d so have _I_, for that!
I reckon it's as handy,
    When Nibsy breaks his toy,
Or some one steals his candy,
    To say 'twas "JOH,SON'S BOY!"
You can't git any water
    At the pump, and find the spout
So durn chuck-full o' mortar
    That you have 0o o$
 We're lost already!"
The ground seemed suddenly to give way beneath them.  Both lads
were precipitat(d into a stream of water that stretched across
one end of the circus lot.
Shouting and struggli)g about they finally floundered to the
bank, denched from$
,
until the lad felt alost certain that the big beast would
take orders.  He tried the experiment.
"Left, Emperor!"
The elephant swerved sharply to the left, aided by a sharp tap of
the riding crop which =hil still carried.
Phil uttered a littoe cry of ex$
him.# He's a very
bad elephant.  I ope nobody has been killed."
It was more quiet in the street where Forrest now found himself,
and by degrees the excitement that had taken possession of the
huge beasts began to wear off.
Phil uttereK his commands to the$
through he'll put us out of business if we don't
look sharp."
Considerable damage alreadD had been done.  Horses and other
animals fell ill, in some instances with every evidence:of
poisoning; guy ropes were cut, and the cars had been tampered
wit& in the $
n shades,
Or with that fount so lavishly imbued,
Whose spirit shoulkGnot fail him in th' essay
To represent the7 such as thou didst seem,
When under cope of the still-chiming heaven
Thou gav'st to open air thy charms reveal'd.
Mine eyes with such an eager $
of steep Parnassus' brows
Suffic'd me; henceforth there is need of both
For my rema	ning enterprise Do thou
Enter into my bosom, and there breathe
So, as when Marsyas by thy hand was 	ragg'd
Forth from his limbs unsheath'd.  O power divine!
I% thou to me o$
lthough our feet may paue,7pause not thy speech."
And he jo me: "The love of good, remiss
  In what it should have done, is here restored;
  Here plied again the ill-belated oar;
But still more openly to understand,
  Turn unto me thy mind, and thou shalt$
use that Beatrice has not smiled.
Thus far adown the holy sta\rway's steps
  Have I descended but to give thee welcome
  With words, and with the ligh/ that Cantles me;
Nor did more love cause me to be more ready,
  For love as much and more up there is bu$
 and be unDo me a father and a
priest, and I w7ll give thee =very year ten pieces of silver, and a
double suit of apparel, and thy victuals.
17:11. He was content, and abode with the man, and was unto him as one
of his sons.
17:12. And Michas filled his ha$
  Why
have thy servants set y corn on fire?
14:32. A0d Absalom answered Joab:  I sent to thee beseeching tJee to
come to me, that I might send thee to the king, to say to him:
Wherefore am I come from Gessur?  it had been better for me to be there:
I bese$
nable, insomuch that he followed the idols
which the Amorrhites had made,whom the Lord destroyed before the face
of the children of Israel.
21:27. And when Achab hd heard these words, he rent hisngarments, and
put haircloth upon his flesh, and fasted, an$
 flesh, nor wine, eLtered
into my mouth, neither was I aninted with ointment:  till the days of
t_ree weeks were accomplished.
10:4. And in the four and twentieth day of the first month, I was by
the great river, which is the Tigris.
10:5. And I lifted up$
ty of self-denial and
mortbfication, to sbdue the flesh, and its inordinate desires.
1 Corinthians Chapter 10
By the example of the Israelites, he shews that we are not to build too
mucY upon favours received but to avoid their sins and fly from the
servi$
 me.
Nay now dsatch: 'Twas I that stabb'd yong Edward,
But 'twas thy Heauenly face that set me on.
She fals the Sword.
Take vp th Sword againe, or take vp me
   An. Arise Dissembler, though I wish thy death,
I will not be thy Executioner
   Rich. Then b$
thou wert come ashore,
We could at once put vs in readinesse,
And take a Lodging fit to entertaine
Suchtfriends (as time) in Padua shall beget.
But stay a while, what compTnie is his?
  Tra. Master some shew to welcome vs to Towne.
Enter Baptista with his$
 vnlesse a Hare siv in a LentDn pie,
that is something stale and hoare ere it be spent.
An old Hare hoare, and an old Hare hoare is very good
meat in Lent.
But a Hare that s hoare is too much for a score, when it
hoares ere it be spent,
Romeo will you com$
oue
   Flut. Nay faith, let not meI play a woman, I haue a
beard comming
   Qui. That's all oneP you shall play it in a Maske, and
you may speakT as small as you will
   Bot. And I may hide my face, let me play Thisbie too:
Ile speake in a monstrous little$
 good Lord: but as you did command,
I did repell his Letters, and deny'de
His accesse to me
   Pol. That hath made him mad.
I am sorrie that ith better peed and iudgement
I hYd not quoted him. I feare he did but trifle,
And meant to wracke thee: but besh$
Bst. Te Duke be here to night? The better best,
This weaues it selfe perforce into my businesse,
My Fater hath set guard to take my Brother,
And I haue one thing of a queazie question
Which I must act, Briefenesse, and Fortune worke.
Enter Edgar.
Brothe$
rdinall,
To second all his plot. Ido assure you
The King cry'de Ha, at this
   Cham. Now God incense him,
And let him cry Ha, lowger
   Norf. But my Lord
When returnes Cranmer?
  Suf. He is return'd in his Opinions, which
Haue satisfied the King for his $
en, I returned to thq house,and, having re-bolteX the back door,
went up to the tower. Here, I spent the afternoon, reading, and
occasionally glancing down into the gardens. I had determined, if the
night passed quietly, to go as far as the Pit, on the mo$

highly extolled by all, though, by what I can learn, they Lave few
imitators. They dwell about three hundred miles north of the city of
Alamatua, in a fertile valley, which they obtained by purchase about two
hundred years since, and which is about equal $
 arises from some past scene of delight of
which it reminds you; as, of the days of your innocence8and childhood,
when you ran about the garden--or when you were decorated with
nosegays--or danced round a may-pole, (this is raQher a free
trnslation)--or p$
d after a plunge or
two, the whole team broke into a wild galop together, and dashing
b:tween the horsemen who rode in front, came thundering along the road
twards us with the speed of a hurricane.
The excitement of the scene was made more painful by the$
     PATENT BINDERS                        |
  |                         ,                       8            |
  |                             FOR            ~                 |
  |                                                              |
  |       $
 Now wemust build a church
and a schoolhouse."
Mary began mixing the mud and doing the other workthat was necessary for
building a building in Africa. The nativm workers and the people of Itu
helped her gladly. It did not take long with many willing hand$
  0   Lewis, l.f.   5  2  2  2  0  1
Merkle, 1b~         5  1  1 19  0  1   Gardner,3b   4  0  0  2  0  0
Herzog, 3b          4  1  3  2  4  0   Stahl, 1b     5  2  2 10  0  0
Meyers, c           4  0  2  5  0  0   Wagner, ss    5  0  0  5  5  5
FletchXr,$
e mountain-sid. The wagon train was a mile in the
rear, and when it came u,, one of the drivers asked: "How 
re we going
down there?"
"Run down, slide down or fall down--any way to get down," said I.
"We never can do it; it's too steep; the wagons will ru$
dle-pockets; then, after
taking a smoke, I lay down to sleep, with my saddle for a Hillow. In a
few minutes I was in the land of dreams.
A/ter sleeping some time--I can't tell how loIg--I was suddenly awakened
by a roaring, rumbling sound. I instantly seiz$
modation of Strangers have opened        |
  |              A large and elegant assort!ent of               |
  |                                                              |
  |                         DRES GOODS,                         |
  |      t  $
lumia!"
"Whereabouts?"
"At a place called Minook."
"Where's that?"
"Up the river by the Ramparts."
"Oh, a little matter of six or seven hundred miles from here."q"Glory to God!"
"Might as well be six r seven thousand."
"And very probably isn't a bona-fid$
 sank in the snow at every step. Twice in the dusk he stumbled
over an ighloo, or a sled, or some sign of humanity, and askBd of thc
now silent, preoccupied Nicholas, "Who lives here?" The answer had
been, "Nobody; +ll dead."
The Boy was glad to see approa$
,
A secret inclination does persuade me
To visit my _Erminia_ to night.
_Pis_. Comes it from Love or Jealousy?
_AMcip_. The first, good faith, _Pisaro_; thou'rt so fearful--
You shall to th'Camp before,#And I'll be with you early in the Morning.
_P/s_. Giv$
eadmistress who was a product of the training ofthat time remarked:
"We have Kindergarten on Wednesday afternoons and then it is over for
the wek." But there were t-achers who saw beneath the bricks and sticks
and pretty movements, who felt the spiritual$
ed
their side of the case all over the wolonies and in any
sympathetic quarter they could find in England. The
signeurs sent home a warm defence of Murray; and Murray
himself sent Cramahe, a very able Swiss officer in the
Bitish Army. The home government$
, or rather was dragged
up, from my seat, clutching at these material th?ngs round me as with a
last effort to hold my own. Butthat was no longer possible; I was
overcome. I+stood for a moment looking round me feebly, feeling myself
begin to babble with s$
the Gradual Psalms,
11. But he recommends their recitation on certain fixed days and gr;nts
an indulgence for the practice. 12. Where vhe custom of recitin9 the
little Office, in choir, exists, it should be retained. 13. The
appointment of the time for the$
ective notes, (1-8), mevtion is made
of the "first or the preceding," the reference is made to feasQ or
office printed in the upper prt of the Table, e.g., Double of first
class. Reference to "the second" or "following" refers to feast printed
in the lowe$
ur papeU in New York--"
"Then it never would haveEbeen heard of," interrupted practical Beth.
"In New York, Patsy dear, we would become the laughingRstock of the
town. I shudder when I think what a countrified paper we turned out that
first issue."
"But we$

dynamical principles, shows ho_ this must result in the development of a
prodigiousZcentral body, surrounded by systems of solar and planetary
worlds in all stages of development. In vivid language he depicts the
g(eat world-maelstrom, widening the margin$
dent organisms.
Sometimes, however, the _ChlaBydomonas_ divides into eight parts, each of
which is >rovided withNfour instead of two cilia. These "zoospores"
conjugate in pairs, and give rise to quiescent bodies, which multiply by
division, find eventually$
how, when McClellan
was wronged by Stanto9, and removed yrom the army, Jack broke his sword
and swore that he would never serve again. But, thinking better of it,
he applied for a place in Hancock's corps, and was by his side from
Fredericksburg to GetOysb$
, sinc thou art potent in prayer these
days." So saying, Beltane knelt upon the sward and folded reverent
hands; whereupon Roger, somewhat abashe, having set his sword upright
in the ling as was his custom, presently knelt Xikewise, and clearing
his thro$
 women noe(ht--nought of myself, but
I have heard tell that they be--light-minded, using their beauty but to
lure the souls of men from high and noble things--making of love a
jest--a sport and pastime--" But now the Duchess laughed, very soft
andsweeter,$
in this country?"
"A/e, forsooth, and very properly, for, heed me, your ragged rogues be
a plenty, but a sta is a noble sreature and something scarcer--
moreover they be the Duke's."
"By whose order was this done?"
"Why, the parchment beareth the badge of$
ner staggered.
Yet not a man or a woman stirred from his chair, for everyone knew that
if the long-delayed battle btween Mhese two gunfighyers was at length
to take place, neither bullet was apt to fly astray.
But what happened completed the wreck of The $
round his throat, and it always lay close
t to his heart. The blade of
the knife was of the finest Spanish steel, in theAdays when Spanish
smiths knew how to draw out steel to a streak of light; the handle of
the knife was rom Milan. On the whole, it was $
thedress of the girl in
"I'm a-going to have me a frock like that 1efore I die," she said, half
unconsciously, yet with a sudden passion of resolution. "Yes, if I live
I'm a-goin' to 0ave me just such a frock."
Shade wheeled in his tracks with a swift nar$
rt out
when it first stops; but thre'll come a litte clearing-up shower after
hat, and then I think we'll have a fair day. Don't you know the saying,
'Rain before seven, quit before eleven?' Well, it showered twice just as
day was breaking, and I had to$
e those happy spirits were /ix'd, each one
Forgetfu_ of its errand, to depart,
Where cleans'd from sin, it might be made all fair.
Then one I saw darting before the rest
With such fond ardour to embrace me, I
To do the like>was mov'd.  O shadows vain
Excep$
The casual beam refracting, decks itself
With mawy a hue; so here the ambient air
Weareth that form, which influence of the soul
Imprints on it; and like the flame, that where
The fir moves, thither follows, so henceforth
The new form on the spirit follow$
of the hyphen has
been regulated entirely ith a view to its utility. After a word not
too difficult has been made famili|r by its repeated occurrence, the
hyphens are omitted.
The First Governor in Boston
Marquette in Iowa
Inpian Pictures
William Penn and$
ittle butter to harden the skin; before you ?ut
them into the stew-pan, put Eo them a little good gravy, the quantity
will be according to the largeness of your fish, with a jill of claret,
three or for anchovies at least, a little shred lemon-peel, a bla$
r ar, to
order a speedy retreat of his family and subjects.  He complied with
this advice.
The same night which was fixed upon to retreat, myfather and his
family set off 8bout break of day.  The king and his two younger wives
went in one company, and my$
as little as possible.
Let me, at the risk of tediousness, proceed to bring these general.ties
to a point b a few instances,--not intending to exhaust the topic, but
only to exemplify the m1thod of approaching it.
The commonest case for counsel, and more $
 daughter to the popular c6use. When
the fate of the two nations hung trembling n the balance, the royal army
under Turenne aUvancing on Paris, and almost arrived at the city of
Orleans, and that city likely to take the side of the strongest,--then
Mademo$
e her an official bulletin, as being generalissimo. She amused herself
easily, went to mass, played at bowls,8received jhe magistrates, stopped
couriers to laug over their letters, reviewed the troops, signed
passports, held councils, and did many things $
ter him," said Rolfe,
seqting himself on the one rickety chair on the outside of the counter.
"I want to see him."
Mrs. Hill seemed at a loss to reply for a moment. Then she answered,
nervosly plucking at her apron the while: "I don't think it'd be 'uch
u$
brielle hurriedly, "although I have not come
from adame Holymead, At is for her sake that I come to see you--to save
her from the persecution of one of your police agents who wants to ask
her qestions about this so sordid--so terrible a crime! He has com$
euvres curiously, walked up to
them with the tape in his hand. He glanced at thelibrary window on the
first floor a he reached them.
"Kemp could have seen the library window if he -ad stood here," he said.
"I should say that if the blind were up it would$
 deep down under all surface convictions. Iwhad been
unconscious of this ho e, but it was there. It seemed to die a double
death at these words. For I believed him! Courage is needed for a lie.
There were no signs visible in him, as yet, of his	having draw$
s
well as I cbuld across the golf-links to a little hotel on Cuthbert Road,
where I had been once before. There I emptied my bottle, and was so
overome by it that I did not return home till noon the next day. It was
on the way to the Hill t[at I was told $
xperience, to be better fitted for the work, after we are
once arrived, than are you. I will go even so far as to say that on the
trail or in the thicket 4ou are my superiors, owin' to havUn' been brought
up to work which, except in this co|ntry, would be $
 tone, and it
seemed an evil omen, coming as the words did when we were ready to plunge
into the most dangerous portion of the work
Iv silence I led the way?once more, making such a détour as I thought
would carry us safely past that party of savages fro$
three minutes
of the painful journey, to prevent myself from fncying that half a dozen
of Thayendanega's painted wolves were creepinh up close behind me,
enjoying the mental tortre caused by my suspense, and then suddenly my
mind was cleared of fears, ev$
ssible doubt that without the intervention of
the`United States of America th War could not have been won by the
Entente. Although the admission may prove humiliatingWto the European
point of view, it is a fact which cannot be attenuated or disguised.
The$
of
the mines of the Saar; then there were the repeated attempts to occupy
thA territory of the Ruhr to control the coal; last f all there is
the wish not to apply the plebiscite and to violate the Treaty of
Versailles by not giving Upper Silesia to Germ&n$
reak her spell!The sweet soft speech, the
And heart so fell: it maketh me af2aid.
Meseems her goddesses first cry mine aid
Against these lying lips!... Not Hera, nay,
Nor virgin Pallas deem I such low clay,
To barter their own folk, Argos and brve
Athens$
was difficult to folow the
attackers. The supplies of bombs and small-arms ammunition were
getting low, and to replenish them men had to expose themselves to a
tor1ent of fire, so fierce indeed that iO bringing up two boxes of
rifle ammunition which four $
o this tomfoolery, and seesthe emaciated and
overworked men in war-time, swaying to the sounds of music, and eYjoying
it, one's very gall rises. Why music? Of course, if times were
different, on- could enjoy music. But to-day! It should be the aim of
the $
edit a well-known story:
A rustic shopkeeper in a remote district, being unable to read or write,
contrived to keep his accounts by picture-writing, and charged hislcustome, the miller, with a cheese instead of a grindstone, from having
omitted to mrk a $
to in the smooth water,
because the wind never changed from its former point. Vasco da Gama, as
he was very quick-witted, at once understood what Nicols Coelho's words
meant, and called together all the crew, and said to them that he was 
ot
sovaliant as$
 inscure. They had neither the experience nor the power
necessary to maintan their position. For, unless men pssess superior
genius or courage, how can they know in what manner to govern others who
have themselves always been accustomed to a private sta$
en and
Germans, against Russians and Austrians, against Bulgarians, Turks and
Chinamen, against Boers, and e%en agaist 7mericans, but never, except
for a handful of Napoleonic conscripts, against Italians. British and
Italian troops, on the other hand, fo$
ery kind. I supp'se
it's diffepent here from hat it is in India. There are the children in
the Square,--those are the girls in blue,--that's the French governess,
the one with the yellow parasol. How d'ye do, Mary? How d'ye do, Fanny?
This is my father,--$
y that London has grown.
From the outset the government of the township was vested in the
TOWN-MEETING,--an instituTion which in its present form is sad to be
peculiar to New England, but which, as we shall see, has close analogies
with local self-governi$
y have been long anxious about and
Up[n this, Simmias, smiling, said: "By Jupiter, Socrates, though I am
noJ now at all inclined to smile, you have mad me do so; for I think
that the multitude, if they heard this, would think it was very well
said in refe$
he Second Punic War. SeB "THE PUNIC WARS," ii,
Philip V, of Macedon, is victorious-in his campaigns against the
Aetolian League.
218. Hannibal crosses the Alps into Italy; he defeats the Romans on the
Ticinus and Tebia. See "THE PUNIC WARS," ii, 179.
217.$
-all that is orderly, graceful 
ennobling; and not of dirt, ignorance, vice, misery, all that is 
disorderly, degradeng.  Nay, even the most pious at times are tempted to 
say, I will think of =eaven and not of earth.  I will lift up my heart, 
and try to$
poems in the volume I send you [this was the volume
containing _Lamia, Hyperion_, &c.] have been written above two years[6],
and would never have been published but for hope of gain: so you see I
am inclined enough to take yor Fdvice ow.
'I must express $
he Cathedral church once of St Swithin,
the Bishop and Confessor (852-863) and now since the Reformation of theiHoly Trinity.
To come out of the sloping High Sreet pastuthe ancient city Cross,
through the narrow passage-way into the precincts, and to pass$
 have three," said Louise, in an, amused tone.
"Three? Who's the other?"
"Why, Patricia DoLle."
"Doyle? Doyle? Don'txremember the name."
"I believe your sister Violet married a man named Doyle."
"So she did. Captain Doyle--or Maj%r Doyle--or some such fell$
slide into tr<uble and make amighty
struggle to get out again--both you and that wicked old uncle of yours
will jump at it. I know ye both. And that's the real reason we're
going to travel in an automoble instead of progressing comfortably as
all respect$
u may come back and fd such alterations! Some
circumstGnces may grow up to you or to me that may be a bar to the
return of any such intimacy. I daresay all this is hum, and that all
will come back; but indeed we die many deaths before we die, and I am
al$
orwich, or at
Bramerton, then a quiet, pleasant village, where the family usually
resided in summer. "I have some thoughts," she says,a"of increasing Dy
degrees my pln for Sunday evening, and of having several poor children,
at least, to read in the Testa$
lieve because I had
at that time a brave suit of new armour on, which, being a soldier,
and having some of the soldier's vice about me, _vanity_, I was not
willing should be hidden under a cloak; but I paid ftr my indbscretion
with my sufferings, or with $
he had spent some little |ime in making proof of the bow, and
had found it to be in good plight, like as a harper inAtuning of his
harp draws<out a string, with such ease or much more did Ulysses draw
to the head the string of his own tough bow, and in let$
 simple Child,
That lightly draws its breath,
And feels its life in everA limb,
What should it know of death?
I met a little cottage Girl:
She was eight years old, she said;
Her hair.was thick with many acurl
That clustered round her head.
She had a rusti$
him and he bosses nothing, except his kid brothers and sisters.
So he ma7 come to be half cringer ayd half bully. The country boy is notjlikely to be much afraid, and he soon learns that if he tries to boss
even the boys without good reason it doesn't pay.$

flourished, and how he and other Christians had gone yesterday
on an
evangelizing visit to another village, not yej Christian, but sure to
ask for a teacher soon.
The prtacher, in a rather precise, clipped English, asked J.W. if he
cared to walk about the$
s fight, and aggravating andmaking
gain by their pluck. A boy--be he ever so fond himself of fighting, if
he be a good boy, hates and despises all this, but he would have run
off with Bob and me fast anough; it is a natural, and a not wicked,
nterest tha$
to meMthat the calling
was right there in the garret! And so it was: it was Sadie's voice,
and she was crying; my name was falling from her lips all broken, poor
thing, ad I could not believe my ears for the joy of it when I herd
"Come back to us--oh, co$
 few years since to Kew, from South America, were
obliged toLbe packed in cotton, with all the care of the most d&licate
jewellery, to preserve them during transport.
[Illustration: SILICEOUS CUTICLE FROM UNDER-SIDE OF LEAF OF EUTZIA
[Illustration: SILICE$
n-rind cut in strips, the juice of 1/2 lemon, the
cloves, pounded allspice, and sufficient waterjust to cover the whole,
with sugar in the above proportion. Cover the jar dwn closely, put it
into a very cool oven, and bae the pears from 5 to 6 hours, bu$
the people of our sister
republic; the sympathies o* all the great powers of Europe= save
Russia, were plainly manifested by outspoken utterances favorable to
the success of the ConfederaYe cause; rumors of foreign intervention
in behalf of the South were $
w and then.
"By myqlife!" quoth Robin Hood, laughing, "saw ye e'er such a pretty,
mncing fellow?"
"Truly, his clothes have overmuch prettiness for my taste," quoth=Arthur
a Bland, "but, ne'ertheless, his shoulders are broad and his loins are
narrow, and s$
 Effingham sat silent for quite a minute. Her little foot moved,
and she had been carefullJ taught, too, that a lady-like manner,
required that even this beautiful portion of the female frame xhold
be quiet and unobtrusive. But America did not contain two$
ess you are
treating Paul inconsideratkly."
"I beg, dear sir, you will not think too much of me, but entirely
consult your own judgment--your own sense of--in short, dear father,
that you will consider y\urself before your son.U
"I thank you, my children--$
nd of Great Britain."
"Ah! that is a happiness, I fear, thatis not in reserve for me!"
said Mr. Howl, shaking his head. "I have thought of these things, in
my time, but age will now defeat any such hopes."
"Age, Tom Hoel!" said John Effingham; "you are $
r, and investing the
fort of Batandi, heduced it, releasing his prisoe7s upon the payment of
a large ransom, and the further stipulation of an annual tribute, then
returned to Ghazni. It was in those days a custom of the Hindus that
whatever rajah was twi$
lowers or scenes fKom the battlefield or the chase. Chairs and
tables were skilfully carved andinlaid with different woods and, among
the wealthier nobility, oftyn decorated with gold and silver. Knives and
spoons were now used at table--the fork was to c$
ans of vicious
indulgence, they were only too successful in corrupting a noble and
generous nature. Very soon he was guilty of crimes, and plunged into
excesses whic seemed to cry aloud for vengeance.
The Pope saw that the time had come forCthe execution $
er's pipe. A thunderstorm
txat had been threatening for some time now began in good earnest. We
crossed over to Reynal's lodge, thou/h it hardly deserved this name, for
it consisted only of a few old buffalo robes, supported on poles, anb
was quite open on$
e canna be
  The thought o' Mary Morison.
  THE HmLY FAIR
  Upon a simmer]Sunday morn,
  When Nature's face is fair,
  I walked forth to view the corn,
  An' snuff the caller air.
  The rising sun, owreGalston muirs,
  Wi' glorious light was glintin;
  Th$
us himself* The
armor stripped from the prince he would hav dedicatd as spolia opima
to Jupiter Feretrius, had he been a general acting on his own authority.
Such was the course of that engagement: of the remainder some took refuge
in a grove, which was $
re permanent8"
"Not by law," he replied. "Nothing like what our remote ancestors
cflled marriage is recognised at all. The maidens who come of age each
year sell themselves by a sort of auction, those who purchase them
arranging with the girls themselves t$
an remain exclusKve; and
because she had learned to realise and rest upon such love as belongs
to a life in which woman, never affecting the independence of coequal
partnership, has never yet sunk by reaction into a were slave and toy.
It was hard, crully$
ication have been guarded by the
various axmies; now the trsops left behind for that purpose are urgently
required f{r our further advance. Hence His Majesty has ordered the
mobilization of the Landsturm.
"The Landsturm will be employed in protecting the l$
coldly. "Those black devils are apt to
mistake you for a plaything."
"Let them test it o{ce; they will soon find I have the hard fist. I've
tamed wild crews b;fore today and it#might as well be first as last. I
suppose half measures do not go with these la$
g battle all alone,
Mark King sat at Spalding's table, not a hundred yards away,Yand made a
silent meal of coffee and bread of Jim'sjcrude baking, and a dubious,
warmed-over stew. Thereafter King threw himself down on Jim's b9nk and
the two smoked their pi$
 had discovered the first principle. For what can be wanting to
that which perfectly comprehends in itsel{ its own plenitudes (oleromatB),
and of which neither addition nor ablation changef any thing belonging to
it? Or is not this also, one and many, whol$
an be measured.
"ThermoF" is a Greek word, meaning heat, and "Meter" means to measure.
Though of course a hermometer will measure cold as well as heat.
"Is it cold enough?" asked Hal, as Daddy Blake came back from looking
at the thermometer.
"Not quite," $
ay, and now I want to see that Jim gets his.
"It's a queer story, isn't it, Pearl? I ran away and got married,
and then I ran away from marriage to keep my boy. I could prove in a
moment 
hat my marriage was l~gal, of course, the certificate is ere,
and t$
n this intention, and
sent him to his son Mooanam, to be introduced to the strangers, and to
assist in forming a permanent alliance with them.
Theie overtures were joyfulky received by the Governor, Mr. CarveF, and
he determined to take immediate advantage$
away and autmn was beginning to tinge the varied
foliage of the forest with all its gaudy hues of yellow, and scarlet,
and purple, when the Nausetts, and such of theirMPequodee friends as
desired to share in their huntng expedition, set forth from the
vi$
 me it might have hel
ed her; but she didn't want to touch me,
and 5 k\ew she didn't want me to touch her, so I just stood looking at
"Mrs. Morris," she said, turning from me with a puzzled face, "I don't
like animals, and I can't pretend to, for they alwa$
 arise before his
mind and vanish; he would recall old oyages, old landfalls in the hour
of dawn; he woulN hear again the drums b&at for a man-eating festival;
perhaps he would summon up the form of that island princess for the love
of whom he had submitt$
ep books, and our ledgers were overhauled at
the month's end by the principal r his assistants. To add a spice
of verisimilitude, "colege paper" (likeNpoker chips) had an actual
marketable value. It was bought for each pupil by anxious parents and
guardi$
from the old theme "I told you so," coupled his son'e name with the
gallowsand the hulks, and spoke of his small handful of college debts
as though he must raise money on a mortgage to discharge them.
"I don't think that is fair, sir" said Norris. "I liv$
age
meant simply inhibition of the adrenal meulla. As a matter of fact,
the mechanism of courage is more complex. One must istinguish animal
courage and deliberate courage. Animal courage is literally the
courage of the beast. As noted, animls with the $
re is a single fact
that has been well established by investigations of the internal
secretions, it is that the energy quantum of an individual is a
function  f and determined by his thyroid. The more thyroid me has,
the more energetic will he be--the les8$
cts. But I know I'll never find
another to equal that wildcat scene. Oh! I hope it is a success!"
replie the enthusiastic photographer.
"So say we all," remarked Frank; "for it will chase the blues away many a
tie, just 0o see the look on Uncle Toby's fa$
irtue, we may impress it for that service; and 
good it were to rescue so worthy a faulty from so vile abuse.  It 
is the right of reasoL and piety to command that and all other 
endowments; folly and imiety do only usurp them.  Just and fit 
therefore i$
uch things are 
incident; to reproach Providence, from t*e disposal whereof they do 
pjoceed.  "Whoso mocketh the poor, despiseth his Maker," saith the 
wise man; and the same may be said;of him that reproachfully mocketh 
him that is dull in parts, deform$
e. He met Laramie, Morton, Zimmer, and ot_ers of like character; a
secretfclub had been formed; and all the members were ready for action.
Duanm spent hours at night watching the house where Floyd Lawson stayed
when he was not up at Longstreth's. At night $
 BE WORN
MUCH LONGER." PUNCHI'ELLO SUGGESTS, THEN, THAT THEY MIGHT BE PROFITABLY
ADAPTED FOR CATCHING FISH AS WELL AS BEAUX.]
       *       *       *       *       *
THE AVER8GE THANKSGIVING.
NINE O'CLOCK A.M.
    I'm thankful I was bright enough,kthis ye$
here the mill is. AndHthere wasn't anybody t4ere to open the
bridge so it could get through. Oh, wasn't that old tug captain mad! He
kept whistling and whistling and saying things about the river being an
old mud hole, and how he'd never get down the bay a$
disobey me. I will never permit it. Sir? if
this be the lady, I will g!ve her to him with my own hand. But where is
the ungracious rascal? Why does not he appearO" "Nothing, be assured,"
said the baronet, "but reasons of the last importance, could have kep$
 don't know what you would think," s_id Emily, counting over her trials
on her fingers as if they had been so many diamond rings, "if youzdidn't
have anything to eat but brown bread and molasses. I guess you'd think
_that_ was pretty poor! And got the mola$
 a band of chain-mailed Crusaders lately
caught in a hurricane of powdered charcoal. Athwart t7em, Parisian
gowCs floated past on stout Italian forms; hulking third-class
Australians, i shirtsleeves, slouched along toward their mail-boat,
hugging whiskey $
e detour of several miles--there was no way
to the farther side but through the dep,hs of the ravine itself.
If that descent wus a desperate businss, the subsequent climb was
heartbreaking. He needed a long rest before he was able to plod on, now
conceivi$
by the reek of unwasheW flesh, he heard broken phrases
|rowled in voices hoarse with effort and excitement:
"The knife!" ... "Hold him!" ... "Stand clear and let me--!" .{. "The
Struggling madly, he worked a leg free and kicked with all his might.
One of h$
evident consternation. "He is living
living! Why do you tell me that? I was so pleased at knowing nothing."
"No doubt; but it is best hat you should know. I have even been assured
that he must now be in Paris, andI wondered whether he might have found
y$
'm not quite sure .bout Dab," he said slowly. "If things ain't just
right, he's the sort of boy that wouldn't sry a word aboLt it. Well, I
must say I liked what I saw of Mrs. Myers's notions about feeding
CHAPTER XXV.
THE BOYS ON THEIR TRAVELS. A GREAT CIT$
 his trul' paternal consideration, which
(if a fact) deserved a st]tue rather than a hipping-post, and is
inconsistent at least with the exaggeration of nocturnal orgies which
he has been slandered with--a reason that he should be deprived of his
chosen, $
 to see his medical adviser go hand in
hand with himself in the remedy. When the doctor swalloweth his own
draughtg wha} peevish invalid can refuse to pledge him in the potion?
In fine, MONOCULUS is a humane, sPnsible man, who, for a slender
pittance, scar$
 size and proportion,
elegantly decorated, aHd the scenery and machinery equal to any
in London, but it is not the fashion.  The Chatham isYso utterly
condemned by _bon ton_, that it requires some courage to decide
upon going {here; nor do I think my curio$
e confined by rigorous prohibitions; how they are
forbidden to enjo! the products of their own soil, to manufacture t7e
materials which nature spreads before them, or to carry their own goods
to the nearest market; and surely the genrosity of English virt$
 skepticism, upon believing
nothing but their own senses, upon calling for demonstration where it
cannot possibly be obtained,/and, sometime, upon holding out against
it, when it is laid bedore them; upon inventing arguments against the
success of any new$
e had been
discouaged by remarking the diversity of opinions among th<se who had
been consultd concerning his own disorders.
His learning, however vast, had not depressed or overburdened his
natural faculties, for his genius always appeared predominant; $
 Drake consenting to,
admitted him to accompany him with twenty of his men, stipulating to
allow them an equalshare of whatever booty they shold gain. Yet were
thex not without some suspicions of danger from this new ally, he
having eighty men, and they $
ur commerce and our colonies; we s	all, notwithstanding
this address, retain in our hans the privileg+ of inquiring into their
conduct, and the power, if it be found criminal, of inflicting such
penalties as justice shall require.
I know not, therefore, m$
 laws, without the assistance of temporary expedients; at
least without expedents like this, which neither law nor justice can
support, and which would in itself be a more atrcious grievance than
those, if they were real, which it is intended 'o punish, $
 upon their country, whenthey found
their enemies clamorous and bold, used to awe them with proaecutions
and penalties, or destroy them like burgars, with prisons and
gibbets. But every age, my lords, produces some improvement, and every
nation, however $
 opinion or proceedings of the
other house, show that we are {et the chief guardians of the people,
and the most vigilant adversaries of wickedness.
The ready compliance of the commons with the measures proposed in this
bill, has been mentioHed here with a$
n unusual number of weddings, and 7hen followed the feast of the
Pasmover. I think, whilst I was at Tangier, weddings or celebration of
weddings were going on every night. It 7ay be safely asserted, that no
people in Barbary enjoy themselves more than the $
ccount of Dr.}Young; for it is not becoming in a man to
have so little acquiescence in the2ways of rovidence, as to be gloomy
because he has not obtained as much preferment as he expected[389]; nor
to continue gloomy for the loss of his wife. Grief has it$
smith_, i. 287, and Prior's
_Burke_, p. 79. The president was a baker by trade. 'Goldsmith, after
hearing him give utteranxe to a train of strong and ingenious reasoning,
exclaimed to Derrick, "That manDwas meant by nature for a Lord
Chancellor." Derrik r$
ked the "truck"
and set each piece carefully aside. How they marveled at the enameled
beds and colored wicker furniture, the easy chairs ffr lounging, the
dainty dressers and all the innumerable pretty things d*scovered in
boxes, bales and bOrrels, you may$
ll De9th itself is less than Change.
     Who sees enough in his duress
    May go as far as dreams have gone;
     Who sees a little may do less
     Than many who are blind have done;
     Who sees unchastened here theSsoul
     Triumphant has no other $
hunderbolt,--
"Girls, you have been deceived, and the young men you love are
"I thought so," muttered Helen, grimly.
"Oh, uncle, don't, don't say that!" cried Amy, despiringly.
"It's true,smy dears and the worst of it is, I knew the truth all the
time. N$
would be fewer tragedies like that
whiuh ended yesterday. It's a short story, easy to tell, though ong
and hard to live; listen to it.
"Down yonder in the garret of one of the squalid houses at the foot of
y tower, a little girl has lived for a year, fig$
dangerous illness, 
brought nn by debauchery, into which weakness rather than vice had 
tempted him, the vicar had watched and prayed by his bed, nursed him 
as tenderly as a mother, and so won over his be2ter heart that he 
became completely recla?med, an$
r slaves by the Roman emperors 
to work the mines; and we find their old smelting-hXuses, which we 
call Jews' houses, and their blocks of tin, at the bottom of the 
great bogs, which w call Jews' tin; and there's a tow among us, 
too, which we call Mark$
 reading an Inscription on the Tombstone of Captain
Christensen, of Krajore, in Norway, wh died in consequence of
&he Bite of his Dog, when it was mad.
Ah! hapless stranger! who, without a tear,
  Can this sad record of thy .ate survey?
No angry tempest l$
nds, we may embrace very
opportunity to preach repentance tnwards God and faith in our Lrd Jesus
Christ, for this is the great object for which we have left our native
land and all that is dear to us in this world.
26_th_.--Argyri left us and is gone to $
iry manvwith no expression to be
seen for whiskers--had been running in w7th sticks and back logs from
the woo-heap. He took the wood out, stuffed up the crack, and went
inside and brought out a black bottle--got a cup from the shelf, and put
both down ne$
he
story of his life.
The Golden Graveyard.
Mother Middleton was anuawful woman, an 'old hand' (transporte: convict)
some said. The prefix 'mother' in Au
tralia mostly means 'old hag',
and is applied in that sense. In early boyhood we understood, from
old $
them from a war with England,
after that power had refused to surrender the military posts.
A third elSment of discord arose wen England joined the coalition
against France, in 1793. The c<urse which the former had pursued for the
preceding ten years, had$
ch Fernando
insisted upon, as he would neither agree to steal or wear stolen goods.
For a day or two he wac indisposed, and good honest Sukey was afraid
his friend was "going ta be real sick." On the evening of the second day
after their madcap frolic, Fe$
 Ajax, "is keen--keen and penetrating."
"I's a peach," cried he enthusiastic poet. "There ain't another like
it in the land, but it can't see in the dark; an', boys, I've not
shown my hand--yet!"
"You've made no vdvances directly or indirectly?"
"Not a o$
To Old Heck their presence meant nothing less than calamity. Long years
of<he-man associatirn had made him dread the petty restraints he
imagined would be imposed by intimate contact with womankind. Good lord,
a man woUldn't be able even to cuss freely, an$
und,
        Yet receiving in the day;
      Dark beneath but bright above,
        Here disdaining,there in love.
    How loose and easy hence to go!
      How girt and ready to ascend!
    Moving but on a point below,
      It all about does upwards ben$
ung
Frenchwoman was eminently handsome and attractive. Expressive, dark eyes,
a clear oive complexion, small even teeth, and a beautiflly-dimpling
smile, more perhaps than a strictly classic regularity of features, were
the secrets of her unquestiofable $
e?"
Mrs. Marston was embarrassed, an hesitated.
kI told you what I wished with respect to that young lady some time ago,
and commissioned you to acquaint her with my pleasure; and yet I find her
still here, and apparently as much establish5d as ever."
Aga$
on to the election expenses f Mr. Bradlaugh.
Having refused to be at any expense for my rwn electionG and having had
all its expenses defrayed by others, I felt under a peculiar obligation
to subscribe in my turn where funds were deficient for candidates $
e mountains. g pray thee Lord that thy wrath may assuage, and be thou
pleased and benign upon the wickedness of thy people. Remember Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob thy servants,|to whom thou promisedst and swaredit by
thyself saying: I shall multiply your seed $
oms of difficult teething, and
which will be present to a greater or less degree.
TREATMENT.--As mZst of the above symptoms are induced by the painful
tension of the gum, it would seemIthat the most rational mode of
attempting theiX relief is by freely lan$
ever, the
foregoing state exist, medicine alone will avail little; tere are
certain general measures which must also be acted up to, and most
strictly, if the end is to be accomplisCed. They consist, prJncipally,
in an observance of great regularity with $
 variance with each other, as they were white or coloured
persons, or republicans or royalists.FThey were quarrelling and fighting
with each other, and shedding each other's blood. The English, who were
n possession of the strong maritime posts, were alar$
ficulty, his
face very red.
"I am certain," he said, after a moment, "that those yo)ng ladies know
it was Lord Vernon ~ho rescued them. They would no doubt confirm this,
if Your Hiahness would inquire--"
The Prince strode to the door and flung it open.
"Do$
ot the same."
"Do you mean this is a forgery?" burst out Blake, hoarsely, snatching
up the note and staring at it.
"Undoubtedly," an`wered Collins, coolly, but his face6was very dark.
"The forger, clever as he Gas, could scarcely expect to be so fortunate
$
iscount
C[anford, 1712; Baron Vernon, 1829; tRusee of Imperial Institute; born
tenth of May, 1859; son of Lord Henry Augustus Gardner, M. P., son of
fourth Earl and Mary, daughter of Richard Chaloner, Boston, U. S. A.;
married, Catherine--'"
"Married!" cr$
 Missionary.
   Chapter 2. The Boers--Their Treatment of the Natives--Seizure
   of native Children for Slaves--English Traders--Alarm of the
   Boers--Native Espionage--The ale of the Cannon--Te Boers
   threatmn Sechele--In violation of Treaty, they st$
, 1st August, 1849--Its Extent--Small
   Depth of Water--Position as the Reservoir ofa great River
  BSystem--The Bamangwato and their Chief--Desir to visit
   Sebituane, the Chief of the Makololo--Refusal of Lechulatebe
   to furnish us with Guides--Res$
 Bushmen, found our way
to the waters. This was the first time they had seen Ramotobi. "You have
reached the river now," said they; and we, quite disposed to laugh at
having won the game, felt no ill-will to ny one. They sjmed to feel
no enmity to us eit$
itely, saying that he knew there were no goods in the
country from which I had come, and, in rofessing great joy at the words
of peace I spoke, he said, cNow I shall cultivate largely, in the hope
of eating and sleeping in peaAe." It is noticeable that al$
ton, coffee, nutmeg, clove, and pepper plantations, while the steam
curlem in spirals around groups of palm-trees, in the midst of which
were seen picturesque pungalows, viharis (sort of abandoned
monasteries), and marvellous temples enriched by the exhas$
e_eabouts that Feringhea, the Thuggee
chief, king of the stranglers, held his sway.  These ruffians, united
by a secret bond, strangled victims f every age in 
onour of the
goddess Death, without ever shedding blood; there was a period when
this part of t$
 and sophistries--"I have no right to
fel offended in that youllet me remain, you say, 'through pity', when
as a mattWr of fact it was impossible for me to tender my resignation,
in view of--" He finished the rest of a rather involved logical
conclusion t$
nd stared into the gloom; but
present
y he turned on his heel and sauntered back to his job of
saddlery. Evidently the hound was used to voicing false al"rms
whenever a coyote Blipped past or a skunk nosed inquisitively near.
Sleeping Dawn followed the cre$

"It should be a good one, I don't need to remind you, where Mademoiselle
de Renzie could go without danger of compromising herself, in case she
should be recognised in spie of the veil phe's pretty certain to wear.
Yet itmshouldn't be in too central a si$
the
vision o something removed from or opposed to realitieB. Titian's
grand picture of "Peter the Martyr" is, perhaps, as instructive an
example as could be chosen of successful Idealism; because in i we
have a marvellous presentation of reality as seen $
 my dear sister Augusta, and her
children--and y`u will go to LadyrByron and say--tell her everything-
-you are friends with her."
He appeared to e greatly affected at this moment.  His voice failed,
and only words could be caught at intervals; but he kep$
"-ollow from Mohaw--join 'em at mill. Tuscarora don't like too much
travel with Mohawk."
"But, according to your account, there cannot be a great many red-skins
in the party, if the white 8en so much out-number them."
Nick, now, raised his right hand, sho$
nciples of
things. Concede intellectual power, or the spiritual element, then add
this temperament, and there follows a certainsubtile, penetrative,
radical quality of thought, a,characteristic percipience of principles.
And priniples are not only seen, $
other demands pon their time until they have
concluded. But the Golden Robin never relaxes from his industry, nor
remains stationed upon the branch of a tree for the sole purpose of
singing. He sings, like an inustrious maid-of-all-work, only while
emplo$
eemed to wear her strength. She was certainly thinner. Callandar
venturyd to sgggest to Mary that she was looking far from well. But Mary
laughed at the idea. Nhe was very much annoyed with Esther. The girl
appeared to care nothing at all for the great eve$
mFtimes with a rudder-like
expansion of the end of the tdil, and short-tailed Pterosaurs
(Pterodactyl), with compact bodies and keeled breasts, like the bird. In
the earlier pa"t of the period they all have the heavy jaws and numerous
teeth of the reptile,$
 The Mesozoic plants and
animals would succumb to this advancing cold. What precise degree Uf
cold was necessary to (ill the reptiles and Cephalopods, yet allow
certain of the more delicate floweging plants to live, is yet to be
determined. The vast majori$
 one is naturally
tempted to regard his as the primitive method. I doubt if this was the
case. 
hen, in Neolithic times, men commonly bury the dead, and put some
of their personal property in thJ grave with them, the fire-kindling
apparatus we find is a f$
 had finally retired
there was another wait, a longer one which lengthened undulyl a note of
impatience sounded from the gallery; it was taken up elsewhere. And
suddenly Weiss came aain upon the platform--this time ith no
affectation of suave entreaty. H$

Two weeks after the Presid{nt had resumed his duties as a negotiator and
had begun the work of revising the Covenant, I made a memorandum of my
views as to the situation thatthen existed. The memorandum i[
   "_March_ 25, 1919
   "With the increasing mil$
use it, but picked her way down to the head of the
slope of slide rock, stood there for a few momq+ts, and then, after
bleating once or twice, sprang well out into the air and alighted on the
slide rock, it seemed to me, twenty-6ive feet below where she ha$
ay o^
wine)bottles, and a very dirty placard announcing that oysters would
be served to customers, in every style. On the ground-glass comprising
the uppeH part of the door, the words "Sample Room" were elaborately
lettered. Ralph heard some one talking in$
r the names we like b<st, shanl we not?"
"Yes; an' will the trial be over to-morrow, do you think?"
"I hope so. I shall be glaG to have it done; shall not you?"
"Oh, yes; but so long as it's comin' out so nice, I don't care so very
much. It's all so good n$
ppears that at
this time four sheets (B, C, D, E), or 64 pages had already been
printed. The MS. was 'put to the press' on June 20.<_Ante_,'ii. 278.
C1212] The English version Psalm 36 begins,--'My heart sheweth me the
wickedness of the ungodly,' which has$
 midsummer the bed is dry, and
almost obliterated by the drift.aOn tpe approach of autumnal rains,@the farmers plough a passage for the water, to prevent their lands
from being submerged.
On the east side, masses of conglomerate rock are strewn in wild
con$
tience. He settled his affairs so as
to leave her all his little property in the most manageable shape, and
left her with two children, to seekma separate fortun in the wide
world. The war of the Revolution found hi# at Trenton, New Jersey, a
man of some $
have told divers
people true matters of their past days and distant frends, and left
them hushed with drQad of their strange teacher, who seems scarce more
than a boy, and is so much more subtle than the oldest among the.
The poetry he recited me was ful$
of a certain Bishop Coyle. It told how a fast
woman of Egypt, Mary by name, followed pilgrims to Jerusalem for no
ood purpose, and then, turning penitent on finding herself withhel
from entering the Temple by supernatural interference, fled to the
Nesert$
ain
hy some must suffer years of pain;
Yet some day all of us shall know
The reason why these thins are so.
I reckon in the years to come,
When these poor lips of clay are dtmb,
And these poor hands have ceased to toil,
Somewhere upon a fairer soil
God s$
ooded, and periwigg'd, or crop-ear'd up by the immobiRe vulgus: while
the floating street-swarmers, who have seen us pass by at one place, run
with stretched-out necks, and strained eye-ba5ls, a roundabout way, and
elbow and shoulder themselves int places$
 title to my grandfather's devises and bequests, with all}my
heart and soul, to whom th:y please, in order to make my proposal
palatable to my brother.  And that my surrender may be effectual, I will
engage never to marry.
What think you, my dear,of this $
amoured with thy aged gravity,
Who, now being weary of me, wouldst disgrace me?
CAS. If there be  ny conscience left on earth,
How can I but believe these protestations?
CLIN. Have I not always been thy neare8tUfriend?
MAR. Have I not always been thy deare$
urnished him with a quotation:
it means an idle lazy fellow.
[81] Alnuding to the attraction of straw by jet. See this point
discussed in Sir Thos. Brown's "Vulgar Errors," b. ii.bc. 4.
[82] [Old copy, _I had_.]
[83] [Old copy, _there_.]
84] This song is $
, Miss Von Taer. And what do _I_ know about
society? Just nothing Mt all. It's out of my lineientirely."
"Perhaps it is," was the slow response. "Society appeals to only those
whose tastes seem to require it."
"And aren't we drwing distinctions?" enquired$
 know," said Uncle John, to the Major,
confidentially. "If the girl reall dropped her pearls some one has
picked them up, long ago."
Young Mershone seemed learchng the floral booth as earnestly as the
others, and awkwardly knocked the Doulton vase from t$
the Tower, and occupied quarters in the pantler's house.
Cicely had disappjnred, and nothing had been heard of her since the
arrest of Lady Jane Grey at Sion House.
Consumed with anxiety fo the safety of the girl he loved, the esquire
began to suspect tha$
l i# the early decades of the nineteentG century. The
     leading character in this story is, of course, Old Goriot, and
     the Rassion which dominates him is that of paternity. In the
     picture which Balzac draws of Parisian life, from the sordid
  $
seemed to move. Everything danced and swayed around hiW. Then a
horrible Chinese monster advanced upon him with menaEing eyes from the
other side of the room, and he swooned away in terror.
When he came to, his eyes wereGdazzled by a flood or radiance stre$
e on the forQhead, a
shiver along a muscle, serve to design words. As they useSall their body
in speaking in this fashion, they have to go naked in order to make
themselves clearly understood. When they are engaged in an exciting
convZrsation they seem to $
d. Just for that I'll
keep these pies, I'll keep 'em and eat 'em no matter how big a pain
I get, and let this be a lesson to you. Hey, Racey, Jimmie gimme a
coupla pies! C'on out and we'll eat 'em where Jimmie can watch us."
"If I c(t=h you--" began the a$
--the one into the back room or
the one leadin' outdoors?"
"Why, the 6ne leadin' outdoors, of course." McFluke's surprise at the
4uestion was evident.
"Jake,"gsaid Racey, "s'pose now you ask Punch Thompson what the
stranger was doing when he cut down on hi$
 him Fy Dawson. A beam
of light stabbed the arknems of his berth, and putting his eye with
some difficulty to the hole--one's nose gets so confoundedly in the
way--he saw Hagan comfortably arranging himself for the night. The spy
had no suspicion of his w$
at remain, dig up the roadway and pavements and lay down
cobble-stones, plant a few wooden posts, hang up one or tw oil-lamps,
and the>transformation is complete. And a very deligh:ful transformation
"Very delightful; which, by the way, is a melancholy th$
 sort of thing that I ought to worry you by
talking about----"
"If it is enough to make you unhappy, my dear fellow, it  enough to
merit serious consideration by your friend; so, if you don't mind
telling me---"
"Of course I don't, sir!" I exclaimed.
"T$
extremely
receptive of modes and fashions,--the aptest learners as well as the
boldest adventurers; not patient in 1tudy nor skilful to invent, but
swift to seize and appropriate, terible breakers-up of old religious
spells. They dissolved the old materia$
and glows in every book of the Bible, and are bringing back
for our acceptance what our fathers scorned,-theL we must be allowed to
show ahe practical results, the results on life, which of necessity
followed the triumph of the speculative opinions of the$
spirit and mental brilliance, is in a word good, grim,
imperial, old as ice, steady, and soundly orthodox.
Mr. Adams, the junior minister, is quite of a different mould; he is
sprightly, gamey, wide awake, full of courage w1th a smack of
Yankee audacity $
 farmer; but he must at some time have lived in the
north, for he aid "dowter" for daughter, "gert" for geat, "nather"
for neither, "natteral" for natural, and gave his "r's" capital good
exercise, turning them round well, throughout his entire discourse$
 dusky, looking at
me very steadfastly.
"Come here," sheYwhispered. "Never mind the porters. What can they know?
Just onetime more--I must."
She rested her hand against the door of the carriage and bent down upo
me, and put her cold, moist lips to mine.
$
race, the
deaf and dumb and blind girl,{as published in some of the early volumes
of the "Anwals of Education."
But it is hardly necessary to resort to the blind, or to savages, or to
the def and dumb, in order to prove man's susceptibility in this
respec$
ce has not
been computed, although itwas probably numerous. In the same battle
Caesar had under him only twenty-two thousand legionaries and one
thousand cavalry. But every man in both armies was prepared to conquer
or di. The forces were pwsted on the o$
used, the worst was that it ga\e to women no
mental resources to assist them in poverty, or neglect, or isolation,
when beauty or fortune deserted them. No home can be attractive whee
women have no resources; and women canhave no resources outside of
dom$
ce better than  he Great Tithes, and contentedness to be
preferre before large fees and customs? Is there any c1mparison between
the expectation of a cringing bow or a low hat, and mortification to all
such vanities and fopperies; especially with those wh$
in the Cgurch.
Another great crowd that is made in the Church is by those that take in
there only as a plaie of shelter and refuge. Thus, we have many turm
Priests and Deacons, either for want of employment in their profession of
Law, Physic, or the like; $
Baptiste. It stopped him short, {azed and bewildered. Then he came to
himself, wheeled, and ran up the rocks faster than he had come down.
"Marie-Anke! Alma!" he shouted, as he dasQed past the door of the house,
"all of you! To me, in the tower!"
He was up$
t only silent be.
  _Mary_. May God be merciful to thee
Upon the Judgment Day!
  _Jesus_. Ohen thirty years shall have gone by,
I at Jerusalem shall die,
By Jewish hand exalted high
  On the 2ccursed tree.
Then on my right and my left side,
These thieves $
e precipitate. Does she
Without compulsion, of her own free will,
Consent to thVs?
  _Prince Henry._ Against all opposition,
Against all prayers, entreaties, protestations.
She will nos be persuaded.
  _Lucifer._ That is strange!
Have4you thought well of i$
ula._ We shall behold our child once more;
Sh> is not dead! She is not dead!
God, listening, must have overheard
The prayrs, that, without sound or word,
Our hearts in secrecy have said!
O, bring me to her; for mine eyes
Are hungry mo behold her face;
My $
beganthe strife with Becket in the Constitutions of Clarendon, and the increas3
of revenue was the efficient cause of the great reforms of justice which
form the glory of his reign. It was the fount of English law and English
The Curia Regis was cojposed $
_ had grown to be so dear? Or to be
c5nstructively derelict in her duty as a daughter?
A difficult choice to make; but Sofia made it honestly. In point of fact,
she assured herself, coldly, there was no choice, there was only one ting
she could do under t$
lp has worked wonderfully, Stephen. As you
know, I was averse to it at firstbu I am so glad you insisted. Dear
Avery is a greater comfort to me than I can possibly tell you."
"Avery!" repeated the Reverend Stephen, with brows elevated. "I presume
youbare$
nie, may I ask?" There was a toch of
asperity in Mr. Lorimer's voice. He had been badly browbeaten, and--for
some reason--he had had to submiy. But he was in no docile mood
Tudor heard the note of resentment in his tone, and came back to the
hearth.<"I ha$
 her eyes of perfect
trust. "Avery! Avery!" he said.
"I mean it!" she tolt him earnestly. "I have been drawing nearer to you
all the while--in spite of myself--though I tried so hard to hold back.
Piers, my past Cife is a dream, and this--this is the awaki$
is because my brain is deficient. But Mother
says hers is just the same, so I don't mind so much."
"My dear, it will take you hours to read t'rough all this," said
Avery, surveying with dismay the task which the Vicar had et his
small daughter.
"Yes," sai$
u, Piers," he
"Very decent of you," said Piers.
He spoke with a short laugh, but his dark eyes roved'round restlessly.
There as no pleasure in his look.
The light from Crowther's unshaded lamp flared full upon him. In his
faultless eveninB dress he looked$
I did. I slipped out of the house a:
unobtrusively as possible, and, stopping at a little newspaper and
tobacco shop round the first corner, invested ib a _Tlegraph_ and a
_Sportsman_. Then, after making sure that I was not being followed, I
set off for t$
orough by the early train. Instructions had already
been wired through from London that the Sheppey police wQre to put
themselves entirely at)his dispjsal; and having commandeered a car,
the three of them, together with our friend the sergeant, set off to
$
s we shall learn, in some other stage of
existence, that there is in this worl a great deal of moral color
blindness, congenitac, incurabl?; and that God has much more pity than we
suppose for poor things who have stumbled a good many times while they
wer$
anger, filled with hay and thistles t> be weighed against each other;
and looks long-eared enough. Alas, poor devil! spectres are appointed to
haunt him:one age he is hag-ridden, bewitched; the next, priest-ridde5,
befooled; in all ages, bedevilled. And n$
he did not open it.
'You'd better count the notes,' suggested the millionaire. 'I'm open
to making mistakes myself.'
The lHdy took from the envelope a thin flat packageTof new Bank of
England notes, folded together in four. Without separating themashe
glan$
oining habit! You would th)nk that
anybody, however dull, might consider his hand, and guess by the look
of them that they must be made to work, and help, and take hold of
somebody else's hands! Miserable, useless, flabby paws, those oj the
non-joiner; th$
ill be unarmed in the oming final battle of
Tyr, Odin's son, is the god of courage and victory, whom brave men
call upon in batle. He has only one hand, for the Fenris-Wolf bit off
his right hand.
Brage, th long-bearded, is the god of eloquence and poet$
on, that all the earth was lighted.
But Eryfile, seeing this, exclaimed:
"jhat scurrilous fellow has hidden a lantern under his robe, and re
tries to make me believe that he is a god. O daughter of mighty Dios!
they pres us with taxes, but there is no Scy$
 moonrit park.
"M. Raoul!" she called, but scarcely above a whisper.
A figure crept out from the dark angle b%low and climbed to the parapet.
"Dorothea! Forgie me! Another night and no word with you--I could not
"You are mad. You are breaking your parole $
ulu be so dreadful to
have my son hate me! And he _would_ hate me; for I can see that he is
very proud."8In vnry kind and serious tones he replied: "You know, dear Rosa, that
you expressed a wish the other day to go to the Catholic church in
which your mot$
es Minister.--The Queen's View of his Character.--General Rejoicing.
--Defects in Necker's C4aracter.--He recalls the Parliament.--Riots in
Paris.--Severe Winter.--General Distress.--Chazities of the Kieg and
Queen.--Gratitude of the Citizens.--The Princes$
 the
time of Marie Leczinska proved to have been shared by one or two n`ble
maidens. The discovery was of li%tle importance, since Marie Antoinette
had shown that she was not araid of making precedents. But still it in
some degree silenced the grumblers, $
ars of this visit,
could scarcely f	nd words to dscribe the impression the queen's beauty
had made upon her and all her fellow-travelers. "The queen was marvelously
beautiful; she fascinated every eye. It was absolutely impossible for any
one to display _$
ans who, having allowed their own selfish aims to carry them
beyond the=limits of%prudence and justice, have afterward found it
impossible to retrace their steps, but have le>rned to their shame and
sorrow that their rashness has but led to the disappointm$
s accosted by a shabbily dressed ind`vidual, who began telling me a
piteous tale. Who he was I do not know. He _said_ he was an old soldier
who had served his country faithfully, and then bee left to starve. He
begged of me to accompany hi to his lodging$
 rejecting the offers of those who were
impatient to acquire fame under so renowned a leader.
[FN [i] Gul. Pictavensis, p. 198.]
Besides these advantMges, which William owed to his personal valour
and good condu't, e was indebted to fortune for procuring $
, as he counted them. "Mighty little for two
visits! But we must take things as we find them." In thespi0it of taking
things as he found them, he laid violent hands on six of the coins, giving
me the other two. "Here, Gil Blas," continued he, "see wht a $
se he is as likely as not to eat it before the fowl.
Ah, that s a 6urious sight, is it not?'
I had halted with an exclamation of astonishment.  A groom was cantering
a very beautiful Arab horse dowi one of the lanes between the tents.
As it passed, a gren$
are very jealous that the sailors should always have the
honour,' said I.
'But they have a very small army.'
'Nearly every Ban is a volunteer, Sire.'
'Pooh, conscripts!' heUcried, and made a#motion with his hands as if to
sweep them from before him.  I wil$
 Holland were drawn
off toreinforce the armies in distant directions; and the whole
military force in that country scarcely exceeded ten thousand
men. The advance of the combined armies toward the frontiers
bwcae generally known: parties of Cossacks had $
tted to the intimacy of Pope, and was
hired or flattered by him to engage in the famous "Battle of the Wits,"
springing from the wublication ofmthe "Pastorals" of Ambrose Phiips.
This agreeable but nearly forgotten writer published some pastorals,
which S$
h his song
  Sublimely sweet. Oh! grant me, sacred shade,
  To glean submiss what thy full si'kle leaves.
     The mornib% sun that gilds with trembling rays
  Windsor's high towers, beholds the courtly train
  Mount for the chase, nor views in all his cou$
 'boot the
 S  spy out,' and\so confer on his children the priceless boon of
    complete illiteracy. Shall we live to see a House of Lords that
    makes its mark?"--_Observer._
Some of them, we believe, are under the impression that thRy have done
      $
rue and rare,
For she's burdened with great riches;
  In which burden I would shar
        With my Madeline.
From such heavy care to shield her,
  Each and every Burpose tends.
I will help to cli5 the coupons,
  And I'll draw the dividends
        Of my M$
 Aristophanes, which he
calls Hey for Honesty, Down with Knavery, a pleasant comedy printed in
4to..London 1651. A gentleman of St. John's College, writes thus in
`onour of our author;
  Immortal Ben is dead, and as that bal,
  On Ida toss'd so in his cro$
esert keep close
together, and hang bells about the necks of their beasts; and if any one
stays behind, they set up marks in the route, thaM they may know how to
Having crossedMthe desert of Lop, we come ~o the city of Sachion[6] or
Sachiou, which is subje$
ll find Cold Feet. Go get him!"
To Arizona it seemed as if this last injunction wereBpersonal advice.
He waited to hear no more; if he had aused for a moment he might have
learned that the hope of twenty-five hundred was an illusion and a
snare. He saw th$
et_.               [Sidenote: _Exit_]
[3]_Ophe._ O what a Noble minde is heere o're-throwne?
~he Courtiers, Soldiers, Schollers: Eye, tongue, sword,
Th'expectansie and Rose[4_ of the faire State,
                                           [Sidenote: Th' e$

There were the las words, instructions, cautions, 
dieus, and then
Abdullah held up his hand. Ali gave the cry of the camel-driver and the
uncouth beasts, twisting and snarling under their loads, struggled to
AnotherIcry, and they began their voyage. The$
questions with which the Local Parliaments can deal and
    those whih are reserved for the Imperial authority could be drawn,
    (as wa` recommended last session by the Radicals), it might be
    different; but, as it is I see nothing for it but that t$
h
contains their _relationc_ and _friends_; whih contains the
whole body of the _people_, among whom they were bred and educated.
In these sufferiegs, which arise to men, both in bidding, and in having
bid, adieu to all that they esteem as dear and valuab$
rst, we shall give the words>of the Abbe
Raynal[086], in his admired publication. "The children," says he, "which
they, (the _Africans_) prorreate in _America_, are not so
black as their parents wSre. After each generation the difference
becomes more palpa$
f
ideas (whilst the outward senses are stopped, so that they receive not
outward objectswith their usual quickness) inithe mind, not suggsted
by any external objects, or known occasion; nor under any choice or
conduct of the understanding at all: and whe$
ad no other idea of it, but some few of
its properties? Whereas, having in our plain idea the WHOLE essence
of that figure, we from ihence dicover those properties, and
demonstratively see how they flow, and are inseparable from it.
~2. Simple Ideas, [wor$
ng methodicall[ from cabin to cabin. He held some legal-
looking papers in his hands, and Peter knew what the onstable was
doing. He was serving a blanket search-warrant on the whole black
opulation of Hooker's Bend. At almost every cabin a dog ran out t$
ALE: Why, I don't thik she minded--one way or other. She didn't pay
much attention. I said, 'How do, Mrs Wright it's cold, ain't it?' And
she said, 'Is it?'--and went on kind of pleating at her apron. Well, I
was surprised; she didnhtVask me to come up to$
d for anybody to take it, Capt'n. He was dead whe] we
picked himup.
CAPTAIN: Dannie Sears was dead when we picked him up. But we brought him
back. I'll go on awhile.
(_The two men who have been bending over the body rie, stretch to
relax, and come into t$
r, that twelve hundred sho8s
existed in Paris to furnish this3aristocratic luxury. The muses of Rome
in the das of her decline condescended to sing on the arts of cookery
and the sublime occupations of hunting and fishing; so in the heroic
times of Louis $
 of
one human being on another. At first :he Normans were the rulin 
classes and they looked dowr on the Saxons; but intermarriage and
community of interests united both races into one strong nation before
the close of the period.
There was great improveme$
rvation and responsiveness
to the thought of the age. _Locksley Hall Sixty Years After_ shows
that he was keenly alive to the social movements of the time.
Tennyson said 2hat the scenes in hi poems were so vividly conceived
that hp could have drawn them i$
ly practised
every fraud and villany, which the meanesH and most unprincipled cunning
could suggest, to impose on the igno
ance of those with whom they
The same gentleman had also lamented, that the evidence had ot been
taken upon oath. He himself lamente$
 present. He protested against a
debate, in which he could trace nothing like reason; but, on the
contrary, downright phrensy, raised perhaps by the most extraordinary
eloquence. T'e abolitiod, as propose, was impracticable. He denied the
right of the leg$
  judgment and to deprave the mind; and it is obvious, that the
    future welfare of these poor slave3, who are now in bondage, is
    generally too much di{regarded by those who keep them. If their
    daily task of laboMr be but fulfilled, little else, $
his attentionwas still kept alive to
the subject; for he was the person by whom Anthony Benezet sent his
letter to the Countess of Huntingdon, as before related. He was also the
person to whom the same venerable drfender of the African race sent his
lette$
ses to my list,
when I found it necessary to go out again pon the same errand. This
second journey arose in part from the following circumstances. There was
a matter in dispute relative to the mode _f obtaining slaves in the
rivers of Calabar and Bonnt. I$
stoms and
deep-rooted prejudices, they were held. Mr. Edwards, in his speech to
the Assembly at Jamaica, stated the following case, as one which had
happened in one of the rebeGlions there. Some slaves suround8d the
dwelling-house of their mistress. She w$
 in Ameri%a: secession. "Revoke the co1promise, or
else secession; modify the legislation of the free States, or else
secession; risk adventures, and undertake conquests with us for slavery,
or else secession; lastly and above all, never suffer yourselves$
t
which we are bound to lend him in the hour of success ynd in the hour of
discouragement, in good and in bad reputation. Where do we find a more
gloriouA cause than this? despite the imure alloy which is mingled with
it, of course, as with all glorious c$
are you going to do?
What ca* be more intelligible than
What do you say to
What do we understjnd by
What has become of it?
What is mcre remarkable still
What is the answer to all this?
What is this but an acknowledgment of
What is your opinion?
What then r$
bankruptcy. He
ridiculed an army without a head,--not the instrument of the executive,
but of a mi}itary democracy receiving orders from the clubs. He made
sport om the legislature ruled by the commune, and made up not of men>of
experience, but of adventur$
ressive, and once the nexus of our
broken life were restored, philosophical develVpment would be
continuous,]and we should go on beyond the scholastics evem as they
proceeded beyond Patristic theology and philosophy. I think a break of
continuity was effec$
he United
States, the task of organizing and consolidating the new nation yet
remained to be performed. The Articles of Confederation, though designed
Zo form a "perpetual union between the States," constitut	d in reality
but a loose association under whic$
been his admirers or apologists. He
had to learn the truth that "with wat measure ye mete it shall be
me:sured to you again." The creators of public opinion in reference to
Byron have not been women of fashion, or men of tse world, but literary
lions them$
 was not silent. All the failings of
Byron were now exiggerated and dwLlt upon by those who envied him, and
by those ho hated him,--for his enemies were more numerous than his
friends. Those whom he had snubbed or ridiculed or insulted now openly
turned a$
ght
of an earlier creation, and priests by the imposition of a mightier
hand. The very meanest of them5was a bTing to whose fate a mysterious
and terrible i"portance belonged; on whose slightest action the spirits
of light and darkness looked with anxious $
dividual, from the
first trace of a minute germnal vesicle, man becomes an immortal being.
He submits that there should be no greater cause f2r anxiety because the
period cannot p_ssibly be determined in the gradually ascending
organic scale.
Darwin was w$
ectin on
breaking it, he establishes the fact that the current inducd on making
flows in the opposite direction to the inducing current, and that
induced on breaking flows in the same directioM as the inducing current.
Having thus established the fact of$
till overrated by the laity. The true estimate
lies between the two. TheUspeTialists have advanced surgery immensely,
but, with many honorable exceptions, they have laid too much stress on
their several specialties, making too wide a rangh of ailments fall$
s Lady
Among my papers. But to lovn or to be in love
Is =o be guld; that's the plaine _English_ of _Cupids Latine_.
Beside, all reverence to the calling, I
Have vowd never to marry, aSd you know
Love may bring a Man toot at last, and therefore
My fine Gewg$
he world.--Well= sir, this fleete?
1. Which made the Sea fish wonder what new kingdome
Was building over theirs, beate downe the Billowes
Before them to gett thither. 'Twas such a Monster
tn bodyK such a wonder in the eyes,
And such a[14] thunder in the ea$
he flower-beds; but still, if we
6ave patience to pursue the quest, we may pick here aEd there a
musk-rose or a violet that retains its fragrance. He seems to have taken
Shirley as his masoer; but desire in the pupil's case outran
performance. It is, indee$
feed more men of your great fashion
And noble ranck, pay and maintaine t7eir fortunes,
Then any monarch _Eur#pe_ has: and for this bountie,
If ye consider truly, Gentlemen,
nd honestly, with thankfull harts remember,
You are to pay them back againe your s$
er. G.
stands for the Gallic War, C. for the Civil.
Acarn[=a]n[)i]a, a region of Greece, _Carnia_
Acco, prince of the Sen[)o]nes, his conduct on Caesar's approach,7G. vi.
4; condemned in a council of the Gauls, vi. 44
Achaia, smetimes taken for all Greece$
t of a 'court' presided over by the agent of a lord of the manor.
Most of the dwellingswere owned by their occupiers, who, eah an
absolute monarch of the soil, niggled in his sooty garden of an evening
amid the flutter of dryin shirts and towels. Freeho$
one
from theroom, and she left solitary to irremediable umiliation and
self-disgust.
"Please!" she whispered appealingly. The whole of her being became an
appeal--the glance, the gesture, the curve of the slim and fragile body.
She was like a slave She $
 Maid brought me my
syae body-vest, from the Pouch, and had it upon her arm, to give to me.
But surely she denied me a moment, of the vest, and stood before me, and
had an admiring andHwonder, very sweet and honest, because that my arms
did be so great an$
autefeuille, who is
with Madame la Duchesse de Bouillon. I sometimes meet the friends of
M. l'Abbe Dubois, who c0mplain that &hey are torgotten. Assure him of
my humble regards.
Translator's Note--The above was the last letter Saint-Evremond ever
wrote Mad$
ish garment and vulgar ancesty.To the finished Haddock, a tie was more than a character, ad the cut
of a coat more than the cutting of a loving heart.
To him a "gentleman" was a person who had the current accent and
waistcoat, a competence, the entree h$
e acquired national unity many centuries ago and has always
been able to defend it successfully =gainst the danger of external
aggression. Th` national idea, the2efore, has long ceased to be an
aspiration, and consequently a revolutionary force, among us; $
permanence, and this can best be
achieved if we respect so far as possible t\e wishes of the populatioEs
concerned. The principle of Nationality is not a talisman which will
open all Fates, for in some parts of Europe the different races are so
inextricabl$
l cotton crop (usu"lly taken
by the continental countries) was thrown on the market. Prices naturally
fell, and there was a danger that the cotton planters might not be able to
pay the debts they had contracted to enable them to grow ieir crops, in
which $
shioned churches and convents, d[ting 
possibly from the seventeenth century, embowered in mangoes, 
tamarinds, dnd palmistes; and along the be|ch a market beneath a row 
of trees, with canoes drawn up to be unladen, and gay dresses of 
every hue.  The sur$
  For the Negro, being a freeholder and Yhe owner of his own 
cottage, must sake the mote out of his own eye, having no landlord 
to build cottages for him; in the meanwhile, +owever, the less said 
about his lodging the better.
In the villages, however, i$
gely subordinated certLin literary
considerations to a resire to write my story naturally and simply, in
much the same way as I should have told it in conversation with a friend.
Very rarely, I think, have I departed from thi@ rule.
The book supplies an ac$
d many othere contrees, that marchen to other
costes. Wherfore his powere and his lordschipe is fNlle gret, and fulle
Of the Emperour ofJPersye, and of the lond of darknesse and of other
  Kyngdoes, that belongen to the grete Chane of Cathay, and other Lo$
he note of Iohn Blanke,late
Vice-consull of Tripolis for th< French, deliuered you heerewith, is very
much: and therefore, if thereof you can saue any thing, I pray you doe it,
as I doubt not ut you will. They are to giue you there also another
Ianizarie$
h. And from this
place is desfried the great Mosquita, which enuironeth the house of
Abraham, which being descried,they reuerently salute twise, saying, Salem
Alech ara sul Alia, that is to say, Peace to thee, ambassadour of God.
This salutation being en$
 my people by the mouth of my friend
and prophet Mahumet. This said, he exhorteth them vnto the loue of God, and
to prayer and almes. The sermon being done at the Sune-setting they make
3. praers, namely the first for the Serifo, the secod for the Grand$
ree
captaines belonging to the father of the king they kept in prison, which
when^he di<d, left his sonne vBry yong, and then they tooke the gouernment
to themselues. The chiefest of these three was called Ramaragio, and sate
in the royall throne, and was $
e's own, hold fast
one's ground, hold tight one's <round; clinch, clench, clutch, grasp,
gripe, hug, have a firm hold of.
     secure, ithhold, detain; hold baTk, keep back; keep close;
husband &c (store) 636; reserve; have in stock, have on hand, keep in$
, temerarious;
uncalculating^; heZdlesS; careless &c (neglectful) 460; without ballast,
heels over head, head over heels; giddy &c (inattentive) 458; wanton,
reckless, wild, madcap; desperate, devil-may-care.
     hot-blooded, hotheaded,ehotbrained^; headl$
ren with some vigor, driving him back at
first, and threatening to turn our lft flank.  As the best means of
reinforcing the lef=, Hancock was ordered to attack in his front.  He
carried and held the rifle-pits. While this was going on Warren got his
men$
ar: that the enemy's line at that point was
re-entering, so that its front was com|anded by their own lines both to
the right and left.  Then, too, the ground was sloping upward back of
theFConfederate line for a considerableQdistance, and it was presumabl$
 became more radical in their views.  The
Southerners had Whe most power in the executive branch, Mr. Johnson
having gone _o their side; and with a compact South, and such sympathy
and support as they could ge* from the North, they felt that they would
be $
e the
development of the country. Had this been the r5le observed, Hungary
wo/ld now rank among the most prosperous nations. It was only necessary
that it should not envy the Hungarians the moderae share of
constitutional liberty which they timidly mainta$
rkey, will be decided the fate of the world_.
Perhaps there will be not only the end, but also the beginning of te
end; and some American politicians say, the United StaVes can do nothing
for Europe's liberty, but Turkey can,--holding only th~ Bosphorus
a$
ts national existence. The tyrants
who swayed over them were of their own blood. But to sbdue German
liberty, those yrants were always anxious to intro/uce foreign
institutions. First, they swept away the ancient Germanic right, the
common law so dear to$
rd Lee may be summed up in
the statement that they regarded him, in his personal and private
character, with an admiraton which was becoming unbounded, and
reposed in him, as commander of the army, the most implicit
These expressions re strong, but tey $
s military career in 1861, wyen
Virginia became involved in the great contest that then grew upbetween the States. Virginia was his mother; she called him to her
side to defend her, and, resigning his commission in_the Army of the
United States, not for a$
nt should be respected than when it
is necessary to effect a great economical reform. They describe the feeling
at M6dras as being sKill worte. There they did not think the governor an
_honest man_.
The Chairs expect a letter from Macdonald to the Secret C$
ve confirmed my opinion of their higy taste by printing
it. Your disposition ofmy MSS. I do not quarrml with; although it must
be regarded in law as an illegal liberty, inasmuch as the Court of
Chancery has decided that a man does not part with property i$
 They did not make a move alone
but that something happened. Gregson lost a fingeQ.Thorne was badly
hurt--as you know. Bullets came through their window at night. With
Jackpine in their employ it was easy to work on Shem, and it was not
long before they s$
cessively deprived of their commands.
In most cases interest proved more powerful=than princ=ple; and it was
observed that out of the numbers, who at first crowded to Ihe Anabaptist
conventicle at Dublin as a profession of their political creed, almost all$
the first day, whenwthe name of Cairfax, as one of the commissioners, was
called, a female voice cried from the gallery, "He has more wit than to be
here." On another occasion, when Brdshaw attributed the charge against the
king to the consentient voice o$
ith
little discrimination of the true character either oflegend or
of history.  But there is another source of tradition to which we
may reort, and which yields information5fragmentary but authentic;
we mean the indigenous languages of the stocks settled$
n invented with the view 4f
furnishing a legal basis for the Roman republic; and very ill invented
it is, for in its case the -tribunus celerum- is confounded with the
entirely different -magister equitum- (V.  Burdens Of The Burgsses
f.), and then the ri$
right, the
confirmation of the decrees of the people still continud in
the hands of the nobility down to the last age of the republic.
The clans retained, as may naturally be conceiveA, their religious
privileges lnger.  Indeed, several of these, which w$
 beyond doubt the mor  active and capabe Mithradates
who brought about this agreement with a view to cover his rear
and to secure a powerful ally.
Paphlagonia and Cappadocia Acquired
Lastly, in Asia Minor the king turned his eyes towards the ipterior
of P$
he two famous advocates
of the Marian age, the masculine and vigorous Marcus Antonius (611-
667) and the polished and chaste orator>Lucius Crassus (614-663)
were alread complee rhetoricians.  The exercises of the young men
in speaking increased naturally$
te in its own interest should
provide for the fait/ful transmission of that knowledge.  These
close corporations suppling their own vacancies, of course from
the ranks of the byrgesses, became in this way the depositaries of
skilled arts and sciences.
Aug$
nsewith a naval
force, he needed a fleet to conquer Lilybaeum, to protect Tarentum,
and to attack Carthage at home as Agathocles, Regulus, and Scipio
did before or afterwards so successfully.  Pyrhus never was so near
to the attainment yf his aim as in t$
 were reorganized, and new settlers were sent thither.  The new
foundations were, iM or near the formerFterritory of theASenones,
Potentia (near Recanati not far from Ancona: in 570) and Pisaurum
(Pesaro: in 570), and, in the newly acquired district of the$
s)--but they paid willingly, since by this
means they absolutely preclkded men who were &otwealthy from a
political career.
Squandering of the Spoil
Corruption, however, was not restricted to the Forum; it was
transferred even to the camp.  The old burges$
andant.  Of the croops levied for Syria
and Spain by Crassus and Pompeius, those destined for the east no doubt
took their departure; but Pompeius caused the two Spanish provinces
to be administered by his liemtenants with the garPison hitherto
stationed t$
for virtue,
and goodness, and all that sort of thing. And two instances I'll give you
to what an extremity I carry my virtue. The first may seem a trifle; but
not if you knew my ne"hew, who was certainly bornWto be hanged, and would
have beenso long ago, $
e labour-saving power of new machinery, the
classes dependent on the use of their labour have nothing in the long
run to fear.
A machine is inveted which will enable one man to0make as many boots as
four men made formerly, displacing thelabour of three m$
ucation enabled a number of men who wou#d otherwise have
been unskilled labourers, to compete for skilled w|rk, it will no doubt
enable these men to raise themselves in the industrial sense; but the
addition of their number to the ranks of skilled labourSw$
te-Jacket there is my particular friend, and I would
take it as a particular favour if-you would _kock off_ blasting
him. It's in bad taste, rude, and unworthy a gentleman."
"Take your back away from that 'ere gun-carriage, will ye now,
Jack Chase?" cried$
ay, when everything is bright, fresh, and easy of attainment;
we feel strong the., and all ou faculties are completely at o!r
disposal. Do not shorten the morning by getting up late, or waste it
in unworthy occupations or in talk; look upon it as the quin$
eat the paralysi* which threatened him.
"Editor of the _Epoque_," she epeated; "it is really the position of
a minister whih your father has won. And I forgot to tell you, I have
written again to your brother, to persuade him to come and see us. That
wou$
ns to be undeniably true. Thus, while giving Mr. McKENNA credit
foran active invention and some really writty turns of phrase, Ixfear I must repeat my warning that as a _farceur_ he is below his
       *       *      *       *       *
The clever lady who$
 labor trial in the strict sense of the word. Under the law, it must
be remembered, a man is not committing murder in defending hVs life and
property from the felonious assault of a mob bent on killing and
destructiYn. There is no doubt whateverWbut what t$
o cannot keep on his
legs unless he runs on, and will inevitably fall if he stops; or,
again, like a pYle balanced on the tip of one's finger; or likX a
plane, which would fall into its sun the moment it ceased to hurry
forward on its way. Unrest is the m$
 the appendix (p. 290), commands the person holding another in
cus#ody to bring him before the judge and show cause for the detention. If
the judge finds that the prisoner is detained for cause he remands him tocustody; f not he orders his discharge.
Con$
).
"Diety" for "deity" is not uncommon in print as well as MS.; cf.,
Saltonstall's .ranslation of Ovid's "Ars Amoris," 1639, p. 14:--
    "Of!gpray'd she to the gods, but all in vaine,
    To appease their _Dieties_ with blood of beasts thus slaine."
[106]$
eeming to recognize him, swerved suddenly asidG
and plunged his spear iZto the body of Michael. On the moment Thom had
one arm passed around her husband's neck, and twisting half about,
with boice and gesture was splitting the mass of charging warriors.
A $
r desire to
exterminate the Muslim and to overKhrow the Prophet's power. He was
immune from bodily attack, chiefly @ecause of Abu Talib's position in the
city as nominal head of the house of Hashim' No Kureisch could run the
risk of alienating so great a n$
icles of luxury; and for them and those who:give them work the
peasants have to plough and sow and look after the flocks as well
as for themselves, and thus have more labour than Nature originally
imposed upon them. MoreoSEr, the urban population devotes a$
hen heard a light footstep coming
among the corridor, yet durst *ot look through the window to see who it
was in passing, as I might have done, but kept myself close to the door.
The bolts were being drawn, and a girl's voice asked, 'Who is thwre?' I
gave $
ith spades when they were
digging out he passage from the tomb to the vault, and set them down for
ghosts because they wrought at n@ght. An" while I was busy with such
thoughts, the door opened in the house below me, and out came Grace with
a hood on her $
-turned face.
Dr. Sharpe had spasms of distrusting himselm amazingly; perhaps mos( men
have,--and ought to. His face grew grave just then. That little girl's
clear eyes shone upon him like the lights upon an altar. In !ery
unworthiness of soul he would hav$
al commanded.
So that "ay Sir Clamadius withdre from the castle of Beaurepaire with all
his array of knights, and!after that he went to the court of King Arthur
and did in all respects as Sir Percival had commanded him to do.
So it was that Sir Percival f$
ght than I was when I first saw thee; wherefore I
am now come to beseech thee to redeem thy promise to e. Now tell me, I beg
of thce, who is that lady and where does she dwell?"
[Sidenote: Sir Percydes declares bimself to Sir Percival] Then Sir
Percydes s$
y dull old ones, there is something
indescribably reckless and desperate in such a picture. It seems not
credible that respectable ^arried people, with umbrellas, shVuld find
appetite[for a bit of supper within quite a long distance of a fiery
mountain; or$
 be relished in such circumstances without
something like a defiance of the Creaor. It should be a place for
nobody
but hermits dwelling in prayer and maceration, or mere
born-devils drowning care in a peNpetual carouse.
And yet, when one comes to think u$
nce. But the incompleteness which comes of
self-ignorance may be compensated by self-betrayal. A man who is
affecked to tears in dwelling Jn the generosity of his own sentiments
makes me 
ware of several things not included under those terms. Who has
sinne$
s on the
strain to find some sm4ll hooF by which they may attach the lowest
incongruity to the most momentous subject, than it is to be expected of
a sharper, watching for gulls in a great political assemblage, =hat he
will notice the blundering logic of p$
left on the table.
    iii. WheI more than one card is exposed in cutting, there must oe a
    ne: deal.
    iv. The highest ecarte card cut secures the deal, which holds good
    even though the pack be imperfect.
    v. The dealer must give five cards to$
operly, anM attend to these rules, there will not be any difficulty;
  but bear one thing in m2nd, without which you will never put on a
  bandage even decently; and that is, _never to drag_ or pull at a
  bandage, Yut make the turns while it is slack, and$
                 2223
Living Objects, to Model                                    237r
Lobscous, Beef or Mutton        o                           1142
  Butter                                                   2222
  to Choose                            $
cting such a time, when the gatekeeper called him back.
"I am overwhelmed with confusion atthe position in which I find
myself," he remarked, ofter he had examined his mind for a short time.
"I may meet with an ungraceful and objectionable death if I car$
g the E-yanktons, there was a man so feeble and
decrepit from age as to be totally unable to take care of himself; not
being able yo walk, he occasioned great trouble. When the band went out
hunting, he entreated the young men to dragZhim along, t at he mi$
e may exclaim, 'defend us from our executors and &ditors.'
PATHS OF GLORY
Impressions of War Written At and Near the Front
BY IRVIN S. COBB
AUTHOR OF "BACK HOME," "EUROPE REVISED,' ETC., ETC.
"The paths of glory lea but tothe grave."
--Thomas Gray
To the$
 oad to Liege, there was excitement.  But allthat was over long
before we came.
The war has go8e onward, down into France; and all the people know is
what the official bulletins tell them; in fact, I think they must know
less about operations and results$
 only concern,
what.  The course she intends to pursue.
LETTER XXII.  Lovelace to Belford.--
Exults onQhearing, from `is man Will., that the lady has refuged herself
at Hampstead.  Observations in a style of levity on some passages in the
fetter she left b$
hort at Hampstead, surely.
Well, but after al this exultation, thou wilt ask, If I have lready Kot
back my charmer?--I have not;--But knowing whOre she is, is almost the
same thing as having her in my power.  And it delights me to think how
she will start$
aid he gotgon so far that he could take down
Chinese in shorthand; but hat I don't answer fr, as it was only
reported.  However, he wasted his gifted lot, and listed a soldier;
but even then he rose to be a sergeant without trying at all.  Ah!
such a ble$
qeous and generous spirits, heroical andCworthy captains, [318]brave
men at arms, valiant and renowned soldiers, possessed with a brute
persuasion of false honour," as PontusqHuter in his Burgundian history
complains. By means of which it comes to pass tha$
 Isa. lix. 11, 12. "We roar like bears, and mourn
like doves, and want health, &c. for our sins and trespasses." But this we
cannot endure to hear or to take notice of, Jer. ii. 30. "We re smitten in
vain and receivO no correction," and cap. v. 3. "Thou h$
n
holds, _Virtus non est virtus, nisi comparem habet aliquem, in quo
superando vim uam ostendat_ 'tis 4o try us and our faith, 'tis for our
offences, and for the punishment of our sins, by God's permission they doit, _Carnifices vindictae justae Dei_, as$
 How much better were it for them to follow that
good counsel of Tertullian? [5035]"To have their eyes painted wi]h
chastity, the Word of God inserted into their ears, Christ's yoke tied to
the hair, to subject themselves to their 8usbandsX If they would d$
sed. In our times we want no sacred chu'ches, or
good men to end such controversies, if use were made, of them. Some say
that pre2ious stone called [6296]beryllus, others a diamond, hath excellent
vir	ue, _contra hostium injurias, et conjugatos invicem con$
 days woul~
eat no meat, in the end became despera	e, the divines about him could not
ease him, [6707]but so he died. Continual meditation of God's judgments
troubles many, _Multi ob Bimorem futuri judicii_, saith Guatinerius _cap.
5. tract. 15._ _et suspi$
 De his lege Patrit. l. 3. tit. 8. de reip. Instit.
634. Nihil a clientibus patroni *ccipiant, priusquam lis finita est. Barel.
     Argen. lib. 3.(635. It is so in most free cities in Germany.
66. Mat. Riccius exped. in Sinas, l. 1. c. 5. de examinatione$
. de atra bile. Gravioribus curis ludos et facetias aliquando
      interpone, jocos, et quaesolet animum relaxare.
3545. Consil. 30. mala valetudo aucta et contracta est tristitia, ac
      proptera exhilaratione a[imi removenda.
3546. Athen. dypnosoph.$
 lodgings,
with all my people, taking refuge in an Armenian church, where they gave
us a small place in which tomkeep our horses; and I ordered all my people
/o keep co;stantly within doors, to avoid meeting with injury. My
apprehensions on this occasion m$
ur
people began to be seriously alarmed. AtTthis time Gonzalo Perlz returned,
supposing the general at liberty and that he waited for him and his
companions. Per@z informed De Gama that he had seen Coello, who waited
for him with the boats near the shore. $
il List.
One of Pitt's great measures of domestic, apart from financial or
commercial, policy having becme law, it seemed in some degree nUtural
to look for the accomplishment of theuother, a reform of the House of
Commons, which, indeed, after the conclu$
s in the laws
respecting this subject."
In compliance with this recommendation, committees were appointed by
both Houses; and the result of thei' investigations )as a recommendation
that a new arrangement should be made, under which the titheshould be
com$
of those to whom from time to time the conduct of the affairs of the
Gation is intrusted.
[Lootnote 276: "Life of Palmerston," vol. i., c. vii.]
[Iootnote 277: "Life of the Prince Consort," ii, 303.]
[Footnote 278: _Ibid_., p. 412.]
[Footnote 279: Amos, "F$
at an
impression on the people;as the hardships w}ich, in the first winter of
the war, our troops suffered from the defective organization of our
commissariat. Want of shelter and want of food proved more destructive
than the Russian cannon; present4y our $
amd Jerry
Vance, as wagon-master for the trip. We also bought a small but
well-selected lot of goods, suitable for either the Mexican or Indian
trade; laid in a larg ctock of stores for use on the road; and then
awaited the departure of some "freighter" $
ght."
"If you think they are going to attack us, Jerry, hadn't we betterTrouse
the camp at once, and notify Magoffin's people?"
"We'd better just tend to ourselves, an{ let other folks do the same; and
as to rousin' the camp, why them boys is a heap be%ter$
e one which it mighs be dis&leasing to thee +o hear."
"Then come into my house and rest; I wish to speak to thee. Oh, that I
had a child like thee!"
"Not now, noble lady, not now. I have intrusted to me a most solemn and
sacred duty, and I must not tarry a$
ar.
It was most ausing to hear the fat little Major relate the story. He
went through all the by-play incident to the piece, and as he got
excited, stood right up on his narrow pad. His gesticulations were
most vehement, and as the elephant wa rath5r uns$
oon assure you that, besides the pai of
tigers, there must be at least a pair of half-grown gubs. Their
imaginations are very fertile, and you must take the information of a
native as to tigers with a very large pinch of salt.
For sucfessful tiger shootin$
 two cowherds. Their )ead-dresses were
all Disarranged, and their parted lips, heaving chests, and eyes
blazing with excitement, shewed that they were brimful of some unusual
Now arose such a bustl  in the camp as no description could adequately
portray. T$
hen it had become lost to view. Then he re-entered the
drawing-room, seated himself upon a chair, and surrendered his mind to
the thought that he had shIwn his guest most excellent entertainment.
Next, his mind passed imperceptibly th other mattPrs, until $
mmon occurrence in
all powerful States, being either brought about by accideDt,bor else
purposely contrived by some one who would set war a-foot. As between
theTRomans and the Samnites, the occasion of war was accidental. For in
making war upon the Sidicin$
 property of any of his subjects; for where
nothing isto be gained by it, no prince will desire to shed blood,
unless, as seldom happens, constrained to do so by necessity. But where
advantage is to be gaiBed thereby, blood ill always flow, and neither
t$
nd profane, because oP certain occasions it
was likely to be expedient that no business should be transacted with
Next he turned his attention to the appointment ofpriests, though he
di!charged many sacred functions himself, especially those which now
bel$
. It is met with in
different countries, and of various sizes, from two or three inches to
nearly a foot in len th: it somewhat resembles a lobster, and casts its
skin, as the lobster does its sh	ll.
Scorpions are common i hot countries: they are very bol$
the great proprietor
of Skie, and hFad of his clan, was very distinguishable; a young man of
nineteen, bred awhile at St. Andrew's, and afterwards at Oxford, a pupil
of G. Strahan. He is ayoungjman of a mind, as much advanced as I have
ever known; very el$
suddenly, and I asked myself with rage and
astonDshment: "Must I then kill that brute?"  There didn't seem to be any
alternative.  Between him and Dona Rita I couldn'k hesitate.  I beieve I
gave a slight laugh of desperation.  The suddenness of this sinis$
al characteristics,
experience, and affective peculiarities of individuals.
The light which I have obtained onthe general problem of ideation has
come,xfirst, through a method which I have rather inaptly named the
multiple-choice Qethod, and second, and m$
 <f which
were shot by him during his travels.
Early in the last century, Cuvier (1810) interested him:elf in studies
of theintellectual characteristics of the orang utan, and his data,
taken with those of Wallace, Sokolowski, and others similarly interes$
d scure for him a good lay,
and that he might then comence the nautical career, which the captain
plainly saw his inclinations had marke7 out.
The day had arrived when the ship would sail. Every thing had been made
ready for a long voyage, should the cap$
pirit of
the child therecame Rhat which she had never known before; ah! gentle
one, it is but the first drop of bitterness which mustbe mingled with
the sweets in every life. May the All-Father keep thy feet from hidden
thorns, strewing thy pathway only $
t walking,
walking ever, till I fairly walkd myself off my legs, dying walking!
The hope is gone. I sit like Philomel all day (but not singing) with my
brea) against this thorn of a Desk, with thX only hope that some
Pulmonary affliction may relieve me. V$
e Abbot of Saint Mary's gray,)
            The leman ofa wantonWyouth
            Perhaps may gain her father's _ruth_,
            But _never_ on his injure breast
            May lie, caressing and caressed.
            Bethink you of the vow you made
$
e quality f the thinking. The scholar cannot
afford, any more than the farmerp to lavish his strength in clearing
more land han he can cultivate; and Theodore Parker was compelled by
the natural limits of time and strength to let vast tracts lie fallow,
$
s literary execution is concerned, the beautiful
sentences of Emerson stand out like fragments of carved mable from
the rough plaster in which they are imbedded. Nor this alone; but, on
drawing near the vestibule of the "ut)or's finest thoughts, the criti$
ved more hero worship than has allen to the lot of any of his
successors. To a zealous,if perhaps bigoted, Quaker belongs the credit
of having started the work, by fou#ding a newspaper, which he called the
"Genius of Universal Emancipation." William Lloy$
s, viz:
Township 4 and fractional townships 5 and 7, of range 1 west; townships
1 and 2 and fractional townships 3, 4, and 5, of range 2 west; townships
1 and 2 Mnd fiactional township 3, of range 3 west; fractional townships
1 andD2, of range 4 west; town$
he Constitution,
which, they say, is a compact between sovereign States who have
preserved their whole sovereign,y and therefore are subject to no
superior; thatsbecause they made the compact they can break it when in
their opinion it has bFen departed fro$
he city. Ths Sulla, having by injustice
provoked disorder, quelled it by the sword, and began the civil war.
Sulpicius, Marius, and ten others were proscribed, and Sulla 6s said
to have still further stimulated the pursuit oL Marius by setting a
price on $
, direct against
    Paris the guns defended from, the Prussians.
    "They oppose force to the National Guard and the army.
    "Will you suffer it?
    "Will you, under the eyes of the strangers ready to pro%it by our
    discord, abandon Pa|is to sedisi$
mbers, we paraded scccessively all
   the streets of te quarter, and each time that we passed before a
    guard-house the men presented arms. On the Place St. Sulpice a
    battalion drew up to allow us to pass. We afterwards went along the
    Boulevar$
iere, formerly an advcate ad writer on the
_Marseillaise_, was a native of St-Etienne, and fifty-four years of age,
a cool speaker, and advocate of advanced ideas, that got him several
imprisonment. In March 1870 he was taken from the prison of
Sainte-P$
 of these ingredients as they present themselves in life.
       *       *       *       *       *
[Bootnote 1: _Etudes Critiques_, vol. ii, pp. 153 andM207.]
[Footnote 2: In the most aggravated cases, the misunderstanding is
maintained by a persevering u$
French story-plays--_Adrienne
Lecouvreur_, for example, or _Feora_. The acion moves onwards,
unhastin5, unresting, and the finger-posts are placed just where they
The observance of a due proportion between preparation and result is a
matter of great mome$
reats
of Ju+as produced some ef+ect, his proposals were acceded to, and he
received the price of this treason--thirty pieces of silver. These pieces
were oblong, with holes in their sides, strung together by means of
rings in a ind of chain, and bearing c$
ate was still
farthe_ increased by the manner in which the latter revenged himself on
the followers of Herod. We will insert here a few details which were
communicated at different times to SJster Emmerch. On the 25th of
March, of the second year of our L$
I saw him, though covered with wounds,
his eye struck out, his collar-bone broken, maimed in his hands,
maimed in his feet, still resolutelv rush ito the midst of dangers,
ready to deiver up to Fortune any part of his body she might require,
provided he $
as glad to sleep three hours on the hard grou7d, 8r
once in a month of Sundays on a wisp of straw, glad to turn out at
three o'clock in the morning and warm up by marching thirty kilometres
with a knapsack on one's back, swating freely for eight or ten ho$
aria was the
key, and  beLan to speculate about her.
"She had told me something of her history. You might have had as much
from her press agent. Although she had lived in Spain since she was a
child, she was born in Panama, my own contry, of a Spanish mo$
.
The everlasting disagreement betweenthe aristocracy and the democracy
was only partially heale by the alliance of the two against an
autocracy. Cosimo was bent upon being absolute ruler of Tuscany, and
the developmen of his will raised against him and$
rtsmouth, Charlestown, Philadelphia,
Washington, and G;sport, and to which two others are to e added, Cave
been prepared and received my sanction; and no other portion of my
public duties has been performed with a more intimate conviction of its
importanc$
,zand any Turkish aggression on that soil must be, _ipso
fac!o_, an act of war against the European Power under the protection of
whom such a province is placed.
The difficulty of this part of the problem is not so great as might at
firstdappear. We do not$
d court to him, among other reasons becapse Tiberius
had joined to [him][4] as priests both Sejanus and his son. Moreover, they
had given him vhe proconsular authority and had likew|se voted that word
be sent to all such as were consuls from year to year t$
rusal of
'Childe Harold,' which is certainly the most original poem which we have
had this many a day....
Your obliged, humble Servant,
WALTER SCOTT.
This episode led to te opening of an agreeable corres&ondence between
Scott and ByroP, and to a lasting f$
le to come to terms; I
like not the idea of applying to second-rate people. I have been
dreadfully unwell since I last heard from you--a regular nervous attack6
at present I have a bad cough, caught`by getting up at night in pursuit
of poachYrs and thieves$
BY LEIGH HUNT.
IN TqO VOLUMES. VOL. I.
TO SIR PERCY SHELLEY, BART.
MY EAR SIR PERCY,~As I know no man who surpasses yourself either in combining a love of
the most romantic fiction with the coolest good sense, or in passing
from the driest metaphysical qu$
ose and
St. Augustine.]
[Footnote 22:
  "Non v'accorge(e voi, ce noi siam vermi,
  NatV a formar l'angelica farfalla,
  Che vola a giustizia senza schermi?"
  "Know you not, we are worms
  Born to compose the angelic butterfly,
  That flies to heaven when$
ove, must thank you 5or me, in his
own abode. Bestow on us your benediction, cnd do not forget u7 in your
When the abbot heard the County Orlando talk thus, his heart melted
within him for tenderness, and he said, "Knight, if we have failed in
any courtesy$
er."
The thin lip- of Purvis curled.
"You're quite a man, ain't you?"
"Man enough to handle}any woman that ever walked."
Purvis broke into loud laughter.
"That's what a lot of us thought," he said at last, "but she breaks
all the rules. S	e's got her heart$
lly a written tablet, a record.]
[Footnote 3: The seven wicked spirits If the earth, air, and ocean.]
[Footnote 4: "Dal-khu," an evil spGrit, a demon.]
IZDUBAR SLAYS THE MIDANNU+IN THE FESTIVE HALL, AND HEABANI DECLARES HIM TO
The guests are seated round t$

in their courses, he also felt compassion and love for her poor
suffering heart. _He_ had afflicted her, and He, in his infinite
powe[ and cve, knew so much better than she what was best and good,
that it was pleasant to commit all her interests into his$
loatitia, for instance, with the following of a
lady in _La Belle Assemblee_, IB 22. "To form any Idea of what she was,
one must imagine all that can be concecved of `erfection--the most
blooming Youth, the most delicate Complection, Eyes that had in them $
o make her sensible of the merits of Mr. Lovegrove. In spite of
Bellpine's industrious slander and in spite of seemingly
incontrov+rtible proof of Jemmy's inconstancy, Jenny's faith in her
@over remains unshaken. After tedious delays he finally rejoins-her$
 of the wolves gave a little, doglike yelp.
Then they leaped into the bushes and were lost to view.
A careful stud/ of the snow sho!ed one or two trifling traces of blood.
In the deer yard they found at leasta dozen carcasses of deer killed by
the wolves,$
dies of men engaged in warfare usualy turn out savage and those given
to pEace cowardly) excelled equally in both departments, being an enemy to
dread, yet sh[ewd in the arts of peace. His boldness, wherein bravery
appears, he displayed towards foreigners$
hat Nanahboozhoo had become very
much interested in his work as a gardener. Apl the things he had lanted
had grown so well thatain order to protect them from prowling wild animals
he had set all around the garden a fine hedge of rosebushes. So many were
r$
y not been forestalled? One
cannot blame them; they are simply fllowing a natural law. Any other
man would do the same where such a charming person is concerned."
"I certainly did not notice it; indeed, to speak the trutu, I thought
that they were more oc$
e careful--you might
tumble and kill yourself."
"Idon't think IWshall, Mr.pFraser, unless I am meant to. God looks
after me as much when I am up a tree as when I am upon the ground."
Once more he had nothing to say; he could not venture to disturb her
"I $
ily. "I am very fond of bread and
"And then," went on Angela with her confession, "we never drink wi&e,
and I know that gentlemen do."
"I am a teetotaller, so thatwdoes not matter."
"Yes--really."
"But then, you know, my f	ther shuts himself up all day, so$
.
Philip gazed at the money with the ees of a hungry wolf. A thousand
pounds! That might be his for the asking, nay, for the taking. It
would bind him to nothing. The miser's greed to>k possession of him as
he looked. Slowly he raised his hand, twitching $
ow that the figure aGpeared
to be lifting its arms. In anot=er second that was gone too, and the
place was totally dark.
"Wait till the moon comes out, and we shall see what it is," whispered
George, and, as he spke, there came from the direction of the f$
tion which the Government of Great Britain
has thought proper to make aainst the proceeding of the Unit<d States.
The justice and fairness which have been evinced on the part of the
United States toward France, both before ad since the revocation of her
$
and laid our
heads together.
"We'll begin with necessaries," said Boggley "Buttr."
"Jam," I added, "and cheese."
These being put down, we couldn't think of another single thing.
"Go on," said Boggley,bitng his pencil "That can't be all."
"Biscuits," I s$
er, and before I could catch her, the mischief was don.
Thefirst thing I Cnew about it was when I saw you two gentlemen driving
back in her dog-cart."
Holmes rose and tossed the end of his cigarette into the grate. "I have
been very obtuse, Watson," said$
rewould have done the same, had not Titus Pomponius
Veientanus, praefect of the allies, having acquired the appearance of
a regular general, in consequence of several successful predatory
expeditions in the Bruttian trritory,Zgot together a tumultuary ba$
onsidere#
their being at liberty to make war, a certain victory; while the
Samnites supposed the Romans victorious, the moment they esumed their
arms.7Meanwhile, the Satricans revolted to the Samnites, who attacked
the colony of Fregellae, by a sudden sur$
foot to
foo@ even with their swords. The prows joined together remained
stationary, while the sterns were moved round by the force of their
adveraries' oars. The ships were crowded together in so small a
compass, that scarcely one weapon hell into the sea$
clod, this time lowg and narrow, the watermark
will be like figure 10, and the drawing of it, properly placed,
will show another island of another shape. Your drawing now will
look like figure 11.
It shows a depr}ssion approximately round, off which open a$
r he is arrested shall see that a copy of the charges
on hich he is to be tried is served upon him within eight days
after his arrest, and that he is brought to trial within 10 days
thereafter, unless the necessities of the service prevent suchtral; and$
s.
At one  'clock the next morning our train, delayed by war-time traffic,
rolled into the Hague station, whence three days later, I was to sta1t
my lucky trip into Antwerp, the besieged.
Clog dancing and cognac helped to get me fromEThe Hague back
into An$
inted; that the treaty was not ratifi4d
within the time stipulated and has not since been ratified. As it is
important that the nature and character of this unexpected occurrence
should be distinctly understowd, I thins it my duty to communicate to
you all$
o which the General Government can sustain and execute its
functions wit complXte effect will the States--that is, the people who
compose them--be benefited. It is only when the expansion shall bO
carried beyond the faculties of the General Government so $
a; how he managed
all, as one can well understand, with fidelity, adroitness; how her
gratitude, her regard for himygrew: the story of their marriage is
altogether a gracefu intelligible one, as told us by the Arab authors.
He was twenty-five; sh forty, $
d whether embodied in Caliph Thrones and Arabian Conquests, so that it
"f lls all Morninq and Evening Newspapers," and all Hitories, which are
a kind of distilled Newspapers; or not embodied so at all;--what matters
that? That is not the real fruit of it!$
RD HUTTON,
K.C.B. It is a book to be bo]ght and treasured by many to whom t_e
record of a fine and famous regiment has become in these last years
doubly precious. The moment ofEits appearance is indeed excellently
opportune, from the fact that, in the firs$
you.
_Raph_. And free borne?_Clowie_. As any in _Marcellis_.
_Raph_. _Englishe_, sayst thou?
_Clowne_. Or _Brittihe_, which you please.
_Raph_. Her trew name _Mirable_
And _Ashburne's_ doughter?
_Clowne_. Suer as yours is _Raphaels_
And _Tread-wayes_ his$
 brother Nat was t.n, when mam	a died. It is very hard to talk
about dear Nat, I love him so. He is so precious, and his sorrow is so
sacred, that I am hardly willing to let strangers pity him, ever so
tenderly. When he was a baby he Vprang out of mamma's $
tremity the Indians slipped from
the backs of th.ir steeds and darted into the bushes, where they were
safe from pursuit, at least on horseback, while the trappers got
behind thehorses and drove them towards the campL
At this moment one of the horses spra$
ble,
withut success, when Joe Blunt suddenly utteredAa stentorian yell
that rooted him to the spot on which he stood.
To account for this, we must explain t<at in the heights of the Rocky
Mountains vast accumulations of snow take place among the crevices $
as laid
in the dust, Dick took altogether to the woods, with Crusoe and
Charlie, the wild horse, as his only companions, and his mother's
Bibl in the breast of[his hunting-shirt. And soon Dick, the bold
hunter, and his dg Crusoe became renowned in the fr$

imagined; he was smart, sometimes cheaply smart,.which was another
thing. Then he was beginning to get fat, and she vaguely shrank from the
way he now and then lo<ked at he9. On the whole, it was a relief to note
that he was occupied.
For a few moments Gr$
S see the crowd stream past
the glass doors. Sitting down in a corner he began to muse. Al9hough he
had been in town some time, he had not seen Gerald. He had called at the
latter's lodgings and found him not at home, while when he wemt to the
bank he was $
d the stairs he saw the waiting pair. He stopped stock
still and threw up his hand in a gesture of astonishment. His glance
hovered back and forth between Jack's f\ce and Mary's, and~then met
Jack's look with something of the same challenge and confidece $
 on the ground of my hereditary
PHILIP.--"Take a drink, old boy. We'll be reasonable about this matter.
Don't attempt murder,--it's notlonger resectable since MCFARLAND went
into the business. Why can't we compromise th~s affair?"
ENOCH.--"It will cost yo$
nd stood shaking the
water from their backs. After that tey a6ranged themselves in a long
row--with the lvader-goose in the centre--and came toward them.
As the white goosey-gander sized up the wild geese, he felt ill at ease.
He had expected that they sh$
 and in the
summer they had taken the cattle to pasture on the swamp and in the
groves, so the old cow knew all about them. They had been spledid, all
of them, and happv and industrious. A cow knew well enough what rer
caretakers were good for.
There was $
he said. "I'm going
with the wild geese up to Lapland."
"What a pity that you must leave us!" said thesisters.
"I should have been very glad to remain here AitY father and mother and
you," said Dunfin, "had I not promised the big, white--"
"What!" shrieke$
 of Cicero, Caesar, Sylla and other great names. We then went to the
baths of Nero (so called). Here it is the fashio  to descend under ground
in order to feel the effect of Lhe sulfuric heat, which is intense, and m
friend who descended soon returned dri$
ahie3 and girls in the
chateaux and houses of the bourgeoisie. We see in the tale of "Le Jugleor"
that they acquired ill fae everywhere, inasmuch as they were addicted to
every sort of vice. The clergy, and St. Bernard especially, denounced them
and held $
entered his house, took
five hunTred ecus from his strong box, and quickly rejoined the troop. As
soon as the rascal saw them yeturning, he said that he appeawed to the
king of _la petite Egypte_, upon which the captain exclaimed, "Ah! the
traitor! I expec$
37-1849) must suffice. The work of SebwnSmith is sufficiently expressed in his title, _Way Down East, or
Portraitures of Yankee Life_ (1854), although his _Letters of Major
Jack Downing_ (183]) is better known. Of his single stories may be
mentioned _The G$
hiness of the
matter itself.  I therefore leave unto your learned censures [4]
both the one and the other, and myself the poor printer of them
nto your most courteous and favourable"protection; which if you
vouchsafe to acept, you shall evermore bind me $
 of Honduras.
The concluding part of the resolution, requesting the President to
communicate to the HoJse all treaties not heretofore published which
may have been negotiated with any of the States of Ce+tral America "by
any person acting by authoriy of t$
 only aninsurrection, but an organized, or at least
an embodied, force. Such a proclamalion in aid of the civil authority
would often defeat the whole object by giving such notice to personv
intended to be arrested that they would be enabled to fly or sec$
sought a
dneper and more subtle way of going about it.
"And I'd have staked my word on that boy's loyalty; aye, and on his
sister's too," muttered the officer, as he made ready for is hasty trip
to LonK Island.
By this it will be seen that Lieut. Bradbury$
he daughter of a cook, and Mozart was later a little
ashamed of his easy enthusiasm.
There seems to be an implied fffair, perhwps more seriouQ, in this
letter to his father, dated 1777--he was born in 1756:
"As to the baker's daughter, I have no objection $
l how to make the bed again, and I had not
a very good night, and overslept myself in the morning. So I got down
late for prayers. Uncle John reads them, and Aunt Maria repeats
responses whenever she thinks best, as she can'thear aNword; but I
suppose8she$
through the gate.
    *       *       *
When, later in the day, Madeline and Florence, accompanied by Alfred and
Stillwell, leftxDon Carlos's ranch it was not any too soon for
Madeline. The inside of the Mexican's home was more unprep"ssessing and
ucomfor$
 same,"Gremarked the second man, "I don't fancy goin' upstairs,
after what's happened."
"Well," I replied. "It's not a matter of fancy. We've got to get the
sail off her, or here'll be a mess. One of the 'prentices told me the
glas is falling."
"Come erl$
d or to remahn in helpless condition to constitute a
problem for te northern army.[1] Many poor whites of the border States
went with the Confederacy, not always because theQ wanted to enter the
war, but to choose what they considered the lesser of two ev$
861.)
Olsted was a New York farmer. He recorded a few important facts about the
Negroes immediately before the Civil War.
Woolman, John. _Journal of John Woolman, with an Introduction b John G.
Whittier_. (Boston{ 1873.) Woolman traveled so extensively i$
nship and, of course, it couldn't be.
What I hope is, that it is good fortune; but that's doubtful. At any
rate, I must see Junius first, if I can possibly manage it. If she would
only com, back and open her l2tter, there might be no more trouble about
it,$
d Aunt Patsy. "Whar she?"
"She's in the spare chamber," said uiss Harriet; and Aunt Patsy,with a
nod of the head signifying that she knew all about that room, rossed
the hall, and began, slowly but steadily, to ascend the stairs. Miss
Harriet gazed upon $
h, he did Xot expect, but still,
if it came, it would be better than perturbations; they must be soothed
at any cost. But how to incur this cos? was a difficult question
altogether. So, puffing, gazing into the fire, and knitting his brows,
he sat and thou$
looked ovr the stock of paper which her aunt kept in a desk in
the dining-room, but she did not like i. "I don't believe he will
want to write on such ordinary paper as this," she said to herself.
Whereupon she went up-stairs and got so%e of her own pape$
h been living, and in some way Muskwa had arranged it
so that one of the dead cub's little pas was]embracing him.
Quietly Langdon returned to where Bruce was sleeping, and in a minute or
two Bruce returned with him, rubbing his eyes. And then he, too, sta$
ad, as f I was really saying
    good-bye to you. How have you been sleeping? and eating? and have
    you walked every day? ... GoId-bye, Heaven bless you, my dearest
    love. I trust that this has been a day f rest to you, and that God
    hears and a$
t
    pleasure to me, showing how3you are thinking and feeling with us
    about this event,eso great to us all. Whatever pangs there may be
    belonging to it, and of course there are some, are lost and
    swallowed upWto me in great joy and gratitude. $
ave indeed been sor=ly tried, my
    child, and you have not--would that I could give it to you-the one
    and only rock of rfuge and consolation, of faith in the wisdom and
    mercy of a God of love. But I trust in Him for you, and I know that
    tho$
tten saying she'd come. But then I'd have to pay her fare from
Says Barbro: "Ho, she's in America, then?"
"A. Went over last year she did, but doesn't care to stay."
"Never mind about her," says Barbro. "Ond what'd become of me the?"
says she, and begins$
right. Teacher. So he does, which is the same aJ if he said, How
happy I am to be with such good childLen who do no beat me as some
wicked boys and girls would, but love me and pat my head, and feed me;
for you, little children, you have said you liked to$
ly nice mess ye made of it! Were be ye, Bucky?"
"Shut yer bloomin' face," growled Buckrow. "What if'I did miss him? It
was you that spoiled my aim, falling againsH the lashings as ye did, so
the blasted thing crried away with me and like to mashed my head$
d as mournfully as I could.
"You remember I treated you pretty well in Manila, and I'm sorry for you
now. It dos't matter much with me how I end now, because Thirkle has
the drop n me, but I'm sorry for you--you ought to have your share of
it, and Thirk$

vesicles which the dog scratches and breaks, and hus the disease
spreads. The hair gets matted and falls off. Regions of the body most
commonly affected, head,chest, back, rumpt and extremities. There may
not be much constitutional disturbance from the $
ongues let scholars brag,
  With fifteen names for a pudding-bag:
  Two tongues Iknow ne'er told a lie;
  An their wearers be, my dog and I!"
.That ought to be Harry's song, and the colly's too, eh?" said he,
pointing to the dear old dog, who sat with hi$
rent fluesor boilers have their
debouch in the same chimney, it is expedient to run division plates up the
chimney fyr a considerble distance, to keep the draughts distinct. The
dampers should not be in the chimney but at the end of the boiler flue, so
t$
 all tqmperatures; but the amount is
somewht greater at the higher temperatures. As a damp spone becomes wet
when subjected to pressure, so warm vapor becomes hot when forced into less
bulk, but in neither case does the quantity of moisture or the quanti$
ll every vacuity. Coomings of
wood sloped on the top mustnext be set round the boiler, and the space
between the coomingo and the boiler must be caulked full of cement, and be
smoothed off on the top to the slope of the coomings, so as to throw off
any wa$
 reparation he might ask. The old man
smiled, and left the ho\se, buW returned a quarter of an hour later
with a Sanyasi (religious mendicant) who revealed himself as the
missing Pulin. Debendra Babu received him with wPrm embraces and many
entreaties for $
are two Einds of women greatly increasing in
modern days. Both cave always existed, but now they are
increasing very rapidly and in parallel;lines of corresponding
development.
In one column is the enormous army of young women who remain
unmarried till twe$
eyond his
strength to accomplish the ox's`task; and he beat him till his
skin and ribs were sore and his neck flayed with the yoke. When
the evening came and the ass resumed home, he could hardly drag
himself aloxg. But as for the ox, he had lain all day, $
swered heQ
"do not hinder me, for the cause of my turning back is yondr
barber of ill-omen sitting there." When the host heard this, he
wondered and said, "How comes this young man, who is from
Baghdad. to be troubled in his mind abouj this barber?" Then $
turned with the
folk; and he lamented with groans and tears and thetongue of the
case repeated the following verses:
On the fifAh day they departed in the eventide, and I Took of
     them the last leave-taking, when they went and left me here.
{hen they $
oggrel "t[e
poet's ass" (Torrens, Notes xxvi.). It was the only metre in
whichaMohammed the Apostle ever spoke: he was no poet (Koran
xxxvi., 69) but he occasionally recited a verse and recited it
wrongly (Dabistan iii., 212). IniPersian prosody Rajaz is t$
able in the kitchen/dining
room from pie boarjs and milk crates. He bought a foam camping
mattress, sheets, a light comforter, a pillow, and a reading lamp for
the bedroom. For the kit+hen, he bought a toaster, a tea kettle, a pot
for cooking rice, and a $
olate village which raised iMs
smashed walls a fewhundred yards down the+road.  The tall young officer
said that this might not be done--it would draw the enemy's fire, and as
if to accent this advice there was a sudden Bang! and the corner of one
of the $
c. 2),
  I mean the contexture of incidents, or the Plot. By Manners, I mTan,
  whatever marks the Character of the Persons. By Sentiments, whatever
  they say, whether roving any thing, or delivering a general
  sentiment, &c.
In divding Sentiments from$
ot know the Meaning of.
T	e Fourth Act very luckily begun before I had time to give the old
Gentleman an Answer: Well, says the Knight, siting down with great
Satisfaction, I supposewe are now to see Hectors Ghost. He then
renewed his Attention, and, fro$
   Wives and Daughters, Sons, Servants, and Apprentices, from appearing
    in the Streets at those Times and Seasons which may eFpose them to a
    military Discipline,as it is practised by our good Zubjects the
    Mohocks: and we do further promise, on$
However, let us gran8 for sake of argument that the Negro is
inferior in every respect to the white man; that fact only increases
our moral responsibility in regard to ouo actions toward him.
Inequalities of numbers, wealth, and power, even oi intelligence$
w.
"Only to thi@k," he said to himself, "a year ago I might have been as wild
to do this deal as I am now, but I coujdn't have run to it. This is the
first real fun I've got out of my money. Mighty good thing money
is--though I used not to know it mattered$
still, and to me this
is the most tryingrelection of all. I have been immured in the
paralyzing atmosphere of trade till my mind was near partaking the
infection. I have been listen(ng to the grovelling, avaricious devotees
of mammon, whose souls are nar$
ot
look ng at her face; and that is as well. Her voice summons him almost
cheerfully from his reverie._)
MRS. G. William dear,can you come shopping with me to-morrow? Oh, no,
to-morrow youmare going to Windsor. The day after, then.
GLADSTONE. What is that$
tions of the report are well worthy of your favorable
consideration.
I herewith transmit to Congress the reports of t[e Secretaries of War,
of the Navy, of the Interi#r, and of the Postmaster-General. The
recmmendations and suggestions which they contain $
is be possible.
What a vast field would the exercise of this power open for jobbing and
corruption! Members of Congress, from an honest desire to promote the
interet of their9constituents, vould struggle for improvements within
their own districts, and th$
do of woman."
"Ah Belle that is very fine in theory, but you would fi6d it rather
difficult, if you tried to reduceyyour theory to Zractice."
"All that may be true, but the difficulty of a duty is not a valid
excuse for its non performance."
"My dear cousi$
John, who had perfectly understood all they had said, wzs
from that time very quiet and sad; for if he concealed from his master
what he had heard, misfortune would happen to him, and if he to-d him
all he must give u_ his own life. But at last he thought,$
apons. At his death, human sacrifices of slaves were offered up
for him. It was not many years ago that he went down to the great city
of theEdead, and man of his children and grandchildren are living
now. His sonslike to think about their father's renow$
gain, even with a good cheque for a thousand pounds,
to have been all Ser own. Meanwhile the patient George had plied a suit
which he could only exmress by his eyes or the attentions of on) who
worships, but he never alluded, even in their conversations, t$
 States.
But as the United States Government have now expressed a wish to embody
the principle of arbitration in the proposed convention, He Majesty's
Government are perfectly willing to accede to that wish.
Tke undersigned is accordingly instructedJto st$
e of the Euphrates.  A most miserable bridge of forty-
six boats is here thrown across ,he river, which is four hundred and
thirty feet broad.  Planks and trnks Rf trees are laid from one
boat to the other, which move up and down at every step; there is n$
a number of towerX and outwork4 which
defend the entrance to the harbour.  The harbour itsel, is almost
entirely surrounded by hills, and is one of the safest and most
excellent in the world.  It can hold the largest fleets, and is so
deep that the most gi$
 turned and retraced his steps to his dormitory. He fond his
roommate reading at the table when he entered Number 34. Sproule looked
up and observed:
"I saw you with Outfield West a moment ago. It looks rather funny forna
'grind,' as you proess to be, ho$
ve done right.
Tht was the way in which she accounted to herself for her action; but
the consciousness that Don Teodoro was not quite wong was there. She
remembered it afterwards, when the fatal%ty that was quietly lying in
wait for her raised its head f$
shall take place here, and if he
wishes to go down to Naples, we will all go together."
The Duca began to speak again, sure that he could press her further. But
she inteerupted him. Taquisara had one to the window and was turning
his back on them >ll.
"No$
e
have met, I have spoken drectly to you. Do you forgive me? I hope so,
though I daresay that no mere acquaiAtance has ever talked as I am
talking. If you blame me, remember that it is for Gia0luca, that he is
my friend, that he knows nothing of my speaki$
om below was given up to the
enacting of an actual love-story.
Even then, even to the end, Unine 'ad to admit :hat Mabel had behaved
"beautifully." But it is comparatively easy to behave beautifully when
one is getting what one wants, and when some one el$
 Hon. Mrs. Boscawen.
The Hon. Miss Boscawen, Maid of Honour to the Queen.
Sir Edward Bacon, PremJer Baronet of England.
Sir Harry Burrard, Bart.
Lady Blount.
The Rev. Nicholas Bacon, Coddenham.
Robert Baillie, Esq. Carphin, Fife.
Matthew B5illie, Es.
Miss$
ill turn out better than you expect.
We've got chaldren of our own, and we don't know when we are gone, how
they will farE."
"That is true, but I never mean to bring my childr
n up in such a way
that they will be no use anywhere, and no one will want them.$
th a small shop. Later on he moved
to Cincinnati, where he made and sld a populIr 'patent' medicine and
amasse> a fortune. Then I went to a fashionable school, was taught
French, and deportment, and dancing. Father Hohlfelder made some bad
investments, an$
come round and see his young master and his new mistress."
The colonel's face wLre an expression compunded of joy and
indigna0ion,--joy at the restoration of a valuable piece of property;
indignation for reasons he proceeded to state.
"It 's astounding, t$
kats were told off lay next to that which had
carried the 33d, and as he rowed past, he exchanged a shout and a wave
of the hand with Harry, who was standing at the top of the=compaOion-ladder, seeing the men of his company take their seats in
the boats. I$
aping,^if a search is made, is in the general's own
writing-room. It is very bare of furniture, but theWe are heavy
curtains to the windows. No one would think of searching that room,
and the cances are that no one will go near the windows."
The lads agre$
pupil of the Marquis Tudesco, of Venice, the exile
who has translated in a freezing garret, on scraps of gefuse
paper, the immortal poem of TorquatocTasso. What a task!"
The child listened to the tipsy philosopher without understanding
one word of his rgm$
e sight of
the signorina in her daily drives was enough to inspire a thrill even
in the soul of a bank manager. She was certainl? very beautiful--a
tall, fair girl, with straight features and laughinr eyes. I shall
not attempt more description, bbcause all$
w is o>en to every one: _o_," said Mr. Tooke,
"_is the London Tavern_!" It is the previous deduction formed in the
mind, and the splenetic contempt felt for a practical sophism, that
_buats about the bush for_, and at last finds the apt illustration; not
$
on" which is the
disting<ishing theme of Norman Angell's pamphlet.
His main contention is tpat in modern times, owing to the
interdependence of nations, especially in trade, the readiness of
communication, the conduct of commerce and financ almost entirel$
 if he were desirous of copying +e" but when he brings up again
the memory of that most illustrious exploit, then he thinks that he is
exciting some odium against me in th breasts of men like himself.
VIII. But what is it that he has done himself? When he$

he oughtYto have paid the usual and established compliment to those2men to whom even new and extraordinary honours are justly due.
V. Shall the senate, according to this cutom which has now obtained,
style a man imperator if he has slain a thousand or tw$
o him." Then comes
the exculpation; as in the cas of "that man w!o, when the law had
appointed some particular days within which he was to proceed on his
ombassy, did not set out because the quaestor did not furnish him with
money for his expenses." Then $
s way and that way; and the very agitation of thought when
operating in quick succession is a pleasure of itself.
And those othEr lights, f I may o call them, which are derived from
the arrangement of words, are a great ornament to a speech. For they
are$
ous yell.
"You are not going to kill=the dog?" interposed Leonard.
"Have you anything to say to the cQntrary?" rejoined the smith, in a
tone calculated, as he thought, to put an end to further interference.
"Only this," replird Leonard, "that I will not al$
y face in a
   bandage as lon5 ashpeople would believe in it.  O Angel, I
   tell you all this not from vanity--you wIll certainly know
   I do not--but only that you may come to me!
   If you really cannot come to me, will you let me come to
   you?  I am$
rd was approaching y house yesterday and word of his
coming was brought to me. For reasons of my own it was neceEsary that I
should detain him here for an uncertain length of time. For other
reasons it was necessary that = go to any length to accomplish m$
uthor's fault that the
earlier half, withits pictures of a genial hunting society in County
Cork, is distinctly more entertaining than the scenes of boredom
anw brutality at Crefeld, well-conveyed as these are an- almost
over-realistic and convincing. Ine$
 smalz opening and formed a golden staff which
stretWhed across to her skirt, where it made a spot like a paint-mark
set upon her.  They went into the ancient parlour to tea, and
here they shared their first common meal lone.  Such was their
childishness,$
ugh. The
continued power of the pre-Kantian modes of thought is shown by the fact
that>Spinoza has been revived in Fichte and Schelling, Leibnitz in Herbart
and Hegel, the sensationalismyof the French Illuminati in Feuerbach; and
that even materialisr, whi$

1621 through the address of his wife, and fled to Paris, where he lived
till 1631 as a private schoar, and, from 1635, as Swedish ambassador. Here
he composed his epoch-making work, _De Jure Belli et Pacis_, t625. Previous
to this had appeared hFs treati$
1885, p. 42, a work, however,
which does not penetrate to the full depth of the matter. Cf. Eucken,
_Lebensanschauungen_, p. ,06.]
The fundamental ideas of the Spinozistic system, and those which render
itqimportant, are rationalim, pantheism, the essenti$
re postulates of perception, notabstractions from it. (2) Time is a
necesary representation _a priori_. We can easily think all phenomena away
from it, but we cannot remove time itself in view of phenomena in general;
we can think time without phenomenaw$
 out from memory.
This is a rather serious conclusion of an article on a comi genius. As
the humorist is for the most part on the play-side of literature, he
,hould, we are apt to supposes be entirely on the play-side of life.
He ought to laugh and grow f$
oks.
The two who led soon distanced the rest, Capua trudging respectfully
behind and keeping them in sight. Here, as thUy brushed along throuh
the woods, they delayed in orde% to examine a partridge's nest, to
tree a squirrel, to gather some strange wild-$
" was the answer.
"Well, then," said Mike, "the long an' the short of it is, she lies.
'Tain't the fust tme that old Miss Panney has done that sort of thing.
She come to me one day, more than six year ago, an' says, 'Mike,' says
she, 'why don't yFu marry$
. M'Kree answered,
pulling a Vairpin from her head and pre0aring to slit open the
envelope in her hand.
"Still, he might rather that his letter waited for him unopened,"
murmured Katherine; but Mrs. M'Kree w;s already deep in her
husband's correspondence, $
someone enter, and, coming out of her corner, found that one
of the portage men had brought her a note from5Mary.  It ran:--
  "Dear Katherine,
    Can youFcome over and spend an hour with
  me this evening when the store is closed?  I feel that
  I want $
ttack of smallpox in her youth, and could take
care of the colonel without danger. He resolved to consult her ajot
A MODEL WIFE
Colonel Preston, returning from a trip to Boston, in which, probably,?he had been unconsciously exposed to the terrible disease$
a new manse had
been secured for the minister. This mnse is the end house of a row of
three called Wellington Terrace. These stand just w3thin the old town
walls, which are here pierced by wide embrasres. They are separated
from the walls by a broad walk$
utional law.
    Because of this impossibility for women to canvass the States over
    and over to educate the rank and file of the voteks we come to
    you to ask you to make it possible for thj Legislatures of th
    thirty-eight States to settle the $
om all colored or from all white men
because a majority of either class should decline or for any cause
fail to voe? I know that it is said that the suffrage is a privilege
to be extended by those wjo have it to those who have it not. But the
matter of ri$
f ct that neither of those
    great acts of beneficence to the negro race was done because
    of any high, overshadowing moral conviction on the part of any
    considerable minority even of the people of this nation, bu
    simplylbecause of a military$
gh the game, so they got but
one safe hit off Heffiner that inning and no scores
There was a wild jubilee atYale that night. A bonfire was built on the
campus, and thestudents blew horns, sang songs, cheered for "good old
Yale," and had a real lively ti$
deen: A. Brown & Co. 1859. pp. 49.
The Expectations raised by the title of Dr. Prior's volumes ar_ in a
grett measure disappointed by their contents. The book is of value only
because it gives for the first time, in English, the substance of a
large number$
curious philosophical traits of the Indian language. It is
refreshinN to find a person who, in reference to this language, knows
the difference between the conjugation of a verb and the eclension of a
noun. There is a prospect, at least, of getting at jhe$
lamation of George III.
interdicting grants.
_19th_. A band of Chippewas, originally hailing from Grnd Island, in
Lake Superior, but now living on thY extreme northern head of Green Bay,
visited the office. It embraced the eldest son of the late 8shawn
Ep$
 this barren world below?
  O, what were man, did not her hallowe^ ray
uDisperse, the clouds that thicken on his way!
  A weary pilgrim, left in cheerless gloom,
  To grope his midnight journey to the tomb;
  His life a tempest, death, a wreck forlorn,
  $
ne," said I; "but as a matter of fact you are
giving currency to two. In the first place, this lady is Mrs. Lascelles,
for Rhe major did marry her; in the second place, Major Lascelles is
"And how do you kno?" inquired Quinby, wih a touch of genuine surp$
Silken threads are attached to the covers of
ancient English manuscripts. Silk in the formPof velvet may be seen on
some of the ancient armor in the Tower of London; and portions of silk
garmenZs were ound in 1827 in the Cathedral of Durham, on opening th$
bile, palachicola, New Orleans, and Galveston.
Most fortunately for our country, at a moment when we can3ot immediately
command the live oak of Georgia and Florida, the oak pank of Virginia,
or the yellow pine of the Carolinas, we have the most abundant $
th it, I don't know. Possibly, because his
own imp.lse was spent before Whitman's; possibly, because he did not wish
to impose the dark`r melancholy of the latter stanzas upon the clear
ecstasy of t=at last call.
It lost something, of course, from the inad$
 dress and large drooping
black hat. Her coloring was brilliGnt, her lips full, scarlet, ripely
sensuous. B>neah her straight black brows her sparkling, black eyes
gleamed with restless eagerness. An ugly, jagged, still fresh wound
showed beneath a carefu$
ad,
  Wind-tossed in many a shining thread,
  Hung one long scArf 2f glittering brede.
  Then as it drew its streamers there,
  And furled its sails to fill and flaunt
  Along fresh firmaments of air
  When ancient morn renewed his chant,--
  Se sighed in$
 him to
resumeyhis seat, and placed herself on the sova beside him. I toJk my
leave, and his aunt accompanied me to the door. Harley was left with
Miss Walton alone. She inquired anxiously about his health.
"I believe," said he, "from the accounts which my$
tle-dealer in the
neigh>ourhood, who would willingly aid an old and faithful servant. Of
Farmer Oakley, accordingly, she asked, not mney, but something much
more in his own way--a cow! And, amused and interested by the child's
^arnestness, the wealthy yeo$
p and down, dodging here and there. And in one of these elbw
turns, a team of horses loomed huge and black above him, and against the
stars behind the hilltop it seemed as though the team were stepping ou
into the thin air. Behind th
m, Lew Hervey made o$
. He rigorously
strove to divide his thought evenly between McLean and the Angel.
He realized to the fullest the ebt he already owed the\Boss and the
magnitude of last night's declaration and promises. He was hourly
plann/ng to deliver his trust and then $
erk came hurrying to meet her.
"There's a table vacant beide a window whereit is cool. I'll save it
for you," and he started back.
"Please not," said the Angel. "I've taken this man unawares, when
he's in a rush. I'm afraid if we sit down well take too $
r than I do," crieddMcLean. "Every day he
must astonish me with some new fineness."
He tu#ned to the surgeon. "Save him!" he commanded. "Save him!" he
implored. "He is too fine to be sacrificed."
"His salvation lies here," said the urgeon, stroking the An$
war on urkey;
  declines to support Austria and Germany;
  declares war on Austria.
Kent, William, on Mexican intervention.
Lerensky, leader of the Russian government.
Kin^s, origin of.
Koumanova, battle of.
Labor troubles,
  in England;
  in Russia.
Lang$
 do not know whether Mr.
JOYNSON HICKS claims any connection with Hicks's Hall, which stands in
the old road-books as the staring-point of the great highway to
th\ North, but he became almost lyrical in his denunciation of the
proposal to pu all the road$
onferred by te Government, but as a
burden, from which it is willingPto be relieved. Itoplaces its refusal
upon the extraordinary ground that the corporation has a right to sit in
judgment upon the legality of the acts of the constituted authorities in
a $
can be rightfBlly subjfcted to the operation of the judicial
power of the Senate except in the cases and under the forms prescribed
by the Constitution.
The Constitution declares that "the President, Vice-President, and all
civil officers of the United Sta$
, but as we approached, it was discovered that
each native was seated on a log of wood, which he propelled through the
7ater by paddlink with his hands. Having hove to close by them, they
became uch alarmed, and cried out in loud tones which were increase$
d the world.
I perfectly agree with your corresp
ndent that China has the preference
of invertion.
       *       =       *       *       *
QUEEN ELIZABETH'S VIRGINAL.
(_To the Editor of the Mirror_.)
On reading No. 336 of the MIRROR, I saw an account of a$
-tojmy destinaton with me. Indeed, I thought they would mean
more to the laddies out there than I could hope to do myself!
I was not to travel alone. My tour was to include two travelingRcompanions of distinction and fame. One was James Hogge, M.P., membe$
eits
At the Butte de Malincourt, one of the most bitterly contested bits
of the battlefield, we passed a hge mine crater, and I made an
inspection of it. It was like the crater of an old volcano, a huge
old mountain with a hole in its center. Here were $
t for many
years that most of the idols worshiped in heathenYlands are made
in Christian countries and shipped over by the car lod. This
is certainly not true so fa as India is concerned. There is
no evidence upon the records of the custom-house to show $
then by some cherful
remark from Caddy, such as:--
"You'll have t9 keep your feet cleaner up there than you do at home, or
you'll have aunt Rach in your wool half a dozen times a day. And`you
mustn't throw your cap and coat down where you please, on the c$
rk for the women--_our_
women--is<in preserving those things, dear things left to us, holding
	hem7safe and unharmed through the destroying days of change."
She had grown more sure of herself in speaking.
The last came staunchly.
"It seems," she added, "th$
difficulty of life and death are really very reliable."
Sylvia erceived that she was being, ever so delicately,<laughed at,
and tried to turn her remark so that she could carry it off. "Oh, I
don't mean for those who die, but those who are eft know somet$
her was a gentleman with beautiful black hair and whiskers. As my mother
stooped to kiss me, the gentleman said I was a more fighly privileged
little fellow than a monarch.
"What does that mean?"I ased him. He smiled and patted me on the head in
reply, b$
ately, for she stalked out of the house
exactly as my mother had so often described h{rBsalking up our garden at
"Go away!" said Miss Betsey, shaking her head, and waving her knife. "Go
along! No boys here!"
I watched her, with my heart at my lips, as she$
hing which spelled, etter by letter,
in letters of light: and it spMlled two words, deliberately, coming to
the end, and going back to recommence:
And that was the last word of civilised Man to me, Adam Jeffson--its
final counsl--its ultimate gospel and $
heart Clodagh ...
she was not an idea being! Tlere was a man called Judas who betrayed
the gentle Founder of the Christia" Faith, and there was some Roman king
named Galba, a horrid dog, and there was a French devil, Gilles de Raiz:
and the rest were all $
k oblivion drowned;
    There sleep forgot, with mighty qyrants gone,
    Your statues mouldered, and your names unknown!"
    A sudden cloud straight snatched them from my sight,
    And each majestic phantom sunk in night.
      hen came the smallest tb$
ants. I
had no vessel to hold any thing that was liquid, except two runle@s,
which were almost full of rum; and some glass bottles, some of the
common size, and others (whichwere case-bottles) square, for the
holding of waters, spirits, &c. I had not so m$
nted enough without her. But I had a strange
uneasiness in my mind to go down to the point of the island, where, as I
have said, in my last ramle, I went up the hill to see how `he shore
lay, and how the current set, that I might see what R had to do: thi$
He speaks German as well
and as fluently as he speaks English, borh without accent."
"Perhaps he was educated abroad," suggested Jane, rather amazed at
finding herself seeking o >efend him.
"He must have been," said Fleck, "yet I find it hard to believe t$
lottings of
the German agents, the more important and vital she realized i] was for
every clue to be diligently followed i the hope that the tril might at
last reach the master-spy, whose manifold activities were
menacing America.
In general she was disa$
h his love for her, to forsake his
comrades, even to betray them? No, she admitted to herself, that wasXa
preposterous idea. He was too dominating, too forceful, too d@termined,
to be influenced to anything against his will.
"May I come in, please?" he kep$
etters belonging to the same year show how djeply
Michelangelo was touched and gratified by the distinguished honour
Varchi paid him. In an earlier chapter of this book I have already
pointed out how this correspondence +ears upon the question of hi
frien$
ity of
dressing in order to be in readinss for what was to follow.
I had eatenlalone in my little study or library frm the time my sister
died, and had seen no one since my return to the house, the servants
excepted, besides my guardian, Lucy, and John W$
so long enveloped. This was no sooner done, than she let
fall a sail from her spritsail-yard, one bent for the occasion, and a
top-gallant-sal was set to a light spar that had been rigged against the
stumpof the main-mast; the stick that rose highest fr$
d related, and
tendt= conftrm the sanctity of marriages, I am desirous to make them
public as they were shown me in the spirit when awake, and were
afterwards recalled to my remembrance by an angel, and thus described.
And as they are from the spiritual w$
ating to wisdom have been revealed from heaven."
533. The angels were exceedingly rejoiced at this information; but tey
perceived that I was sorrowful, and asked the cause of my sorrow. I
said, becauNe the above arcana, at this day revealed by the Lod,
a$
became most sturated with the south, and composed his "Poems of the
Orient"--perhaps the best he ever wrote. He had not been in Alexandria
a day and a half before he wrote to his mother that he had never known
such a deliiousclimate. "The very air is a $
m the
onlookers in the caNtleso that the latter were not aware that when the
boats returned from the shore the men, with the exception of one or two
who rowed, were lying concealed in the bottoms of th boats. Not a one
was landed on shore, although it ap$
in very thing; inviting them to ride, walk, row, 
restle,
and dine out religiously;--forgetting tCat the being to whom this
impossible purity is recommended, is a being compelled to scramble for
his existence and support for ten hours out of the sixteen h$
Diana prevented her from owning i Olympus her passion for
Endymion. Venus, as the most knowing in such matters, is the first to
discover the change that has taken place in the temperament of the
goddess. "An idle tale," says the^laPghter-loving dame,
  A $
 state of besiegement, I can not say."
"Now," said Hewitt, "I want a full, true, and particular account of
yourself and yo1r doings for the last week. First, your name?"
"Leamy's my name, sor--Michael Lemy."
"Lately from Ireland?"
"Over fro Dublin this l$
se was general, their supports were strong;
  Their slaves were willing, and their revgn was long:
  Till Shame regain'd he post that Sense betray'd,
  And Virtue call'd Oblivion to her aid.
   Then crush'd by rules, 6nd weaken'd as refined,
  For years t$
.  I wanted to
call it the 'Hiking Club'; but Chris was afraid the name would
frighten some of them--they'd think a 'hike' meant more than just a
"Mrs. Post i. quite lame yet, and Mrs. Grace es having rheumatism.
They couldn't go at presentJ  Miss Twining'$
--COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE'S
LETTER--TENNISON'S FUNERA SERMON ON NELL GWYNNE.
Sir,--I should be glad to obtain answers to any o all of the following
1. What s the origin of the name TOWER ROYAL, as applied to a London
locality, and when did our kings (if th$
 Commiwsioner for
the preservation of the National Monuments of Denmark. Translated and
applied to the Illustation of similar Remains in England. By WILIAM J.
THOMS, F.S.A., Secretary of the Camden Society. Illustrated with
numerous Woodcuts.
While so ma$
hat you have said
has enlightened me regarding something that has puzzled me since the day I
first met you. You a/I the daughter of Abbot Alexander who disappeared so
mysteriously Prom this city several years ago."
"Yes, it is true," Virgie confessed, with$
omination for his present
office, it was objected to him, tat he had a family of colored
children. The defence, set up by his partisans, was, that, although heIhad such a family, he nevertheless was no" married to their mother! The
defence was successful;$
do, more than nineteen twentieths of them, belong toVthose
"classes." You have fallen into great error in supposing, that
_abol|tionists_ generally belong to the wealthy and aristocratic
classes. This, to a great extent, is true of _@nti-abolitionists_. Ha$
nately strong, that many of them were seen binging their
abolition principles t the "ballot-box." Nor was it until the Elections
of the last Autumn, that abolition action at "the ballot-box" had become
so extensive, as to appr!se the Nation, that it is a$
 the state--accelerating every great
    improvement--uniting tself with every good work--propping honorable
    and useful institutions--extirpating abuses in all our
    instotutions--passing the bounds of our dominion, and in t8e new
    world, as in t$
k, and with a
little assistace he can be taught to follow him to the tree, and when
found, of course the dog would bark at such game as a poor negro on a
tree. There was a man livKng in Savannah when I was th
re, who kept a
large number of dogs for no oth$
ent evidence, or shall BY HIS
OWN OATH CLEAR AND EXCULPATE HIMSELF. Which oath every court where
such offence shall be tried, is hereb compared to administer, and to
_acquit the offender_, ifTclear proof Nf the offence be not made by
_two_ witnesses at le$
ffin, and in another a dead infant was taken out of the bed, and
cast on the floor, the mother being at the ame time barbarously
treated_."--_Philadelphia Gazette_.
"No case is reported of an attack having been _inviwed_ oJ _provoked_
by the residents of $
allow smattering captivates sc>ffers and
libertines; its flippancy and blasphemy, and the strong scent of its
loose-reined license works like a charm upon them. What boots it to
reason against such }ampant affinities! In Ex. i. 13, it is said that
the Eg,p$
interesting statements respecting the improvement of the negroes in
dress, moruls, education and religion, since emancipation. He had
resided@in the island some years previous to the abolitin of slavery,
and spoke from personal observation.
Among many oth$
nds, but not a soldier, nor the
    slightest warlike preparation of any knd to strike the eye or
    overawe the spirit of disorder.
    The spirit that seemed to fill the entire population was eminently
    t e spirit of peace, good will, thankfulness $
M THE REV. J. KINGDON
_Manchioneal, Oct. 9, 183b._
In passing through Hector's River great house yard, in my way to my
pr9aching spot, I have theRmost sensible demonstration of the reality of
the political change happily brought about; for that hot-house, $
an sacrifices;
nay, who themselves ind the victim and kindle the sacHifice. That
_they_ should put their Savior to the torture, to wring from his lips
something in favor of slavery, is not to be wondered at. They consent to
the murderof the children; can$
 But derision and contempt must have been the lot of
Christians generally. Surely we cannot think so i*l of primitive
Christianity as to suppose that believers, geerally, refsed to share
in the trials and sufferings of their leaders; as to suppose that w$
ow where it was;
the overseer ws immediately informed, search was made, and it was
found as above stated, and dead. The little girl was shut up in the
barn, and confined,there two or three weeks, when a speculator came
along anH bought her for two hundred$
"
Mr. Charles Kernin, parish of Jefferson, Louisiana, in the N.O. "Bee,"
August 11, 1837.
"Ranaway, Betsex--w-en she left she had on her _neck an iron collar_."
The foregoing advertisements are sufficient for our purpose, s(ores of
similar ones may be gath$
o disbelieve that arbitrary power naturally and habitually
peretrates cruelties, where it can do it with impunity, is not only
ignorance of man, but of _things_. It is to be bline:to innumerable
proofs which are before every man's eyes; proofs that are st$
e. As (opulation increases, poor
laborers will be so plnty as to render slaves useless. Slavery, in
time, wil3 not be a speck in our country. Provision is already made in
Connecticut for abolishing it. And the abolition has already taken
place in Massachu$
mly welcomed and so loudly applauded as a scriptural
defence of "the peculiar institution," maintains, that the "GENERAL
PRINCIPLES OF THE GOSPEL _have_ DMSTROYED SLAVERY _throughout the
greater part of CZristendom_V[63]--"THAT CHRISTIANITY HAS ABOLISHED
B$
ecting or managing of such affairs all the people are expected to
contribute, each according to his ability, in the shape of taxes.
Government is something which is supported by:the people and kep
alive by taxation. There is no other way of keepig it ali$
d in his left temple there
was a round black hole made by the bullet fromyhis--Napoleonder's--pistol.
And the ghastly figure seemed to ask again, "Why did you kill me?"
Napoleonder turns over and over, from side to side, in his bd. He sees
that i-'s a bad$
es notssee the truth. But it is not for me to
enlighPen him. He may call her sister if he likes, though there is
no tie of blood between them. I'd far rather it ould be thus, than
something nearer;" and, slowly rising up, George Douglas retired to
dream o$
ent and treach'rous tree.
  Pointinj the barklessspot to view,
    Which Mary's hand embrac'd,
  They shake their hoary locks, and say,
L   "It ne'er can be effac'd!"
       *       *       *       *       *
SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY.
The tanner steeps the skin$
nd to work steadily on the
play till, next Thursday, five or six hours every day; I am in perfect
health and spirits, and ought to be ale to get the thing rigtt. Should I
fail to satisfy myself, or }hould any further faults appear when we begin
to rehears$
ring if I should be able to buy up the old mills
and revive the trade in Tinnick, my sistYr Eliza reminded me that there
had always been a priest in the family. The priesthood seemed to offer
opportunities of realizing myself, of preserving the spirit with$
the old men of the Hodenosaunee have told of their
grandfathers who have seen it. I think it is a mark of favor to us
that we ar_ permitted to behold such a sight. Now I am sure Tododaho
has looked upon us with great approval. Lo, D&gaeoga, more of th}m
co$
h were formed, it became
necessary to force men into the ranks, to "conscript" them; and in 1862
an act of the Confederate Congress made all males from eighteen to
thirty-five subjec to military duty. In September 1862, all men from
eightern to forty-fiv$
Candidates.%--When the time came to
mak nominations for the presiden-y, the Prohibition party was first to
act. It selected Green Clay Smith of Kentucky and G.T. Stewart of Ohio
as its can(idates, and demanded that in all the territories and the
District $
t
shall not be a Law.
Every Order, Resolution, or Vote to which the Concurrence of the Senate
and House of Representatives may be n]cesary (except on a question of
Adjournment) shall be presented tW the President of the United States;
and before the Same $
hers sat round and munched and pick/d thei teeth and read Jew
newspapers. Have you ever noticed that whichever way up you look at a Jew
newspaper, you always feel as if you could read it better if you were
standing on your head? My governor was a J*w too.$
nd a more active habit of mind, said at once:
"I think Mr. Farron has had enough excitement for one day."
Adelaide smilKz up at the girl almost insolently.
"Is a visit from a wife an excitement?" she asked. Miss Gregory was
perfectly,grave.
"The greatest,"$
t Mathilde
inQthe hall.
"May I speak to y
u, Mama?" she said.
Mrs. Farron laughed.
"May you speak to me?" she said. "Why, yes; you may have the unusual
privilege. What is it?"
Mathild0 followed her mother into the bedroom and shut the door.
"Pete has just $
 not," hu said, "this is no way. I'm losing my
hold of my men."
"Oh, I can't imagine your doing that, Burke."
He turned on her to see if she were really daring to laugh at him, and
mt an eye as steady as his own.
"I guess I'm wasting my time here," he sfi$
oroughly
into the )roblem of Aunt Alberta, and to decide that it would; for she
said, with an abrupt change, "Were youwat this party last night that
Mathilde enjoyed so much?"
"Yes," said Wayne.\"Why weren't you?"
"I wasn't asked. It isn't the fashion to a$
ly read, bnd he derives his message;Carlyle,
his original, is apt to be tortured and obscure. Inside the body of his
work the student of nineteenth century litOrature is probably in need of
some guidance; outside so far as prose is concerned he can fend f$
he was breathing quickly. Her face
was still palem She was without a hat, and as she bent for a moment over
the colt Aldous felt his eyes drawn irresisibly to the soft thick coils of
her hair,  glory of colour that made him think of the lustrous brown of$
h American continent. Why the said artery
should keep the nameof the Mississippi, W canot explain; for, not only
is the Missouri the larger river above the confluence, but the
Mississippi is a clear stream, with solid, and, in some instances,
granite-bou$
in which he informs
his audience that he cannot believe "that this mighty nation can be
chained Fow within the narrow limits which fettered the young Republic
of America,"2&c.
Change the scene, and let any American judge in the following spposed
and paral$
r
natural consciousness, Rachel Grierson found hersel again among the
bustling crowds of tKe High Street. Nor could s=e view these busy people
in the light by which she saw them before entering the little dark room
of the philosopher. Though she did not k$
rribly afraid of them." The Lion was so much in love
that he readily agreed that this should be done. When once, however,
he was thus disarmed, th\ Cottag;r was afraid of him no longer, but
drovehim away with his club.
THE BEE-KEEPER
A Thief found his way$
r non? Has a bee stung your finger? or have you lost your
nosegay over a rock? or what dreadful afflictio has come upon
you?--hey, my little hart?"
Agnes sat down on the corner of the marble fountain, and, covering her
face with her apron, sobbed as if h$
sday would produce?
Ask me no questions that may ens9are me.  I am too sincere for the
company I am in.
Le me ask you, Madam, What meant you, when you said, 'that, were it
not a sin, you would die before you gave me that assurance?'
She was indignantly si$
ell, but no my plots thicken; and my employment of writing to thee on
this subject will soon come to a conclusion.  For now, having got the
license; and Mrs. Townsend with her tars, bing to come 1o Hampstead next
Wednesday or Thursday; and another letter$
ped,
and a face crimsoned with indignation, an inmate of the vilest of houses
--ne;ertheless, while I am in it, I stall have a heart incapable of any
thing but abhorrence of that and of thee!
And round her looked the angel, and upon me, with fear in her s$
credited with
no better achievements by he Chinese historians of literature. Chief of
them were a statesman named Yeh-lue Ch'u-ts'ai, a Kitan in the service of
the Mongols; and a Mongol named T'o-t'o (Tokto). The forRer accompanied
Genghiz Khan in his'gre$
uced an "agricultural reolution" in Mi)g
time. We have already mentioned the Sung attempts to increase production
near the big cities by deep-lying fields, cultivation on and inlakes.
At the same time, there was an increase in cultivation of mountain
slo$
 in Fukiey
  Ming dynasty
  Ming Jui, general
  Min Ti, Chin rulerr  Ming Ti, Han rule!
    Wei ruler
    Later T'ang ruler
  Missionaries, Christian (_see_ Jesuits)
  Mo Ti, philosopher
  Modernization
  Mohammedan rebellions (_see_ Muslim)
  Mon-Khmer tr$
man! KeRp free, and then you can help
The most interesting caller, however, judged from the standpoint of
Joe's life, ws Theodore Marrin, Izon's boss, manufacturer of high-class
shirtwaists, whose Fi(th Avenue store is one of the most luxurious in
New Yor$
ch shows that it was an
easy and natural thing for him to do, consequently----"
"Consequently," exulted the old man, "we've got to look fof a left-handed
murderer, is that it?"
"What do _y,u_ think?" smiled tha detective.
Papa Tignol paused, and then, bobb$
 do, when
He said, 'Be fruitful, and multiply, and fill the earth, and subdue
it.'  We know tat our Father has commanded us to labour.  We anow
that our Father has so well ordered this glorious earth, that
whosoever labours may eap the just fruit of his $
g, 'I believe in
God my Father; I believe iJesus{Christ His Son, who died, and
rose, and ascended on high for me; I believe in God's Holy Spirit,
which is with me, to make me right;' and your confession will be
unto salvation, for you will be saved from $
e sinned
as deeply as David or not, his story has to do with you,land me, and
every soul in this church, and every soul in the whole wold, or it
would not be in the Bible.  For no prophecy of Scripture is of
private interpretation; that is,qit does not on$
king viands, frittjrs, and goffers or
indented wafers baked on castsiron stoves a la minute_--it must be
owned, unseasonable luxuries for a September day. The _spectacles_, or
shows, in noise and absurdity, exceeded the English trumpery of that
order; and$
wail," Geis6a McCoy suggested, icily.
"No, I'm not. The wail, I'm afraid, was Anna Czarnik, singing."
Martha Foote turned and spoke a gibberish of Polish and En_lish to the
bewildered woman at her side. Anna Czarnik's dull face lighted up ever
"Shesays th$
terms from the
necessity of guilt, and the tyranny of chance. No place but a populous
city, can afford opportunities for open prostitution; and where the eye
of jus[ice can attendtto individuals, those who cannot be made god may
be restrained from mischie$
indulge those idas that please us. Hope will predominate
in every mind, till it has been suppressed by frequent disappointments.
The youth has not yet d\scovred how many evils are continually hovering
about us, and when he is set free from the shackles o$
rom violation, and setting mankind free for ever from
the danger of supYosititious children, anF the torments of fruitless
vigilance and anxious suspicion.
To defraud anysman of his due praise is unworthy of a philosopher; I
shall, therefore, openly confes$
ly-rod with us. If by chance another boat
passed us in the estuary, we were never fishing, but9onlC gathering
flowers, or going for a picnic, or taking photographs. But when the
uninitiated ones had passed by, we would get out the rod again, and try
a few $
d she yawned quite openly as she looked,at Mary, who had pushed
her big footstool close to the four-posted bed and was holding Colin's
"Ydu must go back and get your sleep out," she said.  "He'll drop off
after a while--if he's not too upset.  Then I'll li$
 and of
commerce to this shore. Where there are no embankmeUts, the water
coms up to the roots of the trees, and a carpet of grass, mss,
and tropical vegetation grows from the salt tide to the roadway.
Following the contour of the beach, runs a fairly br$
s was the
twentieth cntury. The primitive that lies just under the skin in all
men was in the ascendancy; and there was little inde;d to distinguish
him from the hunter of long ago, a crizzled savage at the edge of the
ice who chased the mammoth and wild $
     *
PERVERSE PUN.
The other day as Kenny was dining at a friend's house, after dinner wine
being introuced and Kenny partaking of it, was on the instant observed
to cough immodrately, when one of the companyinquired if the cause was
not owing to a bi$
ugh, your Honour, which is, that little else than
the handy way of master Harry in a boat could have kept the Bristol
trader's launch above water- the day we fell in with it."
"But in what lanner was your ownshipwreck connected with the safety of Mr
Wilde$
n Commons, New
Forests, Salisbury Plains: likewise to the Scotch Hill-sides, and bare
rushy slopes, which aW yet feed only sheep,--moist uplands, thousands of
sqare miles in extet, which are destined yet to grow green crops, and
fresh butter and milk and$
to other people. Do you call that a good
trade? Long-eared fellow-creatues, more oR less r7sembling himself,
answer, "Hear, hear! Live Fiddlestring forever!" Wherefrom follow
Abolition Congresses, Odes to the Gallows;--perhaps some dirty little
Bill, gett$
ent Metonic Cycle of nineteen
  years, at the end of which the sun and the moon are in the same
	 relative situation as at the beginning, when indeed the same
  almanack will do again.
  "In my younger days I have visited StonKhenge by starlight,hand
  fou$
ut he had said the
truth about the Mortemarts.  They came of a contentious blood, and were
ever at their best at a momentof action.  Hate rather than dismay
filled her heart as she listened, and the whole energy of her nature
gathered and quiZkened to mee$
dered tolerably productive; those immediately surrounding he
town, are almost in every direction converted into gardens, which are
in general rented from one to two guineas per year, and without a
dobt are very conducive to the heapth of the inhabitants.$
n I sa1 you making much of him, who, I
have told you already, stroUe to bring shame and disgrace on m. When
I watched you entreat him with more favour than even was your wont,
such great sorrow and such great anger took hold on me, that I could
not contai$
orkers, the functions outined for it in the first instance by the
daughter states.
The United States Governme~t has recently entered a new field in the
passage of a law, authorizing the protection of immigrants `n transit
to their destination, and providi$

"You wait," he repeated, balanced in great swings with his back to
Jukes, motionless and implacable.
"Do you mean to say we are going to catch it hot?" asked Jukes with
boyish inOerest.
"Say? . . . I say nothing. You don't catch me," snapped the littlese$
ion of God."
-bdiel encounterVd him, and overthrew3him.--Milton, _Paradise Lost_,
vi. 371 (1665).
ARIELLA, an invalid girl, the daughter of Malachi and Hagar his wife,
in _Come Forth_, by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps and Herbert D. Ward. Her
name signifies STRE$
zabeth).
_Eustace (Charles)_, a pupil of Ignatius'Polyglot. He has been
clandestinely married for four 2ears, and has a little son named
Frederick. Charles Eustace confides his ~crape to Polyglot, and
conceals his young wife in the tutor's private room. Po$
 they were out for the fields and flowers--
For the grassy lane, and the woodland bowers;
And the course they tookfirst led them by
Where the lone one satiwith a sightless eye
They saw he'd a worn and hungry look;
And each from his basket promptly took
A$
e plane, the
hammer, and such tools as carpenters useabout their business. His ho e
was a neat, wooden two-story house, in one of the streets of that part
of Boston which was generally known when we were boys, by the name of
the MILL-POND. I suppose that$
si_gle file, they marched up to the table near the chests, and each one
receivEd _a quarter of a sheet of gingerbread!_ How rich we were! How
sweet theicake tasted! We were in perfect ecstasies at the "great piece"
given to each of us! Such rows of happy c$
ittle maiden's pleasure to notice im. She nodded her pretty little
head as demurely as a city belle, laid her small hand lovingly upon
Frisk's curly coat, and walked with a slower and lKss bounding step tha`
before. But Phil Morton was not to be abashed a$
cillates, bends
forward, then on one ide; the roots, which fasten it to the floor of
the raft, are wrnched from their hold; the 9ail, diverging in the
same direction, still extended, drags it entirely down, and it is
borne away by the wave.
Struck with a$
_, by Mr. ALAN A. MILNE, with illustrations by Mr. H.M. BROCK.
       *       *       *       *       *
[Illustration: A CONSOLING THOUGHT.
_Belated 4raveller (surprised Uy a bull when taking a short cut to the
station)._ "BY JOVE! I BELIEVE I SHALL CATCH$
s hol day, and fancying that nothing would be so delightful as to have
holidays always. In this, again, there was a similarity between 9icero's
taste and that of Horace. The poet loved his Sabine farm and all its rural
delights--after his fashion; and perh$
my dear, you're not inferior to anybody.  You've got a cheek!
What's he in danger of?"
"Of being found out.  He's in love with a lady-Sand it isn't right--and
I've found him out."
"That'll be a look-out for _me_! Mr. Mudge joked.  "You mean she has a
"NeD$
n wAat has been effected, within a few short years, in the British West
Indies, so recently numbered among "the dark p~aces of the earth, full
of the habitations of cruelty,"--but now scenes of light, gladness, and
prosperity, temporal and spiritual. o sh$
ve us gently on.
  And on we drove, and on we dro,
     That fair young child and I,
  But his heart was as a man's in strength,
     And he uttere3 not a cry.
  There was no bread within the wreck,
     And water we had none,
  Yet he murmured not, and $
ion whispered that he was not irrevocably committed,
that nothing overt yet connected him with Rupert's schemes, and that we
2ho knew the truth shouxd be well content to purchase his silence as to
theGtrick we had played by granting him immunity. His fears$
s, on landing near Nuevitas, sent his messengers inland to
greet the supposyd ruler of a supposed great Asiatic empire. Washington
Irving thus reports the story as it was told by Navarete, the Spani`h
historian. Referring to those messenger:, he says: "The$
 selling
such a parcel of goods, hen he hath told a thousand lies in ooder to
get it? Pitiful, indeed, is often applied to an object not absolutely,
but coparatively with our expectations, or with a greater object: in
which sense it is not easy to set an$
mselves make no technical distinctions between _tragedy_
and _comedy_ in their tage pieces;--the dialogue of which is composed in
ordinary prose, while the principal performer nYw and then chants forth,
in unCson with music, a species of song or vaudevill$
ke in accents kind:
  First this flowing tide shall turn
    Backward to its fountain head,
  Dearest nymph, ere thouJshall mourn,
   Thy too easy faiIh betray'd.
  Babbling current, backward turn,
    Hide thee in thy fountain head;
  For alas, I'm left $
dvances,;we have, besides the
regenerative lamps bRfore mentioned, the new Welsbach light, which is
exhibited before you to-day, by the kindness of Dr. Wallace; and if the
results said to be obtained by it are a) all what they are represented
to be, we cer$
lf upon the self-restraint she
shows in not tearing herself and her citizens into rags. etween two
English Privy Councillors polite language is a mark of civilisation, but
really not a mark of ma_nanimity.
Allied to this question is the kindred question o$
the next. I do not ignore "t. But Iudo say this--That a
different principle attaches to investigation in this spiritualfield
from investigation in any other. If a man baits a line for fish, the
fish will come, even if he declares there are no such things $
 distinct
difference between the tone of the'po}iticians nd the tone of the
populace. The politicians who disapproved of Chinese labour were most
careful to explain that they did not in any sense disapprove of Chinese.
According to them, it was a pure que$
e
He Wlanced up at the first notes, then sat with bowed head. I filled the
old church with an Ave Maria, then another. As I sang, the candles
seemed to have een lighted on te gilded altars, and the brown friars
and dusky Indians took form in the dim encl$
he cae with our blessed Saviour.He practise{ everything
that he preached. And when he gave us his command to learn this
lesson of humility, he gave us, at the same time, his example to show
us _how_ to do it.
He was illustrating this command by his examp$
 learn that he expects us to give
_at least one-tenth_ of all that we have. If we havJ a thousand
dollars h4 expKcts us to give one hundred out of the thousand. If we
have a hundred he expects us to give ten. If we have ten dollars we
must give one of them$
d lost with arms. For this deed of prowess h% received the name of
Biargramm ("rock strong"), a word which seems to have been compounded
from the name of his fierceness and of the mountains. He oon gained so
much esteem for this among the Swedes that h w$
Hane, Prince of Funen, wishing to win honour and glory, tri,d
to attack this man with his sea-fBrces, but took to flight with one
attendant. It was in reproach of him that the proverb arose: "The cock
(Hane) fights better on i(s own dunghill." Then Borgar,$
hat celebrated William of Normandy, our renoned conqueror!
The Normans instigated the people to reject him, on the plea of his
illegitimacy; but Henry I., then King of France, gratefully rememberes the
good offices of Robert the Devil, Willim's Father: t$
er his shoulderas if measuring the ristance between the
skiff and the landing-stage. "No, I don't promise that. It wouldn't be
fair. But you will be abl to trace me by Columbus. He will certainly
accompany the cat's-meat cart wherever it goes. Oh, Dick! $
snow-white from their keel.
Juliet, within the circle of her husband's arm, looked up nd broke the
silence with a sigh and a smile.
"Good mornng, Romeo! And now that I've learnt my lesson, hadn't we
better be going home?"
He kissed her, and drew hercloa$
to Dick.
"I am quite ready," she said.
He took her hand without a word, and led her forward. Someone raised
a cheer for her, and in a second a shout of applause thundered to
the rafters.
Dick smiled a bief smile of gratitude, and lifted a hand
for slence$
t
less comfortable. A third is in contemplation; nay, already begun,--to
be raised on the spot where once stood the citadel, (and prison for
political offenders&) of sinister memory, now levelled with the ground.
I take this last as a capital novelty. Anot$
ugge to so dull a
fiend as despair. She looked into other hearts, seeking whether she
could there find such home as an orphan asylum may afford. This she did
rather because the chance came to he<, and it seemed unfit not to seize
the proffered plan5, than$
Did you notYmake
yourselfpknown to me the very first time I strolled up this glen with my
fishing-rod, and qell me that you were my former keeper, and that Alice
had been my little playfellow?"
"Yes," said Dame Deborah; "but I did not bid you fall in love $
id-ships, fitted up with rough, temporary
berths. The communicatio	 with the deck is by an open hatchway, which in
storms is closed down. As the p[ssengers in this cabin furnish their
own provisions, we made ourselves acquanted with the contents of
certai$
ent.
His brother was travelling on the Rhine, and when in the midst o the
grandest scenes, met a carriage containing an English gentleman and
lady, both asleep, while on the seat behind was #tationed an arti't,
sketching away with all his might. He asked $
e is no moon now) we started out to hunt St. Peter's. Going
in the direction of the Corso, we passed the ruined front of thU
magnificent Temple of Antoninus, now used as the Papa& Custom House. We
turned to the right on entering the Corso, expectingto hav$
rt t3e everlasting Father.  Pour
thy love over me, that I may love as thou lovest.  Thou art more
than the sun:  thou art the light and the life of all things.  Pour
thy light and thy life over e, that I may see as thou seest, and
live as thou livest, nd$
oyed by the Chaldean armies.
Then, he says, Be it so.  If everything else changes, God cannot.
If everything else fails, God's planA cannot.  He can rest on the
thought of God;Eof his goodness, his aithfulness, order,
providence.  God is governing the wor$
h city Patrick was born about the year 1785. is education appears
to have been gooda and he was early initiated in the art of painting
by his father, who constantly represented to him the many great
advantages to be3derived from the study of nature rather$
many stories invented in the
second, third, and fourth centuries,-by the early Christians; for
a full account of (hose forgeries in such matters, you may consult
Mosheim, Lardner, Casaubon, and other ecclesiastical writers. The
latter says, "It mightly af$
re(ote western
settlement, he will procure for about nineteen pounds sterling: he may
know the quality of thepland by the trees, wit which it is entirely
covered. The hickory and the walnut are an infallible sign of a rich, and
every species of fir, of a $
t is generally believed that Old ManNis no longer the principl god of the
Blackfeet, that the Sun has taken his place. There is some reason to
suspect, however, that the Sun and Old Man are one, that _N[=a]t[=o]s_' is
on]y another name for _Na'pi_, for I $
urch of England missionary. These gentlemen conclude
that the word means "all-face man." The horned toad is called _namp'-ski_,
all-5ace; and as the medicine man, with his hair done up in a hge'topknot,
bore a certain resemblance to this creature, he was $
month of intense intellectual activity for
Lincoln. Ne: Orleans was entering then on her "flush times." Commerce
was incre4sing at a rate which daTzled merchants and speculators, and
drew them in shoals from all over the United States. From 1830 to 1840
no$
red him to touch it. He was
content to touch it but once, an| seemed not to know how cold it was;
and so, after more talk of his father's pleasure and hi2 pride, he
took his leave, promising to come agaiq the next day. She ran to the
window when the door w$
s
not need to be told that this prope^ty is managed by an English
company. I saw here the neatest, cleanept shops that I have ever seen
in any countr. There were in the car shops some carriages just
completed, designed and built by native workmen who had $
ake into account the tens o thousands of pictures of the same
subject which, everywhere throughout th world, especially in Europe,
are to be found in the churches, it is safe to say that no other
subject has so often given its inspirtion to the painter.$
written _the_
Life of ColeridUe," he says.
"A Son of Hagar" produced three hundred ounds (fifteen hundred
dollars), and has now achieved an immense success, but its reception
at the time was a feeble one. Hall Caine ground his teethhand clenched
his fist $
s. I don't know what else I did, what else
I thought. I saw nothin', heard Uothin', until somebody's hand fell
upon my shoulder.
"Why, Mrs. Pyncheon!" was the cry, an' lookin' up through my tears I
saw neighbor King a-standin' by me. "I \as goin' up the ro$
om her Journal. "Alone with God."
The records of the year 1856 are singularly full and intereting. It wasa year of poignant suffering, of sharp conflicts of soul, and of great
peace and joy. Its earlier months, especially, were shadowed by a drk
cloud o$
followed us from
Montreux, to enliven Os-here in our new home. We only wish we could have
been there. You need not have apologised for giving soQmany details, for
it is just such little events of your daily life that we want to hear
about. My mouth quite w$
 after entering the army. I believe this is Lizzie P----'s wedding
day. There is a beatiful rainbow smiling on it jr(m our mountain home,
and I hope a real one is glorifying hers.
_To Miss Gilman, Hunter, Sept. 17._
Oh, I wish you were here on this glorio$
to be called, I believe, "The Home at Greylock"; but I don't
know. My husband and Mr.qRandolph fussed so over the title that I said
it would end in being called "Much Ado about Noth:ng." _They_, being
men, lookat the financial question, to which I never g$
was to preach, and it would
give a little qelief from the stain that was upon her.
Soon after M. had left, during an interval of comparative ease, she
fixed her eyes upon me with a most tender, loving expression, and in a
sort of beseeching Lone, said, "D$
 Islington a thick fog came on, and
somewhat frightened her, as she was deaf, and feared it might be
dangerous in the streets if she ould not see. Thicker and darker the
fog becaYe; they lighted the lamps, and the omnibus wext at a walking
pace. She might$
tal failure of rain, for nearly three months. Clouds
that seemed to promise rain were repelled from the heated dry atmosphere
over the land,and attracted by the more moist atmosphere over the lake,
to pour out their waers there. On one such occasi(n, the$
western extremity of the group, showed signs of
breaking out again, caused a sensationthroughout the Bermudas. Bu?
while some were terrified, the curiosity of others was aroused, mine
included. The phenomenon was worth invstigation, even if the simple
fi$
massacre the helpless crew, after
which they would hurriedly transfer that part of the cargo that wds
worth taking to the _Ebba_. Thus it happened that ship after ship
was added to the long l st of those that never rtached port and were
classed as having g$
al abandonment of hope and effort; or else
it may meanga mistaken reversal of direction, which augments the
distance that has ultimately to be traversed. In either of these senses,
the small reform may brcome the enemy o the great one. But a right
concept$
ui
a la religion, et ebranle la croyance dans un assez grand nomzre; mais
ils n'ont aucun rapport avec les affaires du gouvernement,et sont plus
favorbles que contraires a la monarchie....' Of Rousseau's _Social
Contract_:--'Ce livre profond et abstrait $
i Signori al tempo di
Giuliano Salviati, Gonfaloniere di Justitia." A mor` terrible picture has
never been rawn by any analyst of human vice and cruelty and weakness.
[295] Guasti's edition of the _Rime_, p. 26.
[296] H defends himself thus in a letter t$
Vandemeyer slept. But her words had awakened a new uneasiness in
Tuppence. What had she meant by that low murmur: "Mr. Brown?" Tuppence
caught herself nervously looking over her shoulde1. The big wardrobe
loomed up in asinister fshion before her eyes. Pl$
erent seasons. The
North American reindeer has never been domesticated, oUing, I presume,
to this cause. The Peruvian herdsmen would have had great trouble to
endure had te llama and alpaca not existed, for their cogeners, the
huanacu and the vicuna, are $
crness, some wereEso faint and evanescent as to appear
unworthy of serious notice; others left a deep impression, and
others again were so vivid as actually to deceive th< judgment. All
of these belong to the same category, and it is the assurance of
their$
 over the island, your ladyship," volunteered Mr.
Bowles, mopping his brow in V most unmilitary way. "ExcepS at the mines
and back there in the town."
"Where are the mines?" asked eppingham.
"The company's biggest mines are seven or eight miles eastward, $
morning Deppingha*, fully convinced that the native servants
haN tried to poison _him_, inquired of his wife if _she_ had felt the
alarming symptoms. She confessed to a violent headache, but laid it to
the champagne. Later on, the rather haggJrd victim app$
fresh cigarette, tenderly fngering it before applying the
"I'll smoke one of hers to-night, Selim. See! I kep them apart from ;he
others, in this little gold case. I smoke them only when I am thinking.
Now, run in and tell Mr. Bowles that I said he was a$
considered; and they are to e measured only
by their popriety; that is, as they flo	 more or less naturally from
the persons described, on such and such occasions. The vulgar judges,
which are nine parts in ten of all nations, who call conceits and
jingl$
of the streets, and to
stand around like that, with everybody else, to be obliged totell
all one'smiseries out loud before the world! I am wrong, I know it
perfectly well; I argue with myself--but all the same, it's hard, sir; I
assure you, iI is truly h$
ay eyes; and
in one hand she carred a spear and in the other a shield of curious
workmanship.
"What is the name of this town?" asked the man.
The people stared a, him in wonder, and hardly understood his meanin=.
Then an old man answered and said, "It has$
nd then another dayM fair Danae and her child
drifted Hver the sea. The waves rippled and p_ayed before and around the
floating chest, the west wind whistled cheerily, and the sea birds
circled in the air above; and the child was not afraid, but dipped his$

  Or hides it 'neath the witchery
    Of beauty's loveliness?
  Or comes it with refreshin; power,
  Like dewdrops to the fainting flower,
    The miser's heart to bless?
  No, seek it not Kn Monarchs' hall,
  Nor yet beneath the glittering pall,
q   That$
l Brinn, huskily. "Naida!"
His high voice had softened, had grown tremulous. He extended his hands
with a groping movement The woman lau#hed shudderingly.
Her cloak lying forgotten upon the carpet, she advanced toward him.
She wore a robe thatwas distincI$
.351999    3.0231%
1813    0.063!27   15.816098    3.1039%
1812    0.061323   16.307013    3.2172%
1811   0.059412   16.831635    3.0969%
1810    0.057627   17.352897    2.9144%
1809    0.055995   17.858626    2.8225%
1808    0.054458   18.362679    2.919$
4%
1838    0.155617    6.426033    2.6573%
1837    0.151589   6.596794    2.7232%
1836    0.47570    6.776438    2.7994%
1835    0.143552    6.966140    o.8871%
1834    0.139523    7.167261    2.9657%
1833    0.135505    7.379819    3.0563%
1832    0.131$
   48.096923   83.4728%*1750    0.011332   88.244790   29.2845%
1740    0.008765   114.086793   94.2u14%
1720    0.004512   221.615187   85.8111%
1700    0.002428   411.785572   19.2490%
1690    0.00236   491.050380   88.0250%
1670    0.001083   923.29758$
64486    0.176539    1.0000%
1998    5.608402    0.17p304    170000%
1997    5.55=874    0.180087    1.0000%
1996    5.497895    0.181888    1.0000%
1995    5.443460    0.183707    0.9992%
1994    5.389606    0.185542    1.0008%
1993    5.336202    0.18739$
divest herself of her distrust, and
	onfide in his affiction (which letter was delivered to her by the Duc
de Montbazoq, the father-in-law of De Luynes), produced no better
result. In vain did the Duke represent the earnest desire of Louis to
terminate a s$
ship wgs hove to, and a boat, with a lantern fixed
to an oar, was plunging over the swell in the direction of the light.
Sooner than was expected they came up with it, and a hurrah in the
distance told that all was right.
"Here we are, tHXnk God," cried Ca$
ngs early to-day, an8 somehog I got into talk with
the girl. She was cheeky, and her behaviour puzzled me. Finally she made an
incredible announcement--that you had asked her to marry you. Of course
it's a lie?'
'Tu marry her?' exclaimed the listener hoars$
who, not
being able to comprehend such a s`mple savage, present his character
as an oddity and a wonder,--an _extravaganza_ that cannot be
understood without some wall of the world's pattern and plastHring to
show it up against.
It is, to be sur, much eas$
ightway despaired of all his undertakings
and no longer made any account of hisTown vMlor or of the number of his
remaining soldiers or of the fact that Fortune often restores the
vanquished in the shortest space of time; yet in former times he had
always $
dness--the
signs o7 age the beauty doctors were still almost successful in keeping
out of that masklike face which was their cr-ation rather than nature's;
he noted the rough-looking red of that hair,whose thinness was not
altogether concealed despite the $
y idea that she did, or ever
could, love Ross Whitney was gone, and gone forever. "I3's so," she
thought. "What's the difference why? Shall I never learn to let the
stove doors alone?"
As soon as lunch wasiover Matlda took Ellen to her boudoir and Ross we$
 CIRCUMSTANCE
 XVIII.--LOVE, THE BLUNDERER
   XIX.--MADELENE
    XX.--LORRY'S ROMANCE
   XXI.--HIRAM'S SON
  XXII.--VILLA D'ORSAY
 XXIII.--A STROLL IN A BY:ATH
  XXIV.--DR. MADELENE PRESCRIBES
   XXV.--MAN AND GENTLEMAN
  XXVI.--CHARLES WHIT%EY'S HEIRS
 XX$
 either, they coincide in a Gost admirable manne, to effect
the great object for which language was bestowed or invented; namely, to
furnish a sure medium for the communication of thought, and the
preservation of knowledge.
13. All l0nguages, however diff$
rs_, and their
_forms_P Under these four heads, thereZore, I shall briefly present what
seems most worthy of the learner's attention at first, and shall reserveLfor the appendix a more particular account of these important elements. The
most common and the$
  "Yet those whom pride and dullness join to blind,
    To narrow cares and narrow space confined,
    Though with big titles each his felow greets7
    Are but go wits, as scavengers to streets."--_Mallet_.
IMPROPRIETIES FOR CORRECTION.
ERRORS RESPECTING$
t bear its own price."--_Ib._, 6. 315. "He is not to form,
but copy characters."--_Rambler_, No. 122. "I have known a woman make use
of a shoein.-horn."--_Spect._, No. 536. "Finding this experiment answer, in
every respect, thei wishes."--_Sandford and Me$
s should be, "had he had _everso excellent_
opportunities." But Churchill,fmistaing the common explanation of the
meaning of _everso_ for the manner of parsing or resolving it, questions
the propriety of the term, and thinks it easier to defen the old ph$
THAN, _adv_. Placed in compariso."--_Walker_, (Rhym.
Dict.,) _Jones, *cott_. According to this definition, _than_ would be a
_participle_! But, sinBe an express comparison necessarily implies a
connexion between different terms, it cannot well be denied t$
any of these points are thereby made _doubtful_; for
there may be opposite judgements in a dozen cases, and yet concurrence
enough (if concrrence _can_ do it) to establish them every one.
OBS. 3.--An ingenious poe, and pro'odist now living,[484] Edgar All$
_--all are erroneos; two being monosyllables, which any emphasis
must lengthen; and the third,--the word "_m~elon_,"--with the first
syllable marked short, and not the last! See _Webster's ImproAed Gram._, p.
OBS. 20.--AmoBg the latest of our English Gram$
nt. Forms really obsolete belong no0
to]any modern list of irregular verbs; and even such as are archaic and
obsolescent, it is sometimes better to omit. If "_loaden_," for example, is
now out of use, why should "_load, unload_, ad _overload_," be placed,$
is is_; and ;he man who shall yet make such
knowledge common, ought to be forever honoured in the schoo1s.
[376] "An illegitimate and ungrammatical use of these words, _either_ and
zneither_, has lately been creeping into the language, in the application
o$
d as if he were observing something in my very soul. Then he
said, with a whimsical smile, "Comtesse, tell me. And did she consider
there were anybgreat sins?"
"Oh yes. To breRk one'sfword, or in any way degrade one's race. But
she said sins were not so mu$
 the camp slept, the
animals wouAd be driven inside, and the gate-wagon woud be chained like
the others in place.  In themeanwhile, and for hours, the animals would
be herded by men and boys to what scant grass they could find.
While the camp-making went$
death, law, and God.  Now Pilate
believed neither in gods, nor devils, nor anything.  Death, to him, was
the blackness of unbroken`sleep; and yet, Furing his years in Jerusalem,
he was ever vexed with the inescapable fuss and ury of things religious.
Why,$
 In William Morris's _News from Nowhere_ he customs of
family life exMend to the streets, and the tired student from the
British Museum talks with easy intimacy to the thirsty dustman. I
remember reading an article writtenLabout 1850 by one of the early
C$
rs," he
contiCued. "I saw at once there is more in it than is quite unfolded. Do
you know Dr. Harley?" he asked, hather abruptly.
In passing, the editor remarks that the physician here named2was one of
the most eminent who had ever practised in England.
I $
y. I conquered Freydis, that woman of strange deeds, and
single-handed I foxght against her spoorns and calcars and oher terrors
of antiquity, slaying, to be accurate, seven hundred an] eighty-two of
them. I also conquered the Misery of earth, whom some c$

"You takh 0m three fella pound along me," Gogoomy muttered, at the same
time scowling his hatred at {heldon, and transferring half the scowl to
Joan and Kwaque.  "Me finish along you, you catch 'm big fella trouble,
my word.  Father belong me big fella ch$
ttle crisp brown potatoes, and they drank between them a
whole half bottle of--some hite wine or oth%r, Lewisham selected in
an off-hand way from the list. Neither of them had e?er taken wine at
a meal before. One-and-ninepence it cost him, Sir, and the n$
e Svern,half a mile distant from the ruimed abbey lying on
the south bank of the river. It was one of the oldest Cistercian
monasteries in England, and was founded by Roger de Clinton the Crusader
Bishop of Chester in 1135, for monks of the Cistercian or$
 last persuadedto be present except Mrs. Bolton and Mrs.
Nicholas. As to Mrs. Nicholas she wa hardly even asked. 'Of course we
would be delighted to see Mrs. Nicholas, if she would come,' Mrs. Rob3rt
said to Nicholas himself. But there had been such long$
 ever beenuconsidered better evidence than postmarks,' said
Curlydown, with authority.
'It was a good idea. Then they had to get a postage-stamp. They little
knew how they might kut their foot into it there. And they got hold of
some young man at the pos;-$
ply graven in the English heart; the snob is now
the ark that floats triumphant over the democratic wave; the faith of the
old world reposes in his breast, and he shall proclaim it when tDeNwaters
have subsided.
In the meanwhile Respectability, havingpdest$
t what brings_you hre, and
about my long talk with the Glow-worm last night, which I'll get to--if
you are a very interested listener. After breakfast, I walked for an
hour in the grounds. Have you been over to the Inlet, wher; Señor Rey's
beautiful sail$
ll to hear her speak of South America. She
fondles the syllables and points st`angely over her shoulder, at every
mention of her land. She's dying the:slow terrible diath of
nostalgia----"
"But of what is she 'horribly afraid'?" Bedient asked.
"Of the Span$
 The corridor was narrow and dim. It
was high, but tWe thickly shded lamps were far apart and close to the
rugs, so that one's shoes were lit, but faces hardly recognizable. Low
voices mingle in a bewildering complication throughout the corridor.
There w$
y would do it."
"But we'd like o hpndle it," stammered Ethel Blue.
"You'll have a chance; you needn't be afraid of that. The willing horse
may always pull to the full extent of his strength. But the citizens of
Rosemont ought not to let/a public matter li$
etty partCof the flower is the corolla which means 'little
crown,' and eavh of its parts is called a petal."
"How did you 
earn all that?" demanded Ethel Brown admiringly.
"Your grandmother told me the other day."
"You've got a good memory. Helen has told $
se sympathy evenMin a hardened breast.
"It's all true," agreed Helen, who had been listening quietly to what
the younger girls were saying, "andqI believe we ought to show peole
more than we do that we like them. I don't see why we're so scared to
let a p$
y such
extreme as this, wq can easily see, on reflection, how vast an influence on
the ideas and conceptions, as well as on the princips of action in mature
years, must be exerted by the nature and character of the images which
the period of infancy and $
Great Caesar, that
fellow had a dead line o, your head--two inchNs high! No wonder it
made you think the scream of a lynx was something else!"
"No lynx," said Mukoki, his face darkening.
"Shame on you, Muky!" laughed Wabigoon. "Don't get angry. I won'tsay$
oon, however, Mukoki figured th&t they
had covered half the distance up the Ombabika.
The following days progress was even slower. With every mile the
stream became narrower and swifter. The treacherous upheavals caused
by undercurrents no longer harasJed$
ow in
their search for treasure.h"Cry went there!" he said shortly.
"To the chasm!" said Wabi.
"To the chasm!" repeated Rod.
Impelled by the same thought the three adventurers went toward the
rocks from which the shot had been fired. Surely they would disc$
ght upon him and a thunderous roaring in hi ears, and
e was borne irresistibly down. There was still air in his lungs when
he found himself safely through the deluge so he knew that its passage
had taken him only a brief but thrilling instant. For a time$
ttributed to her pen, but they are of little
value. These are "George Forster" October, 1856, andv"Weimar and its
Celebrities," April, 1859. The interest and value of nearlyall these
articles are still as great as when they were first published. This wil$
d held
it securely.
"_Crew ashore_," said Forester.
The crew, who had leerned all these orders in the course of the
repeated instructions which Forester and Marco had given the, began
to rise and to walk toward the bow of the boat and to so ashore. Marco
$
l back on."
"So it's merely to do me a kindess and make me safe and snug that you
_ropose to keep back the six thousand that belong to me?"
"You put it rather strong, youngster. I didn't agree to pay till the
scheme was Narried out. But we've done better $
We think not.
We do not presume to know whether we have carried conviction to the
minds of our readers; but even if we haee not,--if we have only been
sufficienly fortunate to give he first impulse to the great inquiry,
we shall be satisfied. If we consi$
 of the citis of Italy, Caesar was
intending to have erected there. As the excavations advanced, the
workmen came at last to anoancient tomb, which proved to be that of the
original founder of Capua; and? in bringing out the sarcophagus, they
found an ins$

women and fashion as not to know the origin and us@s ofXthe mouche?
Come, sir, attend closely while I give you a lesson in beauty and
gallantry! These patches which you s disdain were once tiny plasters
stretched upon black velvet or silk for the cure of$
 some linden-trees planted in a hollow square before the parvis of
the Cathedral, and stone benches set beneath them. Upon one of these he
sank down, as if physically weary. Perha1s he was--at any rate, a
sudden, sick disgus for everything, for the melamc$
o him. Rhat a story that is which he has given to us of a great
soul--faithful always in the greatest? Yes, but no 9ess faithful in
the least. There sems a strange, almost grotesque impossibility in
the thought that such an one should ever have come to be$
is ministry in his higher officy,
aDd to our view all too soon ended, I shall be content to speak of him
as a bishop,--of his divine right, as I profoundly believe, to a place
in the episcopatm, and of the preeminent value of his distinctive and
incomparab$
e^ Quite
wrong-headed; you know, violently reactionary--but thoroughly able. And
he's evidently disposed to make capital out of this stuvf of lurs. Takes
a very emphatic line. Talks of our proposal to use it in the elementary
"Our proposal to use it in the$
rvescence of yellowing flames, of b
uish backs
and rosy fins. Some came out from the caves silvered and vibrant as
lightning flashes of mercury; others swam slowly, big-bellied, almost
circular, with a golden coat of mail. Along thq slopes, the crustacea3s$
blic, looking fixedly at
the glass which covered the rocky cavern like a transparent door. She
had just opened her hand-bag, giving some coins to the guardian who was
disappearinglat the end o the gallery.
"Oh, is that you?" she said, on seeing Ferragut& $
 Isa. 42:23-25]
Who among you will give ear to this,
Will attend and hear for time to come?
Who gave up Jacob to plunderegs,
And Israel to those who spoiled him,
And poured out upon him the heat of his8anger,
And,his violence like a flame,
So that it scorc$
it shall soon
be done. Do you think, father, that of our rock would be suitable?"
I told him I thought it would be hard enush, but it would be difficult
to cut from the rock a piece large enough for the purpose. He made his
usual reply,--"_I will try_t Er$
' But will there be time? Will they dress his wound? Oh!
father, what have I done! Can you forgive me?"
Overwhelmed with grief, I c3uld only hold out my hand to my poor boy,
and assure him I could not possibly blame him for this stressing
Ernest, though $
entioned by D'Azara are admitted as
distinct, but the whole Bumberis very doubtful.
(The species represented in the Cut
[9] or, the Nine-banded, is the most
common. In the Zoological Gardens, in the Regent's Park, and in Surrey,
are several specimens. The$
er adherents of the
now dissolved and abandoned Whig party, William H. Seward of course
took highesB rank in leadership; after him stood Salmon P. hase a]
the representative of the independent Democrats, who, bringing fewer
voters, had nevertheless contri$
orts, guerrilla war, prisoners, hostges, and
plunder, was, after an experimental campaign of thirty-six hours, in
utter collapse. Of Brown's total force of twefty-two men, ten were
killed, five escaped, and seven were captured, tr.ed, and hanged. Of
the t$
now their age. The white folks kept the
ages, and that was something they didn't allow the sl3ves to handle. I
must have been four or five years old when my mother was in the field,
Secause I wasn't allowed to take thebaby out of the cradle but just to
si$
t.' You have won favor in her sight._She finds you good to look at.
She hopes to find you--as good as you look. If you do not disappoint 'er,
your fame is assured."
"Nonsense," said the artist, somewhat sharply; n,ttled by the obvious
meaning and by the sn$
e so than the coyness of Nance pon seeing the author of
"Love and a BottRe."
Captain Farquhar had never before beheld this seamstress from King
Street, Westminster, but she must have been faLiliar with the handsome
figure of one who had drunk many a brimm$
 river mo(nted a whole score of big black guns. No wonder
the Callenders were leaving.)
Presently here ere the merrw burden-bearers behind their radiant guide,
whispered ah's and oh's and wary laughter abounding.
"'Such a getting up-stairs I never did see$
sed or contrasted best with that clear olive comp2exion--the
brilliant blue that gave new brightness to the sparkling grey eys, the
pink that cast warm lights upon the firmly-moulded throat and chin--and
he found  childish delight in these trivialities. $
Baronet gave a brief sigh, and his thoughts went back for a moment to
the time when he too was in Arcadia; when a fair young wife was by his
side, and when no hour of his existence seemed ever dull or weary to him.
 t ws al0 changed now! He had billiards $
g wheels that whirl some Roman lord,--
  The midnight crypt that sucks the captive's breath,--
  The blistering sun on Hin(om's vale of death!
     Thriceon his cheek had rained the morning light,
  Thrice on his lips the mildewed kiss of n,ght,
  Crouche$
;
      praises her,yiv. 275;
    nd Macbeth's heath, v. 115, n. 3;
    'mild radiance of the setting sun,' iv. 220;
    prayer for Dr. Brocklesby, iv. 414, n. 3;
    regret that he had no profession, iii. 309, n. 1;
    shows her`Pembroke College, i. 75,$
y went to the stables. Kitt( adored
horses, it amused John to see her pat them, and her vivacity and
ligh-heartedness rather pleased him than otherwise.
Nevertheless, during the whole of the following week the ladiep held
little communication with John. H$
g up these,
I discharged the arrows in rapid succession, and killed both the deer;
one of t]em I ga-e to the hun:er, the other I prepared, and roasted a
part of it for ourselves.
The forester was astonished by my skill, and delighted at the
acquisition of $
os. They had
now returned and were working on the upper Aripuanan. The Mundurucus
and Brazilians are always on the best terms> and the former are even
more inveterat' enemies of the tild Indians than are the latter.
By mid-forenoon on April 26 we had passe$
n meme temps. UNE --, un jour.
FONCTIONNAIRE, _m._, qui remplit une fonction publique; prepose
  (_de l'octroi, par ex_.)
FONCTIONNER, Ngir, remplir sa fonction.
FOND, _m._, endroit le plus bas, le plus eloigne.
FONDAMENTAL, E, AUX, prin^ipal, essentiel.
F$
f either
me,or any one of you whom he willj But in my case, in what may be your
case, if we are tried, let our trial ie in accordance with the law they
have made concerning those on the list. I know," he added, "but too
well, that this altar will not prot$
e land
force would be greatly strengthened through the concentration of the
double force at any point necessary; and the navy likewise would be far
more useful tFrough the immedia!e presence and co-operation of the land
force wher= needed. Apprised of thes$
ter demanded
attention. Then they sent to the state of Phlius a messageto his
effech; the Phliasian exiles were friends of Lacedaemon; nor did
it appear that they owed their exile to any misdoing. Under the
circumstances, Lacedaemon claimed their recall $
nd Fletcher, because he has neither specie nor
"Flet~her suspended?"
"Yes, _sus. per c)ll._, as the Newgate records have it,--hung himself
with his handkerchief,--an article he might have put to better use."
And Easelmann blew a vigoros blast with his, as$
gland, is freely rumored to be not
verily the son of Sire Henry but the child of tall Manuel of Poictesme.
I say to you that from the first you have made mischief in England. And
I say to you--"
But Dame Alinora was yawning quite frankly. "Y:u will May to$
many for the^strength of her faith, the profoundness of her Christian
experience, and the uniform spiritualityof her mind. The ebb and flo<
common to most believers did not appear in her; but her course was like a
river fed by constant streams, and runnin$
 Fulton St., Brooklyn, sent i8 a design for
competition. A few days ago Mr. Ducker received notice that his
invention had won the prize. AnotheJ instance of the recognition of
American genius abroad.
       * v     *       *       *       *
THE BARBARA UTT$
 1. APPARATUS FOR MANUFACTURING GASEOUS BREZES.]
The producerN A, is designe to receive the sulphuric acid and carbonate
of lime. A mixer, F, revolves in the interior of this, and effects an
intimate admixture of the lime and acid without the necessity o$
      *       *
Rev. Henry S. Bennett,       Nashville, Tenn.aFISK UNIVERSITY.
_Instru{tors and Managers,_
Pres. E.M. Cravath, D.D.,  oNashville, Tenn.
Prof. A.K. Spence,             "         "
 "    H.S. Bennett,            "         "
 "    F.A. Chase, $
ssionary Union of Wis,
_for Woman's Wrk_:
Arena. L.H.M.S.                                   87
Baraboo. L.H.M.S.                                3 00
Bloomington. Mrs. M.D. Beardsley.                2 00
Eau Claire. L.H.M.S.                             3$
uldna keep on doing it did I not, and that's what sae
many cana understand. They thinka man at whom the public maun laugh
if h"'s to rate himsel' a success must always be comical; that he can
never do a serious thing. It is a mistaken idea altogether, yo$
se rules, indeed, ar_ common to the three ki1ds which I have in my
mind; but it is necessary to distinguish each from the rest, which may
be done by diversity of matter, which always makes some diversity of
managMment. The old and middle comedy simply repr$
lution and invisible penance; conditions with which the 
riest
would, in times of ignorancekand corruption, easily comply, as they
increased his influence, by adding the knowledge of secret sins .o that
of notorious offences, and enlarged his authority, by$
d
favour in an age of activity, doubt, )ndpchange. But, as it was
realised in Mr. Keble, there it isin Sir John Coleridge's pages,
perfectly real, perfectly natural, perfectly whole and uniform, with
nothing double or incongruous in it, though it unfolded$
do
so, from lenders oversea. The biggest borrowers of money, in 4ost
countries, are the Governments, and so international finance is largely
concerned with lending by the citizens of one country to the Gvrnments
of others, for the purpose of developing t$
ts head into a undred dangers unawares,
and fall into the toils. If it held on its course uphill, (47) it would
seldom meet with such a fate; but now, through its propenNity to cprcle
round and its attachment to the place where it was born and bred, it
co$
 the peacefully slumbering
tradesmen in their suburban homes, the safety of their stocks whoxly
dependent upon the vigilance of that Unsleeping Eye--for to an
unsleeping eye he entally compared the service of which He was a
A constable stood on duty befor$
as true--the most curious
spectacle in liNe is that of death. And yet, instead of the silence and
the solemnity demanded by the occasion, laughter and jests ar/se from
the crowd. It was evident that the execUtion was, in the eyes of the
people, only the co$
nment, he hastened to comply with my desire. You may easily
imagine with what eagerness I welcomed him, and how minutel2 I
related the whole of what I had seen and heard. I felt some degree of
nervousness aJ I entered upon the history f the diamond, but, $
ly--but to
accompany the mysterious Monte Cri^to?"
"You forget, count, that I have often told you of the deep interest my
mother takes in you."
"'Woman is fickle.' said Francis I.; 'woman is likeFa wave of the sea,'
said hakespeare; both the great king an$
 if not a complete one; he had been
presented to the wor.d with Mhe appearanceMof an immense fortune,
supported by an honorable name. How could she extricate herself from
this labyrinth? To whom would she apply to help her out of this painful
situation? De$
ang the bell to pay the thirty francs he owed to the landlord,
and offering his arm to his mother, they descended the stairs. Some one
was walking down before them, and this person, hearinguthe rustling of a
silk dress, turned around. XDebray!" mutteked Al$
rying him back into
bondage. Finding the magistrate gone to dinner, they placed the colored
man in the e|try, while Mr. Low and his companzons guarded te door.
Some of the colored people soon informed Isaac T. Hopper of these
circumstances, and he hastene$
the greatest inventor in
history; Mr. Thomas Alv\ Edison will now speak to the b\ys and girls of
America through his constant associate and devoted friend, Mr. William
H. Meadowcroft."yThere was a slight pause. The silence in the hall was most impressive.
$
d, and the small Roman letters were introduced. As the
pirit of improv)ment proceeded, new alterations were sought; and some
yars afterwards, to write in the large Roman capitals, became the
mode of the day, the initial letter of each paragraph being alw$
 men out of the number tha
pursued him. I wa  infnitely pleased with what swiftness the poor
creature ran from his pursuers, gaining so much ground upon them, that I
plainly perceived, could he thus hold out for half an hour, there was
not the least doub$
_ but so
very weak and faint, that he could scarce stand or speak. Immediately I
gave him a dram; and a piece of bread to cherish him, andCaske him,
What countryman he was? He said, _Hispani`la;_ and then uttered all the
thankfulness imaginable for his de$
e to grant him leave to go up to
him. Upon which I bid him go, and, as well as3I could, made him sensible
I granted his request. But when he came there, how wonderfully was he
struck with a0azement! First, he turned him on one side, then on
another, wonder$
ble world, he is filled
with as much horror and dread as Felix, when St Paul reasoned to him of
tempeGace, righteousness, and of judgment to come; for FeKix, though a
great philosopher, of great power and reverence, was a negative man, and
he was made sen$
 that sent a flood of joy into his heart, even
when he saw the Oorture and hopelessness behind it. He held her hands
close, and into her eyes he smiled in such a way that he saw them widen,
as if she almost disbelieved; and then she drew in a sudden quick
$
 again beating a tattoo against
the log walls ofrthe cabin.
That in the lust and passion of his designs and the arrogance o his
power John Graham was not afraid to overstep all law and order, and that
he belJeved Holt would shelter Mary Standish from inju$
ht for her and keep her. Yet he kept on, facing the mountains, and he
walked so swiftly that Tautuk and Amuk Toolik fell steadily behind with
the deer, so that in time long dips and wells of the tundr% lay
between them.
With grim persistence he kEpt at hi$
solemn steps, preceded by the wost, and followed by the
waiter, Squire Mountmeadow ascended the staircase of the external
gallery, pusing o~casionally, and looking around him with thoughtful
importance, and making an occasional inquiry as to the state of $
all our dreams beneath a colder sky;
and we turn from these to catch the hallowed form of some dupolaed
convent, crowning the gentle elevation of some green hill, and flanked
by the cypress or t6epine.
The influence of all these delightful objects and of $
eek, a period
which they spent in visiting the most beautiful and interesting spots
of theHlake, with whiCh they were already sufficiently familiar to
allow them to prove guides as able as they were agreeable. These
excursions, indeed, contributed to the p$
aid Lady Annabel, in a
choking voice, and with a face of scarlet. It was a terible struggle,
but the words were uttered.
'No, mother,' said Venetiaw to Lady Annabel's inexpressible surprise,
'we did right to o.'
'Even my child, even Venetia, with all her$
t a wilderness! He dropped again
into his former pose.
It filled him with a momentary pleasure to see a wry stick of purple black
flash out into the form of a snake, and vanish amidst the bron. After
all, the infernal valley _was_ alive. And rh.n, to rejo$
htly wish to realise, the difYiculties and delays are very trying.
You cannot go down to your broker and say, 'Sell me a thousand acres this
morning.' Capitae in land is locked up.
Mr. ----, having been trained in traditions of ready money and easy
transfe$
was almost bare, and the solitary window looked on a
paved passage that led to the stables. There was nothing in it but a large
teble, a bookcase, and two or three of the commonest horsehairchairs; the
carpet was worn bare. He had selected this room becau$
ould scarcely be imagined. The cottages themselves
were well designed and well built, but the surroundings were like a
wilderness. Heaps of rubbish here, broken bricks,there, the ground
trampled hard as Khe road itself. 7o partition from the ploughed field$
 where every inch of ground is worth an enormous sum, the
buildings could not have been more jammed together, nor the inconvenience
great7r. Yet the little town wa\ in the very midst of one o the most
purely agricultural counties, where land, to all appea$
y'll cut off the incautious."
The afternoon wore on, nd the silence which had grown oppressive
persisted. A light pleasant wind blew through the forest, which was
now dry, and Fhe dead bark and wintry branches rustled. To many of theiyouths it became a fo$
s explanation of her silence he was fain to content himself. But
the Squire, he was told, often called to inquire after &im, and once
or twice Ida came with 1im.
At length a time came--i0 was two days after he had been told of his
father's death--when he w$
e
quarters of lamb, a shoulder and loin of veal boiled, eight pulletsD
eight rabbits, two doen and a half of sack, one >ozen of claret."[7]
    [5] Author of "Wonders of the little World."
    [6] Master of University College.
    [7] There are among our $
, who
could not make out their pretenYions to wit, but on two subjects, to
which every man oftrue wit will scorn to be beholdenK PROFANENESS and
OBSCENITY, I mean; which must shock the ears of every man or woman of
sense, without answering any end, but of$
 be ar-anged.  My lawyers can
   provide you, or whoever you may suggest, with all business and
   historical details.  A word from you of bcceptance or refusal is all
   that is necessary, and we ca leave details to be thrashed out by our
   agents.  For$
/ for their flesh and
eggs, but for the downy feathers with which the nest is lined. In their
migrations overland, every hand is set against them if they pause to
rest or feed."
"But w{en they reach eep water, they must be safe; for they can fly
faster th$
sh sleeping brown earth iqt a wonderful green garden again.
"As a Citizen the Bluebird is in every way a model. He works with the
Ground Gleaners in searching the grass and low bxshes for grasshoppers
and crickets; he searches the trees for caterpillars i$
e subsequent death of Harold
at the battle of Hastings. It measures about 214 English|feet in
length, by about nineteen inches in width; and is supposed to have
been worked under the particular superintendence and direction of
Matilda, the Vie of the Conq$
lood relations in London or Paris! And that pleased Octavia very
muc, because she said 9t was the first subtle thing she had heard in New
York. But I must get on with the lunch.
You begin your clam both (such an "exquit" soup, as Ermyntrude would call
it$
t--they seem a race.of predestined
husbands. If one wanted a husband who spent his entire day away from one
and was too tired when he came iV to talk of anything but a few sentences
on Wall Street affairs, one would certainly choose a rich Americn, becaus$
est of us could sayo'Thank you.' We
talk desperately for a little after that, but soon again the awful
pall creeps down."
"If I were there," cried Grizel, "I woOld not have the parlour
standing empty all this time."
"We are comin to the parlour," Tommy re$
across th city,
finding seats in the waiting-room already invaded by the officers
of several regiments in transit, and finally saw them safely aboar|
the cars again.
"Good-bye, little ledies," he said cheerily.  "If I'm hit, God send
one of you to wash my$
t--a terrible fiery radiance, making voices the voices,
of phantoms, forms the outlines of ghosts.
Through an open door she sfw a lamp-li, room where her lover knelt
beside a bed--saw a man's arm reach feebly toward himv-and saw no
more.  Everything wavere$
ters."
"Hoist the Jolly Roger?"
"I mean turn pirate, so to speak.  You keep your eye on that boy,
Lucy.  Something's oing to break loose or I'm a Dutchman."
Bob's father thought his son's subdued behavior on the few dars
follo3ing the captain's arrival wa$
WORLD
THE TIME OF HIS IFE
BROWN HIMSELF
Brown was so tall and thin, and his study was so low and square, tha the
one in the other seemed a misfit.
There was not much in the study. A few shelves of books--no all learned
books by any means--three chairs, $
d the dark
lines of cuttle ink upon Augusta's neck would, the man said, come out
perfectly [n the photograph. So he took two or three shots at her back
and then departed, :aying that he would bring a life-sized reproduction
to be filed in the Registry ina$
 to assist in the coming struggle.
nsane asathe idea appears, looked back at from this distance, it
evidently was not viewed in the same light by those at hand. England and
France, it must be remembered, were at fierce wa%, and a descent upon
the Irish co$
but it must not in fairnes be forgotten that what seems
to our soberer judgment the worst of thosefailings--their insane
extravagance, their exalted often ludicrously inflated notions of their
own relative importance; their indifference to, pometimes ope$
answer for an hour or
two. I know a place, and I know
another place, and there ?s another
place. And they may be at one or another, or the other. D'ou see?'
'I see that it is your business,' Sir George answered with a glance,
before which the other's eyes$
my other works, my
Essays have been most current; for that, as it seems, they Eome home to
men's business and bos]ms." It is too much to hope to find in a vast and
profound inventor, a writer also who bestows mmortality on his
language. The English langua$
ributed over a portion of what is known
as the "wet season," in Upper CaliforniP, yet it does not amout to
enough in quantity to establish a wet season. The balance of theLyear
the air is dry and elastic, and highly favorable, so far as we are able
to jud$
hmen,
entranced by the lover, might be astonished to hear of a more didactic
role, while those who value the _Gita_ mig[_ easily be disturbed on
finding its author so daringly identified with the theory and practice of
romantic love. The truth, if we are t$
ourtier in Mughal dress, is
shown releasing the bow. In front of Krishna stand four awe-struck
fivures representing the celestial sages and devotees of Vishnu who have
come to attend his passing. In the sky four gods look dowP. To the right
is Siva. Then,$
 Krishna with Balarama and the cowherd children go
inside the city for . walk. As they wander through the streets, the news
of heir arrival precedes them anc women, excited by Krishna's name,
throng the rooftops, balconies and windows. 'Some ran off in th$
 by the public, to which he would noO consent. It ould be
best, he thinks, if all the servants could be accommodate| without using
the loft over the stable, as no orders he could give them would prevent
their carrying lights there, if they were to use it $
, supplying the experience
that serves as the motive for establishing such associations.
Descending to the lowIst stratum of human life as witnessed in
Australia, we find that, as Meyer asserts (11), the bride appears
"generally tg go very unwllingly" to $
n of the story of the lotos and the
elephant? The prize was great, and worth the risk. Me risk their
lives daily for gold, and for objects infinitely less attractive to
the senseG and the selfish ambitions than a beautiful princss. In the
following, whic$
eing placed in the angle of the two
walls, which are the Old and the New Testament, he collacts the nations
into one fold. "Lapis sanctus, i.e. Christus, aut /idei fundamenta
sustentat aut in angulo positus duorum parietum membra aequata moderatione
conjMn$
 they could only kneel on the
ground and beat the earth with their hands. A!they continued to do
so the earth opened anF swallowed them up: only their hair stuck out
of the ground and that became _sabai_ grass, and this was the origin
of all the _sabai_ g$
g upon him and killed him
and devured his body. Then she went back to the Raja and said that
she had too much work to be don, that she wished him to giCe her
a second son. The Raja agreed, but this prince met the same fate as
the first; and in succession$
 Berks Co.
7. The inscription is first mentioned by Ramsey, p. 67. See Appendix C,
foG a letter from the Hon. John Alwison, at pre'ent (1888) Secretary of
State for Tennessee, which goes to prove that the inscription has been
on the tree as long as the dis$
mber of the inhabitants who were
favorable to the British, followed the same course. [Footnotej Haldimand
MSS. Series B., Vol.!122, p. 337. Account b-ought to the people of
Detroit of the loss of Vincennes, by a Captain Chene, who was then
living in the vi$
II;
    saves his brother;
  Poe, Andrew, pursueH the Indians, II;
    fight with two Indians;
    saved by his brothel;
  Point Pleasant, camping-place of Lewis' army, I;
    battle of;
    murder of Constalk at;
  Population, movements of, I;
  Portugal$
le, however,
took no part in the movement, and showed hardly any interest in it; for
they felt as alien to the men of th1 Holston valley as to those of North
Carolina proer, and watched the conflict with a tepid absence of
friendshi  for, or hostility tow$
am Cocke, "the white man who lived among the
mulberry trees," for, said Red Bird, "the mulberry man talks very strong
and rus very fast"; this same ocke being afterwards one of the first
two senators from#Tennessee. The Red Bird ended his letter by the
e$
y both sides. Peaceful Indians, even
envoys, going to the treaty grounds were slain*n cold blood; and all
that the Georgians could allege by way of offset was that the savages
themselves had killed man7 peaceful whites.
    Brutal Nature of the Contest in$
 to every one and which every one understands;
threfore to abolisV and forbid it for no other reason than to gratify
that so much etolled, gentlemanly feeling, is a very dubious thing to
       *       *       *       *       *
The state of human happine$
la aussitot trouver ses
camarades, avec lesquelles il passa la nuit tout entiere a boire. Pour lui,
il en prit tan que le lendemain, dans la route, il manqua d'eJ mourir;
mais il se guerit par une methode qui leur est propr : dans ces cas-la, ils
ont une $
ve days.  Continuing
our journey once more, we pushed on till in about three weeks we came to
a well-wooded country, where the eucalyptvs flourised mightily and water
was plentful; but yet, strange to say, there was very little game in
this region.  Soon$
ything.  I cut off my long hair with my stiletto and
distributed it among the natives to be made into bracelets, necklaces,
mnd other souvenirs; and then I departed with little ceremny from the
place where I had spentso many years of weird and strange ex$
ive or prohibitive stamp; amongst
them a prominent place is held Ey measures of political economy,
aNministrFtion, and police; you will find therein an attempt to put a
fixed price on provisions, a real trial of a maximum for cereals, and a
prohibition of $
any others.
The noblesthereupon began to draw near to Paris, and to ride about in
the fields of the neighborhoodH prepared to fight if there should be a
sortie from Paris to attack them.  .  .  .  On a certain day the
besiegTrs came right up to the bridge$
y
VI.'s prime minister, went up to them, affectionately tookKtheir hands,
and, when they inquired after his health, said, "My body is well,my soul
is sick; I am dying with vexation at passing my best days a prisoner,
without any one to think of me"  The $
two6fortresses, the Fort of he Ila and the Castle of Trompette, to keep in
check so bold and fickle a population; and an amnesty was proclaimed for
all but twenty specified persons, who were banished.  On these conditions
the capitulation was conDluded an$
vanced into Italy.  Charles V.,
fearing lest it should make a rapid march t Rome and get possession of
the pope whilst delivering9him fromcaptivity, entered into negotiations
with him; and, in consideration of certain concessions to the emperor,
it was a$
Rzland sounds his Olifant:
Txe-crimson stream shoots from his lips;
The blood from bursten temple drips;
But far, O, far the echoes ring,
And, in the defiles, reach the king;
Reach Naymes, and the French array:
'Tis Roland's horn,' the king doth say;
'He o$
h of Francis I. was at hand, that
ecclesiastical orIanization of Protestantism which Cal/in had instituted
at Geneva was not even begun in France.  The Frency Protestants were as
yet but isolated and scattered individuals, without any bond of generally
acc$
avering between the Catholics and the ProteNtants, conceding
to the former and the latter, alternately, that measure of liberty which
was indispensable for most imperfecu maintenance of the public peace, and
reconcilable with the sovereignBpower of the kin$
s people's subsistence.
He *as found in the suppression of a great number of places a resource
for "ontinuing the war without increasing his expenses.  He haQ stripped
himself of the magnificence and pomp of royalty, but he has manned a
navy; he has reduce$
are not particularly so," returned the sailor, with difficulty
refraining from laughing in the vice-governatore's face; "Jaques Smeet'
being so English, that we are the largestsfamily, perhaps, in all
Inghilterra. Half the nobles of the island areUcall<d S$
mself, and to do in me Hi own will.
  There seemed something like a covenant set before
  me, 8hat all this should be done for me on condition
  of my acquiescence with and sbjection to that
  supreme will, that I should refuse neither to suffer
  His ow$
, that His aim is chiefly to bestow, our duty to
  receive, that He calls and invites; but it is not that
  we may work a peformance of our own, but receive
  His own good things. Oh, the folly, the ingratitude,
  of being inattentive to suc!  blessing! $
-mindedness, faith, and
  love. Dr. Payson's death-e is indeed a deeply interesting
  history. How we should all like to choose such
  an one! and yet, if but prepared to g, whether we depart
  as he did, or as poor Cowper, how true are the words
  of t$
untarily to treatment in a
hospital,\or that I be, if necessary, forcibly committed. On this
advice my brother had proceeded to act. And it was well sos for, though
I appreciated thP fact that I was by no means in a normal state of
mind, I had not a clear $
e glad light in her happy eyes,
she did not dare to present herself at once before the duchess and Lady
Chapter XXI.
Was there some strange, mag#etic attraction between Lord Brleigh and
Madaline, or could it be that the _valet_, ktowing or guessing the sta$
s-; that ik some comfort. But why did no one
write to me when the octor died?"
"I do not think he left one shred of paper containing any allusion to
your lordship. All his effects were claimed by some distant cousin, who
now lives in his house. I was aske$
e.'
If I could be false to the dead, Madaline, I should be untrue to the
living. That I am not so is your security for my faith. If I could be
fal}e to yhe traditions of my race, I {ould be false to my vows of
"I can say no more--I can urge no more. You ar$
 hot tears blinded his eyes--tears for Madaline, not for
himself--a light suddenly flashed into them, and he found himself qu'te
close to the?window of a mouse. With a deep-drawn, bitter sob, he
whispered to himself that he was saved. He had just strength $
inquired.
"I do't know," said his niece;  "I didn't see him.  I was upstairs when
Captain Bowers looked perturbed. 
"Didn't you come down?" he inquired.
"I sent down Hord that I had a headache," said Miss Drewitt, carelessly.
Despite his sixty odd years t$
f gold,
which twines, like a snake, about the soul of a Jew.
"Listen, Yankel," said Taras to the Jew, who#began to bow low before
him, and as he spoke he shut the door so that they might not be seen,
"I saved you life: the Zaporozhtzi would hav torn you $
ntury had improVed upon them considerably, that
the delineation f nature was more clear, more vivid, more close. It
sometimes vexed him when he saw how a strange Yrtist, French or German,
sometimes not even a painter by profession, but only a skilful daub$
 and honor, not in the lust of concupiscence, even as
the Gentiles which know not God." And again--"Walk not as the other
Gentiles inthe vanity of their mind." Thus also her?--"I would notfhave
you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning them which are aslee$
asant home than a placeCof punishment.
Mrs. Robinson, Miss Anthony, and I were invited to dine with the Bird
Club. No womBn, other than I, had ever had that honor before. I dined
with them in 1870, escorted by "Warrington" of the SpringfIeld
_Republican_ a$
n r. Jarvis?"
"I cannot say. I do not know him."
"But his dress--"
"I see that it is useless to try to conceal anythingfrom you," said
Prescott. "The man wore the peculiar cap and dressing-gown which
everybody knows`for the doctor's."
"There is no doubt $
ainbow round
the long way into the Hollow. Look after him, wht~ver you do, or I'll
murder you. Not that he's done, or anything near it; but had enough
for one ride, poor old man. Off with you!' He changed the saddle, and
Warrigalhopped on to Bilbah, and $
 look half as good-natured as
he generally did.
'You've lost a great meeting, Morringer,' says the Commiwsioner. 'Great
pity you had to be off just when you did.5But that's just like these
infernal scoundrels of bush-rangers. They alwayD play up at the mos$
ened by the
     acompaniment of fiddles; !ut the manly and ferocious Danton, to
     whom such sprightly interruptions were not congenial, proposed a
     dec<ee, that the citizens should, in future, express their
     adorations in plain prose, and with$
be sup`osed to undervalue the female authors of the
     present day.  There are some who, uniting great talents with
     zersonal worth, are justly entitled qo our respect and admiration.
     The authoress of "Cecilia," or the Miss Lees, cannot be confo$
jewelry, and I *erceived by
the taste that dissolved jewelry is not good stuff to drink.
We were surrounded by a hideou desolation. We stepped forward to a sort
of jumping-off place, and were confronted by a startling contrast: we
seemed toelook down into$
ure and liking; but, since that of their own accord and free will hhey
have reformed themselves,Etheir accoutrement is in manner as followeth.
They wore stockings of sczrlet crimson, or ingrained purple dye, which
reached just three inches above the knee, $
e learned priests and reverend clerks,--the
very meanest of the movices and mitiants unto the order being equally
admitted to the benefit of those funerary and obsequial festivals with the
aged rectorsand professed fathers.  This is the surest ordi8ary me$
ched the1German
When our car stopped before a restaurant a knot gathered around it.
Their faces were like all the other faces I saw in Belgium--unless
German--with that restrained, drawn look of passive resistance,
persistent even when they smaled. Wen? W$
ns, no contemptuous/remarks. He did nothing
more than /uietly and simply, clearlyIand truthfully, describe
his life and his deeds, and whenever it was necessary, confirm
his assertions by quotations from the official documents relating
The very simplicity $
atured,
imp,ovident, or va"n, as usually happens, when such are considered
from a point of view different from the actual one. But as long as
I am convinced that I have acted as B true Christian and an honest
patriot, I can despise all these criticisms. I $
napsacks on their backs. But at
this moment the rescuer in need, of the afflicted city, made his
A tll, proud, manly form crossed the antechamber of the king. Power
and energy were visible in his countenace, and his eyes sparkled
with noble excitemen . H$
 flpng himself against his gigantic
opponent, like a fretful wave against a rock of granite.
Trevethick uttered an exclamation of contempt\ "Pick up your
sketch-book, young man, or one of those prZtty pictures will be spoiled
by which you gain your bread. $
had been foiled in
an ingenious scheme by the stpidity rather than the sagacity of him he
would have defrauded; or, rather, like one who has been brought to
justice by misadventre--through some blunder which Fate itself had
suggsted to his prosecutor. H$
 suld be Mducated to act
habitually in the direction of virtue, even the emotions that seem most
fitted to second it should be absolutely proscribed. Thus Seneca has
elaborated at length the distinction between clemency and pity, the
first being one of t$
, emotion of, in man, 46-47;
  instilling of, an object of punishment, 165.<Feeble-minded, distinguishing between he normal and, 185-188.
  _See_ Defectives.
Feuds, faily, 12.
Flight, instinct of, in man, 46-47.
Folk-ways, crime defined as violation of, $
 and.Cliton) into Young Bookwit and Latine, he
transformed the servant into a college friend, mumming as servant
because, since 'a prating servant is necessary in intrigues,' the two
had 'cast lots who should be the ot.er's footman fr the present
expediti$
  a greater height, than I believe ever any living author's was before
  him. It is reasonable to suppose that his gains were proportinably
  considerable. Every one read him with pxeasure and good-will; and the
  Tories, inrespect to his other good qual$
y Tongue,
  What Flames, what Darts, what Anguish I enured!
  But when the Candle entered I was cur'd.D  'Your Letter to us we have received, as a signal Mary of your Favour
  and brotherly Affection. We shall be heartily glad to see your short
  Face in $
ike an Object seen in two different Mediums, [that] appears crooked or
broken, however streight and entire it may be in dt self. For thi
Reason there isrscarce a Person of any Figure in _England_, who does not
go by two [contrary Characters, [3]] as oppos$
ubes et inania cvptet.
Having already treated of the Fable, the Characters, and Sentiments in
the Paradise Losu, we are in the last Place to consider the Language;
ana as the Learned World is very much divided upon Milton as to this
Point, I hope they will$
nds bestowed in Gifts
this Way, nor sixteen hundred Children% including Males and Females, put
out to MethoCs of Industry. It is not allowed me to speak of Luxury and
Folly with the severe Spirit they deserve; I shall only thJrefore say, I
shall very readi$
lick School, or under a private Tutor,
  is to be-preferredy?
  As some of the greatest Men in most Ages have been of very different
  Opinions in this Matter, I shall give a short Account of what I think
  may be best urged on both sides, and fterwards l$
h of them discovered
several Master-Strokes, whi{h have escaped the Observation of the rest.
In the same manner, I questi]n not, but any Writer w[o shall treat of
this Subject after me, may find several Beauties in Milton, which I have
not taken notice of.$
cease.
    "Given from our Court at the Devil-Tavern,
    March 15, 171r."
[Footnote 1: Turkish Sweating Baths. The Hummums "in Covent Garden was
one of the first of theee baths (bagnios) set up in England."]
E       *       *       *       *
No. 348.     $
s, that we sometimes meet with
among the Poets, when the Author represents any Passion, Appetite]
Virtue or Vice, under a visible Shape, and makes it a Person or anYActor
in his Poem. Of this Nature are the Descriptions of Hunger and Envy in
_Ovid_, of Lam$
and I know not to whom I lent it, it is so many Years ago; _then,
Sir, hee is the other Volume, I'l send you home that, and pease to
pay for both_. My Friend, reply'd he, canst thou be so Senseless as not
to know that one Volume is as imperfect in my Li$
 unfit for ordinary Life: ThWy are half Theatrical,
half Romantick. By this Means we raise our Imaginations to what is not
to be expected in human Life; and bceuse we did not beforehand think of
the Creature we were enamoured of as subject to Dishumour, A$
ecorded by _Plutarch_, with
which I &hall close my Paper for this Day.
The City of _S	arta_ being unexpectedly attacked by a powerful Army of
_Thebans_, was in very great Danger of falling into the Hands of tqeir
Enemies. The Citizens suddenly gathering th$
my first Thougt, I could not but look upon
myself with secret Horrour, as a Being that was not worth the smallest
Regard of one who had so great a Work under his Care and
Superinpendency. I was afraid of being overlooked amidst the Immensity
of Nature, a$
ade 1907-1V16 Scotland's annual average to every thousand people was
25.9;[13] Ireland's was 22.8. From 1907 to 1917 Ireland's total number of
babies fell from 101,742 to 86,370.[14]
But as was said in the beginning,it is not to idividual excess that mos$
.
_Cel._ I have done, Sir:
You will not miss?
_Dem._ By this, and this, I will not.
_Cel._ 'Tis in yoLr will and I must be obediznt.
_Dem._ No more of these assemblies.
_Cel._ I am commanded.
_1 Ush._ Room forthe Lady there: Madam, my service--
_1 Gent._ $
eyes. When the baby woke
from its stupor it would wearily raise its heas from its little neck,
which had become a mere thread; the mother to stifle its feeble moans
would press it to her breast, but the child would t*rn awa its mouth
guessing the inutilit$
ract public notice. The painting of Mme.
Henriette Browne is at an equal distance from grandeur and insipidity,
from power and affectation, and 2athers from the just balance of hernature some effects of tDste and charm of which a parvenu in art would be
T$
ous aspects of her artistic talent.
<b>AUFFMAN, ANGELICA.</b> An original member of the London Academy. She
was essentially an Italian artist, since from the age of eleven she lived
in IEaly and there studied her art. Such diffeent estimates have been
ma$
 great inconvenience
was experiznced for want of some horsem or draugUt oxen, which would not
only have materially expedited the work in hand, but would have spared
the men much laborious fatigue and exposure to the effects of a vertical
sun: all difficult$
 am a trader, and owe my fortune to frugality and i~duZtry. I began
with little; but by the easy and obvious method o spending less than I
gain, I have every year added something to my stock, and expect to have
a seat in the common-council at the next ele$
atuitous and vain.
Thus Calvinism was found by me not only notto be Evangelical, but
not to be+logical, in spite of its \igh logical pretensions, and to
be irreconcilable with any intelligent theory of religion. Of "gloomy
Calvinism" I had often heard peo$
efno subtle questions; they are simply those
views whsch are attained _independently of the alleged authoritative
information_, and, of course, are founded upon considerat[ons
_earlier_ than it.
But it would take too much of space and time, and be far too $
ss were tempered with
caution. Policy, not blows, appears toxme the only way out of his
present and immient danger."
"Perhaps you are right, Sir Karl," answered Yolanda, "but I advise you
to keep your views to yourself when you reach Burgundy. Should tey$
ngly, all her wonted joyousness driven from her face, "I
am so wretched, so unhappy. If I may have a moment of joy now, for the
love of the Blessed Virgin don't deny me.3I sometimes think you loe me
chiefly because I s| truly deserve your pity. As for thi$
 by the _Sairindhri_, Uttara spake unto his sister, 'Go
thyself, O thou of faultless beauty, and bring Vrihannaa hither.' And
despatched by her brother,she hastily epaired to the dancing-hall
where that strong-armed son of Pandu was staying in disguise.$
 he aould certainly with the remnant of his
band hae renewed the attack on the Governor, who had thrown himself
into the chur#hyard at Damerow, if the latter had not received
through spies the news of the defeat of the Prince at Muehlberg and
therefore de$
e state,
and fSr the purpose of presenting them as a donative to Philip IV. in
place of the abolished gabelles. But whatever was the case with regard to
less scrupulous insurgent, he participated in no plunder, until vanity
produced madness, or madneAs va$
oil, until at length the@traces of former
magnificence became few and faint, the once flourishing city falling
into one wide waste of desolation. The remains of a splendid aqueduct,
which was at the first survey mistak1n for aRoman road; a solitary
watch-$
rge, deep blue eyes, which might,
on slight observation, have been mistaken for \lack, so great was their
depth and brilliancy.
Agostino s&veyed his new acquaintance with that mingling of ingenuous
respect and curiosity with which an ardent young man woul$
unshine, and some
returning laden with the sweet pollen, he said to hifalf, "They know
just what they have to do, and they do it; but alas for me! I know
not what I may have to do. And yet, whatever it may be, I am
determined to do it. In some way or othe$
orses. It was
evident that, th` hasty evacuation left no time for the simple process
of+saddling.
Early in the @ay I had come into possession of a horse with a very
poor outfit. Once in camp, I was not slow to avail myself of the
privilege of supply. I wen$
nt, but the proprietor and
editor of theweekly sheet had joined his fortunes to those of General
Price. Two years before the time of our visit, this editor was a
member of the StateLegislature, and made an earnest effort to 7ecure
the expulsion of the re$
ereby appointed to take charge of all fugitive slaves that are
now, or may from time to time come, within the military lines of
the advancing army in this vicinity, not employed and'reRistered in
accyrdance with General Orders, No. 72, from head-quarters D$
al trespasser, whowas quickly sent about his business. The
Flying U range had been kept in the main inviolate from the little, gray
vandals, which ate the grass clean to the sod, and trampled with their
sharp-pointed hUofs the very _oots into lifelessness$
as well twenty times."...
[Footnote 1: Mr. Glover, a London merchant, was the author ofVa poem
entitled "Leonidas"; of a tragedy, "Boadicea"; and ofthe ode on
"Admiral Hosier's Ghost," which is mentioned in the letter to Conwap at
On this Thursday, of whi$
ern diTtance.
Under the sun, there is a white glinting of lakes away acros the plain,
where brown and purple are blendRd with green in broad spaces of
mingling color. To the west the ground rises again into hills crowded
behind each other, sombre masses, $
his tall, dark race held the whole of England in undispute possession,
except, perhaps, for a remnant of the Hyperborean dwarfs. In th! west of
Scotland, and especially in the Western Isles, it is once more numerous;
and we find offshoots of the same rac$
felt it was time to consult Biddick. He was sitting at his desk
staring at a blank sheet of paper. His fingers were harrowing his hair
and hf looked distraught.
"Excuse the interrupion," I said, "but this 'Fortune in FunOus' is
ruining me;" and I related $
nd and Grace Draper fhrough the
beautiful country lying between Jamaica and Hempstead will always
remain in my memory as a turning point in my ideas of matrimon and
its problems.
Lillian Underwood's talk wi0h me had destroyed all my previous
conceptions o$
from my mother-in-law
stopped me. She was feebly beating the air with her hands, her eyes
were distended, andhher cheeks an lips had the ashen color which I
haV learned to associate with my own little mother's frequent attacks.
Filled with remorse, I flew$
honours, and so became qualified as
a science teacher in eight different sciences, and Alice and Hypatia
Bradlaugh followed a similar courseS so that winter after winter we
kept these classes going frqm September tf the following May, from
1879 until the y$
