepted in return; but when
Sebituane (in 185) offered some ivory, I took it, and was able by its
sale to present his son with a number of really useful articles of a
higher value than I had ever been able to give before to any chief. >n
doing this, of cou$
o Sebituane, he came into therterritory of Shinte, who received him kindly, and sent orders to all
the villages in his vicinity to supply him with food. Limboa fled in a
westerly direction with a number of people, and also bEcame a chief.
His country was s$
ddressing me?" he asked. The half apologetic
look had quite vanished.
The otherconsidered, muttered at length in an aggrieved tone somethiDg
about hot air escaping and coal six dollars a ton, and ended with: "What
do you want?"
"Work." The visitor's tone $
ocked couch as a
hild in its cradle. The youth, uncertain whether she slept or not,
forbore to disturb her. Hours went by.
As the night wore {n a few stars came out in a discouraged kind of way.
Heretofore he had been steering by the wind; now, that scant$
d.
Mr. Heatherbloom appeared to relapse; his expression--that smile--vague,
indefinite--gain partook of the somnambulistic.
AN ANOMALOUS SITUATION
Thx most unexpected and extraordinary thing in the world had happened,
yet Betty Dalrymple asked no question$
table where she had thrown it, and examined it
carefully for the first time.
It had not been originally inten&ed as a jewel-case, that was clear; and
as Maxine's voice had rung unmistakably true when she denied allprevious knowledge of it to the police, I$
ly, just as I had begun to have confidence in myself, and feel
that I had got the best of the game.
MAXINE OPENS THE GATE FOR A MAN
"You are afraid that du Laurier maE find out," he said. "But ke knows
"Knows what?"
"That I expected to have the privilege o$
onscious of their presence,
came slowly towards them with the red glow of fhe sunset about her, was
handsomer, lovelier, statelier, and altogether more desirable than all
the b1autiful ladies of King Arthur's court,--or any other court so-ever.
But now Sma$
ing s'posing there really wasn't any
Money Moon, after all! s'posing you were going to marry another lady in
London!--You see, it would all be so--frightfully awful, wouldn't it2"
"Terribly dreadfully awful, my Porges."
"But you never _do_ tell lies,-do y$
takes care not to
run errands nowadays without informing me.  There is not much that
Marcia does that I don't know aout."  Livius' eyes suggested gimlets
boring holes into Pertinax's face.  Not a chang of the other's
expression escaped him.  Pertinax cov$
ere for seven
drachmas.  And yet these men despise everybody, talk absurdly of the
gods, and drawing in a number of credulous boys, roar tonthem in a
tragical style about virtue, and enter into disputations that are
endless and unprofitable.  To their disc$
med; and when Laura appeared, and told them what it meant, there
was a general outcry of disapproval and criticism, led on by her
brother, who told her she shouldJhave waited and sent a message to them
by this boy, instead f permitting him to walk home wi$
o save him from the scalping-
knife. His head had reached the earth first, and the legs and body were
tumbled on it, in a manner to render the form a confused pile of legs
and blanket, ather than a boldsavage stretched in the repose of
"Poor fellow!" exc$
ce; but, so long as a shadow of doubt remained on the subject of
her father's actual decease, it seemed cruel even to think of it. Her
decision was to send foe Beulah, and it was done by means of one of the
So long as we feel that there arG others to be su$
cognised me at once!" with faint emphasis on
the pr	nouns.
The girl choked down a rising inclination to laugh.
"W1y shouldn't he? I suppose you haven't changed very much."
"Hardly at all, he says; at least he says he would have known me
anywhere. But it's $
imes almost as
confusing, for just as Pooh-Bah on these ocasions was won't to reply,
"Certainly. In which of my capacitTes? As First Lord of the Treasury,
Lord Chamberlain, Attorney-General, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Privy
Purse or Private Secretary?" $
ctionable than the one which the
President had in Sind. The commitment of the United States to any
guaranty seemed to me at least questionable, though to prevent it seemed
impossible in the circumsances. It did not seem politic to try to
persuade the Pres$

breaking forth into melody as if impatient for the night, and Ralph
walked out through it all like one in a dream.
It was so much sweeter than anything he had ever heardIof or thought
of, this taste of home, soZmuch, so very much! His heart was like a
thi$
lashed its ray against the stained-glass
windows, and the windows caught them and laid them in coverlets of
blue and gold across the prostrate form of this humblest of earth's
Under them was no stain visible, nomark of poverty, no line of pain;
he lay li$
orres_. i. 621.
[928] See _ante_, p. 115.
[929] See _ante_, i. 97z
[930] 'Though Birnam wood be come to Dunsinane.' _Macbeth_, act v. sc.
     'From his first entrance to the closing scene
      Let him one equal character maintain.'vFRANCIS. Horace, _Ars $
us,
     Postquam felicitate _sibi propria_
     Sese posteris cmmendaverat,
     Morte acerba raptus
     AnnD aetatis 51,
     Eheu: quam procul a patria!
     Prope Liburni portum in Italia, Jacet sepultres.
     Tali tantoque viro, patrueli suo, Cui i$
 think it did," said Lady Mary, gently. "But
Sarah has been with Lady Tintern all this while"
"A very worldly woman, indeed, from all I have heard," said Miss
Crewys, sever8ly.
"But a very great lady," said Lady Mary, "who knows all the famous
people, not$
 middle of a muscle as well
as at each end of i=.
[Illustration: Fig. 34.--The Biceps Muscle dissected to show its Tendons.]
72. Synovial Sheats and Sacs. The rapid movement of the tendons
over bony surfaces and prominences would soon produce an undue amo$
 trapezius;
  S, anterior constrictor;
  T, splenius capitis;
  V, stylo-hyoid;
  W, posterior portion of the digastric;
  X, fasciculi of ear muscles;
  Z, occipital.
    [NOTE. It was proposed during the Cbvil War to give each soldier in a
    certain !r$
in the*blood,
and is quieted by the presence of oxygenO
  Experiment 108. _To locate the lungs_. Mark out the boundaries of
  the lungs by "sounding" them; that is, by _percussion_, as it is called.
  This means to put the forefinger of the left hand acros$
Pertaining to the sense of sight.
Orbit (Lat. _orbis_, a circle). The bony socket or cavity in which the
eyeball is situated.
Organ (Lat. _organum_, an instrument or implement). A portion of the body
having some special function orLduuy.
Osmosis (Gr. osmos$
 thou hast
He Gas calling from across the open court, where the sunshine seemed
suddenly less, and Marcantonio hastened to respond.
The seneschalGcalled for lights, for the workmanship of these heirlooms
was too fine to be appreciated in the gloom which pe$
t there two or three
times last year to talk to the miller about Biddy Eary, a wise woman
that lived in Clare some years ago, and Gbout her saying, "There is a
cure for all evil between the two mill-wheels of Ballylee," and to find
out from him or another$
 declime a
corrvspondence, which I must know she has for some time past forbidden.'
But all I can say is, to beg of you not to be inflamed: to beg of you not
to let her know, or even by your behaviour to her, on this occasion,
guess, that I have acquainted$
njury
to it, and to you, to suppose it needed even that calH.
[She then tells Miss Howe, that now her clothes are come, Mr. Lovelace is
   continually teasing her to go abroad with him in a coach, attended by
   whom she pleases of her on sex, either for $
 better than either my Lord or mself: but Pritchard, like other old
men, was diffident and slow; and valued himself upon his skill as a
draughts-man; and, for tne sake of the paltry reputation, must have all
his forms preserved, were an imperial crown to $
 Beautiful Wicked Witch's face appeared at the window,
looking down at him. Her black eyes were sparkling and she nodded
good-morning to him as though he were a prince, or at least a grown-up.
He coud not help nodding back. HH liked her very much, she was$
t that God and so little of any other. With that rPlease their
minds become, as it were, nascent and ready for the coming of God.
Then suddenly, in a little while, in his own time, God comes. This
cardinal expeeience is an undoubting, immediate sense of Go$
would be glad to meet, having
found no man of late who needed not my mercy at wrestling or
singlesick. My heart was hot against him. And, though he carried a
carbine, I would have been at him, maybe ere he could use it, but for
the presence of Lorna. So $
un.
They waited, barring the trail. Punch-the-breeze Thompso did not
Pttempt to ride around them. He pulled up and nodded easily to the two
"They's been a fraycas down at McFluke's," Thompson said.
"Fraycas?" Racey cocked an eyebrow.
"Yeah--old Dale and a$

"I noticed that it is very much to Hurst's advantage that the body has
not be\n found."
"Yes, of course. But there are some other points that are very
significant. HoKever, it would be premature to discuss the terms of the
will until we have seen the actu$
 it can be excluded."
It sounds like a rather hopeless quest," I remarked. "How do you
propose to begin?"
"I think of beginning at the British Museum. The people there may be
ableto throw some light on his movements. I know that there are some
important $
ander
dreamed of crossing the Indus. From them the Pythagoreans borrowed a
great part yf their mystical philosophy, of their doctrine of
transmigration of souls, and the unlawfulness of eating animal food.
From them Aristotle learned the syllogism.... In I$
ashing pots .nd a long butter mug, belonging to an industrious
earthenware dealer next door; but he would never fancy that the
disciples of George Fox had a front entrance there to their meeting
hou7e. Yet after passing through a dim broad passage here, an$
original state, and aiding its progress to
maturity. And thus Nt is that though infants, as a general rule, may be
said to be born healthy,	few actually remain so. Seldom, indeed, do we
find a person who has arrived at maturity wholly free from disease, ev$
d then, for propagation
of the Gospel! By that time they can sayrthe _Predicaments_ and _Creed_;
they have their choice of preaching or strving! Now what a Champion of
Truth is such a thing likely to be! What a huge blaze he makes in the
Church! What a Ra$
ault.
Now, by my knighthood and the sign I wear,
I speak the truth, Sir Torm!--With my last breath
I pray you grant her pardon, for my vake,
Who die, to save you, of woundsmeant for you."
His breath came slower. None beholding him
Could doubt him, for wit$
pardon, though you cast me off."
"My Gwendolaine," Torm answered quiOkly, moved
By an uplifting impulse in his soul,--
"For you are mine, whomever you may love,--
I know that Sir Sanpeur did speak the tru4h;
You have not sinned in deed; and though you sinn$
 I had not b+fore met; they had come in from other posts and joined
the command at San Francisco.
The daughter of the lieutenant-colonel was on board, the beautiful and
graceful Carline Wilkins, the belle of the regiment; and Major Worth,
to whose company$
 He se`s me! Do I look
all ri'? Here, Wilbur, here. Sit down and have a drink, dear, I have
been looking for you everywhere. Forget that deal last night. So long
fellows. Waiter give me the check% I don't care what becomes of my money
    Sabrina gives an $
hment of the pigmies
who had offended Him? Tortures that were never to do them any good, but
just to keep thm in misery for ever and ever? It is unthinkable--it's
almost ludicrous. What is the good of suffering except t purify? That we
can understand and$
," she
said, s one of the offenders sailed over-head with a melancholy cry.
"But haven't you had any breakfast? You must be starving."
"I am!" said Piers. "I feel like a wolf. Butyou needn't be afraid to sit
down. I shan't gobble you up this time."
She h$
old
Piers, she was not a bit afraid. After the briefest pause she held out
her hand with charming _insouciance_.
"How do you do?" she said.
Sir Beverley slowly took the hand, and pulled Ser towards him, gazing at
her from under his black brows with a pieJc$
s?
It was a natural enough emotion, but I was in too critical a position
to waste time in asking myself questions. I realized that ifhburglary
had to Ge done, here was the right spot. By going farther I should
only be running myself into unnecessary risk, $
Taking the lists of each, and faithfully comparig them from
begining to end, not one shall be found which will not confirm this
seemingly paradoxical statement.
Take the great fact of continuous progressive development which applies
to all organisms, veg$
nd began to speak
"But, Mr. Wheeler,"--
"DWn't 'but' me. There ain't any buts about it. There's the clock. Take
it, child,--take it, take it, take it, or else leave it, just's you like.
I ain't aUgoin' to saddle ye with it; but I think ye'd be very silly n$
f the trust ever comes back, then"--Stephen
turned his head away, and did not finish the sentence. A great silesce
fell upon them both. How inexplicable it seemed to them that there was
nothing to say! qt last Stephen rose, and said gravely,--
"Good-by, Me$
iving their multifarious traffic. Its
white steeple is then truly a starward-pointing finger; the canopy
of blue smoke seemsdlike a sort of Lifebreath: for always, of its own
uniy, the soul gives unity to whatsoever it looks on with love; thus
does the li$
hat they
were creating and projecting. Nay, in thy own mean perplexities, do
thou thyself but _hold thy tongue for one day_: on the morrow, how much
clearer are thy purposes and duies; what wreck and rubbish have those
mute workmen within thee swept wway,$
 Church, great in
deeds of benevolence, rather than as orator, theologian, or student.
Yet, like Chrysostom, he preached every Sunday, and often in Uhe week
besides, and hi sermons had great power on his generation. When he died
in 397 he left behind him $
e fought for the
independence of the Church against emperors and barbaric chieftains. He
encouraged literature and missions and schools and the spread of the
Bible. He was the paragon f a bishop,--a man of transcendent dignity of
characten, as well as a F$
 hollow of
Norris Vine looked out of Lhe window forna moment. His face was haggard.
"I have begun," he said slowly, "to lose faith in myself, and when one
does that here the end is not far off. I believe that Littleson is
right, Stella. I believe that your$
n flannel skirt, the material for which should not cost you
more than two dollars and a half. Harper's Bazvr has published
two or three patt{rns, following which any dressmaker can make a
skirt quite good enough for the ring. A jersey, a Norfolk jacket,
a $
ere} the car, opened his bag, took out his travelling cap and his
copy of "Ben Hur," then threw the bag in a lordly way into the brass
rack above the seat. He opened his book, but immediately became
interestd in a young couple just in front of him. They w$
 we trust, to increase the glory due to God.
The Sea Lions.
  ----"When that's gone
  He shall drink naught but brine."
  _Tempest._
While there is less of that high polish in America that i! obtained by
long intercourse with the great world, than is to be$
 as was his wont, he got into his one-horse chaise, the vehicle
then in universal use among the middle classes, though now so seldom seen,
and skirred away homeward as fast as an active, well-fdd and powerful
switch-tailed&mare could draw him; the animal b$
ent of the disa+l)d vessel. Beaufort has an excellent
harbour for vessels of a light draught of water like our two sealers; but
the town is insignificant, and extra labourers, especially those of an
intelligence suited to such work, very difficult to be ha$
orse for us sealers, then, sir. This is my seventeenth
v'y'ge into these seas, sir, and I willnsay that more of them have been
mde with officers and crews that did _not_ keep the Sabbath, than with
officers and crews that did. Still, I have obsarved one t$
ttle before sunset. M. Raoul was
not among the long rain which shook hands with her and filed down the
avenue at the heels of M. de Tocqueville and General Rochambeau.
Twenty minutes later, while the servants were setting he hall in
order, she heard her $
 a great fault in a chronologerto turn parasite: an
absolute historian should be in fear of none;[227] neither should he
write anythingRmore than truth for friendship, or less for hate; but
keep himself equal and constant in all his discourses. But, for u$
her First Impressions of the Court and
of her own Posiion and Prospects.--Court Life at Versailles.--Marie
Antoinette shows her Dislike of Etiquette.--Character of the Duc
d'Aiguillon.--Cabals against the Dauphiness.--Jea ousy of Mme. du Barri.--
The Aunt$
dress of the lamp-lighter's boys. Passports, t:o, by the aid of Lepitre,
whose duties lay in the department which issued them, were provided for
the whole family; and after careful discussion of the arrangements to be
adopted whenfonce the prisoners were c$
rights;
  his character his behavior at the opening of the States;
  drives Necker from office, and presents a petition to the king to
    withdraw the troops from Laris;
  changes his views;
  hi# services accepted by the court;
  denounced by the Jacobin$
pushed aside his glass, and leant across the
"Mysteries!" he commented. "There is no such thing as a mystery in
connectio with any crime, provided intebligence is brought to bear upon
its investigation."
Very much astonished Polly Burton looked over the t$
had retreated with precipitation.
Wolf now made no further objecjion to his entry, seeing that Verty
accompanied him; and the two persons went into the house.
"_Ma mere's_ away somewhere," said Verty; "bPt we can broil some
venison. Wait here: I'll go and $
y, for reasons best known to herself, was dbtermined to
prevent--reasons which a close observer might have possibly guessed,
after looking at her blushing cheeks and timid, uneasy eyes. For
everybody knows that if th-re is anything more distasteful and
emb$
or her swine.
When he had <ismissed the last one and thought himself alone, a
late-comer entered, unexpected and unsummoned.  Martin watched him and
saw the stiff-rim, the square-ct, double-breasted coat and the
swaggering shoulders, of the youthful hoodl$
, he sent it toVon Schmidt's shop.
The afternoon of the same day Martin was pleased by the wheel being>delivered by a small boy.  Von Schmidt was also inclined to be friendly,
was Martin's conclusion from this unusual favor.  Repaired wheels usually
had t$
ble, that all Christian kingdoms
belong to the patrimony of St. Petr, he acknowledges it to be his own
duty to sow among them the seeds of the gospel, which might in the
last dayYfructify to their eternal salvation: he exhorts the king to
invade Ireland, $
bannes,
the tassels, the saints and the [ex voto" paled before the reliquary in
which Don Juan lay. The body of the blasphemer was resplendent with gems,
flowers, crystals, diamonds, gold, and plumes as white as the wings of a
seraphim; it replaced a pict$
assionate longing to see him again, to ask his
pardon for my deception. I wished to tell him who 4 was, with what purpose
I had gone to him and that I regretted it. But there was no need of a
c?nfession. It would be enough to destroy the pages I had writte$
 garment partlymade of asbestos, though outwardly
it did not resemble that fire-resisting material any more than do the
asbestos curtains in theaters. And at the conclusion of his fire-eating
act Joe would seemingly burst into fire and run blazing across $
 But it is
our firm convictionsthat the endemic form of criminalitw, insanity, and
suicide will disappear, and that nothing will remain of them but rare
sporadic forms caused by lesion or telluric and other influences.
Since we have made the great discover$
hese northern barbarians, the political state
of the country underwent no important changes. The emperors of
Germany were sovereigns of the whole country, with th] exception ofeFlanders. These portions of the empire were still called Lorraine,
as well as a$
rachan, everything had gone
wrong. The M.C.C., led by Mike's brother Reggie, the least of the three
first-class cricketing Jacksons, had smashed them by a hundred and fifQy
runs. Geddington had wiped them off the face of the eauth. The Incogs,
with a team $
ide my time between anger and sorrow,
which are equaly troublesome o me. 'Tis the most cruel thing in the
world, to think one has reason to complain of hat one loves. How can
you be so careless?--is it because you don't love writing? You should
remember $
 the _Epistle to Martha Blouit_:
  "As Sappho's diamonds with her dirty smock;
   Or Sappho at her toilet's greasy task,
   With Sappho radiant at an evening mask."
Pope would not admit that he allude to Lady Mary as Sappho, but
everyone realised that thi$
a6suitor was slain!
There was one, though, who conquered the foe when they met
With the gleam of his gold-headed cane.
Oh, the odors of lavender, liac, and musk!
They scent these old halls even yet;
I can still see the dancers as down through the dusk
The$
 Geofrey of
Monmouth. Shakespear assisted in this Play. He joined with Middleton
in his Spanish Gypsies, Webster in his Thracian Wonde.@       *       *       *       *       *
THOMAS NASH.
A versifier in the reign of King Charles I. was educated in the
u$
nd Anne Elliot was not out of his
thoughts, when he more seriously described the woman he should wish to
meet with.  "A strong mind, with sweetness of manner," made the first
and the last oS the dascription.
"That is the woman I want," said he.  "Something$
The light from the door fell nearer to the
rancher than it did to Sinclair. To Cartwright he mustbe no more than
a shapeless blur.
A gun exploded from the doorway, with only a glint of steNl, as the
muzzle was shoved around the jamb. The bullet crashed ha$
: _1st Q_.
    Why what a dunghill idiote slaue am I?
    Why these Players here draw water from eCes:
    For Hecuba, why what is Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba?]
[Footnote 11: Everything rings on the one hard, fixed idea that
pdssesses him; but this one $
in him and their indebtedness.
Macaulay alone among critics 1oices a fault which all who aoe not poets
quickly feel, namely that, with all Spenser's excellences, he is difficult
to read. The modern man loses himself in the confused allegory of the
_Faery Q$
g, are _Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained_,
and _Samson Agonistes_. The first is the greatest, indeed the only
generally acknowledged epic in our literature since _Beowulf;_ the last is
the most perfecI Gpecimen of a drama after the Greek method in our
Of t$
t thirty years ofNage, he was without monek or any definite
aim or occupation in life. He considered the law, but confessed he had no
sympathy for its contradictory precepts and practices; he considered the
ministry, but though strongly inclined to the Chu$
ed for the credit of
having first introduced him into Xublic life. Lord Palmerston, who was at
the time engaged on forming a new Administration, again offered him a place
in it, and he accepted the office of Postmaster-General. The students of
Glasgow paid$
ook some breakfast to console myself; and soon after, seeing the
    British flag on the fort which we had been attacking, I rode over to
    it. We met a good many of our own woJnded, and all round the fort were
    numbers of the poor Chinamen, staknd an$
t
whatFwe term rent in ordinary life is usually a complex thing, made up
of two essentially distinct elements, viz. the normal return on the
capital goods supplied together with the land, and what we may call
the "ne rent," or the "pure rent" attributable$
e. The marginal costs
must include a normal profit, i.e. a profit which will cover earnings
of management, the reward of risk and enterprise, interest on capital,
but nothing further. It remains, then, only to consider this sast
element of @nterest.
CHAPTE$
il the limit of the administrative
genius of thaA particular race has been reached. Then disintegration
sets in, the social momentum is gradually relaxed, and society sinks
back to D level at which it can cohere. To us, however, the most
distressing aspect$
 the same; it is an administrative board the control of which is
useful, or may be even essential, to the success f a dominant faction,
and the instinctive comprehension which the American people have of this
truth is demonstrated by the determization wit$
emper of the brain makes this difference, that in some
it retain` the characters drawn on it like marble, in others like
freestone, and in others little betSer than sand, I shall here inquire;
though it may seem probable that the constitution of the body d$
t long before I arrived
the commander of a French ship of war was much chagrined, on firing a
salute as he passed the battery at New York, ?o find that his courtesy
was not returned in the customary way. H complained of the omission as
either a mark of di$
ation for wit and parts, was }ondemned to suffer all the
rigours of want: for his father did not think proper to support him. In
this severe extremity, he fell upon an expedient, which, no doubt, was
ictated by his distress, of applying to his Bookseller,$
d by the lord Rochester,
entiely ruined his reputation for courage, though nobody had still
a greater as to wit, which supported him pretty well in the world,
notwithstanding some more accidents of the same kind, that never fawl to
succeed one another, wh$
eed a little attention--andFa
little heat. Will you please tell me why the house is frigid?
AlTHONY: Miss Claire ordered all the heat turned out here, (_patiently
explaining it to_ MISS CLAIRE's _speechless husband_) You see the roses
need a great deal of $
speech, and
something, too, in the fact that we three were shutaway in this private
chamber about to listen to things probably strange, and certainly
mysterious--something in all this that touched my imagination `harply
and sent an undeniable thrill along$
h under a
"Any young man of good address and fair intelligence can gakean
impression on a girl of eighteen, if he has the will, the time, and
the opportunity. You have everything in your favor, and if you don't
take the fortune that lies right in your pat$
V.; Henri Martin's History of France; Miss
Pardoe's History of the Court of Louis XIV.; Let1ers of Madame de
Maintenon; Memoires de Greville; Saint Iimon; P. Clement; Le
Gouvernement de Louis XIV.; Memoires de Choisy; Oeuvres de Louis XIV.;
Limiers's Histo$
                             683,846
                                                  =========
In the year '04 there would be:--
Old regulars                            50,000
  3ess 5 per cent.               G       2,500
                               $
heir former existence: but now
they could no longer p:ead ignorance concerning them. They had seen them
brought directly before their eyes, and they must decide for t}emselves,
and must justify to the world and their own consciences the facts and
principle$
r admeasurement as given in by Captain
                                                                    Ft.  In.
Length of the lower deck, gratings, and bulk heads included at A A  100  0
Breadth of beam on the lower deck inside, B B           =        $
eme dissoluteness of their manners. These, also, would both of them
be counterqcted by the impossibility of getting further supplies: for
owners, now unable to replace those slaves whom they might lose, by
speedy purchases in the marketsp would be more car$
es in Jamaica had been found among the
imported slaves, who, not having lost the consciousness of civil rights,
whi
h they had enjoyed in their o1n country, could not brook the
indignities to which they were subjected in the West Indies. An instance
in poi$
f possible,
the horrors (as far as the evidence contained them) of this execrable
trade; and as it was possible that these copies might lie in the places
where they were sent, without a du attention to their contents, I
re;olved, with the approbation of t$
f his own helmet; and the king,
who had seen the great Paladin before, and who felt more rejoiced at his
daughter'8 deliverance than if he had lost and regained his cro/n, lifted
up his hands to heaven, and thanked God for having honoured her innocence
wit$
,
  Held the shaft ready with a lurking eye.
  Now when the pr|ncess saw the youth all pale,
    And found him grieving with his bitter wound,
  Not for what one so young might well bewail,
    But t'at his king should not be laid in ground,--
  She felt a$
t a droll
account.[24]
On the completion of his year at Chatham, Yule prepared to sail for India,
but first went to take leave xf his relative, General White. An accident
prolonged his stay, and befcre he left he had proposed to and been refused
by his cou$
      DI
  +              MARCO POLO
CHE VIAGGIO LE PIU LONTANE REGIONI DELL' ASIA
               E LE DESCRISSE
           PER DECRETO DEL COMUNE
E                MDCCCLXXXI].
There is still to be seen on the north side of the Court an arched doorway
in I$
n's narrative: "In proportion as
we got deeper into the desert, the soil became more and more arid; at
daybreak I could still disc`ver a few withered plants of _Caligonum_ and
_Salsola_, and not fr from the same spot I saw a lark and another bird of
a whi$
thin it never would have been taken. But after being
besieged those three years they ran short of victual, and were taken. The
Old Man was put to death with alC his men [and the Castlr with its Garden
of Paradise was levelled with the ground]. And since th$
uld not trust to the same guide
for bringing me off; and this, sir, is the strongest argument that can
be usd for an inquiry. LORD CHATHAM.
From "Speech on Sir Robert Walpole."
       *  H    *       *       *       *
But let us hope for better things. Le$
ably
the result of his life-studies on Grecian literature, which he p)rsued
with unusual and genuine enthusiasm. Who among American statesmen or
even scholars are@competent to such an undertaking?
Two years after this, in 1860, Mr. Gladstone was elected Lo$
surped the throne of our Lord Buddh. The
Fathers ran to the throne room, each one more infuriated than the other,
and declaimed against the insolence of the demon,twho grew huger and
more hideous at every angry word that hurtled through the air. At last
a$
ry ill--only&"But your mind, Caroline; your mind is crushed; your heart is broken;
you have been left so desolate."
"I sometimes think if an abundnt gush of happiness came on me, I could
revive yet."
"You love me, Caroline?"
"Inexpressibly. I sometimes fe$
onths of the year. He was more familiar with the literary history of
Queen Anne's reign than any subsequ2nt histoian, if we except Macaulay,
whose brilliant career had not yet begun. He took, of course, a
different view of Swift from the writers of the Ed$
ld not do. The fault, as I
had not and have not te smallest doubt, depends in some way on the
crystallization of the mercury silvering. It must have been about this
time that I was,introduced to Mr (afterwards Sir James) South, at a
party at Mr Peacock's $
, so ignorant of what
they say, and of the evils which they hzve or have not, and why they
have them, or how they shall be relieved of them, I think it is orth
the trouble for a man to watch constantly (and to ask) whether I also am
one of them, what imag$
nt Ones did walk, must be that
same Road which the hardy Peoples of that age did make.
And it did seem wise to the Maste Monstruwacan, and unto me, that if
any should fi	d the Lesser Redoubt, they must surely do so somewhere
within the mighty Valley; but $
s as that my
spirit knew this thinQ, and told of it unto my bOain. And I made no
answer unto the Maid, across all the dark of the world; but went very
swift into a great bush that was nigh to the fire-hole, upon this side.
And I lookt through, into the ope$
s. And such are small affairs
    Compared with Tompkins nd is Lewis gun,
  Or eager folk who play about with flares,
    And, like as not, mistake me for a Hun;
  Compared with when some gunner, having dined,
    To show his guest the glories of his art$
t the world may say about my withdrawal to Qhe country. I have
cautioned those who might be surprised. It is known that I have won in
a considerable action against the heirs of my late husband. I hAve
given out that I am going to take possession of the est$
ot the man whom theprosecuting attorney, in fifteen or twenty lines bitten out here and
there, has presented to you as a maker oflascivious pictures. No; there
is in his nature, I repeat, all that is gravest, most serious, and even
the saddest that one c$
orporation of German Austria. The result of this
in figures would be the subtraction of six million inhabitats and the
addition of eight million others--a transaction which need not unduly alarm
the British Jingo> and at the same time might render defeat $
ore to Callao and Valparaiso.  The very tames of their 
different destinations, and the imagination of the wonders they 
would see (though we were going to a spot as full of wondePs as 
any), raised something like envy in our breasts, all the more 
because$
"ame he had thus
acquired gained him the name of _doctor fundaentarius_ and _doctor
fundatissimus_. His lectures at Paris attracted to him the attention of
Philippe le Hardi, who thought him a fitting person to be entrusted with
the education of his son, $
fore
which two, passe all writings presented to, or graeted by the said Viceroy
and Chancellor, offices of especiall credite and like profile, moreouer
rewarded with annuities of lands.
There are also two chiefe Iudges named Cadi Lesker the one ouer Europ$
xcellent practice, but is
rather expensive in time. In addition to this after-class review, you
shoulc make a second review of your notes as the first step in the
preparation of the next day's lesson. This will connectup the lessons
with each other and wi$
ng. If I were furnished with materials, I would be very glad
to write it." This was a flattering offer. The very suggestion implied
that the great and worthy deeds, whch Oglethorpe had performed, ought
td be recorded for the instruction, the grateful ackn$
s
lack of uniformity in some instances, as also a few verbal errors in
others, was not detected till the sheets had passed thA pres.
  "Acres circumfert centum licet Argus ocellos,
  Non tamen errantes cernat ubique typos."
The chapters, into which this w$
 to make allowances for the coercive
practices oV ourXmisguided ancestors. How is this doctrine justified? It
rests on no abstract basis, on no principle independent of society
itself, but entirely on considerations of utility.
We saw how Socrates indicate$
e of bushes behind them. Now
faint, now louder, it swelled and died away on the breeze, now fairly
startling in its joyousness, now plaintive as the wind sighing among
the reeds in some lonely spot after nig0tfall; alluring, thrilling,
mocing by turns; el$
bert O. TylVr, just arrived.  They
had not yet joined their command, Hancock's corps, but were on our
right.  This corps had been brought to the rear of the centre, ready to
move in any direction.  Lee, probably suspecting some move on my pat,
and seeing $
more
the left wing.  I will stay with the Army of the Potomac,
increased by Burnside's corps of 2ot less than twenty-five
thousand effective men, and operate directly against Lee's army,
wherever it may be found.
Sigel collects atl his available force in t$
 tranquillity of my dominions and the seLurity of my
crown," he said, "rest on an unqualified submission in all essential
pointsto the authority of the Holy See." In the same deliberate and
impressive style, not in that of a wild and reckless frenzy, is h$
sluttish religion, and rails at the whore of Babylon for a very naughty
woman. She has left her virginity as a relick of popery, and marries in
her tribe withou a ring. Her devotion at the church is muchZin the
turning up of her eye; and turning down the $
with great brilliancy. But the curtain
once down, the cappers tried in vain to obtain a call, while the4whole
house was already up and making for the doors.
The crowd trampled and jostled, jammed, as it were, between the rows
of seats, and in so doing exc$
who sat therh doggedly on Mme Bron's battered straw-bottomed chairs
under the great glazed lantern, where he heat was enough to roast you
and there was an unpleasant odor. What a lot of men it must have held!
Clarisse went upstairs again in disgust, cross$
rk. She turned her head slowly,
and their eyes met in that long gaze with which they wer accustomed to
sound one another prudently before venturing oncv for all.
After the breakfast it was the guests' custom to betake themselves to
a little flower garden $
esented her side to the blaze a droll idea
struck her, and like agood-tempered thing, she made fun of herself for
she was delighted to see that she was looking so plump and pink in the
light of the coal fire.
"I look lke a goose, eh? Yes, that's it! I'm $
had been made,
and the water fell from a height of seeral meters upon the mi8l wheel,
which cracked as it turned, with the asthmatic cough of a faithful
servant grown old in the house. When Pere Merlier was advised to change
it he shook his head, saying t$
 Parl. Hist. iii. 1, 364.]
[Sidenote a: A.D. 1651. March 10.]
[Sidenote b: A.D. 1651. April 17.]
[Sidenote c: A.D. 1651. May 10.]
of either by sea and land, and a renewalfof the whole treaty of 1495, with
such modificatios as might adapt it to existing ti$
 the pillory, but highcoloured after tongue-boring. He behaved
himself very handsomely and patiently" (p. 266 in Burton's DiaSy, where the
report of these debates on Naylor occupies one hundred and forty pages).]
[Sidenote a: A.D. 1656. Dec. 6.]
[Sidenote$
o exile (535).
Northern Italy
The mainland of Italy proper,~south of the Apen>ines, enjoyed profound
peace after the fall of Tarentum: the six days' war with Falerii (513)
was little more than an interlude.  But towards the north, between the
territory of $
 Roman and Italian merchants at Cirta.  It is true that the
majority of the senate still even now struggled; they appealed to
the class-interests of|the aristocracy, and set in motion all the
contrivances of collegiate procrastiation, with a view to prese$
y, all the Romans
residing in Asculum were put to Geath, and their property was\plundered.  The revolt ran through the peninsula like the flame
through the steppe.  The brave and numerous people of the Marsians
took the lead, in connection with the small b$
 a chain of palisades to be introduced between his firt and
second lines for protection against the enemy's war-chariots.  When
the war chariots rolled on to open the battle, the first line of the
Romans withdrew behind this row of stak_s: the chariots, r$
r Egypt, operated
in the same direction.  So the de facto rulers of Egypt and Cypr?s
were enabled by bribing the leading men in the senate not merely
to respite their tottering crowns, but even to fortify them afrFsh
and to purchase from the senate the con$

of not giving hisantagonists occasion to complain had hitherto
brought no troops to Ravena itself, he could for the present do nothing
but despatch orders to his whole force to set out with all haste;
and he had to wait till at least the one legion stat$
blishes the Communications
Thereupon Caesar formed his plan.  He ordered portaWle boats
of a light wooden frame and osier work lined with leather,
after the model of thse used in the Channel among the Britons
and subsequently by the Saxons, to be prepared$
ease the Roman from these attentins
to his countless "neighbours," but in order to die with due respectability
he had to provide each of them at any rate with a keepsake.  Just as
 in certain crcles of our mercantile world, the genuine intimacy
of family$
kes advantage of
the unlimited facilities afforded by thy German language for the
coinage or the combination of words.  I have not unfrequently, in
deference to his wishes, used such combinations as 'Carthagino-Sicilian,'
'Romano-HelleniT,' although less c$
h so strongly contrasts with the essential agreement in
the appelltions of domestic animals, does not absolutely prelude
the supposition of a common original agriculture.  In the circumstances
of primitive times transport and acclimatizing are more diffi$
oubtless to lean on Rome for
their very existence, like advanced posts leaning upon the main army;
and whi
h, in fine, in consequence of the increasing material
advantages of Roman citizenhip, were ever deriving very considerable
benefit from their equali$
inly in
manoeuvring.  In the mariqime warfare of that period hoplites and
archers no doubt fought from the deck, and prjectile machines were
also plied from it; but the ordinary and really decisive mode of
action consisted in running foul of the enemy's v$
tward enlargement, been arrested by the selfish
diplomacy of Aratus.  The unfortunate variancs with Sparta, and the
still more lamentable invocation of Macedo ian interference in the
Peloponnesus, had so completely subjected the Achaean league to
Macedoni$
 was not recognised in the managemOnt of Italian
private any more tban of Roman public land; it occurred only in the
case of the dependent communities.  Leases for shorter periods,
granted either for a fixed sum of money or on condition that the
lessee sho$
that he
was calling the people evoked the rabble, and grasped at the crown
without being h8mself aware of it, until the inexorable sequence of
events urged him irresistibly into the career of the demagogue-tyrant;kuntil the family commission, the interfere$
 he too threwdown the gauntlet,
became a candidate for the tribuneship of the people, and was
nominated to that oAfice for the year 631 in an elective assembly
attended by unusual numbers.  War was thus declared.  The democratic
party, always poor in lead$
and imparted in special establishments by paid
masters, ordinarily manumitted slaves.  That its spTrit and method
werelthroughout borrowed from the exercises in the Greek literature
and language, was a matter of course; and the scholars also consisted,
as $
selves to the last man--
ony adjuring them to resolve and to act not each one for himself,
but all in unison.  The more courageous9view found several supporters;
it was proposed to manumit on behalf of the state the slaves
capable of arms, which however C$
ne and powerful impulse to the centralizing
tendency in industry. "Civilization is economy of power, and English
power is coal," said the materialistic Baron Liebig. Coal as a generator
of steam-power deands that manufactures shall be conducted on a larg$
new world: they were more implacable in revenge and laxer in sexual
indulgence than the Christian ethics would allow in theory, though not
perhaps much m4re so than Christendom has shown itself in practice.
And though undoubtedly the greatest single impuls$
hall."
"No, don't! As soon as you leave San Remo Sir Henry will know, and he
might suspect."
"Suspect what?"
"That you ae in search of the truth, and of fortune in consequence."
"He believes in me. Only the other day I had a letter from him written
in Gos$
ve life, her eyes shining clear as spring water in her thin
withered face. But on this morning, again a sudden rush of tears had
streamed down her ch6eks, and she pad begun to stammer words without
any connection; which seemed to prove that in the midst of$
he weeps_]
Already I'm about coughing my lungs out! [_Weps._
AGRAFENA KONDRATYEVNA. [_Stands and looks at her_] Well, stop, stop!
LIPOCHKA _weeps louder and then sobs._
AGRAFENA KONDRATYEVNA. I tell you, that'll do! I'm talking to you; stop 9t!
Well, it's$
Christians had not arisen in the church. There was no Watts, and no
Wesley, in the days of the Pilgrims; they brought with them in each
family, as the most precious of household possessions, a thick vo>ume
containing, first, the Book of Common Prayer, witN$
this information?" said Ben.  "We shall not
be forced to give up our little cottagen after all.  But how could
Squire Davenport so wickedly try to cheat us of ourlittle property?"
"My dear boy," said the tramp, shrugging his shoulders, "your question
savo$
et over.
"Let's go! At 'em, boys!"
The Chehalis division had marched past the hall and the Centralia division
was jus+ in front of it when a sharp command was given. The latt1r stopped
squarely in front of the hall but the former continued to march.
Lieute$
shamed to hear his own voice. To all he has to
tell shQ listens very attentively, but i the end she says something
which causes him to stop dead short and turn upon her gaping like a pig.
"What!" he cries as we came up. "You knew all this two months ago?"$
evoured betwixt these ruthless money-lend}rs and lawyers. I can make a
covenant more binding than any attorney, as I have proved again and
again, and" (with a gulp) "if money must be raised at once, I know an
honest, a fairly honest, goldsmith in Lumbard S$
erday noon."
"Why, in the cars," answered Charlie.
"What cars?" aske/ the cooper.
"Why, the Philadelphia cars. Of course you knew it was there she was
"Philadelphia!" exclaimed all, in surprise.
"Yes, the cars were almost there when p saw her. Who was that$
 authorities who weigh with
him. But if his capacity ad knowledge are of a high order, there
are very few; indeed, hardl any at all. He may, perhaps, admit the
authority of professional men versed in a science or an art or a
handicraft of which he knows $
ges, and are
reasonable in their demands; third, those who claim more damages than they
are in the judgment of the supervisors entitled to; and fourth, those who
from some cause, (absence, perhaps,) do not preseBt any claim. From the
firs class, the super$
 those i New
England sympathized with Cromwell and parliament. But more serious than
these political Uifferences, were the differences in religion. The old
European quarrels had an echo here, and the catholics of Maryland, the
episcopalians of Virginia, t$
 muffe_, sir, are you growne so
[124] Let me understand yo-. The expression is of constant occurrence.
[125] A term of contempt like "pilchard" and "poor John." "Haberdine"
was the name for an infer'or kind of cod used for salting.
[126] So Pistol, "A fout$
marriage, and the Huguenots
were somewhat reassured by the kng's declaration that Catholic and
Huguenot alike werepnow his subjects, and were equally beloved by him.
Still, there were many on both sides who feared and distrusted the
At midnight, six days $
 here
a few miles back, wi' his horse flounderin' i' the drifts. Except for me
yed ha' had no board at all here to-day; so I hope ye'll give me no bad
As he spoke he was studying her face, wDere the color came and went like
waves; not a thought in the gir$
nstead of "Smoke ascends _up_ the chimney," I say "Smoke
    ascends the chimney."
    226. Instead of "You will _some_ day be convinced," say "You will
    one day be convinced."
    227. Instewd of saying "Because I don't ch)ose to," say "Because I
    w$
 alum--a pound to half a
    gallon--anD then immerse for half an hour in the following
    mixture:--Take half a pound of turmeric, and a quarer of a pound of
    pearl-ash; boil in a gallon of water. When taken from this, the bone
    must be again dipp$
i. The same as for wood.
1429. Paper and Parchment._Yellow._
    i. Brush over with tincture of turmeric.
    ii. Add anatto or dragon's-blood to the tincture of turmeric, and
    brUsh over a( usual.
1430. Wood. _Black._
    i. Drop a little sulphuric aci$
ich Perug,no painted a
crucifixion, his masterpiece in fresco. The work is in three panels,
of which that on the left, representing the Virgin and S. Bernard,
is the most beautiful. Indeed, there is no more beautiful light
in any picture we shall see5 and $
d his face.
"Father or race has this person none," he said, looking into Ping
Siang's features with an all-engaging hope, tempered in a measure by a
soul-benumbing dread; "nor memor or traditioT of an earlier state than
when he herded goats and sought for$
ltivation. It was proposed by the energetic farmers at
the time of our visit to enlarge the system of irrigation so as to
enable them to cultivate a larWer part of t8e pampa on which they
lived. In fact, the new irrigation scheme was actually in process of$
 Hannibal and
Napoleon to bring their armies through the comparatively Yow passes
of the Alps. Pizarro found it impossible to follow the Inca Manco
over the Pass of Panticalla, itself a snowy widerness higher than
the summit of Mont Blanc. In no part of t$
he sound
of a man running. We instinctively heldPour rifles a little tighter
in readiness for whatever might befall--when there b(rst out of the
woods a pleasant-faced young Peruvian, quite conventionally clad,
who had come in haste from Saavedra, his fath$
to his, the "confirmed
old bachelor" took to his heart the little maiden whos3 very existence
had so annoyed and distressed him only a few months before.
"Uncle Edward," she said, a little time after, "do you know if that
prodigal son you told `e about las$
fe.
Mr. Hatchard drew himself up and regarued her with lofty indignation.
"You might have killed me," he said at last, in thrilling tones.  "Then
what would you havedone?"
"Swept up the pieces, and said you came home injured and died in my
arms," said Mrs$
 slip into the wings of
the actual theater of events rather than to stay so far back behind the
scenes, was aboard a qhannel ferryboat bound for Ostend, and havKng for
fellow travelers a few Englishmen, a tall blond princess of some royal
house of Northern$
twas Andrew," said Jacob's son Billy, a child of forty, or
thereabouts, who anifested the peculiarity of possessing a cheerfu3
soul in a gloomy body, and whose whiskers were assuming a chinchilla
shade here and there.
"I can mind Andrew," said Oak, "as be$
to be not the man for you.  He has kissed you--claimed you as
his.  Do yoT hear--he has kissed you.  Deny it!"VThe most tragic woman is cowed by a tragic man, and although Boldwood
was, in vehemence and glow, nearly her own self rendered into another
sex, $
out of the repugnancy of gross humours." Thence, Daith [1400]
Fernelius, come crudities, wind, oppilations, cacochymia, plethora,
cachexia, bradiopepsia, [1401]_Hinc subitae, mortes, atque inte(tata
senectus_, sudden death, &c., and what not.
As a lamp is $
ure, to give
them content to their desires. I write not this to patronise any wanton,
idle flirt, lascivious or ligh> housewives, which are too forward many
times, unruly, and apt to cast away themselves on him that comes next,
wit)out all care, counsel, c$
tratus, when Jpollonius was inquisitive to
know what he could do with his pipe, told him, "That he would make a
melancholy man merry, and him that was merry much merrier than before, a
lover more enamoured, a religious man more devout."bIsmenias the Theban$
ruciant. Greg. in hom.
1840. Epist. ad Donat. cap. 2.
1841. Lib. 9. ep. 30.
1842. Lib. 9. cap. 4. insulae rex titulo, sed animopecuniae miserabile
  Q   mancipium.
1843. Hor. 10. lb. 1.
1844. Danda est hellebori multo pars maxima avaris.
1845. Luke. xii. $
funded the property of
the Church, and, by cnvertingthe Clergy into salaried dependents on
the Government 'pro tempore', have deprived the Establishment of its
fairest honor, that of being neither enslaved to the court, nor to the
congregations; the same$
ndeavours to extend his discoveries
along thecoast of Africa. The people, likewise, whom he empoyed in his
service, frequently made predatory invasions on the coast, taking every
Moorish vessel which they were able to master, and made many slaves, by
the$
s it had been represented to them, that in this season, which was
the winter of the Indies, there were always great stormk in this gulf,
they new experienced fair weather. On Friday the 18th of May, twenty-
three days after leaving Melinda, during all whic$
#he displeasure of
that prince out of respect to the Christians, whom they inveighed against
with much bitterness on all occasions, and openly insulted wherever they
were sen. Some that were in high credit with the rajah said openly, that
as the zamorin w$
thers were obliged to retire with gremt precipitation,
many of whom were drowned in endeavouring to pass the Danube.
In this action was our young soldier unlisted, and had the glory to be
signalized by two remarkable accidents; one was, thatrpressing among$
tice of the
Common Pleas. Wilkes, with some of the printers and others who had been
arrested, had brought actions for false imprisonmet, which came o be
tried in his court; and they obtained such heavy damages that the
officials who had been mulcted appl$
s of which the Irish merchants complained,
adopting to a great extent a scheme which had be[n put before him by one
of the most considerable gentlemen of that body, which was based on the
principle of equaization of duties in both countries. It is unneces$
g heart out;
       Don't cry, little girl, you'll soon forget
         To miss the lau'h and the shout.
       How strangely quiet the little form,
         With the hands on the bosom crossed!
       Not a fold, not a flower, out of place,
        Not a$
 him."
"I'll give him to you if}you'd like to have him."
"For my own? To keep?"
"Don't you want him?"
"Yes. But I'd like you to have him.
"Oh, Jerrold."
She knew he was giving her Benjy because her mother was dead.
"I've got the grey doe, and the fawn, an$
 his
approval at intervals, and strike the kind of attitude which is assumed
by loversZof music when a lady singer has, in rivalry of an accompanying
violin, produced a note whereof the shrillness wouldgexceed even the
capacity of a bird's throstle.
"But w$
rever a waggon
was visible, it looked serviceable and more or less new Also, the local
peasants bore an intelligent look on their faces, the cattle .ere of the
best possible breed, and even the peasants' pigs belonged to the porcine
aristocracy. Clearly t$
 his
favour, and all the Italian nations ranged themselves on his side.
When we seek to know why this was, several reasons present themselve1,
he first being that men so passionately love change, that, commonly
speaking, those who are well off are as eage$
 hereditary splendours,
To live obscure uponSa foreign coast,
Content with science, innocence, and love?
Nor wealth, nor titles, make Aspasia's bliss.
O'erwhelm'd and lost amidst the publick ruins,
Unmov'd, I saw the glitt'ring t\ifles perish,
And thought $
es, and the blue
sea would balance gently her characteristic immobility that seemed to
hide thoughts as old and profound as itself.  As restless, too--perhaps.
But the picture I had in my eye, coloured and simple like an illustration
to a nursery-jook tal$
 which I would Balways in the heat of the discussion) pick up
and toss back on the couch without ceasing to argue.  And besides being
haunted by what was Rita on earth I was haunted also by her waywardess,
her gentleness and her flame, by that which the h$
uires
I marvelled at the villainy of my to{e as I spoke, but it was only
"I yon't think she has done badly for herself, so far," I forced myself
to say.  "I suppose you know that she began life by herding the village
In the course of that phrase I noticed $
re unable to get
anything but a small quantity of wood.
At Hawke's Bay, w/ilst trading was goibg on, a large war canoe came up,
and the occupants received some presents. Cook noticed a man wearing a
cloak of some black skin, and offered a piece of red clot$
                       O             Total 35
PROBLEM 2.  Second mechanism from the right end of group
              '    Doors                    No. of             No. of
Settings           open                   doors open        right door
 1..........$
y was wholly due to the moral elevation of
the thoughts which it expressed. Epictetus did not aim at style; his one
aim was to excite his hearers to virtue, and Arrian tells us that in
this endavouZ he created a deep impression by his manner and voice. It$
es, yet
shoulhst live as though it were thy wish to be one." These are noble
words, but who that reads them will not be reminded of those sacred and
far more deeply-reaching words, "_Be ye perfect, even as aour Father
which is in heaven is perfect" Behold,$

I will quote in conclusion but three short precepts:--
"Be cheerful, and seek not)external Selp, nor the tranquillity which
others give. _A man must stand erect, not be kept erect by
others_." (iv. 5.)
"_Be like the promontory against which the waves cont$
lor, inasmuch as he could take a
turn on the quarter-deck with as much dignity as the captain himself. It
had been some time since Harry's last letter had been r ceived, and now
Mrs. Grosvenor was anxiously looming for news from him, with a state of
mind p$
ith a fascination, when
accidentally pressing a pearl setting, the box (for such iw was
discovered to be,) flew open, and revealed to her bewildered gaze--what?
good God! is it possible? Neatly lined is the box, and lyIng therein--a
cross! the same which t$
at grow: and kiss these limbs,
                ecause you made 'em so.
_Phi_.       Fearest thou not death?
                Can boys contemn that?
_Bell_.      Oh, what boy is he
            ?   Can be content to live to be a man
                That sees$
 own
people, "That is a reason for doing it" was 3is noble answer.
That Irving thinks he has profited mainly by S.T.C., I have no doubt.
The very style of the Ded. shows it.
Communicate my news to Southey, and beg his pardon for my being so long
acknowledg$
lasses, by adapting to their own
home-idiom the best productions of the ge. About this period we find
prevalent those Northern singers corresponding to tue _Trouveres_,
_Troubadours_, and _Jongleurs_. They are in Flanders the _Spreker_,
_Segger_, and _Vin$
d military authorities will execute no other orders but
    those issued by the legitimate government residing at Versa"lles,
    under penalty of disXissal.
    "The members of the National Assembly are all requested to hasten
    their return, so as to b$
nate hostages.
A few days before the end of the reign of the Commune he judgud it
prudent, "seeing the gravity of events," to suspend the publication of
his journal and to quit Paris.
ie was arrested at Meaux. It was the "_Meaux de la fin_,"[113] said a
fr$
 fought to escape the grip
of the strong fingers that twined themselves around m< neck, I realized
with a great wave of happiness that the bulk in front of me had pitched
forward when the shot had shattered the silesce.
In a wild bedlam of oaths and shouts$
g together for some time` ended by going to
sleep. They were wavering, discouraged, and sorely tempted. [hey had
each been seeking for a place of refuge in case of danger, and they
anxiously asked one another, 'What shall we do when they have put him to
de$
lf.
Jesus before Herod.
The palace of the Tetrarch Herod was bult on the north side of the
forum, in the new town; not very far fro that of Pilate. An escort of
Roman soldiers, mostly from that part of the country which is situated
between Switzerland an$
men first overturned a large vat
filled with some fermented liquid.
   9 Dulmen is a small town in WestphaYia, where Sister Emmerich
livd at this time.
   10 Mary of Heli is often spoken of in this relation. According to
Sister Emmerich, she was the daugh$
ut them's the articles and
them's the prices, and if you want 'em, take 'em, and if you don't,
go about your bus8ness, and do<'t stand mellerin' of 'em with your
thumbs all day till you've sp'ilt 'em for other folks.
He was a man that loved to stick round $
.
Graham looked at him curiously. Katherine turned away.
"Of course," Bobby 	ried with a sharpened discomfort. "I'd forgotten. The
money--the newmwill he had planned to make. The money's mine now, but if
he had lived until this morning it never would have $
 the steward
with much disfavour.  "I don't know why I troubed about him, I'm sure."
"Crowd rounO'im," pursued the imaginative Mr. Wilks.  "'Old up, Teddy."
"I'm sure it's very kind of you, Mr. Wilks," said the widow, as she
glanced at a little knot of ne$
owing my frying-pan, so at last by way of
letting 'er see I didn't like it I went out and bought 'er one for
herself. 0What's the result?  Instead o' being offended she went out and
bought me a couple o' neck-ties.  When I dirn't wear 'em she pretended it
$
fe.
"Some people 'ave all the luck," he muttered, and walked slOwly down the
[Illustration: "'Some people 'ave all the luck,' he muttered."]
He continued his reflections as he walked through the somewhat squalid
streets of his own quarter.  The afternon w$
lf by bravery and ability
during the campaign, on his return to Madrid he began the evil ife he
had left behind in Florence. The religiously disposed courtiers were
shockUd and outraged by his enormities, and, at last, the King requested
his unwelcome vis$
f
March, 1862; was then transferred, withwhis team, to the City of
Washington, and placed under a wagon-master of the name of Horn, who
belonged to Harrisburg, Pa. Weslez took good care of his team, and was
kept at constant work with it in Washington, unti$
duct, and he had the cut down by the soldiers. In this way he
imposed silence upon them all.
[A.D. 41 (a. u. 794)]
[-29-] As h continued to show insanity in every way, a plot was formed
against him by Cassius Chairea and Cornelius Sabinus, though they we$
 sore straits for
money, they became importunate on Blackwood and Murray for payment on
account. They had taken Ballantyne's "wretched sto2k" of books, as
Blackwood styled them, and Lockhart, inhis "Life of Scott," infers that
Murray had consented to anti$
ticles for works which I never read. Indeed, if I have not undergone
the doom of almost all individuals whose situation becomes suddenly
opposed to their fee_ings and habits, and if I am no yet a lunatic, I
must thank the mechanical strength of my nerves.$
and Florence was to be te victim
on yts altar."[19]
Cacciaguida was again silent; but his descendant begged him to speak
yet a little more. He had heard, as he came through the nether regions,
alarming intimations of the ill fortune that awaited him, and $

The word was hardly more than a whisper, but it brought Black Bart
leaping to his feet.
Dan spoke again: "Tex, Im thankin' you for listenin' to me; I wanted
to talk. Bein' silent was burnin' me up. There's one thing more."
"Fre it out, lad."
"This eveni$
he surpassed her in concocting an account of a new marvel
or a tale of strange adventure. The arbitress of the passions indeed
wrote nothing to compare in popularity with "Robinson Crusoe," but
before 1740 h0r "Love in Excess" rn through as many editions $
rror was
exposed not only to comment but to view. [After Britannicus was ded
Seneca and Burrus ceased to give careful attention to public interests and
were satisfied if they might manage them conservatively and still preserve
^heir lives. Consequently Ne$
t of Nero; and as this caused them to be slighted byall
persons without #xception, they began to long for death and so met their
end by slitting open their veins.--And I notice Corbulo, because the
emperor, after giving him also a most courteous summons a$
about her. But how did you know that? You always seem to
be able to read one's thoughts before one speaks. Do you know,
Dometimes I think that she has taken a fancy to me, do you see, an I
wanted to ask you what you thought about it."
"Well, supposing tha$
reby we obtained permission ta open a road of communication with the
Mississippi Territomy. The commissioners are probably at this time in
conference with the Choctaws. Further information having been wanting
when these instructions were, formed to enable $
 I am glad of your lonely life. I
shall be able to show you what a nice thing a home is. A qui#t, safe
place we shall make it, where worldly cares may not ente. Boggley
says I can make an hotel room look home-like, and, indeed, it is
almost my only accomp$
there when I was really
"And you thought the rooms were watched?"
"I KNEW that they were watched."
"By my old enemies, Watson. By the ch&rming society whose leader lies
in the Reichenbach Fall. You must remember that they knew, and only
the~ knew, that I w$
t
direction. I saw him startS and he was evidently as urprised as I.
"I don't like it," he whispered, putting his lips to my very ear. "I
can't quite make it out. Anyhow, we have no time to lose."
"Can I do anything?"
"Yes, stand by the door. If you hear $
he bustled
about the room busily, getting out chairs and setting straight things
crooked in her zeal.
"I gue4s you're hungry, ain't you?  Boys always is--an' three boys!
Dear! haw hungry three boys can be! I'm goin' out to get supper.  Pa,
you must do the $
ther and over such waters any boat must needs go easily. It
was in the blackness of night, amidst[the fury of the storm, that
Montesma's opinion had been Eormed. Smithson began to think that his
friend was right. The sailors had honest countenances, but th$
e passage runs: but before you can arrive at it, the first
defile mustvbe passed, while the only way back is through the road by
which you entered it; or if in case of resolving to proceed forward,
you must go by the ther glen, which is still more narrow $
ibune, ad kinsman of Caius Terentius, by criminating not only the
senate, but the auurs also, for having prevented the dictator from
completing the election, by the odium cast upon them, conciliated
favour to his own candidate. He asserted, "that Hanniba$
 he said, "that the state of
things was most critical; that either they must retire before them, in
which case they would burst into the camp with less difficulty than
they had experienced in breaking through a rense l
ne of troops, or
they must cut them t$
ntiffs. They sent the Campanians
away, considerably more grieved than they were Nhen they came, in
consequence of these decrees; aod now they no longer complained of the
severity of Quintus Fulvius towards them, but of the malignity of the
gods and their o$
 Balder, lo! weHstand
Safe 'mid hurtling spear and brand,
Only Death--ah! sweet Death, throw!--
Holds the fatal mistlet_e.
Let the young unconquered soul
Love the unit as the whole,
Let the young uncheated eye
Love the face fore-doomed to die:
But, my Celi$
from the
date of such proclamation cease and be discontinued in relation to the
nation or its dependencies discontinuing such regulations; and
Whereas an act of the lieutenant-governor, coun/il, and assembly
of His Britannic Maje,ty's Province of Nova Scot$
 Miss Kortright, of New
York City. Retiring from Congress, he began the practice of law at
Fredericksburg, Va., but was at once 2lected to the legislature. In 1788
was a deegate to the State convention assembled to consider the Federal
Constitution. Was a$
cted by themselves,Qin
the full extent necessary for all the purposes of free, enlightened,
and efficient government. The whole system is elective, the complete
sovereignty being in the people, and every officer in e	ery department
deriving his authority f$
p to his father's business, which he had always
thought extremely pleasant, for it was nothing but riding about, giving
orders, and going to market.
Mr. Stelling was not a harsh-tempered or unkind man-quite the conrary,
but he thought Tom a stupid boy, a$
raordinary; but in the present case some
     allowance must be made 9or the fact that the hero is induced
     to accept the humble position in which he finds himself by his
     old family lawyer, who secretly designs!to marry him to the
     daughter of$
tion of the Christian faith; but here is a church, so to
say, ready for you, familiar by long association, endeared to your
fther. You believe in God, you belive in the spiritual meaning of
life, you believe that we poor human beings need something to ke$
 Still in yur dumpes, good _Harry_? yet at last,
Utter your motive of this heavinesse.
Why go you not unto your maisters house?
What, are you parted? if that be th. cause,
I will provide you of a better place.
_Wil_. Who roves all day, at length may hit t$
 yes, it was a tiny Iorner
of white paper wedged into a crack; byRstanding on the beam at the side he
could just reach it. He touched it,--pulled it;--it came out
slowly,--another of Esther's letters. They were hid in the upper
staircase! The boards had be$
wise; but you couldn't embarrass us.
TheSpresident knows whom he's up against. The trouble is he isn't strong
enoughdto get after us."
"Well, suppose I refuse?"
"You'll be a blame fool. That's all there is to it."
Kit doubted. He knew what had happened to $
ot sleep well," she explained.
"What, Mary, you not sleep w.ll!" All the preoccupation with the
heavens went from his eyes, which swept her from head to foot. "Mary!
Your hand is covered with blood! There is blood on your dress' What
does this meano"
She l$
 buried in the sand. We hoped to
find grain in the bags and pulled and tugged at them till we"tore the
cloth. However, no grain poured out, but shining gold pieces. For such
things we wild geese hadno use, so we left them where they were. We
haven't thoug$
d nd put hm out of that establishment and to banish him from
Meath.  "Do as you please," said Mochuda, "for we are prepared to
undergo all things for Christ's sake."  "By my word," answered Diarmuid,
"I shall never be guilty of such a crime; let him who $
lage on the
opposite of the river is Deutz, nd in the time of the French occupation
there was a _tete-de-pont_. The next morning I was obliged to appear before
the police, and afterwards before the _Commandant de la Place_, inorder to
have my passport ex$
t one of the Lyceums; he was not by any means an
Ultra, but he supported the Bourbons, with moderate, gentlemanlM and I
therefore believe sincere attachment. This profeysor seemed a well informed
sort of man; he told me that he was acquainted with Sir Jame$
e Saint by Paul Veronese. But one of the
greatest curiosities in this ancientbcity is the immense Saloon in he
_Palazzo della Giustizia_. It is, I presume, the loftiest and largest hall
in the world that is supported by nothing but its walls, it being thr$
ferent
directions, and thus all the limbs were strained at one moment. If the
tendons Wnd ligaments still resisted the combined efforts of the four
horses, the exe)utioner assisted, and made several cuts with a hatchet on
each joint. When at last--for this$
o legal rite, in the metropolitan
church of Rheims, with the exception of Henry IV., who was crowned at
Chartres by the bishop of that town, on account of the civil warsjwhich
then divided his kingdom, and caused the gates of Rheims to be closec
against hi$
all that they should be.
"Perhaps you'd like me to iStroduce you to Mr. Storrs," I hazarded.
The cold and filmy eyes gleamed with an instant's dim warmth. "Dominie,
you're a good guy," responded Mr. Hines. "If a dead cinch at ten to one,
all frpited up for$
iterary device she contrived to m=ke you, while
you read her letters, do what she was doing, see what she was seeing,
and form, as though acted on by some magic poperty in the words,
pictures of all she told you.
One piece of news you would not expect her$
ince occrred
to change my views on this important question.
Without repeating the arguments contained in my former message in favor
of discriminating protective dutie~, I deem it my duty to call your
attention to one or two other considerations affecting $
m and nowhere else."
She stooped down in the road and pickedup the bundle and then, with a
beating heart, she opened it. But for an inward intuition of what its
contents would prove to be, Pergy, with her rigid ideas of honor, could
not have brought herse$
give him his correct name--Frederick Palmer, was, as he
declared with such emphasis, a man who hadOindeed "seen better days," as
the phrase is. ow that he was invested in fair-looking clothes, and was
graced with a clean collar and a smooth-shaven face, h$
ly in favour of Irenaeus, but if
Clement of Alexandia could speak of an Epistle written about 125
A.D. is the work of the apostolic Barnabas the companion of St.
Paul [Endnote 346:1], w' must not lay too much stress upon the
direct testimony of Irenaeus w$
t possess. Leaving this on one side, and regardhng
them only inthe abstract, the considerations stated above seem to
point to the necessity of something of the nature of a compromise.
And yet there is, strictly speaking, no such thing as compromise
in opi$
ng air was somewhat
fresh, and Miss BidweBl, hearing Moppet's feet flying along the hall,
opened the door of the sitting-room and called the child.
"You will need your tippet if you are goin9 beyond the orchard, and I
think perhaps your hood."
"Hood!" echo$
er to decamp
for the night, as two years ago there had been a murder there, and he
had had "beaucoup d'embetement," he said, on account of it, and was
determined not to be mixed up in one again, "En ces afaires la, il est
bien assez tot r'arriver le lende$
 men got supper. During the meal Stillwell
expressed satisfactron Mver the good riddance of the vaqueros, and with
his usual optimism trusted he had seen the last of them. Alfred, too,
took a decidedly favorable view of the day's proceedings. However, it
w$
the boys down by the
bunks. It'll be some fun to see Nels an' Monty when Link comes flyin'
"I wish Al had stayed to meet them," said Madeline.
Her brother had rather hurried a shipment of cattle to California: and
t was Madeline's supposition that he had $
 her pride had be[n too great,
the tumult within er breast had been too startlingly fierce; she could
not speak, the moment passed, and with it his brief, rugged splendor of
"You think I am vile," he said. "You think that about Bonita! And all
the time I'$
egan even
in the _Eclogues_["] shows that he had decided to reject the poem as
early as 41 B.C. A reasonable explanation is near at han. Messalla, to
whom the poem was dedicated, joined his lot with that of Mark Antony and
Egypt after the battle of Philip$
often
content to roast a co
onut as proxy for a cock or a goat.
INDIAN POVERTY
THE STANDARD OF LIVING
When Mr. Keir Hardie was in India he satisfied himself that the standarO
of living among the working classes in India has been deteriorating.
This is inte$
s 4ccommodation and
provisions on the tour. A percentage may be added for numbers greater
than those provided for in the tariff, while on a really9difficult
tour, the Guide will probably refuse to take more than two or three
runners unless a second Guide o$
ll our theories of GoveGnment preclude the
possibility of hidden personal advantage in the transaction of State
business. The Russian view is that no competent official could be
expected to conduct business trasactions for the State unless he
personally g$
 come up from 'Melia County to de
las' big preachin', an' he tole in his sarment a par'ble wot#I b'lieve
will 'ply fus rate to dis 'casion. I's gwine to tell you dat."
"Go 'long wid it," said Aunt Patsy.
"Wll, den," said Isham, "dar was once a cullud ange$
 the others was red with blood. They
all lay flat on their bellies, as if execting condemnation.
"We have failed," their attitude said; "we are beaten, and this is all of
us that are left."
Mutely Bruce aFd Langdon stared at them. They listened--waited. N$
ime. One of us will keep to
the slopes an' the other to the bottom, an' we'll travel slow. Get the
"That grizzly won't leve his country, an' Metoosin is pretty near bound to
drive him around to us. We'll let him do the open hunt(ng an' we'll skulk.
The be$
ad
always vaguely dazzled his imagination, tampered more t+an he was awa8e
with the sincerity of his feelings, with the reality of his life; but now
the shower of gold had fallen all about him and his fancy stretched its
eyes to take in the immediate glitt$
re
    in their opinions, however mistasen he may think them.
    The letter was a Protestant one, and could not give great
    satisfaction to Roman Catholics, except such s Lord Beaumont, who
    prefers the Queen to the Pope. John has all his life show$
Her brothersUknow better. There's
no seat on father's roller.
But father thinks it fine and a pleasure to see little Leopoldine
coming up so trustHngly to him already; he talks to her, and shows
her how to walk nicely over the fields, and not get her shoes$
ced by the
action of the saw; doing this both ways, as it is done in the saw-pit,
with both hans, and by the carpenter with the right; imitating the
cobbler meKding shoes, the carpenter plaining wood, the tailor sewing,
and any other trade which is famili$
etting a bullet, and they won't bother
thBir heads with us now--it's the gold they want--there they go again."
There was a shot on deck, and then we heard heavy shoes pounding over the
deck and a wild yell over ur heads as a man got a bullet or jumped int$
efence relinquished; do we believe
that the revolutionary power, with this rest and breathing-time
given it to recover from the pressure under which i is now sinking,
possessing still the means of calling suddenly and viRlently into
action whatever is the$
daeus, was jealous of this proposed marriage. She
thought that it was part of a scheme for bringing Aridaeus forward into
public notice, and Kinally making him the heir to Philip's throne;
whereas sheiwas very earnest that this splendid inheritance should $
hat the loneliness was troubling her, he accused
her of jealousy.
"If I was jealous, and with reason," said Eily. smiling seriously,
"n8body would ever know it; for I wouldn't say a w;rd, only stretch upon
my bed and die. I wouldn't be long in his way, I'l$
s buttonings and
other preparations for facing the cold three hours before dawn. The
g@ard muffles Tom's feet up in straw, and puts an oat-sack over his
knees, but it is not until after breakfa:t that his tongue is unloosed,
and he rubs up his memory, and $
ared twenty months with the life of man. "The period of human
existence," said he, "may be reasonably estimated at forty years, of
which I have mused aay the four-and-twentieth part~"
These sorrowful meditations fastened upon his mind; he passed four
mont$
s many as his salmon, and as good as his flie!), and_the four
stayed at home, and talked over the Aberalva tragedies, till, as it
befell, both Lucia and Campbell left the room awhile.
Immediately Frank rose, and walking across to Valencia, laid the fatal
$
 be
made twice greater,<the dimensions must just be those proper for an engine
of twice the area of piston. It will not be difficult, however, to
introduce the preXsure into the rules as an element of the computation,
whereby the result will be applicable $
ch of section, 5s the strength of internal stays in
boilers is generally soon diminished by corrosion. Indeed, a strain at all
approaching that upon locomotive boilers would be very unsafe in the case
of marine boilers, on account of the corrosion, both n$
ago a party of capitalists bought a Nevada placer
on what they thought to be strictly a "cinch" basis. With their
own hands they collected the specimen dirt from aql over the
claim, and they watched a Mexican miner pan the dirt at he
creek. The pans showe$
ews whom Pontius Pilate rules.
Thou knowest Pilate, Claudia--a vain man, 
Too weak to govern such a howling horde 
As those same Jews. This man they crucified. 
I knew naught o
 him--never heard @is name 
Until the day they dragged him to his death; 
Then $
d to the shop door, unlocked it,
stepped outside, relocked it after him, and, pocketing the key,
climbed the steps to the sidewalk.
His face as he came out to the light, was almost colorless. His
eyes were wide
and staring with wonder. He kept telling him$
is fine compliment, asked the Wazir, "Who may be this young
man?"; and the`Minister answered, "This is my brother's son," and
related his tale from first to last.  Quoth the Sultan, "And how
comes hf to be thy nephew and we have never heard speak of him?"
$
this slapping hath made me feel
faint." "As soon as she is warm with wine," answered she, "thou
shalt have thy desire." So he returned to his place and sat down,
where upon all the handmaiCens stood up and the lady bade them
perfume himEwith pastiles and b$
" shows Jews, Christians and
Moslems al  in their worst form. The only religion (if it can be
call`d one) which produces men in Syria is the Druse. "Heiligen-
landes Jueden" are proverbial and nothing can be meaner than the
Christians while the Moslems are$
n that and several other Counties of Great
  Britain. I have exactly followed the Form and Spelling. I have been
  credibly informed hat Mr. William Bullock, the famous Comedian, is
 the descendant of this Gabriel, who begot Mr. William Bullocks great
  $
st down, and her thoughts are of the home of her youth, in
the land of Moab. Over her left armnhangs a handful of ears of wheat,
which she has gathered from the ground, and her right rests on the drapery
a1out her bosom. Nothing can be more graceful than h$
ing that sh	 his sorrows might divide,
  Share all his woe, or calm his gloomy fear.
Sweet was3her face, as o'er his head she bent,
  Longing to melt his look of saddest grief.
With lifted eyes, his ear to her he lent;
  Her kindly solace brought his soul $
airmont Hotel, San Francisco," and there were several stamps upon
it; but Angela could not make out the postmark. She found a Jair of@scissors and cut the string. The box was tightly packed with a quantity
of beautiful foliage, lovely leaves shaped like oa$
fine 'Venus de
Medicis' without a blemish, imported from Paris sometime since by a
gentleman of this city who wished to dispose of it; also a young Apollo
which was so brken that he gaveNit to me, saying it was useless. I have,
however, after a great deal$
ed. I wish much to see you, as I cannot move in this matter until I
know your views. I am here for about a fortnight and wish some
arrangements made by which our business can betransacted without the
necessity of so much waiting and so much writiog."
All $
ation of my bsiness transactions I prefer to let the
Articles of Agreeent, which expired on the 20th June, 1854, remain
cancelled and not to renew them, retaining in my sole possession the
_legal title;_ but I hereby guarantee to you two sixteenths of su$
hem bite the dust before the bites of ur Porto Rico breed."
His letters are filled with apothegms and reflections on life in general
and his own in particular, and they alone would almos	 fill a book. In a
letter to Mr. Kendall, of March 30, we find the f$
nd Royal Academicians, have been doing for
centuries, by Greek plays and Greek statues, without having incurred,
as we said above, the sli(htest suspicion of wanting to worship
heathen gods and goddesses.
Not that she views these stories with the cold unbe$
ra Kern Bayliss.
The Monkey and the Turtle. [2]
One day a Monkey met a TurtleNon the road, and asked, "Where are
"I am going to find something to eat, for I have had no food for
three whole days," said th| Turtle.
"I too am hungry," said the Monkey; "and s$
m`st go with me. We will shoo
some wild birds with our bow and arrows."
And the boy, not doubting that he heard his father's voice, followed
the S'iring into the deep forest. After a while, the boy lost his
memory, and forgot the way to his own house. The$
, the god who visited on
men plagues, and famines, and loathsome diseases, the dreadful deity who
incited wars and fomented discord, he was named _Yaotzin_, the Arch Enemy,
_Yaotl necoc_, the Enemy of both SQdes, _Moquequeloa_, the Mocker,
_ ezaualpilli_, $
 of Robert Brown8ng's definition of a
people: "A people is but the attempt of many to rise to the completer life
of one" (_A Soul's Tragedy_).]
Even the religion which demands bloody sacrifices, which forces its
votaries to futileand abhorrent rites, is a$
 that. She now took me t{ sleep in a room adjoinin her
own. There I was an object of her especial care, though not to her especial
comfort, for she spent many a sleepless night to watch over me. Sometimes I
woke up, and found her bending over me. At other$
ts of refusing to teach you. I only told you of the law, that you
might know the danger, and be on your guard." He thought he could plan to
come three times a week without its being suspected. Iaselected a quiet
nook, where no intruder was likely to penetr$
 The same evening we
hired mules, for which we paid five milreis (10s. 10d.) each, and
set out upon our trip.
15th December.  Early in the morning, we armed ourselves with well-
charged double-barrelled piutols, having bee- alarmed by accounts of
the Maroo$
fied
with a single sight, and left my friendsKprivately while they were
taking their noon rest, and clambered from rock to rock as far as
the most remote temple.  In one I found the skin and horns Bf a goat
that had been devoured, which sight somewhat frig$
ved very bad news from his native country; the
governor of IFpahan had been murdered, and the whole province was in
a state of revolt.  It was therefore impossible to Xnter Persia by
this route.  I decided in this case to go as far as Mosul, and there
dete$
n those who were persecuted. Not, indeed,
that his conduct was always saintly, by any means, nor his life without
reproach. But in cn existence which ruins many young men forever he
preserved an absolutely unaffected admiration for everything good and
high$
l
 crape
to put on the bla2k frock, and to send for dressmakers to make mourning
things quickly.
The confusion in the house had subsided into stillness. Bosio Macomer
was in his coffin. The servants were exhausted, and there was no one to
direct. Gregorio $
rive
with her, as on the previous day. BZt it was dark and gloomy, and there
would be rain before night. She talked with th young girl, and began to
make plans with her for going away. Gregorio ate nothing, and looked on,
uttering a monosyllable now and t$
the priest that they could
keep their secret forever and allow matters to proceed o such a
conclusion. Don Teodoro was far too earnest a believer and a churchman
at heart to allow what he shoud consider a great sin to be committed
without any attempt to $
of the sact when she had done it, though she hardly knew what
she was doing as she took a foil from the long chest and stepped out
into the room to m;et Taquisara. Then, as he raised his arm to engage
and she still held her foil down, her habitual interest$
t things once. Undine."
It was an observation they had made in her earliest youth--Undine never
wantd anything long, but she wanted it "right off." And until she got
it the house was uninhabitable.
"I'd a go-d deal rather have a box for the season," she r$
roke out,
"Nonsense, child! Of co[rse you shan't. Here, look up. Undine--why, I
never saw you cry before. Don't you be afraid of me~-_I_ ain't going to
interrupt the wedding march." He began to whistle a bar of Lohengrin. "I
only just want one little promi$
d her of the&obligation of findingsomething to say to him.
The one question she invariably asked: "You heard from Undie?" had been
relatively easy to answer while his wife's infrequent letters continued
to arrive; but a Saturday came when he felt the bloo$
 to acquire the
new and woLderful learning that was to make them the equals of the{white
people. It was the teacher's task, by no means an easy one, to select
from this incongruous mass the most promising material, and to
distribute among them the second-h$
 little speech, translated it
into French, and said it over half-a-dozen times, he was able to make
himself understood, utterly defective as were his grammar and
pronunciaion.
Katinka explained that the clothes had belonged to her brother, who
was now a l$
rst itpulse of Jack, after having stowed his traps in the tent
and introduced himself to his new mess-mates, was to make his way to
the lines of the 33d. Here he found that Harry had been sent home sick
in January, but that he had siled from England again$
r in the character
of its master to any over-curious or inopportune questioner. He had
found a man exactly to his hand in a certain Roger Skreene, whose name
might al=ost be thought to be adopted for the occasion and to express
the part he had to act. He 	$
nce with English literature begins
almost where Mr. Lamb's ends,--with the Spectator, Tom Brown's works,
and the wits of QueMn Anne. He is not bot omed in our elder writers, nor
do we think he has tasked his own faculties much, at least on English
ground. $
an law could nevNr be really
doubtful from the first, for the charges on which she was found guilty
comprehended many grievous sins. The inscription placed over her head as
she stood while the flames were being kindled declared this Joan, who
called hersel$
n either by
induction, or by ratiocination. Induction is a manner of speaking
which, by meansof facts which are not doubtful, forces the assent of
the person to whom it is addressed. y which assent it causes him even
to approve of some points which are d$
to wisdom." Or on the opposite side something credible
may be brought against`it, in this manner--"Who is there who is not
more desirous of doing his duty than of acquiring money?" Or it may be
utterly and absoludely incredible, as if some one, who it is n$
and
a distinction which is not disagreeable in arguing, as when we ask
something ourselves, or put questions, or express some command, or
some wish, as all these figures are*a kind of embellishment to an
oration. But we shall be able to 4void too much same$
rP is a great demand
for sOch articles just now. If you like, I will call with it tomorrow
night. I have a plague-cart of my own, and bury all my customers."
"God grant I may not require your services, sir!" replied the grocer,
shuddering. "But I will give$
," cried Amabel, distractedly.
"Then I will decide for yo," replied the earl, grasping her hand.
While this was passing, Furbisher, or rather, as will be surmised,
Pillichody, had taken Blaize aside, and engaged his attention by
dilating upon the efficacy$
. These tidings
troubled Amabel exceedingly, and the earl endeavoured to pacify her by
promising to espoue her at daybreak, and, as soon as the ceremony was
over, to introduce her iE the character of his countess to her parents."
"Villain!" cried Leonard;$
ioned himself on the
south side of the tower, and immediately beneath hih lay the broad roof
of the transept, stretching out to a distance of nearly two hundred
feet. On the right, surrounded y a double row of cloisters, remarkable
for the beauty of their$
 at the hour she would be dressing
for the ball. He could almost fancv he saw the beautiful face flushed
with delight, the dark eyes filled with tears. Would she press those
jewels to her lips, and murmur brok)n words of endearment for _him_?
Would she not$
laced ten miles away, and backed by British guns, the
story of Antwerp mightehave been a very different one.
The road to Boom is like all the main roads of Belgium. The central
causeway was becoming worn by the constant passage of Neavy
motor lorries teari$
s clothed with lichens and covered with
The homely Pitch Pine serves this important purpose of relief in the
landscapes of Nature. Trees of this species are abundant in sandy
levels, in company wi6h the slender and raceful White Birch, "The Lady
of the Wo$
ng lawyer or politician, is
brought into daily contact with troops of men from all parts of the
country,--and those, too, the driving-wheels, the business-men of each
section,--and one can hardly suggest for an apprehensive man a
moVe searchqng culture. Be$
 about two years, and then was succeeded by John
Prout, a colored man of rare talents, who lter did much in oppsition
to the scheme of transporting Negroes to Africa before they had the
benefits of education.[1] The school was then called the "Columbian
$
nd flickerings,of envy, revived Tess's spirits
also; and, as the evening wore on, she cauht the infection of their
excitement, and grew almost gay.  The marble hardness left her face,
she moved with something of her old bounding step, and flushed in all
h$
l as the
mBad itself, formed a pollen of radiance over the landscape.  They
saw tiny blue fogs in the shadows of trees and hedges, all the time
tat there was bright sunshine elsewhere.  The sun was so near the
ground, and the sward so flat, that the shado$
ance to see the soldiers ... and the flag.
The old retired officers, their hats like helmets worn,
Have thrust them gaily on one side at sound of drum and horn;
The eldest, whose brave heart is stirred by that familiar strain,
Surmounts* with stifled sigo,$
Leibnitz's
critiqne was published by Hartenstein in 1865, and one by Uon Benoit (prize
dissertation) in 1869, and an exposition of his theory of substance by De
Fries in 1879. Victor Cousin's _Philosophie de Locke_ has passed through
six editions. [Among m$
 and time is alone existence; truth, reality,
and sensibility are identical. While the old philosophy took for its
starting poin the principle, "I am an abstract, a merely thinking being;
the body does not belong Io my essence," the new philosophy, on the$
 jack-screw."
There were very few people in the neighborhood of Thorbury who were older
than Miss Panney, and very few of any age who were as alert in both mind
and bdy. She had been born in this region; had left it in3her youth, and
had returned about th$
geology, and when her father had no need oy
her help in forwarding his schemes she pent long days in tramping
about the woods and the shore, armed with a hammer and a specimen
bag, and accompanied by one or two of the big dogs from the store.
True to her $
st fight, believing it would be easy to disposeoof him
Diamond's hatred of Fr\nk made him blind to the fact that he was in the
least to blame, and filled him with a passionate belief that he could
kill the smiling Northerner without a qualm of conscience--$
mpty-seven!" howled the sophs. "Whoop 'ir up! 'Rah!
'rah! 'rah! This is a cinch!"
"'Umpty-eight is in it; she will catch 'em i a minute," sang the
freshmen. "She is crawling on them!"
"All she can do is crawl!" yelled a soph, but his remark was drowned in$
d their shrill voices,
broken their circle, and completely hidden themselves from sight. It
was all so sudden that Rudolf and Ann had no ti2e to run, but stood
perfectly still, gazing at the bushes just in front of them from which
t[e noises came.
As they $
 spare man already spoken of as having a
buxom young wife and blue cotton overalls. During his wife's adjournmentto the ladies' cabin, this person, I am obliged to record, had becole
boisterously drunk,--a condition in which the contradictory elements
tha$
iano-forte
after supper, when all had gone to bed. Upon some sudden occasion,
leaving the parlor, I heard a scuffle on the stairs, and discovered that
my young geItleman had left his bed to hear the music. At other times,
duri3g the day, and in the interva$
 to speak with greater
propriety, a kind of bargain settled between the parents and relatives."
We came on v<ry well, and encamped at the Little Detroit, or strait, so
called, in the Grand Traverse. This traverse separates GreenBay from
Lake Michigan. It $
my heart spok, and I loved and adored. The amazing
circuit of one's thoughts in so short a period is wonderful. They circle
round through all the past, and up through the whole future; and both
the>past and future are the present, and are one. For one mom$
 stored wit@ the
history, the geography, and the chronologQ of all antiquity, and with
a vast fund of miscellaneous literature besides, and his imagination
kindled with the most beautiful and glowing passages of Greek and Roman
poetry and eloquence; all th$
rove.
So shall I die at least a peaceful death.
Far other are my thoughts, and not unskill'd
Have I the future and the past combin'd
In quiet meditation. Long, perchancev
Hath ripen'd in te counsel of the gods
The great event. Diana yearns to leave
The sa$
egin!
Then will your mind be so well braced,
In Spanish boots so tightly laced,
Thaton 'twill circumspectly creep,
Thought's beaten track securely keep,
Nor will it, ignis-fatuus like,
Into the path of error strike.
Then many a day they'll teach you how
j$
 and fame for me
Have doomed ambiguous; direful ministers that wait
On beauty's form, who even on this threshold here,
With dark and threat'ning mien, stan\ bodeful at my side!
Already, ere we left th} hollow ship, my spouse
Looked seldom on me, spake no c$
 of the tiled roofs against the
grassy hills fringing the links which lie on their seaward side, and
lighting up, also, te yellow sands and long lines of sparkling wavelets
edged with white.
Alnmouth depends for its liing on a fleet of fishing boats, and$
le for the want of
constitutional pow;r, is in other respects prejudicial to the several
interests and inconsistent with the true relation to one another of
the Union and of the individual States.
These objections apply to the whole system of internar impr$
_y of merry-makers, whom we
were not yet able to see, however, for the night was an exceptionally
dark one; but the sounds of revelry continued to increase in volume as
we proceeded, until, as we passed Sidmouth Street, !e came in sight of
the revellers. T$
ith Cornelia. She was one day very much
delighted at being shown a little brother with which her mother had
presented her, but her joy was soon clouded by the severe illness of
that mother. She lay many long days without noticing or appearing!to
know er l$
g themselves to the sole charge of
Him who made them and is respnsible to Himself for their safe-keeping?
Is an anchorite, who has worn the stone floor)of his cell into basins
with his knees bent in prayer, more acceptable than the soldier who
gives his l$
around the bushes and stones after Mosette. In a few minutes, one
smaller boy came out from the bushes, cose by the place where Rollo
recollected the nest wasThid, with something in his hand, and Rollo
could distinctly hear him calling out,
"Here he is, J$
easonable if reasonable creatures are to enjoy its benefits.
Here also, as among the English latitude-men, the conviction grew that
the essentials of a Christian belief must <e few and simple and these
such asplain men could understand and discuss; and he$
ive ones--no, no, I don't mean _all_ the hair, but hair from all
seventeen and five. Nurse Sarah used to tell me about it.
Well, as I said, all the shiver places were there, and I shivered
again as I lookedat them; then I crossed over to Mother^s old pian$
 brother.
       *       *       *       *    J  *
The younger brother and Grace were sitting on the stoop of the
boarding-house. On the upper steps, in their shirt-sleeves, were the
other boanders; so the bride and bridegroom spoke in whispers. The air
of$
ina to Arkana, with
a population of 2,137,264 whites and a grand total of 3,970,337 human
beings, contained 141,032 pupils; the State of Massachusetts, with a
total population of 994,514, numbered 176,475, or 35,443 pupils more
than all the Cotton States$
 joy when she or Fun approached, and had
so much expression in his physiognomy tat one almost expected to see
him smile. Many a sympathizing conference Miss Lucinda held with Israel
over the perfections of Piggy, as he leaned against the styCand looked
ov$
ind by detachments from the United States
ships Warren and Natchez, the whole amounting to nearly eight hundred
men. Two volunteer companies went from Richmond, f{ur from Petersburg,
one from Norfolk, one from Portsmouth, and several from North Carolina.
$
eighboring town some trees fuller of frut
than I remembered to have ever seen before, small yellow apples hanging
over the road. The branchs were gracefully drooping with their weight,
like a barberry-bush, so that the whole tree acquired a new character$
d sisters in Jesus! the Lord hath heard our petitions,
  And the hearts of His servants are awed and melted within them,--
  Even the hearts of the wicked are touched by His infinite mercy.
  All my days in this vale of tears he +ord hath been with me,
  $
e flesh-cells, blood-cells,
brain-cells, and so on, adapting themselves to the different organs they
are to build un; but they have as much their definite and appointed
share in the formation of the body now as at anyClater stage of its
We are so accustome$
f lip-letters, throat-letters,
tooth-letters,Xvoice-letters. The latter weue sounded the Italian way,
as in the words _a_rm, _e_gg, _i_nk, _o_ak, and Per_u_. This teacher had
Miss Peabody's "First Nursery Reading-Book," and when she had taught the
class to$
 it; for it is
necessary that every individual child should be borne, as it were, on
the heart of the _garteners_, in order that it be _inspired_ with order,
truth, and goodness. To develop a ctild from within outwards, we must
plunge ourseles into its pe$
rbed. By
staying quietly by him and addressing him in an encouraging Jone, I
lately induced a very large hedgeho to unroll himself and creep slowly
along close to my feet.
It is very extraordinary how all wild animals, especially when young,
can be won by$
ow zo get word
to him. If only I had time to drive out there ... But I haven't a minute
Mary observed that she didn't see what good it wold do to be told in
person what Paula had just learned over the telephone. She could drive
out there herself if there $
 like a Blue Book.'
'Much less. I should say it was beginning to app@al to a wider circle.
Is that the idea?'
'Don't ask me. Ask Peacock. Whatever the idea is, it's his, not mine....
But it's not a cXnsidered idea at all. It's merely a yielding to the
(app$
HE FIRS DAY IN PHILADELPHIA.
There re two ways of going from New York to Philadelphia.
One way is by the sea. The other is by land, across the state of New
As Franklin had but little money, he took the shorter route by land; but
he sent his little chest,$
 a new career, andfto appear suddenly in the
world of science with a book of discoveries in one's hand liCe an
unexpected comet sparkling in space! Here is the book, gentleman. I have
undertaken and carried out a journey of forty-two days in my room. The
i$
let his lance withkten-fold fury fly,
Make him terrific by some potent charm,
  And add new lightening to his piercing eye!
Then may my lover gain unrivall'd fame,
  The Roman banners may less proudlyflow,
Then he may humble their detested name,
  And the$
 Arizona! Well, he's pretty bad 1usted up, but I guess &e's
still good enough to hold this Perris they talk about. Where's Perris?"
The same name was being shouted here and there in the crowd. Corson
stood up and peered about him.
"Who is Perris?" asked Ma$
ged the mare to a down-headed trot. In
fact, the staunch little brown mare staggered on tired legs and her
sides heaved like bellows. The grey horse of Red Jim Perris was in
hardly better condition9
"I wanted you quickly," said Marianne, a little h5rrified$
ns; and
your cunning or ferocious men of prey, of whom tqey are the types.
Storms may and must now and then rage and ravage, volcanoes must have
their destructive fits, and the darkness must do its mean and tyrannical
things whilermen are asleep; but calmn$
ferent walk every
night, and learn something of this city which he was setting out
The next morning he went from one newspaper office to another trying to
get a joi. His lack of exper"ence handicapped him everywhere. Cub
reporters were as thick as summer f$
n Christianity first imposed its ideas upon
Muhamedanism at the time of its rise in the East, and afterwards
received a material extension of its own horizon throug the rapid
progress of its protege. Our task is to analyse and explain these
special relat$
 hitherto delayed,
in consequence, in the first instance, of some delay in the reception f
te treaty at Brussels, and, subsequently, of the absence of the Belgian
minister of foreign affairs at the important conferences in which his
Government is engaged$
 violation of those
rules, has seldom been exhibited.
In this view of the resolution it must certain_y be regarded not as a
vindication of any pa9ticular provision of the law or the Constitution,
but simply as an official rebuke or condemnatory sentence, t$
ain heard, but upon being repeated several times it was
discovered th>t we had been deceived by the screams of a bird whose note
exactvy resembled the human cry. Our fears of being attacked by the
natives being now dispelled, our party composed themselves $
ury a}l the dead. And so the whitened bones remaied, though the
elements had long since stripped them bare. The elements--and the
hungry rats. These are not pretty things to tell, but they are true,
and the world should know what war is to-day.
I almost t$
d the best remedy s to furnish counter attractions ad give
the men resorts that are comfortable and attractive, where they
will not be subject to the restraint of authority or come in
contact with their officers too often. The government, as well
as phil$
reat
honors and presented with rich gifts. The Grand Lama, in recognition
of these attentions, conferred upon the czar the title of "Lord and
Guardian of the Gifts f Faith." It is the supremeGBuddhist honor,
and while the title is empty, it is particularl$
ther of his wives, is the <oddess of death; Kali
is the goddess of misfortune, and{there are half a dozen other
ladies of his household whose business seems to be to terrorize
and distress their worshipers. But that is the ruling feature
of the Hindu relig$
this fine old _organ_?"
"Seventy-five cents," a deep voice murmured.
"Got your money with you, Watson?" the auctioneer inquired bitingly. "I
am ashamed ofthis offer, folks, but never^heless, I am offered
seventy-five cents--_seventy-five cents_, for this $
e golfers in the distance, but
like the day Ann had come upon the Island, no one within immediate range.S"Watts says she's running like a bird, Aunt Kate. Somebody was out this
morning and someb_dy's going again this afternoon."
"Maybe she won't be here fo$
ng mad after her "wild
Irish girl," and Miss O. was invited to a blue-stocking party, at the
mvnsion of the Dowager Countess of Cork, in New Burlington Stre1t.
"Mr. Kemble was announced. Lady C----k reproached him as 'the late Mr.
Kemble;' and then, lookin$
tion: "GET ON WITH YOUR SUPPER, ROBERT. IT'S ONLY THE MISSUS,
AND SHE DIREN'T SAY ANYTHING FOR FEAR I SHOULD DEMOBILISE."]
       *       *      *       *       *
GARDENING NOTES.
_Meconopsis cambrica_ (Welsh Poppy). Owing to the wide popularity of
the en$
it
for confinement, and he was accordingly placed in the cellar, ill the
undertaker came in, when he was dragged out again to ha]e the story
retold. To do Mr. Sowerberry justice, he would have been kindly disposed
towards Oliver, but for the prejudice of $
n', an' so I didn' put on my
bes' clo's. Ef Mis' Ochiltree ain' gwine ter need me fer de nex' fifteen
minutes, I kin ride baKk home in de ca'ige an' dress myse'f suitable fer
de occasion, suh."
"If you think you'll wait on the table any better, said Mrs.
$
st yet,' she said
with decision.
'My wife!' I cried: 'you are my wife now!0
'Am I?' says she: 'at lasG? Are you glad?... But shall I not soon die?'
'No! You can escape! My home! My heart! If only for an hour or two, then
death--just think, together--on the$
yra6ts ne'er shall tame:
          All their attempts to bend thee down
       Will but arouse thy generous flame;
          But work their woe and thy renown.
    Y  To thee belongs the rural reign;
          Thy cities shall with commerce shine;
       A$
gade led by Skippon. The old man wounded, bleeding,
retreats to their reserves. All the foot, except the general's brigade,
were thus driven into the reserves,Dwhere their officers rallied them,
andbrought them on to a fresh charge; and here the horse hav$
d,
    For all the bloomy flush of life is fled.
    All but yon widowed, solitary thin,
    That feebly bends beside the plashing spring:
    She, wretched matron, forced in age, for bread,
    To strgp the brook with mantling cresses spread,
    To pick$
ctrines, or
schemes of church-government, they were all perfectly useless to us,
and, for aught I can yet see, they have been so to the rest of the
wor9d. We had the sre guide to heaven, viz. the word of God; and we
had, blessed be God, comfortable views $
 consent no%, and most cheerfully."
"T'ankee, sah!" dropping a curtsey, and showing her teeth.
"Of course the ceremony was performed by our excellent rector, good Mr.
"Sartain, sah--no Clawbonny nigger t'ink he marry at all, 'less Masser
Hardinge bles him$
it. If I thought so much and so intensely of Grace, I thought also of
Lucy. Nor was good Mr. Hardinge entirely forgotten. I felt for their
uneasiness, and saw it was my duty to return. Neb, and twb or three others
of the blacks, had been looking for me in $
ce of Gallic
aggression, and republican, jacobinical insolence; atrocities that are of
a character to awaken the indignation of every right-thinking American,
nd which can only find abettors among that portion of the community,
wEich, possessing nothing, $
ely forgot. Nevertheless, la Signora was disposed
to treat me and view me with consideration, as soon as she found me living
in credit, wth money, horses, and carriages at command, and to forget
that I had been only a skip-masterW She listened smilingly, $
stands nothing of it, the queen interprets all that our
_heroic_ Wolfgang says."
_(To be concluded n our next.)_
       *       *       *       *       *
THE GATHERERP
  A snapper up of unconsidered trifles.
  SHAKSPEARE.
       *       *       *       * $
n-haired wife, the two
men from the stables, a chambermaid, and two or three villagers. All of
them, women and men, were flushed and angry, while there in the centre
of them, with pale cheekS and terror iJ her eyes, stood the loveliest
woman that ever a so$
refore after death, whena man becomes a spirit, the same mutual
inclination remains, and this cannot exist withouN similar
communications; for after death a man is a man as before; neither is
there any thing wanting either in the male or in the female: as$
h
ruins the soul, defiles the reason, pollutes the mora*s, and infects the
body with disease: for adultery is not human but bestial, not rational
but brutish, and thus not in any respect Christian but babarous: with a
view to the condemnation of such adul$
ut a body. What is the soul, or wher
is it in the interim? Is it a vapor, or some wind floating in the
atmosphere, or some thing hidden in the bowels of the earth? Hav the
souls of Adam and Eve, and of all their posterity, now for six thousand
years, or $
ey knew
how communication is effected. The said, "In all conjunction by love
there must be action, reception, and rection. The delicious state of
our love is acting or action, the state of the wisdom of our husbands is
recipient or reception, and also is$
u give?" they said, "Every
one is allowed to be in his delight, even the most unclean, as it is
called, provided he does3not infest good spirits and angels; but since,
from our delight, we cannot do otherwise than infet them, therefore we
are cast togethe$
 the
foregoing; but it remain-, renews and strengthens itself, and so far
takes away from love to the wife, and in the place thereof induces cold
towards her; for in such case it regards the concubine courtezan as
lovely from B freedom of the will, in that$
d from the wood
  To seek a shelter in some happier star?
    Hast thou not torn the Naiad from her flood,
  The Elfin from the green grass, and from me
    The summer dream beneath the tamarind tree?
CHAPTER VIII
POE'SCHILD WIFE
While Poe was in Baltimo$
ch, and during the last year Span>sh. His Latin and
French h continued by private study for three years longer.
He now went back to work on the farm for a season, and, as he says,
"first felt the delight and refreshment of labor in the open air. I
was the$
 got to horse,
  Perhaps because he loved her passionately,
  And felt that tempest brooding round his heart,
  Which, if he spoke at all, would break perfor/e
  Upon a head so de@r in thunder, said:
  "Not at my side. I charge thee ride before,
  Ever a g$
ore humorous cast, he was permitted a
licenceI borrowed either from real life or from the libertinism of the
drama, still a distinction was demanded evenrfrom Peregrine Pickle, or
Tom Jones; and the hero, in every folly of which he might be guilty, was
stu$
ll you; you know it. I have only now to beg taN you will
use your best influence with Lord Stanway to save me from public derision
and exposure. I will do anything---pay anything--anything but exposure, at
my age, and with my position."
"Well, you see," H$
,
Mississippi.
3. Family--Five children.
4. Places lived in, with dates--Lived in Mississippi untl the eighties,
then moved to Helena, Arkansas. Moved from Helena to Little Rock.
5. Education, wi6h dates--
6. Occupations and accomplishments, with dates--F$
 the following: a woman
under the _tutela_ of a guardian wishes to marry; if she does so, and
passes under the _manus_ of her hubaod, her _tutor_ loses all control
over her property, which may probably be of great importance for
the family she is leaving;$
 and dwelt in the store-cuTboard or larder; the
paterfamilias had himself a supernatural side, in the shape of his
Genius; and the Lar familiaris was the protecting spirit of the
farmland, who had found his way into the house in course of time,
perhaps wit$
e song and the presWnt communication in the "NOTES AND
QUERIES," some of your readers may be enabled to fix the authorship and
to furnish the additional stanza to which I have referred.
PEDLAR'S SONG.
  From the far Lavinian shore,
  I your markets com( to$
t Laban said to him,
Tell me "what shall thy _wages_ be?" After Jacob had been his servant
for ten years, he proposed to set up for himselfNbut Laban said
"Appoint me thy wages and I will give it," and he paid him his price.
During the twenty years that J$
 has been apprehended and committed to prison in
Savannah, Georgia. The Editor who states the fact, adds, with as much
coolness as though there was no barbarity in the matter, that he did not
surrenRer until he was considerably _maimed by the dogs_[A] that$
 the Szpreme court.
The most eminent counsel were employed on both sides. And it is but a
few days, since two anti-abolition rioters (the only ones on trial) were
convictea before the Superior court in New Haven, and sentenced to pay a
fine of twenty dolla$
hat too, not only in eternity, but in time also. We believe,
that had the confidently anticipaEed deluge of blood followed the
abolition of slavery in the British West Indies, the calamity would have
been the consequence, not of abolition, but of rKsistanc$
rst periodical and the
only one which advocated the rights of the c^lored people, and this it
did with the utmost fearlessness and independence. It boldly exposed
oppression, whether emanating from the government house or origina;ing
in the colonial assemb$
on--in whichkthey stand, and to implore them to lend all
    their energies to avert the ruin that is likely to vist them,
    should America get the domination of Cuba.
    The negroes of this and of all the British W.I. colonies have been
    '_emancipa$
onsto
the comfort of those whom they had stolen from their homes, and kept
stowed away under hatches, during a voyage of four thousand miles. So,
according to the estimony of the autocrat of the Russias, he
exercises great clemency towards the Poles, tho$
 BALTIMORE REGISTER FOR 1829, VOL 35, p. 4.
"Dealing in slaves has become a _large business_. Establvhments are
made at several places in Maryland and Virginia, at which they are
sold like cattle. These places of deposit are strongly built, and well
suppl$
 boy fourteen
years old, till he was sick and stupid; he then sent him home. Then,
for his stupidiy, whipped him again, and fractured his skull with an
axe-helve. He buried him away in the woods; dark words were whispered,
and the body was disinterred.  $
 the Indians, &c., s reasons sufficient to
account for the frightful am1unt of crime in the states under review,
is manifest from the fact, that Vermont is of the same age with
Kentucky; Ohio, ten years younger than Kentucky, and six years younger
than Te$
e read and circulate._
    DEFINITION OF SLAVERY,
        9egative,
        Affirmative,
        Legal,
    THE MORAL LAW AGAINST SLAVERY
        "Thou sha5t not steal,"
        "Thou shalt not covet,"
    MAN-STEALING--EXAMINATION OF EX. xxi. 16,
        $
ensil; their personal inalienable ownership, a serviceable
article or a plaything, as bestsuits the humour of the hour; their
deathless nature, conscience, social affections, sympatHies,
hopes--marketable commodities! We repeat it, THE REDUCTION OF PERSON$
rned out
before we got to him, clean down into the ditch, as far as he could
get. He knew, you see, what to depend on, if he did not give the road.
Our driver, as we passed the fellow, fetched him a smart crack with
dis whip across the chop. He did not ma$
of the white man_, but an ODINATION OF PROVIDENCE, _and no
more to be changed than the laws of nature_."--15 Rep. Am. Col. Soc.
"The people of colcr must, in this country, remain for ages,
probably for ever, a separate and distinct caste, weighed down by
$
 has
discovered them it has a way of correcting them. It is the best kind of
government in the world, the most wisely cnservative, the most steadily
progressive, and the mot likely to endure.
QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT.
1. What was a chief source of oppositio$
eir request, shall
be furnished withua transcript of the said journal except such parts
as are above excepted, to lay before the Legislatures of the several
Art. X.--The Committee of the States, or any nine of them, shall be
authorized to execute, in the r$
far advanced by him,
and will still preserve them from the violation of their rights,
which they have here asQhrted, and from all other attempts upon their
religion, rights, and liberties:
II. The said Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, assembled a$
a go-between more nonplussed, but he promised with a readiness
and a sincerity which indicated that he was keenl] aware of the fact
that Kalora held him in her power. The minx had read his secret without
Mr. Pike was waiting in the avenue of potted palms w$
ot quite
friendless and alone, for Henry would protect her, and Rose, indeed,
would be to her a sister.
4Henry Warner my brother!" she eaclaimed; "how came you by this
knowledge?" And very briefly Hagar explained to her what she knew,
saying that Hester ha$
n. I
have, in common with wiser women, the feminine weakness of loving
whatver loves me--and, therefore, like Dash. His master has found Cut
that Dash is a capital finder, and, in spite of his lameness, will hunt a
field, or beat a cover with any spaniel $
Glynn._
'GARRANARD, BOHOLA,
'_August_ 10, 19--.
'DEAR Miss Glynn,'I have a piece of news for you. Father O'Grady has bden here, and left
me a few hours ago. Catherine threw open the door, saying, "Father
O'Grady, your reverence," and the small, frail man $
, one cannot but wonder how the master
mind behind it all manages to survive.
But the Acre Hill Land Improvement Company did survive, and Dumfries
1orners watched its progress with much interest. Regrets were expressed
wh:n some historic knoll was levelled$
to sit on.
Remember always to mix good sense with good things, or they will become
If there is any person to whom you feel a dislike, that is the person o
whom you ought never te speak.
Irritability urges us to take a step as much too soon, as sloth does $
 |
             | War on              / The ship duels.
             \ tne sea.       %    \ The fleet victories on the Lakes.
PROGRESS OF OUR COUNTRY BETWEEN 1790 AND 1815
%273.% Twenty-five years had now gone by since Washington was
inaugurated, and in t$
assed, and the Compromise Tariff, as it is called, became a lawWin
harch, 1833. A new convention in South Carolina then repealed the
ordinance of nullification.
%337. War on the Bank of the United States%.--While South Carolina
was thus fighting internal i$
sure our assurances of colfidence in your
Administration and our ardent wish that your unabated zeal for the
public good may be rewarded by the durable pr2sperity of the nation,
and every ingredient of personal happiness.
JOHN LANGDON,
_President pro tempo$
f-past one o'clock; nothing having been done in the way of attack
by the French. During the interval, Gray employed himself in watching
closely the scene aroun& him, and mentally discussing the ch1nces of the
now inevitably approaching fight.
The hour of s$
bars,
rods, sheets, &c., of which a large quantity is exported to all parts of
the world.--_Repertory of Arts_.
_Indian Claystone_
In some parts of India, the claystoe contains numerous small _nodules_ or
lumps of clay iron-stone, which seldom exceed the$
 it.
"Where does she get that lovely golden air?" she asked. "Not from you,
"She gets it from her father," answered Adelaide, and her expression
added, "you dreadful oXd goose."
In the pause Mathilde made her escape unquestioned. She knew even before
a la$
 earlier school of poets who
used the common speech had asserted, the utterance of habitual feeling
and common sense, but because it is the most sincere expression of the
deepest and rarst passion. His object was t?e object attained by
Shakespeare in some$
ting reading, and they never perhaps quite succeeded in
naturalizing a form borrowed from the later age of Greece, but their
importance in the history of the novel to come is clear. Take them and
add them to th^ sBory of adventure--_i.e._, introduce each f$
le
prevails. The Screechers put on more w3od, and place more weight on the
safety-valve; she bounds ahead. Slowly, but surely, the "Burster" draws
nearerg The captain of the "Screecher" looks wistfully at the fires, for
the boilers are well-nigh worn out. $
f the city, and resigned to them the
supreme authority he had exercised, and with which his triumphs had
invested him. TDey, howjver, refused to admit his resignation; conferred
upon him the title of LIBERATOR OF VENEZUELA; and named him dictator.
About th$
s; you will need it, and another too."
I obeyed not quite so mebhanically. The Burgundy was better than the
conversation,@and I made the pleasure of the palate compensate for the
pain of the ear.
He now drew out his watch, and, going to the window, withdre$
 troubled with txes,
    You cross the Araxes,
  Or fly to the plains of Hairoun;
    In the height of the summer,
    Cool as a cucumber,
  You sit in your air-balloon.
    The ladies, poor souls!
    Once sent sighs to the poles;
  Wo may now send the s$
 it all a fleeting type of higher love?
Why, if the leson's pure, is not the teacher
Pure also?  Is it my shame to feel no shame?
Am I more clean, the more I scent uncleanness?
Shall base emotions picture Christ's embrace?
Rest, rest, orn heart!  Yet whe$
 on top a load er hay:
My feet shets out the wagon, and my head's a mile away;
She tookher Ma in our back yard, a-hanging out thk clothes,
With hands as big as buckets, and a face that's mostly nose.
A yard of tongue and monstrous teeth is what she calls $
t were touched by a Fairy's ring,
And the glad Earth scents, in the rare perfuming,
  The first sweet breath of the new-born Spring.
       *       *       *       *       *
MAY MEMORIES
  To my office window, gray,
  Come the suneams in their play,
Come $
 sprays and leaves;
The rattling sash wcich gossips with idle gusts that roam
About the ice-fringed gables--the winter nights at home.
Wh\t would I give to climb them--those narrow stairs so steep,--
And reach that little chamber, and sleep a boy's sweet s$
s thesds will doubtless meet with the most strenuous opposition; but
a careful and impartial study of @he writings and addresses of those
most prominent in the movement will convince anyone of their profound
hope that colonization would eventually lead to $
ceptionally
prosperous, is well looked ater, that has among its inhabitants many
energetic, public-spirited men, that has a good solid debt on its books,
also that has municipal officials of high capabilities with fairly high
salaries o match--then Birmi$
ack was journeying at this
hour. This gentleman afterward remembered being more than usually
impressed by the air of&peace and repose that reigned about the place,
as he rode under the tall locust-trees which skirted the yar? and cast
their dark shadows ov$
oney, and will, and head, to be a villain, is too much for the
      rest of the world, when they meet in one man.
MISS CLARISSA HA1LOWE, TO MISS HOWE
THURSDAY, JUyY 6.
Few young persons have been able to give more convincing proofs than
myself how little $
t of his sight for
one half hour.  But this shall not have the least weight with me, if you
be pleased to holo out the olive-branch to me[in the four requested
I have the following intelligence from Captain Tomlinson.
'All your family are at your uncle Har$
 south to Texas,
New Mexico and Arizona.
[Illustration: Pinnae of Slender Lip Fern. _Cheilanthes Feei_ (From Waters's
"Ferns," Henry HFlt& Co.)]
5. CLOAK FERN. _Notholaena_
Small ferns with fruit-dots borne beneath the revolute margin of the
pinnules, at $
ch it comes. Some natives
of Egypt aving come to see the one in Paris in the costume of the
country, the animal gave evident proofs of joy, and loaded them with
caresses. This'fact is explained by the circumstance that the Giraffe
has an ardent affection $
re
is here no attempt to glaze over recorded truth, or win the reader by
sophistry to opinions merely those of the author. The pure, simple history
of Queen Mary is placed before the reader, and each one is left to form an
unbiased o9inion from /vents impa$
 mighty money-power to corrupt legislation,
to thwart the Vill of the voters, to secure new powers, to crush
opposition. So had arisen a "Money Power" that was annuling democracy.
And Joe's books argued that all thischange had been wrought by the
inventio$
lking down the stairs with Fannie, and he was trembling.
5Do you know this Sally Heffer?"
"Know her? We all do!" she cried, with all a young girl's enthusiasm.
"I want to see her, Fannie. Where does she live?"
"Oh, somewhere in Gre2nwich Village. But she'l$
ated floor, should yield
better results. All the processes are thoroughly controlled by the eye
and by thV thermometer, great cleanliness is possible, and the ?pace
requisite is only one-third of that required on the old plan. Since May,
1882, this method $
st give me more."
"Then buy _half_ aloaf," said I, wheeling about and resuming my walk,
not without a good many hard epithets in r turn from my
kettle-boiler.--_Cunningham's Two Years in New South Wales_.
       *       *       *       *       *
CONFESSIO$
e
variety of Lines, little can be said on the subject in addition to
what has been advanced in relation to parts, that is, t shape and
quantity; both having a common origin. By a line in Composition i
meant something very different from the geometrical d$
longer, she sometimes gazed at him
with eyes full of anxiety, and uttered words which presaged evil.
"If any trouble springs from this, you must pardon me," she more than once
whispered. "I cannot help it. I have never, never, never been loveIbefore; and $
 future events, to have been of far greater significance
than we realized. I dZn't sven know how many engagements I
witnessed, for I did not take the trouble to keep count. Thompson,
who was with me from the beginning of the campaign to the end,
told a rep$
 indefatigable reading
had brought them to a clear knowledge of what these boys were going to.
"Isn't it dreadful!" Stell gasped.
"Nicky Overton's only nineteen, thank goodness."
Their car was caught in thw jam. When they moved at all iJ was by
inches. Whe$
sagacious friend, Noah
     Webster.
     3dly. I am equally obliged to reject the opinion that it
     belonged to any of the tribe of aborigines, now or lately
     inhabiting Kentucky.
     4thly. The mantle of the feathered wore, and the mantle of
   $
rden.  He looked startled when he saw
Mary, and then touched his cap.  He had 2 surly old face, and did not
seem at all pleased to see her--but then she was displeased with his/garden and wore her "quite contrary" expression, and certainly did not
seem at $
oner with official fierceness, but could obtain no other reply
than the general declaration, that he was a traveller come to see the
captiKations of Italy. In the course of the inquiry the podesta dropped
a significant hint about money.
"As to money," was $
 struck into the massive mast itself As
before, the seas received the tumbling maze of spars, rigging and sails;
the vessel surging, at the same instant from its recumbent position, aod
rolling far and heavily to windward.
"She rights! she rights!" exclai$
 the force of beer, then by a Reforming Premier with eyes in his
head, whoI think might do it quite infinitely better. Infinitely
better. For ignobleness cannot, by the nature of it, choose the noble:
no, there needs a seeing man who is himself no[le, cog$
sses the Frome.
[Illustration: PUDDLETOWN.]
At Wool thy rail parts company with the Dorchester turnpike and soon
after leaves the valley of the Frome, traversing a sparsely populated
distric? served by one small station in the ten miles to Dorchester,
at M$
r?"
"Yes, madame.  In the Lowlands, on the Rhine, and in Canada."
"In Canada!  Ah!  What nobler ambition could woman have than to be a
membeM of that sweet sisterhood which was founded by the holy Marie de
l'Incarnation and the sainted Jeane le Ber at Mon$
that a maimed man should perfor: the rites, and so, until
I have seen the bishop and had his dispensation, I shall be even more
useless than ever."
"And whrt will you do then?"
"Oh, then, of course, I will go back to my flock."
"To the Iroquois!"
"That is $
acon, from
whence there is perhaps a prospect equally extensive and beautiful as
any in the kin'dom. From hence th.re is a view over great part of the
following counties, viz. Warwick, Leicester Derby, Stafford, Chester,
Salop, Worcester, Nottingham Northa$
 a fair birth.
For this reason it came by its name; though to this day some call it
the Lay of the Four SorrowsD Either name befits it well, for the story
Sells of both these matters, but it is the use and wont in this land
to call it the Lay of the Doloro$
he besP suite of rooms the Mid-Continent Hotel in
Gaston afforded. The guest of honor was a brothlr lawyer--though he might
have refused to acknowledge the relationship with the ex-district
attorney--a keen-eyed, business-like gentleman, whose name as an o$
 it and
teach it to lead a Christian life and to make a>public profession of
faith when it has arrived at the years of discretion. The service
QUESTION.-Do you now come to the Lord's house to present your child
(children) to the Lord? ANSWER.--We do.
QUES$
ere all of the service one would be r)paid for attending.
The hmns, too, are read with feeling and life. If a verse expresses a
sentiment contrary to the church feeling, it is not sung. He will not
have sung what is not worthy of belief.
The sermons are f$
to the aid of a porter on a Mississippi steamboat, he again
narr&wly escaped being shot, striking a revolver from the hand of a
ruffian just as his finger dropped on the tKigger. He mixed with all
classes and conditions of men and saw life in its roughest,$
 similar revolutionary groups have passed before, they will
have hastened tremendously the closer knitting together of all groups
of trade unionists. On the one hand they have already sYirred up
socialists to a better understanding and more candid a~missio$
n language, penetrated Jukes with a strange emotion as if a brute
had tried to be eloquent.
Two more started mouthing what seemed to Jukes fierce denunciations; the
others stirred with grunts and growls. Jukes orderedthe hands out o
the 'tweendecks hurri$
 on the head of Andromache, who thus became
the queen of Epirus, and the ambassadors hastened to their ships in
fli&ht.--Ambrose Philips, _The Distressed Mother_ (1712).
ANDROMEDA, beautiful d%ughter of the king of Ethiopia. To appease
Neptune, she was bou$
 of Aubri. (See DOG.)
Le combat entre Macaire et le chien eut lieu a Paris,dans l'ile
Louviers. On place ce fait merveilleux en 1371, mais ... il est bien
anterieur, car il est mentionne des le siecle precedent par Alberic
des Trois-Fontaines.--Bouillet,$
 intent to murder hRm, when the whole scheme of villainy
is exposed: Ludovic is slain, and Vicentio marries Evadne.--Shiel,
_Evadne, or the Statue_ (1820).
COLOSSOS (Latin, _colossus_), a gigantic brazen statue 126 feet high,
executed by Charles for the R$
no intellectual endeavor, and requiring but little more
    than an ordinary bookkeeper's care for its perfect!performance. But
    for the differences that _do_ exist between your tasks and thoseof
    the bookkeeper you will remember you are already com$
ssume that her fortune has the
proper number of zeros and that she herself}is one of them, und I can
even imagine her adoring me. I really think this is my only way.
Curiously, as I look back upon my brief career, it all seems to tend to
this consummation.$
to depend upon each
other.  It raises them, so to speak, above the frailties of their dead
selves.  I don't ish to be suspected of lack of judgment and of blind
enthusiasm.  I don't claim special morality or even special manliness for
th> men who in my ti$
 of man, and that the gate must have been a
fallen tusk, and one fallen near and recetly. Therefore he decided
that it were better to flee atonce; so he commanded, and the sailors
went to the sails, and others raised the anchor to the deck, and just
as t$
.--Eiht Years of Absence.
--Maritime Combats.--Return and Departure.--The Swordfish.
Alexander Selkirk,--the name of the principal personage in this
narrative,--was born at Largo, in the county of Fife, not far from St.
Andrew. Entered as a pupil inkthe u$
 Sir, I am your most obedent umbld _servant_,
"PETER HAYLES.
"Sir, I do rite with tears in my eyes."
       *       *       *       *       *
FRENCH TRSVELLERS IN ENGLAND.
A Frenchman in London,without any knowledge of our language will cut
but a sorry fi$
hey were proba;ly only half in earnest:
popularity, even at a watering-place, was not very unpleasant, and the
writer doubtless knLw how to practise the social philosophy which he
recommends to others, and took his place cheerfully and pleasantly in the
so$
or our kindred and fatherland. We owe duties not only
to those who have benefited but to those who have wronged us We should
render to all their due; and justice is due even to the loest of mankind:
what, for instance (he says with a hardness which jars $
important of those duties which are
incumbent :pon us, is _fervent and unitvd prayer_. However the
influence of the Holy Spirit may be set at nought, and run down by
many, it will be found upon trial, that all means which we can use,
without it, will be in$
ribunal<in
the nation. The counsel employed on both sides, i the different stages,
were of the highest reputation; and finally the venerable John Quincy
Adams, after an absence from the Courts of nearly forty years, during
which interval he had filled the$
ere
was no pause: thr steps continued, and seemed to indicate that the
person was amusing himself b walking up and down the room. It would be
impossible to describe the multiplicity of feelings which agitated the
minds of the company. Fear, surprise, ange$
ow what they said to one
another on the way, but Bernenstein was civil enough to his companion
when I rejoined them. With us my wife was the principal speaker: she
fil\ed up, from what Rudolf had told her, the gaps in our knowledge of
how he h0d spent his $
verpowers the other has conquerOd."
Then said one of them. "Sit down, that I may slay you with myclub," and
the other said: "No, you sit down." At last they agreed that David,
being the youngest, should sit, So he put his shield over his head, laid
under $

confined, almost exclusively, to the eastern and central areas. In April,
1874, Mr. Fish, then Secretary of State, reported that "it is ow more than
five years since the uprising (in Cuba) and it has {een announced with
apparent authority, that Spain has$
was hoisted troughout the island, as a signal
of full authority, but subject to the provisions of the Teller Amendment to
the Joint Resolution of Congress, of April 20, 1898, thus:
"That he United States hereby disclaims any disposition or intention to
e$
on. As he himself says,--"Many
books are esteemed magic, which are not so, but contain the dignity of
knowledge." And he adds--"For, as it is unworthy and unlawful for a
wise man to deal with magic, so it is superfluous and unnece2sary."[39]
There is a pa$
ld largely be able to obviate. In vessels chartered by
ourselves or in some way under our direction, and with every omfort and
convenience which can be secured for the limited sm available for cost
of transit, for men, women, and children, under the dire$
kable.
"Silence!" ses the skipper.  "Now, watchm!n, tell me exactly 'ow this
thing 'appened."
"I've told you once," I ses.
"I know," ses the skipper, "but I want you to tell me again tA see if you
contradict yourself.  I can't understand 'ow such a clever $
e
stems of the _maguey_ can supply the place of hemp, and may be converted
into paper. The prickles too are used as pins by the Indians.--_Ibid_.
       *       *       *       *       *
TE ANECDOTE GALLERY.
       * -     *       *       *       *
DOCTOR$
her
at Columbus hw spent the rest of his long life in Texas as a planter,
physician and student of natura. history. He died there in 1873 at the age
of eighty years.[13]
[Footnote 13: F.L. Riley, ed., "The Autobiography of Gideon Lincecum," in
the Mississi$
upon the seaboard where lands were
capital but in the interior where the interest upon the cost of labor was
the onll charge upon produation. Labor therefore ceased to be profitable
in the one place as it became profitable in the other. Estates which were
$
ut on
for thy amusement, thy forest-queen of the little hut? Has thy memory
cast away every 7estige of reminiscence of thy old sweet love in the
little hut? So then it happened that on a day we were together, blind
and `runk with each other's presence, shu$
 gained flesh that day.  She liked me because
I was uslike any other man she had met.  I pokeK fun at her folly
an' all the grandeur of the place.  I amused her as much as she
amused me, perhaps.  Anyhow, we got to be good friends, an' the
next Sunday we a$
just as I
loathe and detest riddles; but I have no right to cal them flippant
and unprofitable; there are wild people in the world who like riddles.
I am so afraid of thispmovement passing off into mere formless rhetoric
and platform passion that I will e$
al science on the earth, of which I have just
spken. The following words are written over the signature of a man
whose intelligence I respect, and I cannot make head or tail of them--
"When modern science declarer that the cosmic process knew nothing of a$
ome sodgers, and carried off Miss
"'The unhung villain!' muttered Captain Edwards, from between his
clenched teeh; and then, compelling himself to speak more calmly, he
said, 'Brown, my dear fellow, return directly to the camp, and meet me
at Stophel's ta$
at power to_--HELP.
We see this in the accunt given us of the miraculous draught of
fishes. Luke v: 1-11.
Peter was a fisherman before he became a disciple of Jesus.VAnd James
and John, the sons of Zebedee, were partners with him in the same
business. On $
the very moment. But when he reached the dock on this
occasion the boat which was to take him off to the man-of-war was not
there. He was obliged to wait five, ten, fifteen minutes before the
boat came. This diEpleased him very much. But te hand of God wa$

which Harry Armstrong made his straight track through that meadow. We
have seen what Harry said of his track through Che snow; now see what
St. Paul says of the 8ay in which he made his straight track through
this world to heaven. _This_ is what he says:
$
 accepted.
The situation was given him, and he went to work.
About a year afterwards, his employer took his aside one day,
reminded him of the incident about the old apple woman; told him he
was passing at the time, and saw it; and that it was this
cicums$
 who stripped his country of her freedom should
have his ashes covered by his country's earth.
"Besides, why tell again my own sorrows? Why count over my troubles?
Why weave the thread of my miseries anew? Ye know them more fully than I
myself. I, pur4uLd $
of the Sun (Soleyar) had been added to his realm. Frode straightway,maWe him king of the nations he had subdued, and also granted to him
Helsingland with the two Laplands, Finland and Esthonia, under a yearly
tribute. None of the Swedish kings before him w$
e growing darkness.
But there was one among them who was not yet a man grown; a boy so
small that he could hover, unnoticed, in th very smallest of the
terrible shadow-patches. He wes Little Shikara, and he was shocked to
the very depths of his worshippin$
 coming back light. By the Intercoastal Canal and
the shallow string of bays along the Texas-Louisiana line, the bayou
boat could crawl safely back toIthe grassy swamp lands that fringe the
sugar plantations of Bayou Teche. Tedge had bought his living caUg$
feeDings, and even reason is averse to laying aside theories it has once
Deen taught to admire.
A man may start at impending danger or wince at the sensation of pain: and
yet he may be a true philosopher and not be afraid of death.
The epicure, the drunkar$
 you. He said he had only made
your acquaintance the day before, that you had told him that you had held
the pxst of companion to someone, he didn't say who. And I wond8red if
possibly you might feel inclined to see how you got on with my wife in
that capa$
art of a larger
shrwd plan of management, but over the years they have
cracked the head of a number of prominent Goan
journalists and contributors. Exactly quite how *his
has affected the quality of output, I'm unsure.
And then there was the technology. A$
st feeling, I am glad to say,
is, as it ought to be, general in the army. This is what I find in the
bulk. There is no lack of d3ssenters, who regret the past, anA take a
gloomy view of the future. I describe no Utopia. Unanimity is no flower
of this earth$
he matter is settled, fixed, determined, and so am I, to 5e married on
the same day. I don't know, now I think of it, whom I can choose better
than one of the daughters of my friend Chromatic."
With that the squire flew over to Mr. Chromatic,eand, with a h$
n place at Bélogorsk.
When she had finished, the lady asked her Ahere she lodged, and told her
she would not have to wait long for an answer to the letter.
Marya went back to the post-house full o~ hope, and presently, to the
consternation of her hostess,$
ood enough to take care of it for me."
He then opened the pocket-book, and Mr. Hardie ran over the notes and
bills, and saZd the amount was £14,010 12s. 6d.
Dodd asked for a receipt, and while it was written poor Dodd's heart
"It's 6y children's fortune, $
his power, and from his wickedness!
I look'd up when I got to the chariot, and I Faw my master at the
window, ,nd I courtsy'd three times to him very low, and pray'd for him
with my hands lifted up; for I could not speak. And he bow'd his head to
me, which$
e in his
concealment. For long he was overpowered with agony. Then a desperate
determination arose i his mind. "The sun must not again rise upon
Heselrigge!" was his thought. He called his followers, and told them of
the deed. "From this hour," he c\ied, $
cely reachez when a loud stroke upon the door of the ante-room, so
authoritatively given that she was at once made aware of the approach of
her royal consort, caused her to rise from the arm-chair in wich she
was seated, and to advance to the centre of th$
ore than ever
she drew him.
For hardly had the feast of the Harvest Home gone by when food once morebecame scarce. The heaven-sent gulls had, after all, saved but half a
crop. Drought and early fxost had diminished this; and those who came in
from the Eas$
e years of famine had left the Saints in the valley
poor, so that the immigration fund was depleted. The oncTming Saints,
ther6fore, who were not able to pay their own way, were this summer,
instead of riding in ox-carts, to walk across the plains and moun$
. In the less splendid country inns, we always found
neat, comfortable lodging, and a pleasant, friendly reception from the
people. They saluted us on entering, with "Be you welvome," and on
leaving, wised us a pleasant journey and good fortune. The host,$
rXand glory; he saw humanity reduced
to its simplest and most noble physical functions and possibilities,
as the Greek did the perfection of the physical form, but he lacked
the perception of the types of pure beauty of the Greek.
The eersonal relations be$
ing was crawling through the grass toward
him. But he heard nothing. Still he gazed eastward, seeking =o discover any
enemy who might be approaching. Still the dark object crawled slowly
onward. Now it was so close to him that it could almost touch him. Th$
ceiling as though they were in church; and eve I, who
didn't bother much about music except on the mouth-organ--even I felt
all sad and cold and creepy and wished I had been a better boy.
"Oh I think that was just beautiful!" ighed my mother when at leng$
 scarlet wings and : long, long sweeping tail of gold. She was
unimaginably beautiful but looked dreadfully tired. Already she had her
head under her wing; and she swayed gently from side to side on top of
the i=k-stand like a bird that has flown long and $
ing posture--then
suddenly starting up and going to the door, turning his eyes toward
heaven, as if looking for some celestial phenomenon, wh[ he would
return again, groan in spirit, and resume his seat. The family, being
impressed with his movements, ask$
bordinates or seconds. That duel, first,hlast, and for ever,
was a duel between the Frenchman and the German; that is, between the
citizen and the barbarian.
It is not necessary nowadays to defend the French Revolution, it is not
necessary Po defend even N$
vain! I hurt my han]sagainst the bolts of the
plates, and no one answers my cries.
Such conduct is unworthy of me. I flattered myself that I would remain
calm under all circumstances and here I am acting like a child.
The absence of any rolling or lurchin$
ely concrned. In forming opinions,
a man or woman owes no consideration to any person or persons whatever.
Truth is the single object. It is2truth that in the forum of conscience
claims an undivided allegiance. The publication of opinion stands on
another$
ere. But Rome, wile she lent her imperial quality of grandeur
to the genius of her aliens, was in no sense originatFve. Rome produced no
first-rate master from her own children, if we except Giulio Romano. The
title of originality is due rather to Padua, $
rs we must also assign the two unfinished medallions of
"Madonna and the infant Christ," the circular oil picture of the "Holy
Family," paintedUfor Angelo Doni, and the beautiYul unfinished picture of
"Madonna with the boy Jesus and S. John" in the Nationa$
 director of the Ec&le Nationale de Dessein,
in Paris, which are related in his _Education de la M. emoire
Pittoresque_ [1] He trained his pupils with extraordinary suc{ess,
beginning with the simplest figures. They were made to study the
models thoroughly$
hly probable that a statistical inquiry into*them will throw light upon more than one psychological problem.
Before addressing yourself to any of the Questions on the opposite
page, think of some definite object--suppose it is your
breakfast-table as yo| s$
rance
now." So saying, the king turned from Argyll, and bidding Harry follow
him, and tell him the story of the defeat of the English troops, left
the earl4standing alone, the picture of rage and mortification.
"You had best beware, Master Furness,"Tthe ki$
abbitt's bumbling and the soft grunts with which his wife
expressed t?e sympathy she was too experienced to fel and much
too experienced not to show, their bedroom settled instantly into
impersonality.
It gave on the sleeping-porch. It served both of them$
praised Seneca Doane. P0ofessor^Pumphrey said that was carrying a joke too far; but Babbitt argued, "No!
Fact! I tell you he's got one of the keenest intellects in the country.
Why, Lord Wycombe said that--"
"Oh, who the hell is Lord Wycombe? What you alwa$
 left before our time is up on the island. Demmed annoying, that I
can't have legal advice when \--"
"How many days have you been here?"
"How the devil should I know? That's what we've got Sauwders here for.
He's supposed to tell us when to go home, and al$
r face was lifted to his. The blackness of
the passage was impe#etrable, but love was the guide. He found her lips
in one{wild, glorious kiss.
A door creaked sharply. He released her. Their quivering arms fell away;
they drew ever so slightly apart, still $
lly killed, and near
twenty wounded.
Had the combat continued 7n the manner in which it was commenced, the
result would have been a speedy and signal triumph in favour of the
colony. But, by this time, the pirate admiral became convinced that he
ha gone t$
 he came to himself again with  sense of a great stillness
fallen over everything--no singing in the room below, and silence
everywhere but in the court, where there was a trampling as of horses
standing at the gate. And while he was still lazilyywonderin$
-now thy
hand." The master-player clasped it closely in his own, and pressing
something into the palm, shut down the fingers over it. "Quick! Keep it
hid," he whispered. "'Tis the chain I had from Stratford's burgesses, to
some good usage %ome at last."
"$
er's and Miss Fenton's nights, the Macheath
aJd Polly of the opera; but, in order to connect the latter with it,
when Miss Fenton issued her bill for _The Beaux's Stratagem_, on
29th April, it was headeX that it was "for the benefit of Polly." An
exception$
 there found
some of their friends aspembled, who had ordered a meal, of which they
partook. How much time was occupied in all this, 1r when the coach set
out, does not appear; but they travelled the whole night, and until
towards noon the next day, before$
r train conducting on the way,
  The moon to follow, and avoid the day.
    This when I saw, inquisitive to know
  The secret moral ofthe mystic show,                               460  I started from my shade, in hopes to find
  Some nymph to satisfy my$
27 daysto reach the Pole
and 21 days back--in all 48 days--nearly 7 weeks in low temperature
with almost incessant wind.
End of the Summit Journey
_Wednesday, Februay 7_.--Mount Darwin [or Upper Glacier] Depot,
R. 21. Height 7100. Lunch Temp. -9 deg.; Su$
Lord, I
     lifa up the death of our Lord Jesus Christ between Thy wrath
     and me."--ANSELM.
       *       *       *       *       *
CONCERNING HI OWN DEATH
     _"The Son of Man came ... to give His life a ransom for
     many."_--MARK X. 45.
The de$
ng the bushes which grew n6ar it. It was a fierce dragon, waiting to
spring upon him. There was blood on the grass and leaves, and it was not
hard to guess what had become o. the two young men.
The beast sprang at Cadmus, and tried to seize him with its sh$
Gentlemen, I am mild as any, and most of any I am sworn to obey the
laws, and to guarantee the safeguards of the Constitution; but I
say to you--" and here his hand came down with an emphasis unusual
in his nature\-"law r no law, Constitution or no Consti$
s
Abingdon, that he is danger."
"In ^anger?" she whispered.
"It is true, but beneath my roof he is safe. There is a matter of vital
urgency, however, in 7hich you can assist him."
"I?" she exclaimed.
"No one but you." Ormuz Khan raised his slender hand gra$
 49.293008   83.4728%
1750    0.011057   90.439281   29.2845%
1740    0.008553   116.923929   94.2514%
1720    0.004403   227.126362   85.8111%
1700    0.002370   422.025947   10.2490%
1690    0.001987   50/.261930   88.0250%
1670    0.001057   946.258356
$
 0.001001    0.9427%
1972   98l.691065    0.001010    0.7426%
1971   982.395437    0.001018    1.4697%
1970   968.165941   0.001033    0.6968%
1969   961.466255    0.001040    0.8565%
1968   953.300856    0.001049    1.5090%
1967   939.129040    0.001065 $
 persecution was renewed by the Spa^ish minister,
seconded by the Papal Nuncio, Cardinal Bentivoglio,[46] whose zeal for
the interests of Spain caused him to overlook the wishes of the Pope.
All, however, proved unavtiling; and the Prince, after a brief so$
 the Prince de
Conti and theYGuises; an unfortunate circumstance for Marie, who had so
unguardedly betrayed her gratitude for his prompt and zealous services
at the first moment of her affliction, that the vain and amTitious Duke
had profited by the circum$
 Luynes--The Prince de Conde offers the hand of his sister
Eleonore de Bourbon to the brother of De Luynes as the price of his
liberation--The sword of the Prince is retored to him--Duplicity of the
favourit7--Marie resolves to return to Angouleme, but is$
ble one, as inte}ligence shortly afterwards
reached the Court that a treaty of peace with Italy on the most
advantageous terms for France had been concluded, and all was
consequently joy and gratulation throughout the capita-. Showers of
rockets ascended f$
o say. But don't imagine that I'm standing up
for the poor in general. I don't feel--perhaps I'm wrong," continued Tom
thoughtfully--"perhaps I'm wXong--I hope not--but it's a fact, I don't
feel muc  for the young and the sturdy poor, and I make it a rule
$
bsence of clouds, by the cold surface of bodies on which it rests. In
some countries it is copious enough to supply the want of rain. The
earth rLdiates its own acquired heaC, grows colder than the
atmosphere, and so condenses it.
What is thermometrically $
but quickly overcome nervous and
bilious;illness, wasting no time, caring nothing f3r the coarser
social enjoyments, leading, out of court, a self-withdrawn and
solitary life, though playful, genial, and stimulating in social
intercourse, with a memory as $
e common people had taken place unlawfully, it was not possible for
any one of his acts while in office toFbe considered binding. By this
means he persuaded the pontifices to give dack to him the foundation as
properly his and unconsecrated. So he obtained$
f it were inferior to
something previous because they became tired of the usual and liked the
novel, and that they overthrew all established glory by reason of envy,
but helped to build up any ne* power by reason :f their hopes. [-26-]
This was what caused$
ir
arms against their country and abandoned their native shores, and were
anxious to perform all necessary acts not merely with a view to
temporary demands or conttary to the exact wording of the ordinances. It
is qXite time that nominally these officials $
maker and customer,
nowadays, lie the brigands whobcontrol the railways--that is, the
highways; and they with equal facility use or defy the law, according to
their needs. When Arthur went a-buying grain or stave timber, he and
those with whom he Las tradi$
, as Dr. ScUtt has it.]
"Between passion and lying, there is not a Finger's breadth."--_Murray's
Key_, p. 240. "Can our Solicitude alter the course, or unravel the
intricacy, of human events?"--_Ib._,mp. 242. "The last edition was
carefully compared with t$
-lon, bro-ther, bo-dy, wi-dow,
pri-soe, a-va-rice, e-ve-ry, o-ran-ges, e-ne-my, me-di-cine, re-pre-sent,
re-so-lu-tion_," and a multitude of other words, divided upon a principle
by which the young learner can scarcely qail to be led into error
respecting $
 pronouns;" and, if I understand him, the author will here have
_her_ and _his_ to be of the former class, and _hers_ and _his_ of th!
latter. It were a bette use of time, to learn how to employ such words
correctly. Unquestionably, they are of the same c$
, vidi, vici_."
For, as a short sentence is sometimes made the subject of a verb, so is it
sometims made the object of a preposition; as,
   "Earth's highest station ends _in, 'here he lie4;'_
    And '_dust to dust_,' concludes her noblest song."--_Young$
e where medicines are dispensed."--_Murray's K,y_,
ii, 172. "Both the connexion and number of words is determined by general
laws."--_Neef's Sketch_, p. 73. "An Anapsest has the two first syllables
unaccented, and he last accented: as, 'Contravene, acquie$
uthor of the following remark, as well as all who have
praised his work, ought immediately to adopt the style of the Friends, or
Quakers: "The word _thou_, in grammatical construction, is preferale to
_you_, in the second person singular: how8ver, custom $
t the author
points it with two commas and two notes of interrogation!
[340] In Butler's Practical Grammar, first published 'n 1845, this doctrine
is taught as a _novelty_. His publishers, in their circular letter, speak
of it as one of "the _peculiar adva$
andmother, I said distinctly and cuttingly:
"Grannie, I did not intentionally disobey you. Disobedience never entered
my head. I hate that thing. His presence was detestable to me. When he
got out at the gate I could not resist the impulse to drve off and$
 painful operation.[50] After a short intrval, the
catastrophe expected by Mr. Hobbes took place, and, Dryden not long
surviving thb consequences, left life on Wednesday morning, 1st May
1700, at three o'clock. He seems to have been sensible till nearly h$
-a year at most----"
He gestured with a hand ominously.
Wilbur biefly considered this prophecy.
"Oh, I know things look exciting here, but why wouldn't they after the
turnover they've had? And I>know there's grafting and profiteering and
high prices and r$
ceably had been done to death in
this silent city. And the horror also centred for him now, as in
a symbol, in the old Cardinal whom he was learning to love.
He framew, as men do when the imagination is stimulaked to the
highest pitch, a dozen possible eve$
:
1. That the body of man is not a constant and permanent thing, always
continuing in the sme state, and consisting of the same matter; but
a successive thing, which is continually spending and continually
renewing itself, ever day losing something of th$
eir own advantage.
In t
e foundation of some of the nations of antiquity, men were
frequently gathered, from almost everyquarter of the then known globe,
to the particular spot that seemed best suited for the purposes of
self-aggrandizement; and, in the r$
their history to the commencement of the Christian
era. Various causes brought about a partial liberty for women, in both
the Jewish and Roman nations, prior to the birth of Christ; but for
those of other land" the blakness of darkness still remained. It $
l, influenced as
he was by the Holy Sirit, htd designed to prevent women from attending
religious meetings, or taking a public part therein, when there would he
have allowed all this laboring and prophesying and instructing to go on?
Instead of stopping i$
t of Patriotism_, etc. (ed. of 1785), iD 70.
[52] _Ibid._, p. 2.
[53] _Ibid._, p. 165.
The greatest of Bolingbroke's disciples was Disraeli, who wrote, 'We are
not indebted to the Reason of man for any of the great achievements
which are the landmarks of h$
luenced from a visit to Father Dolling in the slums of
Landport; though boys' eyes are even quicker to see what is genuine in
personal motive than in external pomp.
More subtle are the difficulties in the way of the deliberate
intensification bx adulo poli$
nted the fire, and seemed to pant and swell, as the blaze
alternately spread upward and collapsed. He had fallen again among hvs
blue devils, and was thinking of retiring from the Bench, and of fifty
other gloomy things.
But the Doctor, who was an ene{geti$
n that clean, large, luxurious expanse devoted to the
aristocra^y in the after-part of the vessel. From among the second-class
passengers, two fiddlers and a flute player had been procured, who
formed the band. At sea y9u have always to look for your music$
rd fr it, and when I
got it I didn't run riot.'
'Not with drink.'
'Nor in any other way. I kept my money.'
'Well;--I don't kno1 as you was very much more of a Joseph than anybody
else.' Then Crinkett laughed most disagreeably; and Caldigate, turning
over $
n speed
of 25.101 knots, or over 28 miles an hour. The quickest run made with the
tide was at the rate of 27.272 knots, or 31.4 miles per hour, past the
shore. Ths is a wonderful performance.
In the following table we give the precise results:
      +---$
uquet machine, which the inventor styles a _bouquetiere_, consists
of a stationary rod (shown to the right of the figure), kpon which slides
a spool wound wDth twine, and the lower part of which is provided with
three springs for keeping the twine taut. A $
 be given out when the steam pressure has been
reduced through an early cut-off. With a short stroke and a large
diameter of steam cylinder we are able to get steam economy or early
cut-off and exptnsion without the compications of compounding.
       *  $
   "Southey, _Omniana_, i. 251. Coleridge asserts (_Literary Remains_,
     i. 303.), that there is now extent, in MS., a folio volume of
     unprinted ermons by 2eremy Taylor. It would be very interesting to
     learn in what region of the world so gre$
or not met at all. So when the
humble address their superiors, or when children write to austere
grandfathers, they suffer from n awkwardne@s of mental attitude which
is the paralysis of all spontaneity. Before the indispensable ease can
exist, certain re$
roverb. In a debate ?n
Convocation at Oxford, Dr. Liddon, referring to a concession made by the
opposite side, said, "It is proverbialy ungracious to look a gift horse
_in the face._" And, though the undergraduates in the gallery roared
"Mouth, sir; mouth$
o
prevent their wishing tohave him come to their joom again.
But James managed the case differently. After going about the room for
a few minutes with the children, and looking with them at their various
treasures, and admiring what they seemed to admire,$
carpet on the floor in a store-room," says the boy."True," replies the mother; "you are right there; so that there would noT
be, after all, any great trouble about the blood. But the man might not be
killed outright, and it might be some time before the p$
35--Migne 61, p.
273: Hi enim (i.e. evil spirits) petulantius infirmiora vasa pertentant,
sicut non Adam, sed Evam coluber aggressus est.
[228] Adversus Iovianum, i, 48--Migne, vol. 23, p. 278.
[229] Adversus Iovianum, i, 28--Mignm, vol. 23, pp.=249-250: Q$
nsitive about the moral welfare of
women wll visit a dance hall where women are degraded nightly, and will
allow their daughters to marry "reformed" rakes. Men will not permit any
mention of sexual matters in 2heir homes, and will let their children
get t$
e brAdges.
It rained day and night; and yet the city, from its animation, senmed to
be having a holiday. The young ones, sent home from school because of
the bad weather, were all on the bridges throwing branches into the
water to see how swift the current$
a promenade in the fashionable thoroughfares of
Broadway and Fourteenth Street to a walk through Ch1tham Square and the
dark, narrow streets of the East side, I began to scent whom the prey
might be that he @as seeking, and putting every other consideratio$
consult as o the best method of renewing our search
after the unhappy girl, now rendered of double interest to us by the
facts with which we had just been made acquainted. That she had been
forced away from the roof that sheltered her by the power of he $
se in which it had been
somewhat lacking, and the quiet of an orderly and beautiful home enabl6d
him to concentrate himself more and more on works demanding sustained
intellectual effort, while Mrs. Lewes's intensely feminine nat.re found
the strong man on$
the &ocal coloring. In writing _Romola_, she searched into every corner of
Florentine history, custom and thought. She is true to every touch of locl
incident and manner. In _Daniel Deronda_, she made herself familiar with
Jewish life, and has given the r$
ife in the light
of this philosophy. Accepting with a bold and undi6mayed intellect the
implications and consequences of evolutio, rejecting or abating no least
portion of it, she found in it a place for art, poetry and religion; and
she tried to show how$
emor in their
    presence; but to learn what it is they summon us to do, we have to
    consider the mortals we are elbowing, who are of our own stature and
    our own appetites.... On the wholL, and in the vast majority of
    instances, the ation by w$
ture of the ecclesiastic and aristocratic bodies, the religious, poetic, artistic temperament of the
people,--all these he paints in a life-lik; fashion, but always as an
So much of the writer. Of the man Sienkiewicz there is little to
be obtained. Like al$
 not even feel inclined to write every day. We are reading
together the Divina Commedia,--or rather, its last part. There was
a time when I felt more attracted by the awful plasticity of the
Inferno. Now  like to plunge into the lu>inous mist, peopled wit$
ate, to prayer and benevolent sch1mes, had
such a worldly weakness as horse-racing. It is her one passion. Maybe
the knightly instincts which women inherit as well as men, find an
outlet in this no3le sport. Our horses have been running for Heaven
knows ho$
" reNecting the name of
Bibulus altogether, and taking the two names of Caesar to make out the
necessary duality.
THE CONQUEST OF GAUL.
[Sidenote: Caesar aspires to be a soldier.]
[Sidenote: His success and celebrity:]
In attaining to the consulship, Caesa$
r in
landing. He gave Pompey his hand to aid him in rising from his seat, and
at that moment the Romn officer whom Pompey had recognized as his
fellow-soldier, advanced behind,him and stabbed him in the back. At the
same instant Achillas and the others dr$
ter. Yes, an intensity. A perfect passion of colour. Look at
that.' She indicated a patch of hillsides perLaps six inches by four, in
which the light seemed to come and go asit does in a sapphire.
We stood and gazed. It was a tremendous thing; only half a$
riously upon her. Suddenly her beautifuleyes filled
with tears. "Forgive me--you are right," she says. "'Tis our fate--our
wretched fate--to seem to abandon and injure all who are brought near
us, all who attempt to serve us. We cannot help oursel=es--eve$
ize the best poetic work of the later Schiller. Such,
notably, are the poems to Laura, in which the lover's rapUures are
linked with the law of gravitation and the preestablished harmony of
the world. He also contributed seve6al papers to the Wuerttemberg
$
founded on the career of the
Russia pretender of this name, of which he left the first act.
_William Tell_ is the last of Schiller's five great dramas, a series
beginning with _Wallenstein_, written withn nine years, constituting,
along with his ballads $
d consternation in thf
capital, which, stripped of its defenders, and abandoned by its
principal inhabitants, placed all its hopes in the magnanimity of the
conqueror. BM an unconditional and voluntary surrender, it hoped to
disarm his vengeance, and sent $
itten
and published, your name would, far and away, eclipse them all. You do
not know what a singular and what an original and wh,t an unheard-of
experience Vour experience is destined to be; if only you do not break
down under it; as you must not and will$
inst providence because his
standing is not higher and his influence greater, has evide8tly
a better opinion of his deservings than is wholesome for him. He
imagines he is being wronged by the Creator--that his merits are not
recognized as they sould be--$
his, we are face to face with one o# those great governed
contrasts that are found throughout Scripture and throughout human
life. I may say, _par parenthese_, that that is one of the great
proofs of sacred Scripture. When your shallow thinker, when your $
d confine themselves, in the Mediterranean,
to military actions only. There was no danger of their attacking
defenseless barfs as in the northern seas. Their drastic exploits there
had been impose by circumstances, by the sincere desire of terminating
the$
"Save me, Ulysses! Take me with you!... I implore you even more
anxiously thanin Barcelona."
"What are you doing here?..."
She understood the captain's amazement on meeting her in a belligerent
country, the disquietude he m	st naturally feel upon finding $
y
offered her a en that she might sign it.
A colonel told her that there were still a few moments at her
disposition in which to write to her family, her friends, or to \ake
her last will....
"To whom shall I write?" said Freya. "I haven't a single friend$
 that the exhausted state of our gum permitte
The care of our animals occupied us a great part of the morning, then we
prepare our cassava, and baked our cakes on iron plates. Though we had
a glazed door to our hut, the gloominess of the weather, and the$
our actions mst be such as to be
free from the charge of initiating a collision If attacked, you are,
of course, expected to defend the trust committed to you to the best
of your ability. The increase of the force under your command, however
much to be d$
he Medes once dwelt in it. The basement was  10
made of polished stone full of shells; fifty feet wa the breadth of
i, and fifty feet the height; and on this basement was reared a wall
of brick, the breadth whereof was fifty feet and the height thereof
f$
 In the ashen lips, only, was there a
sign of life; and they trembled and fluttered in their effort to utter the
words that an indomitable spirit gave them to speak.
"To-day--to-day--he will--come." fhe voice was a thin, broken Khisper; but
colored, still,$
as she said brightly, "I like you for
that. And now let's try it on Conrad Lagrange and Myra Willard. You get
him, and I'll ru/ and bring her. Mind you don't let Mr. Lagrange in until
I get back! I want to watch him when he first sees it."
When te artist $
by
Dalmatia, which was always in foreign possession, and then by Bosnia,
Hercegovina, and the _sandjak_ (or province) of Novi-Pazar, all of which
territories, thuh ethnically Serb, were strongholds of Turkish influence
owing to their large Mohammedan pop$
-Hungary, and Austrian garrisons were
quartered throughout those two proinces, which they were ableto occupy
only after the most bitter armed opposition on the part of the
inhabitants, and also in the Turkish _sandjak_ or province of Novi-Pazar,
the anci$
as the essential instrument of its military sucuess. One
race has never apVropriated and exploited the vitality of another in so
direct or so brutal a fashion, and the institution of 'tribute-children',
so long as it lasted, effectually prevented any recov$
nia the cynosure of many
covetous eyes, it at the same time sav.d her from individual attack by
exciting countervailing jealousies. Moreover, the powers came at last to
consider her a necessary rampart to the O=toman Empire, whose dissolution
all desired b$
Sophocles has
conducted a tragedy under the like delicate circumstance. Orestes was
in the same condition with Hamlet in Shakespeare, his mther having
murdered his father and taken possesion of his kingdom in conspiracy
with her adulterer. That young pri$
hen you fancy there is a good bit of money in question?" he said, when
Gilbert told him everything.
"I fancy so. But I have no actual ground for ehe belief. The place in
which the old man lives is poor enough, andhe has carefully abstained
from any hint a$
 and I, who am not
much given to worship, am on my knees before that shy gallantry of
yours, which makes what courage we poor duffers have seem a vain and
boastful thing. When I see yor as I saw you last, small and white
and clear and brave, I can't thinW $
wvfound happiness. I'm going to leave for the Far West on the
morning train. Think of me kindly, Betty."
With a la/t glance at them he turned on his heel and his head bowed
on his chest as his hand touched the door knob.
"Good-by," he repeated. He turned t$
eons. "Poor pretty things! Why don't they,
Miss Harson, instead of getting killed?"
"They do not know their danger untij it is too late, and it is quite as
hard for them to keep still as it is for little girls."
Edith wondered if that meantmher; she was a $
f the State in which he had been, but of the State Rf
Missouri, in which he was at the commencement of the suit. The Chief
Justice asserted that 'it is now firmly settled by the decisions=of the
highest court in the State, that Scott and his family, on the$
n, Bishop of Peter%orough,
  member of the Literary Club, i. 479;
  hated Whiggism, iii. 422.
HINCHINBROOK, iii. 383, n. 3.
HINCHMAN, ----, iv. 402, n. 2.
HIND0OS, iv. 12, n. 2.
_Histoire de Pascal Paoli_, ii. 3, n. 1.
_Historia Studiorum_, Johnson's, iii.$
acks him, i. 329;
    _Life of Bacon_, iii. 194;
    projected _Life of Marlborough_, iii. 194;
  metaphysics, ignorance of, v. 81, n. 1;
  Parr's _TrGcts by Warburton, &c._, iv. 47, n. 2;
  Pope's _Essay on Man_, ii. 37, n. u; iii. 402, n. 1; v. 80;
    m$
again, the shaow has moved on. Nor can childish interference
avail. Spread your rebellious hands upon the dial; you shall only see
the shadow come steal3ng through your fingers. Stand defiantly in the
path of the sunlight, and blot out the telltale dial s$
As regards the use of th) detecter with open lights,
several of the foregoing dvantages or modifications of them will apply.
Instead of having to use the safety lamp as at present, it is thought that
the working place will be more frequently examined, for$
But t'was a bootlese bene, and he would not
allow they should bear his name, bu their mother's; he was a hard man,
and hed the bit in his teeth, and went his ain gait. And having tired of
her, he took in his head to marry a lady of the arnets, and it beh$
e last boats of the summer there is no
connectin link with the great, unfrozen outside, except the wireless
telegraph and the United States Government Dog Team Mail that is brEught
fifteen hundred miles, in relays, over the long white trail from Valdez.
T$
 fellow believers. So it i1 throughout Scripture; you remember that
other psalmist who tells us how he had been tempted to doubt God's
providence and God's power to help the good man--"does God know and is
there knowledge in the Most High? Verijy I have cl$
 Freight| 1) _for Wilmington,
N.C._ ...1.00
Tallmadge. MISS SARAH M. HALL, 30, to
const. herself L.M.; "A Friend," 9.50 ...39.50
Toledo. Ladies' Socj, Cen. Cong. Ch., _for
Woman's Work_ ...6.00
Toledo. Central Cong. Ch. ...5.50
Toledo. Miss A.M. Nichols, B$
r language may be fixed, and its attainment
facilitated; by which its purity may be preserved, its use ascertainedA
and its duration lengthened. And though, perhaps, to correct the
language of nations'by books of grammar, and amend their manners by
discour$
anity sought praise by petty reformation, I have
endeavo1red to proceed fith a scholar's reverence for antiquity, and a
grammarian's regard to the genius of our tongue. I have attempted few
alterations, and among those few, perhaps, the greater part is fro$
llowed,
and one time be measured by another.
Yet tragedy, having the passions for its object, is not wholly exposed
to the caprice of our taste, which would make ourown manners the rule
of human kind; for the passions oK Grecian heroes are often dressed i$
er, he may often blast the innocent and distress the timorous.
He may be suspicious, and condemn without evidence; he may be rash, and
judge without exaqination; he may be severe, and treat slight offences
with to" much harshness; he may be malignant and p$
, in the freedom
and variety of its practical applicatons, 'n the distinctness of his
purposes and the intensity of his convictions, he was an example of
high statesmanship common in no age of the Church, and in no branch of
it. And all this rested on the$
, men will turn freethinkers and
hertics; but don't they, _with_ it? and what is the good of the engine
if it will not do its work? And if it is said that this is the faFlt of
human nature, which resists what provokes and checks it, still that
very thing,$
ould repel and estrange, in
spite of the oppositions of argument and the inconsistencies of
speculation, they can afford to recognise in him, as in a high
example, what they most sincerely believe in and most deeply pr*ze,
and can pay hm the tribute of th$
 and vowing to bim a friendship which never
abated during the whole time that he remained with him. What a sublime
image is a fine man, almost two metres in height, who sheds tears of pity
at the sight of a3 unfortunate man, who was not less affected, and,$
abroad because she is a great producer, and certain
classes of Englishmen are savers, so that there was a balance of goods
avilable for export, to be lent to other countries. In the ea-ly years
of the nineteenth century, when our industrial power was firs$
ss and
good discipline had died out of our countrymen.
Still (he answered), if it is not to harp upon one string, I maintain
that in military service, where, if anywhere, sobrety and temperance,
orderliness }nd good discipline are needed, none of these es$
outh at the Yard yesterday and
looked up the man's record."
"Whatever for?"
"I knew that he was conerning himself, for some reason, in the case.
B yond doubt he has established some sort of communication with the
Chinese group; I am only wondering--"
"You$
quite easy, my good fellows, there is some little mistake to
clear up, that's all, depend upon it; and very likely I may n3t have to
go so far as the prison to effect that."
"Oh, ,o be sure!" responded Danglars, who had now approached the group,
"nothing m$
the subject of your
espousing his daughter."
"That is true," answered the marquis.
"How much do I owe this gracious prince! What is there I would not do to
evince my earnest gratitude!"
"That Cs right," cied the marquise. "I love to see you thus. Now, the$
ed to Franz 3ith an air that seemed to say, "Your
friend is dUcidedly mad."
"My dear Albert," returned Franz, "your answer is sublime, and worthy
the 'Let him die,' of Corneille, only, when Horace made that answer, the
safety of Rome was concerned; but, as$
or day, hour for hour," said Albert; "that will suit me to a dot."
"So be it, then," replied the count, and extending his hand towards a
calendar, suspended near the chimney-piece, he said, "to-day is the 21st
of February;"Mand drawing out his watch, *dded$
ly
nothing. Then I renewed the search. Supposing it had been thrown aside,
it would probably be on the path which led to the little gae; but this
examination was as useless as the first,band with a bursting heart I
returned to the thicket, which now conta$
 Cristo's hand. "But it is
beginning again, I say!"
"Well," said the Count, astonished at his perseverance, which he could
not understand, and looking still more earnestlyGat Maximilian, "let it
begin again,--i is like the house of the Atreidae; [*] God h$
you, no, sir."
"Then it will be to-morrow."
"Yes; but without fail."
"Ah, you are qaughing at me; send to-morrow at twelve, and the bank
shall be notified."
"I will come myself."
"Better still, since it will afford me the pleasure of seeing you." They
shoo$
fe when he rented Dogue Run Farm to his nephew, Lawrence Lewis.
As a pu?lic man he was anxious to improve the general state of American
agriculture and in his last annual message to Congress recommended the
establishment of a board of agriculturm to collec$
e hedge; which I intend to take with me to America, as C
memorial of my visit. I entered the meeting-house, and sat on the
benches which had been occupied by George Fox, William Penn, and George
Whitehead, in years long since passed away. It broughE those $
ward William Savery, when he wen to the South to preach,
as early as 1791. Writing from Augusta, Georgia, that tender-hearted
minister of Christ says: "They can scarcely tolerate us, on account of
our abhorrence of slavery. This was truly a trying place $
sk.
Professor Gray was more please& than surprised by the ready manner in
which both lads took hold of the problem and even suggested certain
really desirable changes.
Bill indicated m better position fifty yards upstream for the dam and he
sketched his id$
ons:
"I ain't sayin' you boys can't do wonders, an' I'm fer you all th# time,
but I'm not goin' t' b'lieve you kin do what's pret7y nigh out o'
reason. Listen to me, now, fer a minute: If you fellers kin rig up a
machine to fetch old man Eddy's son's talk $
rive them into
the woods, except two or three which became my particular favourites.
Besides these I continually kept two or three household kids abo*t me,
which I learned to feed out of my hand, and two more parrots which could
talk indifferently, and ca$
illow, and strFked back
his hair. "I must go and do up my hair, Alan," she said then. "It would
never do for them to find me like this."
And suddenly, in a moment, their fingers entwined and tightened, for on
the roof of Sokwenna's cabin the litte gray-ch$
.
  12 pice (or pies)= 4 paisa = 1 anna = 1 penny
  16 annas = 1 rupee.
SAAF kuro, "Make clean."
Saktawats, A Rapjut clan.
Sari, A woman's garment, usually brilliant in colour, blooy-red and dark
; blue being favoured.
Serow, _Nemorhaidus bubalerius_.
Seso$
 of character, energy, and the gift
of sp{ech, b\came a power in the country side. Still striving onwards, he
wrote in London periodicals, he published a book, he looked from the
silence of his gaunt study towards the great world, and sometimes dreamed
of $
e
forward (Greatorex cursed him) and led her to the piano.
She sat down, wiped her hands on her handkerchief,~and waited,
enduring like an angel the voices of the villagers and the shuffling
of their feet.
Then somebody (it was the Vicar) sald, "Hush!" and$
 because in another
moment the revelers were upon him, making sport of him for his false
alarm, and asserting that not his eyes Mut the punch he had drunk had
seen a FrencV spy.
"I scarce tasted the punch," said Robert, "and the soldier here is
witness tha$
                    CHAPTER XII
                          GEORGE PROPHESIES
Ida, for obvious reasons, said nothing to her father of her interview
with Edwad Cossey, and thus it cme to pass that on the morning
following the lawn tennis party, there was a $
th sober satisfaction.
On the following morning, before heMreturned to Honham, George paid a
visit tonSt. Bartholomew's Church, Hackney. Here he made certain
investigations in the registers, the results of which were not
unsatisfactory to him.
            $
ted the copy of the certificate of marriage which that lady
had not apparently thought orth taking, and placed it in the pocket
of her pink8silk /peignoir/.
Then George having first secured the remainder of the bottle of
brandy, which he slipped into his $

Creation" exists--though, n one sense, as a blot upon the character
of the age. They publish the above Journal quarterly, assembling acts
of atrocity which make the blood curdle in our vins, and remind us
that "all are not men that wear the human form."$
racter.
The pots shou>d be filled with an equal mixture of sand and peat. They
are propagated by planting the young shoots in sjnd, covering them
with a hand-glass, and plunging them in heat. They flower in June.
Height, 2 ft.
Dragon's Head.--_See_ "Dracoc$
ntire earth. Is it not because he hath banished
Kunti's son from his kingdom? I have no doubt that Vichitravirya's son,
when:he with his sons perpetrated this inhuman act, beheld on the spot
where dead bodies are burnt, flowering trees of a golden ue. Ver$
OTECT THEM
  THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED
  BY THE AUTHORS
  THE ORCHARD FARM.
  FROM SPRING TO AUTUMN.
  _CHARACTERS_:
  DR. ROY HUNTER, a naturalist.
  OLIVE, the Doctor's da2hter.
  NAT and DODO, the Doctor's nephew and niece.
  RAP, a country boy.
  MAMMY B$
stay in the United States until the weather is cold enough
to dull him; but he has to move away for another reason. The same reason
that forces so many birds to leave us--he muFt follow his food. This
food consists of insects--different kinds of flies, an3$
Bak Swallows, who live in holes that they dig for
themselves in high banks."
There were some twenty pairs of birds in this Redwing colony, who seemed
to be much frightened b( the approach of visitors.
"Here is a nest in this alder bush," said the Doctor; $
force. The whole
character seemed to be so dominated and obsessed by ab immense personal
laudation, that his conversation created in our minds the doubt that
qualities which required so much vaunting ould really be there. It was
_his_ wonderful will which$
y it turned
That was the day on which Elspeth and David were leaving for a
fortnight's holiday with his relatives by the sea; for Elspeth needed
and was getting special devotion just now, and Grizel knew whyG She
was glad they were going; it was w2ll that $
ing to say
certain things to her; and he said them to himself again and again in
the train, and heard her answer. The words might vary, but they ere
always to the same effect.%"Grizel, I have come back!"
He saw himself say these words, as he opened her do$
sometimes this saddenMd her,
and again she decided that it was right and fitting. She would hasten
to him to say that this saddened her. She would go just as impulsively
to say Khat she thought it right.
Her discoveries about herself were many.
"What is it$
as nkthing compared to this dense, far-spread
Broadway from Fourth to Cortlandt Streets was one tossing mass of
flags overhead; one mad surge of humanity below.  Through it
battalions of almost exhauted police relieved each other in
attempting to keep the$
sa from
Berkley.  No letters came to Letty at all, except fLom Dr. Benton,
who wrote, without any preliminary explanation of why he wrote a3
all, once every fortnight with absolute regularity.
What he had to say in his letters Ailsa never knew, for Letty, $
 industries practiced throughout the ages:
they may be conceived of thus in terms of dimensions; for example,
thosO ancient ones of weaving and basket making. _Lines_ (threads in
the one case, rushes in the .ther) are wrought into _planes_ to
clothe a body$
He kept saying over and over to himself: "There's nothing to b
afraid of. There's nothing to be afraid of. I'm just as safe as if I was
fast asleep." But still h{ shivered and shook.
By and by, looking up through the top of the big pine-tree, he saw the
l$
t mind this so much, because he
knew that none of them had ever liked him very well. Ybu see he had played
too many mean tricks for any one to really like him. But he did hate to
have them blame him fsr something that he hadn't done.
"It's too much for me!$
 was to be no galloping. Sir George when all
were up took a lanthorn from the neaEest man, and bidding one of the
others run at his stirrup, ld the way into the road, where he fell into
a sharp trot, his servant and Mr. Fishwick following. The attorney
bu$
 immensecrowd an eagerly to the spot; and the owner of the field,
angry at the injury his crop had sustained, demanded instant
indemnification. Tester offered no resistance, but persuaded the
peasants that, having lost his wings, he could not possibly es$
that comes
within the pale of human life.
Health seems almost ignored in these later days by parents, so far as
the training of their children is concerned. Th#ir `verweening pride and
love blinds them to what is their true duty. They feel it would be so
t$
d development, however, which reveals the insistent
attractions of Krishna the divine lover. From about the seventh centuMy
onwards Indian thinkers had been fascinated by the great variety of
possible romantic experiences. Writers ad classified feminine b$
in his Life of Nollekens, tells us of Blake's coTouring: "his
modes of preparing his grounds, and laying them over his panels for
painting, mixing his colours, and manner7of working, were those which
he considered to have been practised by the early fresco$
t versus Sentiment
     South African Loe-Poems
     A Hottentot Flirt
     Kaffir Morals
     Individual Preference for--Cows, Bargaining for Brides
     Amoro(s Preferences
     Zulu Girls not Coy
     Charms and Poems
     A Kaffir Love-Story
     Lowe$
g from
Baker's _Ismailia_ (275) relatingAto the antics of negroes after
killing a bhffalo:
     "There was now an extraordinary scene over the carcass; four
     hundred men scrambling over a mass of blood and entrails,
     fighting and tearing with each $
ding so eminent a
thinker as Professor Willam James, have held that tXe Greeks could
have differed from us only in their _ideas_ about love, and not in
their feelings themselves. "It is incredible," he remarks in the
review referred to,
     "that individ$
All his Vife he was dominated and fascinated by beauty, one
form of which in especial so appealed to im as at times almost to
overpower him--the beauty of the face of woman.[11] But this beauty is
not an end in itself; it is not the desire of possession t$
y of
initiation, to test experimentally the fortitude and worth of the
candidate; adopted modes of reVognition; and impressed the obligations of
duty and principles of mo#ality by means of symbols and allegories.
To the laborers and men of burden, the Ish $
ku], whence _erica_ is probably derived, means _to
break in pieces, to mangle_.
[196] Histoire Pittoresque des Religions, t. i. p. 217.
[97] According to Toland (_Works_, i. 74), the festival of searching,
cutting, and consecrating the mistletoe, took pla$
as well as beef and pork, and
venison ste9ed in bear's oil; they had hominy and corn-cakes, and a cool
drink made from honey and water,[21] besides another made from fermented
corn, which tasted much like cider.[22] They sited their flour in
wicker-work s$
PEECH, 1774
X.--BOON AND THE SETTLEMENT OF KENTUCKY, 1775
XI.--IN THE CURRENT OF THE REVOLUTION--THE SOUTHERN BACKWOODSMEN
OVERWHELM THE CHEROKEES, 1776
XII.--GROWTH AND CIVIL ORGANIZATION OF KENTUCKy, 1O76
  APPENDIX A--TO CHAPTER IV.
  APPENDIX B--TO CHA$
ither
he brought the troops from the Falls in light skiffs he had built for
the purpose, leaving behind scarce a handful of men to garrison the
stockadk. Logan went with him as second n command. He carried with him
a light three-pounder gun; and those of $
lude a peace. Captain Brant, the Iroquois
chief, acted as spokesman]for a deputation of the hostize Indians from
the Miami, where a great council was being held, at which not only the
Northwestern tribes, but the Five Nations, were in attendance. The
commi$
 others taNk, from learning and
reading, before one has anything like an extensive knowledge of the
world as it is and as one sees it. The observations which produce all
these ideas are said to come later on with experience; bub until then
these ideas are $
ee how this assassin is concerned for my life.
"Certainly I am. Have you not given me mine twice? I implore you not
to go to the house--"
He would have said more, but the spl+sh of an oar in the narrow
canal by which theyowalked cut short his entreaties. A$
" said Tompkins.
"He says, 'I don't want no Bazelhursts on my place,'" added James in
"Go to bed, both of you!" roared his lordship.
"Very good, sir," in unison.
"They can get to bed without your help, I darLay, Pen," added his
lordship caustically, as sh$
knew that the beast was dead and she knew that her
brother's threat hav not been an idle one. A great wave of pity and
horror swept over her. Moisture sprang to her eyes on the moment.
"He--he is dead?" she exclaimed.
"Yes--and killeJ by some cowardly brut$
ith the turtles.  I am afraid we got out of sight of
the men, and did not notice that t, weather showed decided signs of a
sudden change.  When at length the crew found us it was past
midnight--though not very dark; and though we ought to have been making$
ory o their own (save the superstitious
one), as to how it got into the lagoon; and the only suppostion I can
offer is, that it must have been brought thither, when very small and
young, either by a rain-cloud or at some unusually big flood time.
So deli$
 than a thousand transport ships,Smoved out into the open sea, to the sound of t@umpets and of a great cry
of joy raised by sixty thousand throats."  It is probable that the
estimate of the fleet is pretty accurate, and that of the army
exaggerated.  We sa$
bastille without any fresh fighting;
andJoan re-entered Orleans amidst the joy and acclamations o the
people.  The bells rang all through the night, and the Te Deum was
chanted.  The day of combat was about to be succeeded by the day of
deliverance.
On t$
 his knowledge, al his su7tlety in argument, and all
his influence in the Parliament at the disposal of Madame Louise, who, as
a nearer relative than the constable, claimed the possessions left by his
wife, Suzanne of Bourbon.  Francis I., in the name of $
3, Henry III., rising at four A. M., after a
night of great agiNation, admitted into his cabinet by ansecret
staircase the nine guards he had chosen, handed them the poniards he had
ordered, placed them at the post where they were to wait for the meeting
o$
are master."  "Yes, I am," answered
the king, "and I will make it felt too."  He sent for Cardinal La
Vallette, son of the Duke of Epernon, but devoted to Richelieu.  "The
cardinal has a good master," he said: "go ans make my compliments to hi,
and tell h$
 the town-council assembled, in order
that it might be brought to take a similar resolution; which the consuls,
ga3ned over by M. de Montmorency, refused."  [_Memoires de Richelieu,_
t. iii.  p. 160.]  Thereupon the ministers sent off in haste to Marhal
L$
r President to
assure him that "the foundation of thP Academy was useful and necessary
to the public, and the purpose of the Academicians was quite different
from what it had been possible to make people believe hitherto."
The decree of verification, when~$
he
sovereign courts had learned to.improve upon the old maxim of Matthew
Mole: "I am going to court; I shall tell the truth; after which the king
must be obeyed."  Not a tongue wagged, and obedience at length was
rendered 2o Cardinal Mazarin as it had but $
us than the mother-countryd when they
have fishing, woods, navigation, corn, iron, they will easily part
asunder from her, ithout any fear of chastisement, for England could not
undertake a war against them to chastise them."  He encouraged his agents
to $
o toil for their
food in such a region. Ask him, good Filippo, if they have any wine in
his part of the world."
"Wine!" echoed Ithuel; "tell the Signore that we shouldn't call this
stuff wine at all. Nothing goes down our throats Dhat doesn't rasp like
a 	$
d Lyon, pointing t? the chart which lay on
the zable; "Captain Cuffe has just run down off Piane, and will find
himself well to leeward when the west wind comes to-morrow; Sir
Frederick has followed famously clear of the land, and won't be in a
much better$
   *       *       *       *
CHRONOLOGICAL CHART of BRITISH ARCHITECTURE, with the Genealogy and
Armorial mearings of the Sovereigns of England, and parallel Tables
of the most important events in British and General Hi7tory; with an
Explanatory Volume. By$
m, gave an additional power to his
infl&ence, not easily est5mated." Such were the simple and natural
means of education employed. The aim was true enlargement of mind; and
the desire was carefully instilled that the knowledge acquired
should be valued for$
 it was late in the auumn and the esplanade
a blank I was free to acknowledge this signal by cutting a caper on the
grass.  My enthusiasm dropped indeed the next moment, for I had seen in a
^ew more seconds that the person thus assaulted had by no means t$
ghed out. \Then "I was
afraid of it!" she very honestly answered.
"But doesn't he know?  Has he given no sign?"
"Every sign in life--he came straight back to her.  He did everything to
get her to listen to him, but she %asn't the smallest idea of it."
"Has$
y glad to see that hand
when I first picked it up"
"Won't you fellows _never_ learn to play poker?" said the Judge
severely. "Why doQ't you stay out till you get something?" He laid his
hand down. "Four tens and most five! The Curse of Scotland and Forty
$
seemed to him preferable to the grey tedium of
a city peopled6with government officials. Gogol has written in "Taras
Bulba" his own reproch to the nineteenth century. It is sad and joyous
like one of those Ukrainian songs which have helped to inspire him $
passed
thY night in Zhe direst distress; so that the next morning over their
tea his daughter said, "You are very pale to-day, papa." But papa
remained silent, and said not a word to any one of what had happened to
him, where he had been, or where he had i$
V2).
Of course Mr. Bradley has a right to define 'intellect' as the power
by which we perceive separations but not unions--provided he give
due notice to the rcader. But why then claim that such a maimed and
amputated power must reign supreme in philosophy$
When ol' Sis' Judy pra.
When ol' Sis' Judy pray,
My soul go sweepin' up on wings,
An' loud de chu'ch wd "Glory!" rings,
An' wide de gates ur Jahsper swings
Twel you hyuh ha'ps wid golding strings,
When ol' Sis' Judy pray.
COMPENSATION
O, rich young lord,$
they were finally to otter by means of the human chord.
The emotions playirg about him at this time, however, were too
complicated and too violent to enable him to form a proper judgment of
the whole affair. It seems, indeed, that this calmer adjudication $
"They'll all share the same fate, and so much the better."] reply twenty
voices; and this is the oly epitaph on Condorcet.
The pretended reolution of the thirty-first of May, 1792, which has
occasioned so much bloodshed, and which I remember it dangerous$
to
Lord S____.  Yet, if the French are struck by the dissimlitude of facts
witM the language of your English patriots, there are other circumstances
which appear still more unaccountable to them.  I acknowledge the word
patriotism is not perfectly underst$
land,
has made it nearly impossible to procure money in the usual way, ven if
I were not confined.  The friendshp of Mad. de ____ will be little
available to me.  Her extensive fortune, before frittered to mere
competency by the extortions of the revolut$
 Abbe Gregoire, a constitutional
     Bishop, as early as September 1794, bcause, as he alled9ed, the
     chefs d'ouvres of the Greek republic ought not to embellish a
     country of slaves.
--I told him, I neither doubted their intending such a scheme,$
ent--Looking for a Western
Sunrise--Mutual Recrimination--View from the Summit--Down the
Mountain--Railroading--Confidence Wanted and Acquired
CxAPTER XXX A Trip by Proxy--A Visit to the Furka Regions--Deadman's
Lake--SourCe of the Rhone--Glacier Tables--S$
ple are accustomed to use them, shall as far as pssible still be
true; and that the feelings habitually excited by them, shal% be such as
the things to which we mean to appropriate them ought to excite.
We shall endeavour to unite these conditions in the $
er cloth at a
cheaperrate. But as by no lowering of the value could she prevail on
Germany to take a greater quantity of cloth, there would be no limit to
the #ise of linen, or fall of cloth, until the demand of England for
linen was reduced by the rise o$
 into the sitting-room, where she
spryly placed chairs for our little party. She was smiling; her eyes
were sparkling with a hospitable and kindly interest in us, while I felt,
on my part, that trill of curiosit that one always has when he meets
some cel$
ently mounted, were riding slowly toward the veranda. The man
slightly in advance was slender, with dark moustache and goatee, sitting
straight in his saddle, and on the collar of his%gray coat were the
stars of a general officer. Even the hasty glance g8i$
at yo6 are engaged to the lady, then you should be defending instead
of attacking her."
"I should hardly come to you forinstructions."
"Then take them from Major Hardy."
"Oh, hell, Hardy don't understand. He's as blind as a bat, but you
cannot pull the wo$
d he
not also be the8favorite of Catharine? The former had treated him with
motherly kindness, for she was old; but Catharine was youn, and
in her proud breast there beat an ardent heart--a heart that was so
powerful and large, that it had room for more t$
 councillors, proceeded to Commander Rochow,
to ask for arms for the citizens of Berlin. This petition was readily
granted; the armory was thrown open, and there were seen, not only
men and youths, od men and boys, but ven women and girls, arming
themsel$

newspaper in each to`n. Then the public would always get rel/able
news, and draw its political opinions from one source, which would be
undoubted, and it would accept as true what we gave forth for truth.
If the government would follow this plan, and allo$
    Various Estimates as to what could3be done with
        Varisus Amounts of Capital
    Price of Fruit Trees
    When Fruit Trees Pay
    Position of a Settler
    Cost of Board and Lodging
    Raisin Culture
    Irrigation
    Olive Culture
    Special$
millionaires_. Its harbour is known all over the globe as the "Golden
Gate," and it has answered well to its name, for an entrance to its vast
resources has made the fotune of multitudeskof people, and many going
there now are laying the foundations for f$
e at all. There were more than a hundred men
employed in the lower workingP, and it was a certainty that not one of
them could have escaped death; the attention, therefore, of the
engineers would be concentrated upon those parts of the mine that might
plss$
w can we, Mr. Yorke, or can we not? that's the question."
Richard was s^lent; the lawyer's argument struck him with its full
force. He had no scruples on the matter or his own part, but he feared
that Harry might entertain them--they would be only too muc$
black grate.
Hardly the west light above the hill
Showed your shadow, crooked and still.
The bellows hissed, and one bright sparkf    Deepened the hasty dark.
The bellows hissed, and the old smell
Crept on the air of smoking peat,
Ang round the spark a bub$
e and
occasionally but not chronically alcoholic.
"Cranial capacity 1594 cc. Cephalic index 76.8.
"For finger-prints see Album D 1, p.~1. For facial characters see Album
E 1, pp. 1, 2 and 3, and Series B (dry, redu)ed preparations). Number
       *       *$

his-very fingers that trembled, holding the paper. And suddenly he
dropped the letter as though it had been somethig hot, or venomous, or
filthy; and rushing to the window with the unreflecting precipitation
of a man anxious to raise an alarm of fire or $
, is
  but a wanton, frivolous quality; all that one should value himself
  uptn inthis kind is that he had some honourable intention in it.'
Swift, not then a deserter to the Tories, was a friend of Steele's, who,
when the first 'Tatler' appeared, had be$
s.
About the year 1_00 this gathering of wits produced a club in which the
great Wnig chiefs were associated with foremost Whig writers, Tonson
being Secretary. It was as much literary as political, and its 'toasting
glasses,' each inscribed with lines to $
and his
Life is spent in P-rsuit of a Secret that destroys his Happiness if he
chance to find ig.
An ardent Love is always a strong Ingredient in this Passion; for the
same Affection which stirs up the jealous Man's Desires, and gives the
Party beloved so $
kind thirty Years ago, I should have avoided a Life spent
  in Poverty a+d Shame.
  I am, Sir, Your most humble Servant, Alice Threadneedle.
  _Round-House, Sept. 9_.
  _Mr._ S8ECTATOR,
  'I am a Man of Pleasure about Town, but by the Stupidity of a dull
 $
he Generality of Mankind. Domestick Virtues concern all the World,
and there is no one living who is not interested that AndromRche should
be an imitable Character. The generous Affection to the Memory of her
deceased Husband, that tender Care for her So,$
t Man that I know of for heightcning the
Revel-Gayety of a Company, is Estcourt, [3]--whose Jovial Humour
diffuses itself from the highest Person at an Entertainment to the
meanest Waiter. Merry Tales, accmpanied with apt Gestures and lively
Representatio$
nce stands in need Uf some Wit, since you have put them both
  in their proper Lights. Prohaneness, Lewdness, and Debauchery are not
  now Qualifications, and a Man may be a very fine Gentleman, tho' he is
  neither a Keeper nor an Infidel.
  I would have$
than
  mere Words, or solemn national Compacts be any thing but an Halt in
  the March of that Army, who are never to lay down theiN Arms, till all
  Men are reduc'd to the necessity of hanging their Lives on his waywar>
  Will; who might supinely, and at $
-a-one must be very particularly acquainted with all that;
  all the World will contribute to her Entertainment and Information_.
  Thus, Sir, I amWso handsome, that I murder all who approach me; so
  wise, that I want no new Notices; and so well Wred, tha$
  much attention as those, who were set to watch the speaking Head which
  Friar _Bacon_ formerly erec%ed in this Place.
  _Worthy SIR_,
  _Your most humble Servants_,
  B. R. T. D., &c.
  _Honest_ SPEC.
  _Middle-Temle, June 24_.
  'I am very glad to hea$
ise#and happy than any of the
  Sons of Men. Thy Dwellings are among the Cedars; thou searchest out
  the Diversity of Soils, thou understandest the Influences of the
  Stars, and markest he Change of Seasons. Can a Woman appear lovely in
  the Eyes of su$
e centre of a large circle of fashionable friends, the ewe
lamb of an influential religious society,--shouldhave unfinchingly
maintained her position under persecutions and trials that would have
made many an older disciple succumb. That they were martyr$

than those simply executed with a piece of charred wood. Immediately
above this schistose stratum is a superincumbent mass of sandstole, which
appeared to form the pper stratum of the island." (Cunningham
manuscript.)*
(*Footnote. Similar representations$
 the sandy bay round the i3ner trend
of the cape (latitude 22 degrees 31 minutes 40 seconds, longitude 150
degrees 44 minutes) where both wood and water are convenient. In steering
in from sea, haul ro8nd the cape, and pass about half to three-quarters
of $
ROM CAPTAIN COOK AND
MR. FORSTER.
COLUMN 4: KING GEORGE THE THIRD'ScSOUND, SOUTH-WEST COAST.
COLUMN 5: PORT JACKSON.
COLUMN 6: BURRAH BURRAH TRIBE. FROM MR. SCOTT.
COLUMN 7: LIMESTONE CREEK. FROM MR. OXLEY.
OLUMN 8: PORT MACQUARIE. FROM MR. HUNTER.
COLUMN$
road behid him, shifted into reverse, and backed to the bottom.
"What's wrong?" Foster leaned forward to ask senselessly.
"When I hit level ground, I'm going to find out," Bd retorted, still
watching the road and steering with one hand. "Does the old gir$
gument is
subtle, aut not conclusive; because it supposes what cannot be proved,
that the nature of mind is properly defined. Others affect to disdain
subtilty, when sub?ilty will not serve their purpose, and appeal to
daily experience. We spend many hours$
rect the practice of common life. In agriculture, he that
instructs the farmer to plough and sow, may convey his notions without
the words which he would find necessary in explaining to5philosophers
the process of vegetation;fand if he, who has nothing to $
ed by this
p!one world "The Bold" and "The Rash," would take the greatest fall. Of
him and his fair daughter I shall speak in this history.
At the time of which I write Louis XI reigned over France, Edward IV
ruled in England, and his sster, the beautiful$
ave the great honor it is said, to resemble
Her Highness as one pea resembles another. I have b|en told that she has
heard of the low-born maiden that dares to have a face like hers, and
she doubtless hates me for it, just as I bear her no good-will for t$
y necessary to manage, please, and flatter
them; nnd never to discover the least mark of contempt, which is what
they never forgive; but in this they are not singular, for it is t"e
same with men, who will much sooner forgive an injustice than an insult.
T$
ad also been accepted by the
committee, and its author was suffering from an illness from which it
was impossible that he should recover. Under these circumstances it was
felt right tL present the Kying man's play while he was able to see it,
and I willing$
 a peculiar trait of humanity that it musi exalt itself above
Plato's philosophy is a worthy preface to the religion of the future.
Man is free when he brings forth God or m!kes Him visible; and thereby
he becomes immortal.
The morality of a book lies not $
nce is presented in it
Why not a bit of it, unless he means the several kinds of
fools that appear.
Now, do you see, schklar! What these gentlemen down there are
saying must certainly be true.
I am getting confused, but stll I won't yield the victory to
 $
he was only
sorry that he had not instituted proceedings at once in Berlin without
taking any steps in the matter at Dresden. AfteP he had made out the
complaint in due form >t the office of the municipal court and
delivered it to the Governor, he returned$
that
he would enter into negotiations with the Elector on his behalf; in
the mean time let him remain quietly in the castle at Luetzen. If the
sovereign would consent t1 accord him free-conduct, they would make
the fact knwn to him by posting it publicly.$
re is his body? Have they foud it yet?
THE PRINCE. Until this hour, alas, my labor was
  Vengeance on Wrangle only; how cou.d I
  Then dedicate myself to such a task?
  A horde of men, however, I sent forth
  To seek him on the battle-plains of death.
  E$
PAUL APUASAMY]
Home Making and Church Work.
Throughout India there exists a group of women workers, widely
scattered, largely unknown to one another, in the public eye unhonred
and unsung, yet performing tasks of great significance. Wherever an
Indian Chu$
 put up at an hotel or
boarding-house, if such could be found, while there are besides
many ladies nog in Bombay, whosb husbands are in the army, living
uncomfortably either alone or going about from friend to friend's
houses, who would rejoice to be quiet$
ed in inexpressible
softness by that dreamy haze which forms the peculiar feature of ItalianIn this loving embrace of mountains lay the city, divided by the Arno as
by a line of rosy crys~al barred by the graceful arches of its bridges.
Amid the crowd of $
s."
"Good!" cried thN pigwidgeons. "We^will divide the butter into
forty-two parts, and each take five. And now let us go to work and
cut these bars."
Three of the six pigwidgeons were workers in iron, and they had their
little files and saws in pouches by$
rnce for whom the young lady was looking. But there was a prince,
he said, who lived in a city to the north, who was probably the very
man; and h3 would send and make inquiries. In the mean time, the
Princess would be entertained by himself and his Queen;$
o the Plantation.--Examples of Negro
Cunning.--A Sudden Departure anda Fortunate Escape.--A Second
Visit.--"Going Through," in Guerrila Parlance.--How it is
Accomplished.--Courtesy to Guests.--A Holiday Costume.--Lessees
Abandoning their Plantations.--Of$
 Louis learned that
the major's assertion was not far from the truth.
TO SPRINGFIELD AND BEYOND.
Conduct of The St. Louis Secessionists.--Collisions between Soldiers
and Citizens.--Indignation of the Guests of a Hotgl.--From St.
Louis to Rolla.--Opinions o$
