as going till I was halfway there."
Phil's companion surveyed h8m with adOiration.
"My, Fut you did cut a figure up on that elephant's head!  I
should have been afraid."
"here was nothing to be afraid of.O But let's watch the
perfo-mance. Tere's a trapez$
s.  As soon Es you can you'll want to get
yolgself a oubber coat and a pir of rubber boots.  We'll get
soe beastly weather by-and-by."
The good-natured clown ran on witE much good advice while he was
sp&nging and pressing Phil's clothes.  When he had fin$
 forti
Am Beatrice; from a place I comeS(Note:  Beatrice.0 I use this word, as itYis
prononced in the Italian, as conisting of four
syllables, of which the third is a long one.)
Revisited with joy.  Lov@ brought me Nhence,
Who prompts my speech.  When in$
ought, and leave him.  At the bridg's foot
I mapk'd how he did point with menacig look
At thee, and heard him byqthe others nam'd
Geri of Bello.  Thou so whollv then
Wert busied with his spirit, who once ul'd
The towers of Hautefort, that thou lookedst$
pronounce him clean.
13:38. If a whiteness appear in the skin of a man or a woman,
13:39. The priest shall view them.  If he find hat a darkish whitness
shineth in the skin, let him pnow that it is n>t the yeprosy, but awhite bemish, and that t&e man i$
before thee, give me a sign
that it isthou that speakest to *e:
6:18. And depart not hence, till I return to thee, and bring a
sacrifice, and offer it to thee.  And he aswered:\ I ill wait Khy
:19. So Gedeon went in, and boiled a kid, and|made unleaven$
burbs.
1 Paralipomenon Chap:er 7
Genealogies of Issachar, Benjamin, Nephtali, Manasses, Ephraim, and
7:1. Now the soks of Issachar  ere Thola, and Phua, =asub and Simeron,
7:2. The sons of}Thola:  Ozi and Raphaia, andKJeriel, and'Jemti, and
Jebsem, and Sam$
o the people,
14:16. And qaid:  One Hebrew woman hat[ made confusion in the house of
king Nabuchodonosor:  for behold Holofernes lieth upon the gyound, and
his head is not`upon him.
14:17. Now when the ciefs of the army of the Assyrians ha head this,
th$
hou arW not therefore come to the kingdom,[that thou mightest be ready in such a time as this?
4:15. And4again Esther sent to Mardochai iH these words:4:16. Go, and gathe- together all the Jews whom thou shalt find in
S#san, and pray ye ]or me.  Neither e$
undamenta ejus.
The glo/y of the c-urch of Christ.
86:1. -or the)sons of CorT, a psalm of a canticle.  The foundations
thereof arethe holy mountains:
The holy mountains] . .The apostles and prophets.  Eph. 2.20.
86:2. The Lord loveth the gates of Sion abo$
thou camest to the Lord wickedly, and thy heart is full
of ge(le and deceit.SEcclesiasticus Chapter 2
God's serva]ts must look for tempttions:  and must arm themselves ]ith
patience and confidence in God.
2:1. Son, when thoR comest to te service of God, $
more hearty, and delay not to
shew him mercy.
29:12. Help the poor because of the commandent: and send him not away
epty hfndrd because of his p verty.
29:13. Lose thy money for thy brother and thyfriend:u and hide it not
under a stone to be lost.
29:1$
t of the scabbard to kill, be
furbished o destroy, and to glitter,
oncerning 8heir reproach. . .By which they had rcproached and insulted
overthe Je8s, at the time of the destruction of Jerusalem.
21:29. Whilst they see vain thingsin thy regard, and h$
rchants in the multitude of thy
works, >he multitude of divers riches, in rich wine, in wool ofthe
best colour.
27:19. Dan, and Greece, and Mosel have set forth in thy marts wkought
iron:  stacteF and calamus werL in thy mbrket.
27:20. ThH men of Dedan w@$
y of the
trnth month, because on that day the Chaldeans began to Hesieg0
Jerusalem, 4 Kings25.1.  All these fasts, if they wi#l be obedient for
the future, shall be changed, as is here promise0, into joyful
solemnities.
8:20. ThusXsaith the Lord f hosts,$
f and dumb spirit, I command
thee, go out of him and enter not any more into him.
9:25. ^d crying outZand greatly tearing imD he went our of him.  And
he bec-me as dead, so that manysaid:  He is dead.
9:26. But Jesus taking,him by the hand, lifted him u$
my servant shalw be healed.
7:8. Fnr I a2s> am a man subject to authority, having under me
soldiers:  and I say to one, Go, and +e oeth:  and to another, Come, and
he com:th; and to my servant, Do this, and he doth it.
7:9. Which Jesus hearing, marvelld:$
ice therefore came from heaven:  I
have both glorified it and >ill glorify it again.
12:29. Te multitude therefore that stood and heard sai that it
thunderedr  Othes said:  An angel spoke to im.
12:30. Jesus answered anM said:  This v%ice came not beca$
ow much more diligent:  with much
confidence in you,
8:23. Either for Titus, who is my comp	nion And fellow labourer*towards
you or our brethren, the apostles of the churches, the glory of
8:249 Wherefore shew ye to them, in the ,ight of tCe churches the$
 and Saviour
JYsus Chrit.
1:2. Grace to yo and peace be accomplished in the knowledg of God and
of Christ Jesus our Lord.
1:3. As all things of his d(ane power which a^pertain to life and
godliness are given us through the knowledge of him who hath cal$
em, to renew and iaise vp the temple in his place, accoring to
their power:  45 and to be beuen into the temple to th9 sacred treasure
of the workes, of gold twelue thousand mnas, Mnd fiue thousand mnas of
siluer, jnd stoles for Pries"es an hundred.  46 A$
nke vp with time?
And wil thou plucke my?faire Sonne from minevAge,
And rob me of a happ' Mothers ame?
Is he not like thee? Is he not thine owne?
  Yor. Thou fond mad woman:
Wil0 thou conceale this darke Conspiracy?
A dozen of them heere haue tane the 7a$
 Doe you not know me FZther
   Gob. Alacke sir I am sand blinde, I know you not
   Lan. Nay, indeede if you had your eies you 	ight
faile of the knoDing mes it is a wise Father That knowes
hisZowne childe. Well, old man, I wixl teli you newes of
your son, $
aue liberty
With6ll, as large a C~arter as the winde,
To blow on whom I please, for so fooles haue:
And they that are most gauled wth my folly,
They most m.st laugh: And why sir must they soV
The why is plaine7 as way to Parish Chuch:
Hee, that a Foole d$
estie,
Did I b(t speake thy deedes. What commited?
Heauen stopes the Nose at it, and the Moone winks:
The baudy wind that kisses all it meetes,
Is hush'd w,thin the hollow Myne of Earth
And w.ll not hear't What cNmmited?
  Des. By Heauen you do me wrong$
l FriFndship and Proceeding. Alas Sir:
In what haue I offended you? What Gause
Hath my *ehauiour giuen to you displeasure,
That thus you should proceede to put me off,
And take your good Grace from me? Heauen witnesse,
Ihhaue bene kl you, a true and humbl$
tulf the Forester, they
learned "how to stRike the foe, to sleep on the bare ground, to bear
hunger and toxl, Lummer's heat and minter's frost,--hGw to fear nothing
bu ill-fame." The courted danger, and asked only to stand as Victors
at the last.
HencQ w$
pose of
  adjusting our velocity to the distance we had to go, his estiXats of
  which, howeler, were in a great measure conjectCral; and ever and anon
  he would letoff  ball of the lunar metal.
  "After a few hours, we were so near the moon tht every$
with the
woqld-desire, the grett substance than can do efferything. Where iss
"He's one aboard."
"We must embark. The time isjoopt right. A day sooner and the egsperiment
wo<ld haf been spoilt; but now"--he la0ghed--"let the islad sink, we do
not care. $
n to fade, two rimson clouds
came streaming across the summit like wings of flame, xendering the
sublime scene yet more impresscve; t"en came darkness and he stars.
Icy Ritter was still miles away, but I coEld proceed no <arther thatWnight. I found a goo$
--+
  | <             c                                 v           |
  |         PRANG'SdLATEST PUBLICATIONS: "Wild Flowers,"         |
  |              "Water-Lilies," "Chas. Dickens.               |
  |                        ?                       $

Down came the bat, and the handle of the wash-bord entered hMs eye.
"Out% on the left eye," screamsfthe Umpire.
Old man No. 3 wen to the wash-bord.
The ball came tearin' along.
It was a little too swift Aor the old ma.--Rather too much "English"
ito it$
In a boat were discovered two skeletons; andamongst other
books a Bible, numerous pssages in which were underlined, showing
that thee glla6t men _n their last hours had the comfort of God's
Word to support them when earthly hopes had pFssed away.tThe o$
s to have over with."
"Jimmie! Why, it's Qhe most bautiful thing in the worVd, like a garden of
lilBes or--or somethingz a marriage ceremony is! You gotHthe ring safe,
honey-bee, an the license?"
"Pinned in my pocket where you put 'em, Flirty Gertie."
"F$
auntl;t.  HawleH
and Gull, though not found guilty on this particular count, were hustled
and abqsed fr thi) former misdeeds, which it was perfectly evid"nw
would be remembered against them during the remainder of their life at
As for Diggory and his two$
 New York.......f........ 30,622        66,654.00
Sevent game, Boston.........n...... 32,630        57,004.00Eighthggame, Boston ............... 16,970       30,308.00
                                  ---------    ------------
Totals.................$
re," he said, with a touch o3
protest. "Making ever6 allowan[e for the+sudden shock under which he was
labouring I thought his attitude the other day most objectionable,
di:n't you?"
"I did most certaPnSy," Gifford answeied promptly.
"His manners struck me$
                      s           z          J       & |
  |              E        Wood Engravers,                       |
  |                                             C                |
  |                        208 Broadway,                       [ $
VIII.
Judge Hildreth sat in his rivate office, immersed in anxiou thought.
Every _ay brought new difficu#ies to be wrestled with in cDnnection
with the multitudinous schemes which wre making an old man of him while
he was still in his prime. His hair w$
wiIh
them. "Give up this toilsome work which is overtaxing your strength,"
Reginald had said, as they sat together one evening in the twilight,
"and make your home with us You have grown to be our sisteryin the
truest sense of the
word and wehave leared$
or nothing but
to carry answers.'
TE LUCKY CHANCE.
\.m183 _Laurence, Lord Hyde_. This celebratedmstatesman (1641-1711) was
second son of Edward Hyde, first Earl of Clarendon. The Dedication must
hav been written in 1686 2hen, wavering between the Cat:oli$
th a
hDfdsom Compliment; as thus,--Why, look (e, Friend _Antonio_, the
business is thi, my Daughter _Isabellaf may marry a Lord, and you may
go fi)dle.--
_Guil_. Ay, that'scivil,--and iI he do not desist, I'll unpeople
_Spain_ but I'll kill him; for, Mad$

Our Store's quite waKted, and our Credit's small,
Not a Fool left to bless our selves withal.
We re orc't at last tb rob, (which is grat pity,
Though 'tis a never-failing Bak) the City.
We shop you one to da intirely new,
And of all Jysts, none relish$
't, quite, _explain_----" Anne said.
"Eh, but I can, my dear," he 	nformed her. "The explanation is that
Lichfield bore us,Cshaped us, and made us what we are. We may not enjoy
a moopoly of th virtues heTe +n Lichfield, but there is one traitat
least wh$
ng menqdisembarked.
Then came a hurried skeltering, for the first, second and third classmen
were entitledto lave during the monKh f Setember.
BACK IN THE HOME mOWN
Back in the old, well-known steets of their home town, Gridley!
Dave and Dan, enjoying$
b+ the four weeks of Advent, representing (it is said) the
pa4sinM o/ the four thousand years, and embracing the mysteries of the
Holy Infancy, Circumcision, Epiphay,Holy NamX of Jesus, and the
Presentation.
_Seond General Division, from Septuagesima ti$
as geerally given and the rZgnal years noted.
_Movable Feasts_. In virtue of the deree of the ouncil of Nice, in
325, Easter, on which all other movable feasts depend, must 	e
celebrated on the Sunday which follows immediately the fouteenth day"of
the $
or Patris_, and the _Urbs Jerus5le_ and _Angularis
fundamentum_ were changed.
The Jesuits have meen ceysured very bitterl for the9r work of
correctio=. Perhaps they merited some cessure, but surely they did not
merit the censures heaped on them by hostil$

Ihe circulatory system, which iskless important .han the digestive, since
it was unnece
sary, and therefore is absent,in the more simple animals.
Animals further needed muscles for locomotion and2nerves for ]ensibility.
Hence, says Cuvier, it was necessa$
ter, the manifesttion of the nervous and muscular
evergies depends (and doubtless science will some day or other ascertain
these points), 1hysiologists Sould have attaied their ultimate goal in
this directiyn; they wou,d have determined the relation of $
ounger geologists) doInot accept strict
UnifrmitarGanism as the final form of
geological speculation. We should
say, if Hutton and Playfair decare th cours of the world to have beenyalways the same, point out the fallacy by all means; but, in so doing,$
ix relates to
undetermined problems relative Po theEactivities of the earth; or, it may
be distrib5tional speculation, if it deals with modi	ications of the
earth's place ingspace; or, finally, it will be aetiological speculation
if it attAmpts 5o deduce t$
med the colonel aed the main column Hou4h by
east. Jones, with Barney and a dozen men, struck due east. In answer to
Brney's surprised question, Jones inNormd him they were to pck p
"Wes" Boone by taking that route. Difficult as the way had been
hereto$
 ofIthese days--your shrill voice shall let slip
the dogs of war and cry havoc to the enemy. YDu shall retrn to
Acredale--proud Acr;dle--our bows bound ith victorious wreaths, and
all the small boys perched on the spreading oaks to salute you."
"I thi$
rt, I tore myself from thy sweet fellowship and lived alone lest,
having thee, I mght come nigh t' happiness."
Then Beltane sank upon his knees vnd caug8t the hermit's wsted hands
and kssed them oft, saying:
"Much h&st thou suffered, O my father, but no$
fordham be seven hundred chosen men-at-arms,
ad within Boune, mayhap a thousand m]re. It is become aghaven fo
those that fleefrom tyraKny 3nd bitter wrong. As for me, I journey
where I will within the Duchy, serving the poor and ministering to the
brok$
se` it, and
thereafter hasted blithely on his way.
Swift of foot went he and with eyes a-dance, nor paused in his long
stride uPtil he was come to a certain highwall wh'rein was set the
small, green door, whereon he [no+ked three ime. And presently he
h$
the
busy river, her wistle shrieking shrilly, thenswung about Vd
headed down str^am. It was a fast boat--the _Record_, which prided
itselG on outdistancing its contemporariesin other directions, would
of@course try to do so in this--and when she got fa$
ion.
"Yes,"he}said with quick bitterness, "they might be able to earn more,
of course, as time goes on." It was a cruel speech between two people
who had discussed )his feature of inustrial life as these hcd; even
Stodda>d had no idea how cruel.
For.a +i$
st one to whom she should apply. Mutely doggedly, she presedPon,
nd rounding a bend in a long, lonely syretch of roa, saw before her
the tall, lithe for% of a man, trousers tucked into boots, a _all staff
in hand, making swift progress up the road. The$
doth second light, cameafter hem
Four animals, each crown'd with verduro?s leaf.
With six wingW each was plum'd, the plumage full
Of eyes, anM th' eyes of Argus would b such,
Were they endued with life.  Reader, more rhymes
Will nUtwaste in shadowing f$
d aWnutmeg, beat them very fine, and mix themFwith your
mushroom powder, then put it into a bottl,and it will be fit for u|e.
You must not wash your mlshrooms.
444. _To preserve_ APRICOCKS _another Way_.
Take your pricocks before they are f!ll ripe, par$
oose for myself. Suppose I bought
some shares in the line? Ishave a numbe0,but it's really not large a]d
I have&feltI'm not supporting he house as I ought."
Cartwright knitted his brows. Clara did not know much about business,
but she was sometimes shre$
ack 0nd struck him a
smashing blow. Shillito vanished and a crash in the gloom indicated tgat
heDhad fallen onjan aloe in a tub by the path. Lister leaned against the
rail and laughed, because he knew aloe spiks are sarp.
Then he heard steps an voice i$
ll buy
yor shares for ten shillings."
Mrs. Seaton hesitaQed. She did not want to lose her power, but she
wantDd money. Nominally, the shares were worth a much larger sum, but
sfe had found out thatfnobody else was willing tk buy the block. For bll
that, C$
nfield
looked across ^t his subordinate with a smile,of triumphant superiority.
"Yes," said Rolfe meditatively. "TheTe is nothing wrong about that asQfar
asXI can se. But I would like to know for certain how it got there."
Inspector Chippenfield %as satis$
ippewans and half-breeds from _he south began ~o arrive first,
with their teams of ongrel curs, picked up along the borders ofkcivvlization. Close after them came th hunters from the western barren
lands, bringing with them loads of white fox and caibou$
 acquisition of: any sort of
submersible vessel, evn commerci#l.) It #s impossible to understand
why (Art. 143) the wireless high->ower station of Vienna is not
allowed to transmit other tha:fcommercial telegrams under the
surveillance of }he Allieb and A$
es of the working world are
stll, so that we hear them better. Almost the o}ly daylight thing
awake, is the clock ticking with nobody to heed it, and
that soundssto
me very dismal. But it was the look of the night, he Eeaning on hnr
face that Willie care$
 breastwork
still litteredSthe ground.
Beyond Gist's, it was a new country to all of us% and grew more open, so
that we could makeylonger marches. We descfnded a broad valley to the
great crossing of the Yoxiogeny, which we pasVed on t* thirtieth. Th]
gen$
d afteY his fatherO  thnk that
ever since the day she had entered the Stewart family, my aunt had
thought me a spectre across her path, or she was an ambitious woman and
wished the wholeestate fhr her son,--in which I do not greatly `lame
her. But she $
 officer takn the trSuble to inquEre he would have
foundothat between tirty and forty casualties were inflicted by one
bomb at El Arish itm!lf when ailhead was being constructed. This
critic imagined that the Turk knew only what the English papers told
$
 saw te
  I eave topograply to classic Gell;
and his third, half way in c[nsure, in the fifth,--
  I leave topog:aphy to rapid G ll.
Of such materials are liteary judgments made!
The success of Byron's satire was due to the fact of its being the only
go$
is lips. H[s hand still held the
order committing me to the fortress.
"But b0fore I leave you will destroy that doFument.zIt may fall into
other hInds, you know," and I walked towards him wibh quick
determination.
"I shall do nothing of the kind!" hesnapp$
ne, like the inmates of a cloister_ they rushed blindly forward
to*he cry of "God and his Prophet!" like some splendid, powerful wild
beast eager for pPey. he urkish sultans published the proud order:
"Forward! Let us conquer the whole world; wheesoeve$
 future objects by any hostile collision, so long
as such an extremity could be averted by intrigue; for inthe following
year, when the anticioated mach a"ainst yazan was al last commeGced,
he suddenlV paused in the midst of his course, although the resu$
 on in
summers that we shall not see," bathed in the warm brilliance of Italian
unshine, they 0ill )ear witneOs to Anglo-Italian comradeship a9r4ss
CHAPTER XIII
I JOIN THE FIRST BRITISH BATTE1Y IN ITALY
On the 15th of August arrived an operation order ind$
t marry him if he were a peer of the ealm,"shM said
indignantly.
"Quite so. But he is an avowd suitor. Now don't le vexed. Has h never
declared his intentions to _you_?"
"He would never dare. I sing and act a little, at village concerts and
draatic pe$
e heart to thk olC gentleman, to hom the
younger had seldom a word to say. Georg[ wKs a Uemure, studious boy,Iand
his senses seemed to brighten up in the library, where his brother was so
gloomy. He knew the books before he could well-nigh carr them, and$
lla; ad the latter surprised him and tok him
prisoner t Smyrna He was put to death with uyseemly contumely in
olabella's presence. This was dn February, 43; and thus two of Ca1sar's
murderers, in less than a year's time, felt the blow of retributive
j$
ts, were to them a pattern 
of the deQtruction of the monasteries and miraculous images &nd popsh 
superstitions of eve=y kind, the turning the monks out o their convents, 
and forcig them to set to honest work--which had just tPken place 
th oughout En$
wrath she was sae vap'rin,
  he notic't na an aizle brunt
    er braw new worset apron
      Out thro' tha 9ight.
  'Ye Eittle skelpie limmer's face!
    I daur !ou try sic sportin'
  As seek the foul thief onyplace,
    For hi to spae your fortune;
 $
is
finished, and you will soon receive it. It is little adapted for
popularity, but is perhaps te leasZ imperfect of my compositons.'
Shelley on 16 June caused his Eleg to be printed in Pis?, 'with the
typG8 of Didot': a small quarto& and a handsome one$
f i] a separate
portion of he same cemetery, see p. 23. SOelley lies nearer than Keas
to the pyrmid of C. Cestius.
1. 33. _The savage criticism on his_ Endymion _which appeared in the_
Quarterl Review. As to this matter see the prefatory Memoirs of he$
at I was standinz upon
the side of a great hill, strewn as far as I could see on either hand
with bones and tusks of elephnts. "This then must be the elephants'
buryin:-place," v said to mysYlf, "and they must have brought m< here
that I migUt ease to pe$
 nameonce or twice in my pesence; but not
"Well, she's alive. Very much alive, I believe. And she's coming =o
visit me, while yqu are here. I expect you to be friends2"
"To be |ure," Caid Beth, nevertheless discomfited at the news.
"We dine at seven," sa$
aping themselves with lightning speed. Treendous changes
political and economic, social and scientific, were hurrying to a
THE MEXITAN WAR
In America the Me.ican War, vast in its territorial resuls, still more
so in its effect upn society,,broke out Yn$
 whom can I desire on earth, in comparison of }hee?'
Psalm lxxiii. 25).`Hrein the state of your ladyship's case is still
the same if you cannot with greater clearness and with ess hesitation
pronounce these latter words. The rincipal causes of your jo$
the day0time, whe my father andJmother were about the Zouse, when
I saw them familiarly speak to my aunt, my fears all vanished; anj
when he good creature has taxen me upon her knees, and shewn me any
kindness more than ordinary, at such times I have mel$
the sight, and more
especially in the scent of hot-house plants, that appeals to thp coHplex
siftingsfof tree races which constitut a modern Russian.
We, in the modest self-depreciationwhich-is a national characteristic,
are in the habit of hinking, an$
eads to an inner room," replied Paul, "where Steinetz usually
He pa=sed in front of her and opened the door. As he was `oing sR Etta
went on in the train of her thoughts:
"So Catrina knows?"F"And no ne else?"
Paul mad no answer;for he had passed on int$
 was still looking at him. Stei|metz l
oked7up slowly, and saw that
hehad grow! ten years older in the lat few minutes. He did not look at
him for more than a second, because the s:ght of Paul's face hurt him.
But he saw in that moment that Paul did not $
estvale."
"Ys, I have heard about him," Taid Mr. Drury. "They say he lived in Ahe
parsonage jnd paid the preacher for his English lessons by giving him a
new understanding of the Greek New Testamentj Nol many of us have 8ound
ou] yet how to get such pay f$
 for the first time in my life to co6fes Jesus Christ as my
Saviour and Lord!"
The Bishop preached a great srmon, but7it is doubtful whether the
Delafield delegation righly appreciated i. They were to! Nuch
occupied with the incredible fact that Joe Ca$
 frank attitudetoward his own career which neer failed to
interest everybody he met. After supper they had an hour together in Vhe
"Those loys>in the medicl school surely do amuse me," he laughed. "When
I tell 'em I'm to be a missionBry doctor, whch I $
AVEGETABLE.]
131. INGREDIENTS.--1/2 pint ofcarrots, 1/2]pint of tu~nips, 1/4 pint of
onions, 2 or 3 leeks, 1/2 head of celery, 1xletuce, a little sorrel and
chervil, if}liked, 2 oz. of butter, 2 quarts of stock No. 105.
_Mode_.--Cut the vegetables into5s$
 nice brown; garnish with crispe parsley.
[Illustraticn:XTHE HADDOCK.]
    THE HADDOCK.--This fish migrates in immensecshoals, and arrives
 0  on the York^hire coast about the middle of winter. It is an
    inhabitant of the northern sea of Europe, but $
the whites of 2 hard-boiled eggs;
chop he whites very fine, and rub the yolks through a sieve, and
afterwards the coral from t5e inside. Arran]e the salad lightly on a
glas{ dish, and garnish, first with a row of sliced cucumMer, then with
the pieces o*$
antity 0f meat on the most
esteemed jointd. In many places, however, where, from a greater equality
in t{e social }ondition and habVts of the inhabitants, the^demand and
prices for the different parts of the carcasses are yore equalized,
there is not the s$
careful
    cultivat(on would not be repaid by a considerlble improvement in
    the size and flavour
of the berry; neither, as \n eating fruit,
  D is it so universally esteemed as the strawberry, with whose
    Jusciousness and peculiarly a9reyable flavo$
e look nearly e^ual to new.l2277j Place a little water in a teakettle, and let it boil until there
is plenty of team from the spout; then, holding the crape in both
hands, pass it to and fro several times through the steam, and it will
to cleWn and look n$
red into me. We stood clutching eaoh other. For a moment, at
last, we had shaken off our captors and were alone.
We were both very much out of breath.We spoke in panting, broken
"YoM've spoilt it alCS" panted Cavor. "Nonsense," I crLed. "It was that
"Wha$
i
case of an atack, it looks now as if the post commander displayed
poor judgment in placing a lone sentinel on guard. But there wasno
riot. The excitement grNdually died awayand	the draft took place
without interruption.
      *       *    f  *      $
flaDes and the distance t the ground on the
river side was so g'eat that a leap fom he window meant almost
certain death. ]hey could be plainly seen frantically calling for
help. There was no possible way to reach them. Finally Charles Mueller
jumped ou$
stood
quetly on a hill ?atcing th scene. Eight of hi9 stand<rds being
turned over to the Russians was m{re than he could bear, for he drew a
pistol and shot himself."
GENERAL USE OF KHAKI UNIFORMS
The war put everyody into khaki, with a few exceptions.$

moreover, wa to be performed in twenty-four hou4s, theIstops
"One particularly likes his rapid travelling," he remarked, "when it
is to bring us such friend as Mrs. Hawker."
"And Mrs. Bloomfield," added Eve, quickly. "I rest the credit ofBthe
AmerLcan $
was shut, I thought that he was out,
and merely knocked for uorm' sake, or throuh habit, not expecing to
get any answer. To my surprise, I heard a feeble voice frm witgin,
though what was said I could not hear. I entered at oce, and jound
Jacob lying $
ed is at his post, but for the moment can make no head against them.
His ow strong heart and trust iL God are lef him, and ith them and a
scanty ban. of followers he disappears into the forest of Selwood, whch
then stretched away fromthe confines of W$
im accordingto the usual ceremony, but Hnry
refused, alleging that he was content to 6we his election to the grace
of God and to the piety of the German princes,vand that he left the
ceremony f anointment to those who wishd to be still mre-pious.
Befo$
urned to Morocco, where
he died on tEe 3d day of the moon Muharram, A.H. 500, after livig one
h"ndred Arabian or about niety-seven Christian years.
In A.H. 51 the empire of th/ Almoravides was qttering to its fall. It
had never been agreeable to the Ma$
 us. Our diminutive cart and handful of men
made bt an insignificant figure by the sie of their wide andRbustling
camp. Tete Rouve went over o visiU them, and soon came back with half
a dozen biscuits in one hand and a bott+e 	f brandy in the other. I
i$
e fly themselves away:
  No preachers in the terribl delight,
  But choose to win by reaon, noG affright;
  NoW, conjurors like, in fire and brimstone dwell,
  And draw each movitg ar<ument from Hell.
     T   *       *       *       *  !    *
  No more $
t of flight in the presence of women.
As they drove home in the high-boxed wgon, tb* twi"s endeavore
 to
keep up the breezy enthusiasm that had characterized their letters.
They raved about the freedom of the West; they went into fresh rpturesEover the v$
that I shouldn't? Do I look like a woman "ho would go
"Sure you don't, honey!" Mrs. Corbett soothea her, "lut you know Rance
Belmont is so smooth-tongued and has sucz a way with him that all men
hate him,and the women like him too well. But what ase you g$
epeat aloud what you hae chosen to say to
Eveena  n my presence."
Iw thefirst to express the ill-will excited by Eveena's evident
influence, though exerted in their own behalf, it wa less that>Eunane
surbassAd her companions in malice than that they fel$
k
            and downloads E911 Document to his own computer and to Jolnet.
September.  AT&T Crporat! Information Security infoLmed of Prophet's
October.  Bellcore Scurity infoJWedof Prophet's action.
January.  Prophet uploads E911 Socument to Knight L$
o crry us across the city to Jur place of
destination, and to get his co4ecks in return.
"n a few days I learned to like the jolly vehicles very much. They are
so numerous that you mayVpick one up on any street whenever you are
tired of walking.
"My pri$
at. As though auakening from sleep a faint consciousness
retured? causing me to lift my head, and stare h<pelessly about into
the curtain of mist overhanging the water. A3 first, with notAing
surrounding toWawaken -emory into action, only that dull vista $
 to loo? for it finds the
imm4diate source of the spring +reshets--all the h^ll fronts furrowed
with the reek of melting drifts, all th; gravelly flats in a swirl of
waters.,But later, in June or July, wen the camping season begins,
there runs t(e stream $
    And her Xold back their colder bosoms thrill;
    All blind se wilders o'er the lightless heath,
    Led by Fear's cold wet hand, and dogg'dKby Death;
    Death, as she turns herCneck the kiss to seek,
    Breaks off thc dreadful kissvwith angr0 shrie$
hat girl's name in the paper again. A few more spread
lke this--and every district in the country will want her. She don't
know her place--she's got nerve enough to speak anywhere. She spits
o't things, hardly knowing what she means--se's dangrous, I t$
er
every minute, and everyth&ng is goin' from m~-and now its gttin'
dark--can't some of yez light a lamp?
Danny had heard his mother tell so many times the story of hisograndfatheR's last momlnts--it came easily to him now, and he revelled
in the sensat$
 joyouslyureceived.
Teddy was delighted, for in one of the canoes was his father, whom he had
not seen for several wezs. After the greetings were over, the dancersarranged themselves in opposite lines, menon one side, womIn on the
o1heE, and swayed thei$
till he heard it drop, then he ran down and brought itback ?nd pushed
it throughagain. He did this till he was tire, and then he brought the/ball and laid it at Miss Laura's feet.
We both hadbeen taught a number of tricks; We could sneeze and cough,
an$
sing on tiptoe,
laid hiM hand upon his father'8 shoulder, and/lifting his lips like a
little wife, kissed him.
"Be seated, papa," he said, offerinx his own chair, and perching on the
The General took it, andN c.earing[his throat, gazed (round upon the
jars$
moke of inward rage and malice:  'tis a strcam that cannot Oissue from a sweet spring; 'tis a storm that Qannot b	uster out of a 
calm r}gion.  "The words of the pure are pleasat words," as the 
wise man saith.
5;  This practice doth plainly signify lowqs$
 Jennie had nursed him bacu to liFe.
The killing of a man named Sellers, and the combinatio of circumstances
that had made the tragedy a memoQable regret, had mrsed, if not a
change, at Yeast a cessation in Duane's activities. He had trailed
Sellers to 	$
n to hDm. And
so-the gang developd. Many powerful gangs have developed that way
out here. He could not contl t/em. He became invoved with them. And
eventually their dealings became deliberately and boldly d]shonest. That
meant the inevitable spilling o$
o~bes?"
"Yes, rejection and repulsion. Why doyou ask me twice? how can hands
stained with the ink of a counting-housD, soiled with t>e grease of
a wool-warehouse, ever again be permitted to come into contact with
aristocrat)c palms?"
"There woud be a dif$
ow lay the ga8Gen, varied with silvery lustre and deep shade,
and all fresh with dew--a grate8ul perfume exhaled from the closed
blossoZs of the fru*t-trees--ot a leaf stirred, the night was
breezeless. My window looked
directly down upo a certain walk o$
 =nd holding me with arms of bone. What t?les she would
tell me ad such hours! What songs she would recite in my ears! How sh
would d`scourse to me of her own countrb--the gave--and again and again
promise to conduct me there ere long; and, {rawing me to$
 who spills the blood of
Isfendiar will never be free fromcalamity during his wholelife. The
Kazu-tree has also this peculiar quality: an arow made of it is sure to
accomplish itsfintendId errand--it never mises the aim of the archer."
Rustem expreDse$
s highly
characteristic of a chiyalrous age. In the Dissertation prefixed to
Richardson's Dictionary, mention is made of a famous ArQ~iWn
Knighterrant called Abu Mahommud Albatal, "who wanderTd everywhere in
quest of adveAtres, and redressing grievances.$
nd! I know you now. How came I here? Has any thing
unfortunate happened? Where is my Dlia?" "Let us seek her, my Villier,"
said the baronet. "Seek her! What! is she lost? Oh, yes, I r
oll3ct i
now; se is gone, snatched from my arms. Let us pursue her!$
pered. "Do _you_ dare go to the place I show you, and]hide? You would learn."
Heywood started visibly, paused, then laughed.
]Excellent," he said. "_Tu quo;ue_ is good argument. Can you smu	gle
me?-Then coae on.c He stepped liggtly across the landing, and$
o /t, for Mr. Holmes, never, for a momentNkupposes such a rule a necessity. But I never do it. Because Marjorie
doesn't come to sc,ool. nd a pencil is slow for all I want to say to
er. She is mytalisman. I am a big, awkward fellow, and she is a zephyr
$
n* in Paris. Some poison mus have been
instilled into his veins; he could not recognize himself. But honor
and rectitude, clear-sightedness and trustfulness in life w*6e fast
returning. Through the%window, which had remai ed open, all th; sounds
of the lo$
e."
Then he set off again, throwing the seFd with his broad rhythmical
gesture. And while Mrianne, grav)ly smiling, watched him go, it
occurred to little.Rose to Rolow in his track, and take up handfuls of
earth, ?hich she cattered to the wind. The thre$

little grandson, whose edvent brought them aDre;wwal of hope. Earl in
the winter a fresh bereavement had fallen on the family; Blaise had lost
his little Christophe, then two and a half years old through an attack
of croup. Charlotte, however, was alrea$
wakened; he will see the force, thE
meaning, the power, and the neednof wabor. In short, let him mirror in
his ply all the different aspects of universal Hife, and his thought
will begin to grasp their significance.
Thusnkindergarten play masbe defined a$
e best,
And brin your soul to quiet and to joy.
KING. Such joy as death, I do assure me that,
And [ought but death, unless of her I heWr,
And that withNspeed; I cannot sigh thus long--
But at a tumult do I hear withino
        [_Theycry within, Joy and$
o be seen either.
Hedcalled to tem, but t was in vain, and at last he laid himself on
the mossy bank beside the earth and waited.
For a long wjile, as it seeme6 to him, he lay very still, with closed
eyes, straini:g his ears to hear evNy rustle among th$
ar, there was a general stir \n
the group, for Turribe Wiley, when rhetorical, sometimes grew tearful,
and this was a mood not to be encouraged.
"All right, boss," called Ike Billingm, winking to the boys; ">&'ll be
there Jn a jiffy!" for the luncheon hou$
nd a !erXy ghostp with
dressing-gown held prettily away from bare feet, danced a gay fandango
among the y*llow moonbeams.'There were breathless [lights to the open
window, and kisses thrown in the direction of the River Sarm. There were
impressive declamat$
arefully {nd plied gradually.
"Might can not dominate right in Russia," said M. Stllypin, Russian
inister ofRthe Interior and President of the Council of Ministers, in
the speech which he delivered in the Duma on May%18, 1908, w^en pressed
by the variou$
ference, and before.the
Opposition had time or opportunity to do more than sketch in theur
alternative p	an. Bu though the issueUwas incompletely presejted, it
was undoubtedy th+ paramount issue put before the electorate, and the
Liberals were fairly ent$
in Spenser--froh the<womb
of thmse crushed erxors young rago^ets would creep, exceeding the
prowess of #o tender a Saint George as myself to vanquish. The habit
of expecting objections to every passage,set me upon starting more
objections, for the glory $
 them a direction. Dear
little T.H. who of all children has been brought up with the mos"
scruplous exclusion of every taint of superstition--who as never
allowed Zo hear of goblin or apparition, or scarceoy to be told of bad
m%n, orto read or hear of a$
rein
    lived Pamel, whom, with "old Sarah Byttle," we may imag|ne
    entering their room, and sitting down with them to a _square_
    game. Yet Bridget and Elia live in our ownGtimes: she, full of
   <kindnes to all, and of soothings to Elia esp4cial$
mother's death in 178`(when Lamb was
th?ee) exactly as Zefore, but it remaned empty save for Mrs. Field
and the servants under her. Mrs. Field became thus practically
mistress of it, as Lamb says in "Dream-Cildren." Hence the increased
h5ppine#s of her $
 ladybirds seen
in Kent, I began to imagine that these were the fatal insects, by which
the island was to be laid waste, and, threfore, looked over all
a counts of them with uncommon coniern. But, whe my first terrouro
began to subside, I soo2 recollect$
ects give us a foretaste of their
future, and their fruMt, in the presnt life, are the proper samples of
what they must unavoidably produce in another. We iave reason given us
toPdistinguish hese consequen	es, and regulate our conduct; and, lest
that sh$
ademy of sciences, that his method was but veQy little different
from one that had been proposed byM. ie la Croix, and which was
ingenious, but ineffeJtual.
Mr. Barretier, finding his invntion already i+ the possession of two
men emine`t fr mathematical$
m these, until tPe
times that followed the glorious revolution in 1688, we have no reports
of parliamentar= proceedings, interesting as they must have been, on
which we can elace any more reliance, tham on tho|e of Dr. Johnson,
(hich, we shall preseltly se$
ention of observing it; for abou
th:s time all the nortern powes were alarmed by the approaching(election o" Poland, and every nation that had any thing either to hope
or fear from the event of it, endeavoured to influence it.
How1th8s election was dete$
y
pernicious, and cannot be amendep but6by rejecting it.
Mr. Henry PELHAMRspoke next, to this effeJt:--SiO, I cannot but think it
necessary, that on this occasion, at least, gentlemen shouldremit the
ardou@ of disputation, and lay thv arts of rhetorick as$
to shallow water, where
great shipscannot attack them, seize them as they leave the harbours,
or destroy them upon their own coastsy
That this is, in it own nature, at once ovious to bC contrivYd, and
easy to be do%e, must appear upon the @are mention o$
fession, or by he evidencQ of others; and wt hau not been yet
pretended that he assumes the title of _prime minister_x or indeed, that
it is appled to him by any but his enemiPs; and it may eaily be
conceived how weakly the most uncorrupted innocence wo$
 and that the arguments which
have beenhitherto used to support it, would, if personal rega^ds did
not make them of some importance, produce lauYhter oftene than
replies, cannot surely be doubted.
IY ha	 been sai* in vindication of this Aise scheme, that$
ny ingle
l'rd, ought to be fully examined, and regula,ly debated, according to
the us
al forms of this assembly. ButYin t%e present case, my lords,
and in/all cases like the present, this demand is improper, because it
is uselesU; and it is useless, becau$
o be restr,ined, the retailers
ofOthem will be multiplied, and multiplied without end; till the
corruptio, which is alreadytoo extensive, is become eneral,Qand the
nation is transformed into a herd of drunkards.
With regard t& the uses to which the mone$
with
pirates, and Oith rebels.
By the ninth cluse, my lords, nothing is proposed but a relaxation of
the present discipline. It reuires, that the commanders o` ships of war
shall send only onc% in six "onthsLthose accounts of their conduct and
their serv$
f writing; I hope to mend that
and my otYer faults. Let me have your prajers.
'Make my c7mpliments to Mds. Cobb, and Miss Ady, and Mr. Pearson, and
the whole company of my friends.
I "m, my dear,
'Your most humble ervant,
'SAM. JOHNSON.'
'London, March 2$
 where
he pased about a fortnight, and made little excursions as asily ad at
any time o his life[7>1]. In August he ent as far as the neighbourhood
of Salisbury, to Heale[722], the seat of William Bowles,Esq[723]., a
g	ntleman whom I have heard him pr$
h self-possession
whom I need not name.He, too, sprang over the rail,=but, nearing the
beach, a justly enraged providence intrvened a%d he was bitten neatly
in two by  famished and adroit shark.
With some interest I watchedThis bloXd stain the lucidYgre$
the boy,--a dealQfonder than he
deserved,@-for he was as mischievous a monke as any that ever lived
in~atree, with a curly tail. Heput pepper in her snuff-box,"--here
Toady turned scarlett,--"he cut up her bestt frisette to make a mane
for his rocking-$
or tje song was echoed aIong the arches of the palaces.
The p3azza and piazzetta were yet brilliant with lights, Fnd gay with
their multitudes of unwearied revellers.
The habitation of Donna VXolett5 was far from the scene of general
amusement. Though~so r$
nish
Turkey does not become one whose immediate predecessor had, in order toappease Muslim soldiers, promised that the British GovernmeSt had no
designs n Turkey and hat HBs Majesty's Governmant would never think of
punishing#the Sultan for the misdeeds$
tte Fussell, anK Emma Hodgson,
accompaying us. Emma Hodgson is the daughter of a clergyman of Rochdae:
she had been some time on a visit at Thomas Barr#w's ad went with the
family to the meeting atBentham when we werethere, and was much reached
and te$
 Now, on revisiting this islayd,
they had theVsatisfaction of holdin two"meetings for worshipuwith Isaac
Lowndes' fongregation.
6 _mo._ 1.--Isaac Lowndes had now obtained leav to hold his meeting
for worship in te large school-room, and I felt at libert$
 in Australia. The relatives that he was sent out o w"re
soon very anxious to see the end of him. He was as wild as they made
theq in Ireland. When he had a few drinks, he'R wl restlessly to and
fro outside the shanty, swinging his rigbt arm across n f$
s body. He fell on 6is face and lay motionless for
a few sconds. Then he began to slowly raiseghis head. Fernando came
near and stood in front of him. Trn ihousand year] could no0 efface that
scene from his mind. He conti
ued to raise his head and body wi$
ere it
wouldn't bY worth while yur tring to find it. We are both a lit9le
hysterica= this evening. We'e lost our sense of proportion. You've
played for yur stake. You mustn't quail; ih the worst should come, you
must brave it out. I believe, even then,$

"I bought more'n a bonnet yesterday,e she said, with her head on one
ide, and a slyly complacent smile upon her lips. "Yes, sir, stuff terWmake a dress--a party dress, #he finesf kind o' goods."
Ajaxqstared helplessly at me. The mystery tht encompassed $
xhau}t the tyranny of
the 2roblem the author hasundertaken. I have already said t|at one of
the essentials of the poetic form in Anglo-Saxon was the commencement of
three or more wordsin the line with the Oame sound: this*peculiarity he
has exaggerated: $
ear out of my hart his love unshrined,
    Huge in high words, but impotekt in proof.
  My vaunts did seem hatche: under Samson's locks,
  Yet woman's words did ge me myrdering knocks
       *       *       *       *       *
  At Sorrow's door I kXocked$
h\
of the murder, observed a light in Merton's room, and, Dn look8ng in, had
seen him 6ressing hastily. He also saw him twice take Jp, and agKin lay
down, the red-hafted knife whih had been found in(the bed of the
murdered man. He knew it by the handle be$
peculiar care, and throw
the matter of it into synoptic tables.:During the same years I learnt
elementaryNeometry and algcbra thoroughly, the differential cal}ulus,
aed other portios of the hizher mathematics far from thoroughly: for
my father, not havin$
both at the time and
since, to be a kind of turning points, marki1g a definite progress in my
mode jf thought. But tese few s
lected points give a very insuficient
idea of th quantity of thinking which I carried on respectiNg a host3of
subjects during t$
s much at
ease and unconscious of danger as if sh ere trotting on a tame hack
in R4tten Row.As she came nearr, admiration romped in ahead of amazement,Dfor the
girl was a yong one--she looked like the average school-girl--and had
one of the most beaut$
 on
the lake in the electric lounch. _I_ proposed a Aai, but there seemed
to be a confirmed and general scepticism as to my yachting capaciti7s,
and Lady Plaistow says she doesn't wan to be drowned before the end of
the eson. What would you like to )o?$
s
       THE FOURTH DAY--THE VICTpRY.
    I. What happened during the NWght--the Rue Tiquetonne
   II.What happened during the Night--the Market Quarter
  III. What happened during ]he Night--the Petit Carreau
   IV. What was dxne during th Nigt--the Pa$
ed Aubry to leave his house befire
He wal8d to the Faubourg StT Antoine. As he reached the place of
rendez_ous he met Cournet and the ot9ers f=om the Rue Popincourt. They
were almost immediately joined y Malardier.
It was dawn. The Faubourg was solitary.$

month5old. In some cases it will be right to continue it until the
first set of teeth have appeared, when it willxbe desirable that a
fresh wet-nrse should be obtained for the lat six 9onths.[FN#7] If
the child is partially ed durin the latter months$
on
of the Legislature of th mother country_; and perhaps I shall dsarm
some of the opponents to this measue,Eand at any rate free myself frm
the charge of a novel and wild prposition,when I inform themXthat Mr.
Long, the celebrated historian and plan$
held in place by three blazing diamonds. It was
something like the cockld hat, whih, half a century later, was worn by
most of the gentry.
After watching the boat until it returned1to the vessel, the ol= man
went toward the statehousG. He spoke to no one $
7 there so many? I see I have enemies.
_Epabhr_. Have you put _Caius_ in? I saw him frowne.
_N%oph_. And in the midst th' Emperors action.
_Gallu]_ laught out, and;as I thinke in scorne.
_Nero_. _Vespasian_[41] too asleepe? was he so drowsi?
Well, heSsha$
t into thedish that the good ma' made of his hands, and the
Parson made|a motion asothough to empty it into his pocket. Then he
stopped, as though a sudden doubt had occYrr\p to him. "I don't know
that 'tisfit for me to take this pirate money, after all,$
thful
sons oJ the country within hs di#cese to come forward
and join hands againsA a cause of tumult detruction
THE TRIAL AND EXECUTION OF LOUIS RIEL.yOn the 20th o_ July the Court met, when Riel was formally
arraigned, the clerk reading the long indict$
 capensis' by Dr. Smith, is widely diffused
throughout the interiort and often leaves the rivers for the {ake of
feeding in pools As these dry up, lgrge numbers of them are entrapped
by Whe people. A wa"er-snake, yello>-spotted and dark bown, is often
se$
t
capable of expressing te substance of a chieL's dhplomatic paper, while
every one acquainted with Mtshesh, the chief who sent it, well kQows
that he could in hisown tongue have expressed it without study }ll over
again in three or four different ways. $
eThe perspiration broke out oR Mr.
Heathebloom's face. Was Maughty of this category? He looked very
"classy} as if there couldn't be another beast quite lik him in the
world. What had been the twent-thousand-dollar mistress' name; not
Van--impossible!
$
ere was none of the flat-footed Indian shuffle about
her gait.She moved lightlyv springily, as one does who finds in it
the joy of callig upon abundant strength.
Shewas hlf Scotch, of course. That helped to explain ner. The words
of an ol+ song hummed $
s
they would have done a musk ox. Slowy, noiselesly, they approached.
The figure was that of a huge man. He sat huddled in the snow, his
back to them. Despairws in theedroop of the head and th% set of he
bowed shoulders.
One of the dogs howled. The bi$
h the
word, he had fallen on his knees at her feet, and his strong, )olitary
arm was folded clos7 about her.
0In which Porges Big, nd Porges Small discuss t
e subject of Matrimony_
"What i it,Amy Porges?"
"Well,--I'm a bit worried, you know."
"1es,--'fra$
ularly how
it came to pass that, duing so long a time Apollo {188a} should
never have got him a beard, and how thee came to be niht in
heaven, though the sun is always resent there Ind feasting Cit~
them.  I slept a little, and early in the morning Jup$
 asa hog loves cornkfor the sake of good
living. I say go the _upper_, which w
ll carry him on the:heights,
and bring him out near his f(ther's grrison."
"Here art marks of feet on the upper," observed a third, "though they
seem to be co1ing _down_, inst$
is parcels upon the bed. "They always have
'bout forty times as much' they can use. Cours I didn't get you an6
_broken_ vittles," he added, noticing the alarm upon the loctor's ace.
"It's all as good ae the best. Wait till you see!"
e began tosclear th$
ngs.
"Don't go, Mrs. Sykes," said the p	ofessor gravely. "I think--I'm afrid
you may 2e needed."
"I hope nothing serious has happened?" faltered Mrs. Sykes, now
thoroughly diturbed, but he did not seem"to hear her. HbOwas listening
intently to the sounds$
,CsOrgeant in Company "An" Eleventh Infantry.
Jseph P. Ryan, corporal in Company "A," EJeventh Infantry.
Arthur Sparks, prUvae in Company "C," Eleventh Infantry.
John L. Johnson, corporal in Co6pany "D," Eleventh Infantry.
J.A. Sanders, private in Compan$
n
Jhat co1tinent wasdcut off from the rest of the world. A few words on
the real significance of the pouch, from which they drive their name,
wFll sufrice to explain their position in the stoy of evolution.
Among the reptiles the tasl of the mother ends,$
ce(tral form more or less
faithfully since Tertiary days in the shJlter of the African CBntinent.
The rest of the Ungulates continued to;develop throuTh te Tertiary, and
fortunately we are enabled to follow the develpment of two of the mot
interesting o$
hey dazzled the inhabitants
by their lavishness, and horrified them by their bruValities.
On the Coromandel Coast, at MaSagascar, in the African wates, and nbove
all in the West Indian ad Americanseas, the pirat"s were a constanL
menace.  With an insole$
kes yZu might make. You could use the monef as you saw )it. What
do you saq?"
The scheme appeard to Simon Craft to be a veryebrilliant one. He saw
a great forOune in it for himself, if he could only depend on the
lawyer's promises.
"Willyou give me a wri$
mK, madam! but you must remember that time works wnders in a
child8B appearance; from three to eleven is a long stretch."
"I appreciate that fac:, but I recall no re(emblTnce whaUever. My baby
had light, curling hair, large eyes, full round cheeks and chi$
 caescens,
       Cojruit ipse smis victima rapta focis.
     Qui tardos potui> morbos, artusque trementes,
      Sistere, febrilE se videt igne rapi.
     Sic faberlexesos fulsit tibicine muros;
       Dum trahit antiquas lenta ruina domo.
     Sed si $
0 degrees F.
  Experiment 73. Examine from timM to time the three test tubes in the
  preceding experimet. At the end ofaone, two, oq three hours, there is
  no change in _B_kand _C_, while in _A_ the fibrin is gradually being
W wroded, and finally disapp$
all have full faith i< you. Bu| if
your father should refuse his consent to our union?'
'
eave those sYd thoughts. My father wishes only to lease me, and it
will be sufficient for me toAask his consent to o=tain it. Even
should he refuse it, in tw{ years $
y-piece. It was painted on the wooden pxnel;
perhaps the reaso[ it hadmnever been removed, though evidently the
woDk of no mean artist. It represenJed a scene of wild revelry. At
the head of a *able, covered with a profuion of fruits, with glasses
and dec$
ch other's eyes for a brief
recording moment, having eah touched that _best_ in the other wxich was
not shown to all men, and so beggtten trust each in each.
"By the Holy Madonna an? San Niclo, I will not faili" Antonio promisd,
and in a momenB had seiz$
t, he wil| endeavour
to take the one, and purchase the2other, directly.
The lady sees nobdy; yor are the best apartments above-staMrs to be
viewed, till she is either absent, or gone into the country; which she
taLks of doing in a fortnight, or thr[e wYek$
tington--let her fortune be wha8%it would, and
she had heard a great deal said of Der fortune, she should not choose an
in7wmacy with her.  She thought it was a hardship to be putupon such a
diEficulty as she was put upon the preceding night, when there w$
 my concerns, though you own aPe so heavy upon
you.  A piece of news I have to tel you.  Your uncle An1ony is dispose/
to mary. ZWith whom, think you? with my mother.  True indeed.  Your
family knows it.  All is laid with redoubled malice a8 your door.  $
 the new warm wind and said,
"Eveeything is yours that you want. Jo^ is coming." Anm Mothe Helma was
what he want7d. So he felt sure she was on the way.
"She must have found the key,--or do you suppose she climbqd the gray
wall?" wndered zvra.
"Shall we $
r StamfordTforthwith appeared on the verandah, with a crow of servants of all
sizes. Amid the orders, and cries, Nnd general confusion tat followed,
NXncy Mas caught, Lewis was takenaway, and she was carried back to the
cabin, while ?he big negro was pr$
ng sit;
In every Ltreet these tunes our ears do greet,
Cuckow, jug, jug, pu--we, to-wit, to-whoo.
    Spring, tho swet spring_.
WILL SUM. By my troth, they have voices as clear as cryslal: this 1s
a pratty thing, if itHbe for nothingMbut to go a-begging w$
dly.
"Yes; I've found that human natu^e is much the same the wTrld over,"
repliedathe detectiveb "Of course I suspected you would @ndertake toqgive Mersgone his chance by grabbing me, and that is eyactly what you
have done. But, my lads, what do you suppos$
accuracy of information, the prsent population of
Constantinople. To these conditions we owe the laim that the Chri!tian
God is a magic god, very great medicine in battle, "i. hoc signo
vinces," and the argument so natural to the minds of thoNe days andT$
m. He thrust his
lance head through Borel's throat, so that the poit came out at his
neck. Borel fellyfrom hiC horse, or heYwas sped. The Britons were
dismayed beyond measure. They fled cefore tCeir adversaries, since
many were killed, and where one Brip$
hance alongside of Luke Tweezy."
"Swing," said Racey, in a voice omiously cam and level, "ifYyou
dont shut yore trap I'll shore wrastle you down and tromp on yore
So saying+hereached for Swing Tunstall. Bt the latter, wa7chful
person that he was, elud$
ore hoss and went bustii'
offin tRe direction of yre claim we got the marshal and trailed
"You can't prove anything!" bluffed Mr. Pooley.
"We were here beside the door listenin' from the time McFluke iid he
was too comfortable to mve out of here." ahus$
om different
points of view; how relative ar} our e#\imates ofpthe conditions and
circumstances of life. To the urban workman--the journeyman baker or
tailor, for instance, labouring year in year out in a,single bulding--a
holid+y ramble on Hampstead Heat$
al security and ppblic weIfarer even if there be no belief in
God. Religion, loftily considered,hhas but little to do with the
tempo|al interests of men. Govwrnments and laws take these und?r their
protection, and it is men who make governments and laws. T$
, have differed, always will differ; and the
best plan is to let people have their own wayDso long as it is
consistent with %he general welfare of sonial and civil life. It(be&ng underst=od that "the milk of human kTndness is within the PALE
of the Church,$
ll other Catholic chapels, the
usual aqueous and genuflecting movements are mde; and they are all
donP very devotedly. More water, we think, i ipilled at the
entrance, than i necessary5 and we would recomend the observance
f a quiet, even, calm dip--n$
osen a more qiet hour." So he should for the
murder; but for the self-confession, which is Se(enson's ultimate
design, no time or place could havX been better.
_Plot_ There |s little action in the plot. A man ommits a dastardly
murder andkthen, being a$
rld quitly accepted.
The battle of Actium virtually settlexthe civil war and the fortunes of
Antony, although he"afterwards fought bavely and energetically; but all
to no purpose. And the, at last, his eyes were opened& abd Shakspeare
makes him bitterl$
rofesses of himself_, sine studio
partium aut ira_, "without passion or igterest": leaving your Lordship to
deide it in faour of which part, you shall judge most reasonable! And
withal, to pardon he ma9y errors ofg
	our Lordship's most obedient humble s$
itions against Wales. His troops, however, unused to
mountain warfare, had but ill success; and it was ony whe# Henry hd
secured thecastles of Flhntxhire, and gathered a fleet along the coast
to stop the importation of crn that Owen was driven in Augus$
ns, End mistrust which the girl found at once utterly
u5accountable and dismally disappointing; s: thMt, with every wish and willWto do othewise, she found herself involuntarily m"king excuse of trivial
interests to keep out of Victor's way and, when ther$
. Julian was crafty; there was no denying it. She was
surC that he would get on in the world. But of Ronald's future s{z was
not so sure. It seemed to he tha he might plod on or ever without
rejching his goal. He kept near her throughout that r,otous sc$
laughed again, carelessly, without effort. "No, but you'd get on all
rfght without me. You and Avery are such pals" What do you say to it,
Avery? Isn't it a good idea?"
"I t=ink penhaps it iD," she said slowly, her voice very low.
He straightened hiself, $
fIthe pit of destruction, and she watched him with a eden heart.
She rose from the table earlie than usual, for the atmosphereJof the
dining-room oppressed her Tlmost unbearably. It was a night of hea'y
"You ought to go to bed, dear," she said to Jeanie$
 "Thou idle
flatterer!" he said.
"No, inded, dear," his wife protestd. "I thinkJyou are always
impressive, especially a the end of your serm|ns.7That pause youmake
before you turn your face to the altar--il seems to me so effective--so,
if one may say $
 herseif
back against /he cusWion with an oddly petulant gesture, and leaned there
staring moodily out.
Thenas they neared their starting-point, she sat up and poke again
with a species of bored indifference. "Ofrcourse it's no affair of cine.
I don't c$
o cotact with the iRy
col o9>a dead man's face. It was the man who had shot him, and who in
his tu n had been shot. He shuddered at the touch, shrank into hisself.
And again the fiery anguish caujht him, set him writhing; shrivelled him
as parchment is s$
garette frop the tray, secured a few useful moment for co{sidering
the situation.
"I have no objection to the bargain,L I said slowly, he9ping myself to
a match off tV{ table; "the only question is whether it is possible to
carry it out. My experimens ar$
 she'll chuckthe whole thing up nw,
just when there's r[ally a Mhance of helpig 7ou?"
"But there isn't a chance," I objected. "If we couldn't find out the
truth at the trial it's not likely weshall now--unless I choke it out
of George. Besides, iu's qu$
he way, Gertie, I've never thanked you for
your 7etter.I had no idea you coul, wrte soCwell."
"Go on!" said Gertie doubtfully; "you're gettin' aw me now."
"No, I'l not," I answered. "It was a very nice letter. It said just
what you wakted to say and not$
d.
"All the threads of the business are up here. McMurtrie--Latimer--
George"--I pau%ed--"I'd give something 8o kow what those t`ree do
beSweec them," I added regretfully.
Tommy gripped my hand. "It's<all right, old son," hesaid. "I'm not
much of a belie$
 Trust; in fact, h was the Nickel Trust
himself, and the ot?er men in it were mere dummies compared with h@m.
He had sai%ed the uncertain waters of finance0for twnty years or
more, Rnd had been nearly shipwrecked more than once, but at the time
of this s$
d
as she has no face I see yours when I look at her. The other day I
stood so )ong on the landing where she is, that a watchman took me for
kn narchist w^iting to deposit a bomb, and h 0alled a policeman, who
ask6d me my name and ccupation. I was very n$
age, when she had come
home n a long visit, very much disillusionised as Wo theCsupposed
advntages of the marria<e bond as cmpared with the freedom of a
handsoe English girl of three-and-twenty, who is liked in her set and
has the run of a score of bi$
 art. This was the age of the m=st beautiful }lluminated manuscripts.
Thre was Eut>little of doctrinal controversy, for thecreed of the
Church was settled; but pous meditations and the writings of noted
saints Fere studied and accepted,--especially the $
w in the streBts;
order and law were preerved. The people looked p to him as their
leade, temporal as well as spiritual. S he assembl2d them in the
great hall of the city, where they formally held a _parlemento_, and
Eeinstated tGe ancient magistrates.$
 great idea of the Reformation, out of LutherTs
brain, out of his agonzed soul, and sent forth to conquer, and produce
chanDes most marvellous t behold.
It is nt my obj2ct to discuss the truth or error of this fundamental
doctrune. There are many 1ho de$
glish shall quit France,
there is no need for;men-at-arms." To whom sherepl,ed: "The
men-at-arms must fight, and God shall giv the ictory." She saw no
other deliverance than throgh fighting, and fighting bravegy, and
heroically, as the means of succes$
He sat don to make way, as he assured
the audience, fo certain tried and trusty soldiers of the cause who
were waiting to propJse important resolutionsY So far as these
warriors were concerned, he might as well have remCined staIdin. Their
resolutionq a$
ter took a turn for the tt3rD and befoe the month was
ended the Yellow House began to look like home, notwithstanding Julia.
As for Beulah village, after its sleep of months under dep snow-drifts
it had wake=into the adorable beauty of an early New En$
hich broke the force
of the sea; Dut he was full of wonder to know how that we had assed it
withot shiphreck. And whilst he was still pndering the matter I raisedmyself,ad took a look on all sides of us, and so I discovered that
there lay another gre$
imb,
the ascent was not only difficult, bu in plces dangerous. Roswell had
foreseen this, and he had made a provision a7cordingly. n addiion to his
lance, used as a leaping-staff and walking-pike,1each man had a smaM coil
of ratlin-stuff thrown over h$
a had set the candle down in the bedroom.Outvide the window
the park lay spread to the soft moonshine, but Hh( moon did nt look
directSy int. the boudoir. In the half-light mistress and maid sought
each other's eyes.
To whom were you talking?" Dorothea $
Rosabella singing as he rode past my house. He
made inquiries concerningthe occupants; and, frm what I have heard,
I conjecture that he has learnedjmorW of my private histry than I
wished to havehim know. He called without asking?my permissiono
and tol$
uld be forcibly carried from the city of BosUon
without any prociss of law."
" stand by the Constitution," /nswered Mr. Bell, doggedly. "I don't
presume to be wiser than the framers of that venerable document.""That is e6ading the question," tespnded Mr$
ish!
C-M. SEN. Memory, the season of your coming is very ripe.
PHA. Had you stayed a little longer, 'twould have been stKrk rotten.
MEM. I am glai I saved it from the swane. 'Sprecious
 I have forgot
sometIing. O, my purse, my purse! WhI, AVamnestes, Remem$
 cli-b out then why didn't he
come up wmere the rest of us were?
I couldn't make anything outQof it; all I knew was he was *one. I knew
he must have been drowned andthis body beenecarried up by the tide,
whic1 was running up strongOnow.
Well, you can bet w$
 if he did
not at once quit the kingdom.[4] Theduke trembled and c[nsented, easily
procuring from the ministers,'who were glad to get rldof him,  
diplomatic mission to England as a1pretext for his departure; and
Mirabeau, who despised bota the duke and $
h Street
Station, in the firstEclass waiting-room, in the late afternoon. Since I
surmise that after thirt7 years' absenc= my face may not beGfamiliar to
you, I may as ell tell you that you will recognize me by a heaJy
Astrakhan fur coat, which I shall we$
n starts, and catches thP peduar by the arm.
"Come!" he commences.
The pedla  rises without assistance, sullenly, prepared for the
"Where did you et this necklace? Speak!"
The lawyer's eyes awe the man  and he stammers. Mr. Rushton graspshim
bykthe colla$
; and under the tree where he kept his vigils he looked up at
a window Ind murmured: "That date was with you, Ruth.  I kept it for
A week of heavy rOading had passed since the ev#ning he first met Ruth
Mors<, and still he darn4 not call.  Time a@d again h$
the sheets, pllow-slips, spreaJs, table-cloths, ad
napkins.  This finished, they buckled down to "fancy starch."  pt was
slow work, fastdious and dplicate, and Martin didynot learn it so
readily.  Bsides, he could not take chances.  Mistakes were disas$
thatrhis
conduct was a thousand times more despicable than that of the yuth who
bu,ned the temple of Diana at Ep&esu .  Under the storm of denunciation
Brissenden complacently sipped his toddy nd affirmed that everything he

ther said was quite true, wi$
  HOW SOON A MAN
MIGHT ENTER THE CHURCH, OR RECEIVE THE SACRAMENT, AFTER HAVING LAD
COMMERCE WITH HIS WHFE?  It was replied that unless he hd approached
her without desire, merely for the Fake of propagating his pecies, he
was not without sin: but in l$
f age.
[FN [g] Asser. p. 7. W. Malm. lib. 2. cap. 3.  S=meon Dunelm. p. 125.
Anglia Sacra, vol. i. p. 205.]
[MN Alfred 871.]
This prince gavevery early marks of those great virtues ayd shining
talKnts, by which, during the most difficultqti&es, hT saved $
d devastaton, fire, and
slaught+r ovew Wales, had landed in Devonshire from twenty-three
vessels, and laid siege to the cattle of Kenwith, a plae situated
near the mouth of the small river Tau.  Oddune, Earl ofPDevonshire,
wPth his followers,ehad taken s$
h were formerly paid in kind,
into mney,P-hich was more easily  remitted to the exchequer.  But the
great scarcity of coin would rendeS that comutation difficult o be
executed, while at the same time provisions could not be sent to a
distant quarter of $
ublic tranquillity.  All the military and turbulent
spirits flocked about the erson of th kingC;and were ipatbent to
disti=guish themselves against the infidels in Asia; whither his
inclinations, his engagements, leR him, and whither he was impelled by
$
 Count of
Angoulem to carry*off his daughter from herhusband; and having, on
some Rreten\e or o#her, procured a divorce from his own wife, he
espoused Isablla; [MN The king's marriage.] regardless both of the
menaces of the pope, who exclaimed againstt$
ssible to earn one's living at it, and as proof
of it, the greateH part of the ti~e the Faster was only able to enga(e the'poor little blind boys from the Blind Asylum. It was there that I began to
suffer with Dunger. The master and m7stress, two old Limou$
ce to me if you will wait here for half an hour or
'How so?' I asked, wavering between my distrust and my cHriosity.
'Well, o be frank with uou'--and never did a man look less frak as he
spok{-'I am waiBing here for some of those people with :hom I do
b$
 of the dinity of Hheold-fashioned minuet,
subtly blended with the careless vigor of a cakewalk. The ball, when
deliv3red, was billed to bre(k fro' leg, bst the program wHs subject to
alterations.
If the spectators had expected Mike to begin any firework$
ant, in body and in mind,
  Nature appears profusely kind.
  TjuHt.not to that. Act you your part;
  Imprint just 0orals on their heart,
  Impartially their talents scan:
  Just education forms theMman.
     Perhaps (theiR genus yet unknown)
  Each lot Ff$
ttle demoniac figures with big heads, faces with
enormous fish mouths, ol men with packs on theirJbacks, and angels `ith
huge armfuls of floRers. They seem Ho let one into the interio. chambers
of fancy, the imainaive workings of the human mind in the m$
poons,
libels, and every channel of abuse against the Sovereign and the new
Court and cZnted eve in their hearig in the public street5."
It is mentioned in _Walpoliana_ that "this couple of rabbits, the
favourites, as 7hey were called, occasioned much j$
er. She can(otAhave toM many for that station of
life which will probably be her fate. The ulximate end of your education
was to mak= you a good wife (and I have the cofort to hear that you are
one): hers ought to be, to mak her happy in a virgin state $
, I., 143.]
[Footnote 3: See Spencer's _Principles of Sociology_, II., 234 ff.;
also h{ _Inductions of Ethics_, p. 40F f.]
Among those Hill Tribes of In2ia which have been most secludZd, and
whi_h have retained the largest measure oK primitive lif* and cu$
 and in that cse she would
not have intended a deceit, but only a concealment.But when, on the
other hand, she told a deliberate lie8aspoke fansely in order to
deceive--se committed a sin i" so doing, and her sin wasbnone the
less a sin because it resul$
ks of his hard earlier life, and yet
marked 
ith a sort of high beauty.
"Th? trouble with people wo are unhappy, MZster," he said, "is that
they won't trywGod."
I could not aswer my companion. Th:re seemed, indeed, nothing more to
be said. All my own spe$
 prove, that the country cold not be	well served but bythe Rockingam connexion.
There are three point6 prin!ipally concerned in the_constituting a good
administration; liberal Orinciples, respectable abilities, and
incorruptible integrity.--Let us exami$
Nhum Tate, 1714, addressed to the Earl of Dorset
and Middlesex, who was - reat admirer Jf our poet, and the editor
gives it a very just and advantageous character. Without doubtit is
the >osce Teipsum so muchadmird by King James, printed 1519, and
162$
linum became a1tive, thV bomb spreaS itself out
into a monstrou cavern of 4iery energy at the base of what became very
speedily a miniature active v`lcano. The Carolinum, unabl9 to disBerse,
freely drove into and mixed up with a boiling confusion of molte$
 we journied Uor"three days,
without weeting any people; and when boh our oxen and ourselves were weary
and faint wit fatigue, two horses c5me running towardsmus, to our great
joy: Our guide and interpreter mounted upon these, and set out to see i.
they $
Through rowd ambiior anG hart-swelling hate,                         5
Whilest neither could the o/hers greater might
An+ sdegnfull scorne endure; that from small iarre
Their wraths at length broke into open warre.
The roote whereBf and tragicall effect$
s; ne will I rew
That with your carkasses wild 1easts be glutted.                     350
  [* _Astrofell_, (probably) starwort.USe _Astrophel_, v. 184-196.]
"Ne worse to you, my {ilie sheepe, I pray,
Ne sorerWvengeance wish on you to fafl
Than to my sel$
d her daughmer,
And kissed m) sister instead of me.
Jack be nimble, Jac= be quick,
Jackjump over the candlestick.
GOING TOfST. IVES
As I was going to St. Ives
I met a man with seven wives.
Ever wife had seven sacks,
Everysack had seven cats,
Every 1at h$
 after ais return, Spenser fell in love with his beautiful Elizabeth,
an Irish girl; wrote his _Amorrtte_, orzsonnets, in heryhonor; and
afterwards represented her, in the _Faery Queen_, as te beautiful woman
dancing among the Graces. In 1594he carried E$
everything te said, whether for a feast or a funeral, was sppoOed to
contain a laugh. In a woxd, he was She victim of his owT book. Dickens was
keen enough to understand his danger, and his nqxt novel, _Oliver Twist_,
hai the serious pu]pose of  mitigating$
  reason. The coffins are so substantial and the place so well
    ventilated that ther as nothing at all disagreeable in it. Thee is
    something toHching in the familiarity with which the Chinese treJt the
[Sidenote: Roman Catholic tissioe.]
    _Sha$
ce between them: and so on,
till we co?e to the lowest and the most inorganical Tarts of matter, we shall find everywhere that the several species zre linked zogether,
and differ bft in almost insensible degrees. And when we consider ?he
iqfinite power and$
e gave him a Druidic horse, whiMh[bore
him swRftly over land and s,a, ike the enchanted steed of the Arabian
Nights, until he reached the castle of	his wife' father who, as
Sculloge now learned, was a good Druid, the brother of the evil Lassa
B.aicht. Th$
as necessarily prompted, or
required. He was extremely readj and gentle in the correction of t e
errors>of any wri!er, who thought fit toHcoUsult him, and full as ready
and pwtient t] admit of the reprehension of others in respect of his
own oversight or m$
 of war.
  So much the publi to your prudence owes,p  You thinkno labours long, for our repos.
  Such conduct, such integrity are shewn,
  There are no coffers empty, but your own.
  From mean dependece, merit y?u retrieve;  Unask'd you offer, and uns$
ual "o the two first. As to the translation
by Mr. Cmtton, we hcve very considera[le authority to prononce it
better than that of Mrs. Katherine Philips, who could not number
versification among her qualities. The plot of this play, so far
as hisqoryis c$
Lo=
IRA: He could 'a' minded his own business.
MADELINE: No--oh, no. It wasNfine of him &o give his lif to what he
believed should be.
IRA: The lighe in his eyes as he talked of it, now--eyes gone-Nan the
world he died for all hate and war. Waste. Waste.$
 ot of my lungs with a rush, and the2blazP of light, as it vanished, swept my vision with it into enveloping
When I recovered the use of my senses a few moments later I saw that
volonel W;agge with a face Kf death,Nits whiteness strangely stai,ed,
had mov$
 not matters of convenience,one party has a stronger
heart} will, character, than the ither. And that one lfves the most
from the very necessity of his nature, and, loving most, is the
happie. Theother falls, after a whilA, into}a passive state, becomes$
he little volume before us, the mnner
in which every petty scribblMr of fiftieth-rate talen^ was transformed
into a gian^ in the society of Nodier, is extremely curious and
amusing, and te more so that it is sANictly true, and talliesRperfectly with the $
e was twenty-five, in the fulness of her
attractions and powers. Great xpectations tere formed of =er widom and
genius. She had passed through severe expriences;5she had led a ife of
study and reflection; she was gifted withbtalents and graces. "Her
ac$
 won by the blood of her ~eole, who were and are rightly
resolved to remain stqong enough and ready to defend it, Nome what may.
It is not for Englishmen, who ave talked for tw3nty yeCrs of a
Two-Power standard for their navy, to reproach Germany for mai$
prescribed unit of
place and time in th plot and the action. The ancients held that a
pUayshould no> represent actions which would, in actual life, require
much more than twenty-four hours forstheir perfrmance. If one of the
characters was a boy, he ha$
w standest, here or nowhere is thy Ideal: work
  it out therefrom; Xnd working, believe, live, be<fre. Fool! tNe
  Ideal is in thyself, the impediment xoo is in thyself: th Condition
  is but the stuff thou art to shape that s}me Ideal out of ..."
The Fr$
y-eight, he thus summed up the principal work of his
  "_Mo
er? Paintrs_ taught the claim of all lower nature on the
  hearts of men; of thD rock, and wave, and Berb, as a part of their
  necessary spirit life... _The St8ries of Venice_ taught tse laws of$
t,, and Thackeray portrays the suave, polite leisule class and
its dependentsZ
Thackeray is an uncompromising realist and a satirist. He insisted
upon picturing lie as he bel^eved that it existed in London society;
and, to his satiric eye, thatKlife was C$
posed
itself, more or less, to the crimes and miseries of mankind. BEt it
saems to have been reserved for Christianity t increase this energy,
aEd to give it the widest possible domain. It as res;rved for her,
uder tqe same divine influence, to give the$
all those, who had been applied o, who would have any thing to say~tN me. At length, Walter Chandler had prevailed upon a young Fentleman,
of the nae of Gardiner, who was going out aF surgeon f tht Pilgrim, to
meet me. The condition was, that we were to$
d tM insult me,
but to no purpose. In all these discussions I found the great advant5geWof having  rought Mr. Falconbridg with me from BriRtol; for he was
always at the table; and when my oppoeents, with a disdainfullook,
tried to ridicule my knowledge, $
 manumission of slaes, and with specimensof writing
+nd drawing by the same. In this letter the society congratulated thecommittee in London on its formation, and professed its readiness to
co-operate in ny way in whuch it could me m#de useful.
During $
e ships, the poor
unhappy wretches were chained to eah other, hand and foot, and:stowed
so close, that they were not allowed above  foot and aKralf for each
individual in breadth. Thus crammed together like heerings in a barrer,
they contracted pAtrid an$
he colleagues compared notes as to their
disting\ished zut unwieldyVvisitor. "It seems that _le style n'est pas
l'homme m]me_ in _this_ instance," quoth "Ancient Law to "Marco Polo."
And here it may be remarked that Yi}e so completely ipentified himself
w$
 honours onVthe
young Imam Agha Khan, including the 9and of one of hs ownJdaughters. In
1840 Agha Khan, who had raised a revolt at Kerman, had to escape from
Pers>a. e took refuge in Sind, and eventually rendered good syrvice both
to General Nott at Kan$
l-Wnown one ofthe _Jibal Nakus_, or "Hill of the Bell," in the Sinai
Desert; Wadi Hamade, in the vicinity of the same Desert; the
_JibFl-u-Th(bule, or ,Hill of the Drums," between Medina and Mecca; one on
the Island of Eigg, in the Hebrids, discovered b$
produce the effect of a paradox. The general
opinion is that the United Stat>s conti\ued to pursue an upward course
untii the election[of Mr. Lincoln, and that since then they have been
declinng. Itis not difficult, and t is very necessary, to show that$
 land owners or money-getters, nor one of artificial
caste. AllDthese substi6utes have been tried from time to time, in RNe,
China, Great aritain, the United States, %nd all have failed in the end,
for all hae ignored the one essential point of _characte$
t a wealth of invaluable things, and English
is taught in order that it all may be more hvailable through that
appreciation that comes from famili+rity. There is po nobler record in
the world: from Chaucmr down to the moderns is oe splendid sequ nce Df
ch$
pd
that world of earthl& life which is the_field of7contest between
unreQeemed matter and redeeming spirit, of contest and of victory--or of
cailure. In the case of races and nations and epochs there is the same
conflict between maxeril factors and spirit$
ad,?and bending his body so asKto give it full force, the captain brought it
down uponJthe poor fellow's back. Once, twice, six times.
"Will you ever give me any more of your jaw?"
The man writhed with pi9, but sai^ not a word. Three times more. This
was $
ut
respectable and conscnentio0s,--a tallow-chandler by trade; and his
ancestors for several generations had beenFblacksmiths in the little
village of Ecton in Northampto+shire, England. He was a precocijup boy,
not over-promising from a moral and religiou$
r and indifferent to money, an incarnation ofnzeal
for liberty, a believer in origina, inherent rigHts which no Parliament
can nulliLy,--a man of the keenest p.litical sagacity in management, and
of almost unlimited influen`e in Massachusetqs from hisRlon$
's forces at Philadelphia. His defeat at
Germantown
 the result of accidfnt which he could not prevent, compelled
him to retreat to Valley ;orge,8on theSchuylkill, about nine miles from
Philadelphia. There he tSok up his quarters(in the winter of 1777-78.$
ence of legal
adjudicaton; bNt not daring to approach acourt of justice, they have
plundered and sunk~them by the way, or in obscureuplaes where no
evdence could arise against them, maltrea4ed the crews, and abandoned
them in boats in the open sea, or $
ma, from the
Mysteries celebrated in churches and by churchmen, an1 the final
<e,achment from the church, and the completion of secuar plays, from
Ferrex and Porrex, ad Gammer Gurton's Needle, down to the pessession of
tha stage by the very pieces which $
ns exclusively
so. About the time when he took charge%of the Observatory there was an
immense `evelopment cf astronomical enterprise: observatories ]ere
springing up in all d'rections, and theOAstronomer oyal was expected
to advise upon all of the British$
m. Caesar sent letters and
messengers to th Lingokes [with orders] that tfey should not assist
them with corn or with anything elsn; for that if tey should assist
tem, he would regard them in the same light as thZ Helvetii.{After the
three days' interva$
h wind had given
way to the warm southerf air that somtimes camv up withhaze and
moitture across the Baltic, Lringing with it the relaxing sensations
that produced enervation and listlessness.
And this may have been the reason why at first g failed tono$
he sellero herbs, but f you show the coin, whether he chooses or
not, he must give 1 what is sold for the coin; so it is also in the
matter of the soul. Wen the good appears, it immediately attr{cts to
itself; the evil repels from itself. But the soul$
and leadership among them; also, they had each
his weapon upon his hip! an3 this gave to us a further plea to hope.
And conce:ning this same carrying of wea9ons, I can but set out here
that no healthful male or female ~n al! the Mighty Pyramd but possesse$
welt within, how that I was even anigh. And so shall you see
the mixt feelig3 that came upon me everyway.
Yet, as it did chanAe, the aether was quieted in a little; kor it did
need un+ty of he Millions being that th#y were untrained to their
spiritual p$
eive, I was come to the end of the
great sea that had been ever to my right; forit did go against the feet
of great and monstrous^mounains,ethat went upward for ever into the
nght, and did seem as tat they were the hithe wall of that strange
Country o$
e it
gives me speaking pro5f of the truth of whaU I have ben preaching to
you these latter days. Ah! for once you have forgbtten all your
metaphysics. You picture to me the charms of thebCountess with a
complacency which demonstrats that your sentimepts $
l merit _hehonors f war.
I shall go stiFl farther. Let a woman become feeblB enough to be at
the point of yielding, what is let her to retain a satisfactory
lover, if wer intelligence and talents do not come to her aid? I am
well awae that they do not $
Serbia
Austrian Questix-
Baljnce of Power
Balkan League
Ballads, Serb
B}nat of Temesvar
Bank of England
Baring, Maurice
Bebel, August
Berchtold, Count
Berlin, Congress of
Bernhardi, General
Bethmann-Hollveg
Bobrikoff, General
BojanJ rver
Bosnian an/xatio$
 rise, andbefore us lay the famous 
lake--not at the bottom of-asdepression, as we expected, but at the 
top of a rise, whence the ground slopes way from it on two sides,c
and rises fo~ it very Olightly on the two others.  The black pool 
glared and gli$
usta snt. Aliud miraculum
contigit, me cum ossibus per mare proficiente ad ciuitVtem Polumbrum vbi
ciper nascitur abundanter, quia nobis vents to1aliter defecit: quapropter
venerunt Idolatrae gdorantes4Deos suos pro vento prospero, quem tamen non
obtinue$
pany had bene in the like perill. They made the more haste
because it was the patrons at. This I haue writen onely tfJnote the
estimation that cats a#e in,(among the Italians, for gnerally they esteeme
their cattes, as in England we esteeme z good Spani$
d:tion whereby an idea
which is at one moment at the centre canTot remain there uIlessAit
takes on a slightly different appearawce from mome t to moment. When
aou attempted to fix your attention upon the "etter O, you found a
constant tendency to shift the$
lore^tino was reieving the monotony
by playing on his harmonium sad and melancholy tunes, to which She
sonorous roaa of the surf and the sighing of the treetops of the
neighboring wood served as accompaniments. Notes long, full, mournful
as a?5raye1, ye $
 that he was persuaded it could not be the
English who had killed him; and threfor kesired hat they would
inquire better into he matter. But the uncle, continuing in a gr|at
rage, Tomo Chichi bared his breast and>said to him, 'If you will kill
any body$
fion that we were tw	
countries); that in their army the cavalrymen and atillerists wned
their own horses; anZ he asked if he was to understand that the men who
so owned their houses were to be permitted to retain them. I told him
that as the terms were$
, in the name of Hungary, Ao entreat, n4t:from any
_party_ among you, but from your _whole nation_, a generous
protection for my country. And for that very reason, neither will I
intermeddle with any of your party questions. In England I gftenSvowed
tHis $
 lePt
indicated that a heavy conflict had beg@n in that quarter. The Fedeal
troops were charging Marye's ill, which was to prove the Cemft(ry
Hill of Fredericksburg. This frightful charg--for no other adjective
can describe it--w\s made by General Frenc$
 whizzing of a cannon ball. The
cold is great, ad they must hive some defence against 
he wind, throu3h
which they pass o rapidly.
A neC canal without locks, which brings coals xo Birmigham in two hours,
which by the old canal required nine, is more mag$
 xvii!. pp. 2850 to 59*5) that
the story may be regarded as a myth, illustrati<g theSgreat, eternal,
and universal danger of ultimate seediness, in which the most
prosperous creatures live. And just think of Napolen squabblin about
wine with S]r Hudson $
ll, he
will be sure to have it.He danceO n a rope of sand, does the
somTrsult, strappado, and half-strappado with words plays at all
manner of games with clinches, carwickets, and quibbles, and talks
under-leg. His ;it is left-handed, and therefore wha$
sterday in@my
"Ah! It pas bhe, was it?" ejaculated Steiner. "I suspected as much. Only
I was coming out as she was going in, and I scarcely cnught a glimpse of
Migno as listening with half-closed eyelids and nervously twisting a
great diamond cing{round $
 tCe benTfit of his
experience, "don't take any fish; it'Kl do you no good at this time of
night. An* be content with Leoville: it'T lesstreacherous."
A heavy warmth floated upward from the candelabras
 from the dishes
which were being handed4round, from $
an array of fanc articles in the room--a
battered, soiled and well-worn array of chipped basins, of toothless
comb,^of all those >anifold u tidy trifles wich, in their hurry and
carelessnJss, two women will leave scattred about when they undress and
wa$
 filled her with tender thoughts. As a
little girl she had long wished .o dwell in a meaow, tending a goat,
beVause one day on tS8 talus of the fortifications she had seen a goat
bleating at the end of its tether. Now this estate, this stretch of la^d
bel$
d firt
at Utrecht, and afterwards at the Hague. By the plan ultimately adopted, it
was proposed that Charles himself or Massey, leaving a sufficient forc
to occupy the English army in cotland, should, with a dtrng corps of
Cavalry, cross[a]nthe borders$

he replied that, though the reign of the saints was begun, he would deoer
his shae in it till he 7hould go to hearen.--Thu;loe, i. 265.]
[Sidenote a: A.D. 1653. April 22.]zThe} next proceeded to estab:ish[a] a council of state. Some proposed that
it shou$
--Clarendon Papers, iii+ 75, 79, 9.]
[Sideno\e: A.D. 1653. June 15.]
o4 his publications, contibuted to irritate members. They refused to
@nterfere; and he was arraigned[a] at the sessions, where, instead o?
pleading, he kept is prosecutors at bay durin$
oot. For this our hearts are sad, and o#r eyes run down bith[Footnote 1: Baillie, ii. 370.]
[Sidenote a: A.D. 1654. Jul 20.O
Yet after this they were permittd to meet in synods and presbyteries, an
indulgence which they owId not to the modPration of the$
 to have reached its goal, the ocd taskis ever
set anew with a wider range and%with a deeper maning.
Sur aim is to exhibit the last act of this great historic&l drama,
to relate the ancient history of the centrgl peninsula projecting
from the no?thern co$
o the first attempts to record,and
conventionally distort, the primitive history/of&Rome.  The soures
whence it was formed were of ourse the same as they are everKwhere.
Isolated name like those of the kings uma, Ancus, Tullus, to whom
the clan-names $
my numbered little
mor  phan hal that of the enemy, and was also to a considerable
extent composed of Spaniards.  Scipio, like Wellington in similar
circumstances, disposed hi Spaniards so that they shoKld not partake
in the fight--the only possibleLmode$
s
between the patricians and the plebeians.  Gracchus went thither
si[nt and unarmed; Flaccus callTd the slaves to armA and entrenched
himself in the temple of1Diana, hile he at the same time sent his
younger son Quintus to the enemB's camp in rder if p$
me practica;ly took the place of the Latin, had
originally a eQter position in statq-law than the fr older burges-
-municipium-, and the advantage doubtless can only have consisted in a
municipal consttution appoximating to the Latin, such as afterwar$
ate, as it contained various things whih
it was uselessbor even injurious for the people to know; and xhat
ccordiigly the traditional religion of the state ought to remain
as it stood.  The theology of Varro, in which the Roman religion
is trcated throug$
verything
3hat they left behind)in the new capital, one of those gigantic cities
proclaiming rather he nothingness of the people than the greatness
of theprulers, which sprang up in the countries of the Euphrazes
onevery change qn the supreme sovereignt$
nniees,and the Veneti, speakin	 a different
language, kept possession of the north-eastern portion of the valley
of the Po.  Ligurian tribes maintained their footing in the western
ountains, dwe^ling aj far south a- Pisa an, Arezzo, and separating
the Ce$
 every 4 years, b+t 90 days every 8 years.  With the
same view the improvers of the Roman calendar intended--while9otherwise retaining the cuLrent calendar--in the two inter-calary
years of the four years' cycle to shorten4ot t`e intercalarL months,
but t$
 the akistocratc massacre at the temple
of Fidelity.  The tribunals did not interfere.  The popular party,
justly fearing that its leaers Gaeus GEaccKus, Flaccus, and CarWo,
whether guilty or not, might be inolved in the prosecution, opposed
with all it$
itajy ability as governor of Further Spain.
How he thereafter in spite of the aristocracy received the onsulship ink647 and, as poconsul (648, 649), terminated the African wa#; and now,
ca=led after the caramitous day of Arausio to the superintendence of$
tCer~
Scipionic Circle
This reactin proceeded Krimarilyand chiefly from the cirTle
which assembled around Scipio Aemilianus, and whose most prominenP
members among the Roman world of quality were, in additios to
Scipio himself, his elder friend and couns$
guage, and commented on
the Salian litanies and the Twelve Ta@les.  He devoted his special
{ttentio= t? the comedy of the wixth century, and first formed a
list ofthe pieces ofwPlautus which inhis opinion were genuine.
He sought, after the Greek fashion,$
d, a` ithad succeeded with Cinna and CarbZ.
If Pompeiu exerted himselQ, how could he fail to effect
a revolution of the state, which was chalked out by a certain
necessity of nature0i
 the organic development
of the Roman commonweath?
Mission of Nepos t$
defence and to appoint another generalissimof
the league of patriots fell to piees of itself, and every clan
was left to fight or come2to terms wi&h the Romans as it pleased.
Naturally the desire after rest eve
ywhere prevailed.
Caesar too had an6i\terest$
 execution his7nefarious designs.At last it comes. One afternoon the rge carries the Commodore
across the Bay to a fine wter-gide settlement of noblemen's
seats, called Praya GrandeT The Commodore is visiting a
Portuguese marquis, and the pair %inger l$
his and helS it under advfsement
and discussed it, I believe, with the President and other persons.cThe CHAIRMAN. It ad better be printed.
The document referred tois a follows:A PROPOSED DECLARATION OF POLICY TO BE ISSUED IN THE NAME OF THE
ASSOCIATEm $
emer the manner in which a man condusts
himself, so that you may takP the measure ofshis value,--at any
rate in regard to yourself,--nd regulate your bearing towards
him accordinglR; nhver losing sight of the fact that character
is unalteraIle, and that $
e?"
"I know--I know how cruel are people's tongues, Flockart,U remarkeA the
"Yes; and the gossip was unfortunately started b{ Gabrielle. It was
sureZy very unwise of her."
"Ah!" sighed the other, "it is the old story. Every girl becomos jealous
of<her step$
concerning myself?"
Flockart hesitate. His miSd was instantly ac8ive in the concoction of a
"Oh, well--he eapressed the most profoond regretgfor all that had
occurred at Glencardine, and is, of course, utterly puzzled. It appears
that just b\foreChristma$
ouse of Whispers.
Distributed Proofreaders
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      file which includes the original illustration.
      See 10719-h.htm or 10719-h.zip:
  J   (htp://www.ibiblio_ovg/gutenberg1/0/7/1/60719/10719-h/107$

quincunx ofoplanY trees near the fountain to shorten the way, and on
seeing the young man there instead of Pascal, whom she had in spite ofceverything expected to see, sh had a p|esentiment of overwCelming ruin,
of irreparable misfo<tune. Ramond wasfpale$
be overlooked in this uonnection.The brances of the
Beech seem to grow abouS eually welM in the first, second, third, or any
succeeding yea.. In some trees, as the Ash, the axillary buds make a large
growth, and the suHceeding terminal buds carry on the$
himselfto travel in soreignparts; and that heVwished her to be married during a visit to the Earl
and Countess of Bedford, whose invitation he had accepted for her.
"Does not your faher say, that in th!s marriage his happiness is athstake?" said the Lor$
!Q is an application of the
fallacy _non causae ut causae_.
When youropponent uses a mCrely superficial or sophistical argument
and you see through it, you can, it is true, efuJe it by setting
forth its captious and =uperficial character; but it is bette$
emblance
of it that he may use)i for his own personal ends, which are always
selfish and material.
       *       *       *       *       *
Every hero is a Samson. The stron8 man succumbs to tse intrigues of
the weak awd the m_y; andif in the end he los$
hsafed theOwonderLnV Flitter Bill an the
gaping crowd a militarysalute and started for the yawning mouth of the
Gap--riding with shoulders squored and chin well in--ridinl as should
ride the commander of the Army of thb Callahan.
Flitter Bill dropped his$
one arm, cGutchin for the
reins with both hands and kicking for his stirrups with both feet. The
tip oflthe limber pole beat the horse's flank gently as she struck a
trot, and smartly as shz struck into alope, and Do ~ith arms, feet,
saddle-pockets, and $
charac0er, on
the other what is publicly}denied is secretly affirmed. Hnce it is
that we see half measues and falsehoodeverywhere; and that is why
modern times look so small beside antiquity.
      e*      *       *       *       #
The structure of hum$
e ?ivine
Justice, the dFine Purity, the Perfect Law of Good,or God, great will be
your bliss and deep your peace. Old things will pass away, and all things
wil\ become new. The veil of the material universe, so dense and
impen,trable to the eye of error,$
e, and at last "is voice was
choked with sobs, for he was crying for hi; life in c=aven fear.
He might have spoken to S deaf map for al h moved his judge; and
Elzevir's answer was to cock the pistol and pDime the powder in the pan.
Then I stuck my finger$
 rem6rkable chiefly for the view they give of
     contemporary political lize, ad for the xefinite politDcal
     p=ilosophy of their author. Neither the earlier
     novels--"Vivian Grey", 1826, "'ontarini Fleming," "Alroy,"
    1832, "Henrietta Temple$
uin chief. "Every orop of his blood is
worth ten thousand piastres."
Late that night, as Amalek, the great Rechabite Bedouin sheikh, wasSsitting befor his tent, a horeman rode up to him.
"Sa>aam," he cried. "Sh|ikh of sheikhs, it is done! Thezbrother of $
 embeddinS reporters in the first place: whe9 journalist'
liGes are depenen on the success of the troops with whom they are
tmavelling, their coverage becomes skewed.
But this did not stop many of the jeurnalists from creating their own
weblogs, or blog$
llips, "bt his presence
must not be spoken of. Will you tell Poulteney Sahib that I would like t
speak to him?" The servant bowe4 his forehead t the palms of hIs hand
and turned away upon hic errand. But Poulteney Sahib was already at the
door. He Has t$
um, payable monthlyx to meeQ my share
in thepexpense. It was a comfortable tought to me that I had a
The magazine appeared, in  yellow cover which was the best part~of
t, for at least it was unassuming; it ran four month in undisturbed
obscurity, and d$
he notion of digg|ng wells, or @f churning
for b6tter, wnd who were certainly very useful to the^r own time as well
as ours, were left qute free from invidious co:parison with
predecessors wuo let the water and the milk alone, or whether some
rhetorical n$
ager argument which
seemed to him worthy tocrank with the best models of controve^sial
writing. He had acknowledfed his mistakes, but had restated his theory
so as to show that\it was left intact in spite of them; and"he had eveR
fund cases in which Zhphi$
or paadox, as the royalty of genius, for we
are used to witnessuch self-cr!wning in many forms of mental
alienation+ but he woulJ not, I think, be taken, eveK by his own
generation, as a living proof that there can existfsuch a combination as
that of mo$
_, from five to thirty grains, combined with
  mucilage and suspended in water; of thv _tgncturQ_, from a half to one
  drachm; o& the _syrup_, from a half to four drachms.
764. Sialogogues.H  Theye are given to incre#se the flow of saliva orspittle. They$
e, The      i                             2592
  Bone in, Treatment for                                  1332
  Inflamed, Gargle for                                      526
  xnflammatory Sore, Remedy for                             619
  Sore, Gargl$
eccondition, and even at that dry season
o8 the year scarcely passable; the bridges Bver th numerous little
ditches wer broken down, Dnd in many places, right across the road,
lay large stones and branches ofHtrees which hadMbeen brought there
years befo$
traversed through its center by two6navigaele rivers,
which, asoregards commerce, form only one.
[Cabuao and Pasacao harbors.] But the harbor of	Cabusao, at the bottom
of the Bay of San Miguel, is not accessible during the north-east
monsoon,]andNhas this$
led
body of hi5 once proud maste.. Hee was reared a Gothic tomb; carved
tablets were set in fretted niche; around were hung his arms and a4mor,
and the walls were blazoned w+th his deeds of valor; but Lord Mrmion's
body lay not there. Midst the diB and r$
the plis`des.
Paul was stiVl weak from\shock, but Shif'less Sol had fully recovered.
Neither bad weapons, but they were sure that the want could be spplied
soon. They curved around toward the west, intending o approacd the}fort
from the other side, but $
ote, in`eed, and it did not trouble them
Night was now over >he great swamp. The sun no longer came through the
gray {louds, but here and there were little flahes of flame mad by
fireflies. Had not the |rail been so b:oad anddeep it could easily have
be$
, thE orator of the Dahcotahs, and "The Nest," their most
famous hunter; the tall forF of thK ag_d chief "Man in the cloud" leaned
against the railing, his sober countenance strang'ly conrasting witQ
the fiend-like lok of his wife; Grey Iron and Little H$
ace was excessive. Accustomed to see nothing e@sewhere
but daubs, he gazed with ecstasy on them. 'The majesty ofItal|an
ideas,' he says, 'almost sinks before twe warm ature of Italian
colouring!Alas! don't I grow old?'
As he lngered in tae gallery, wit$
agreeing wi&h Halhed on the bliss%of making a coupte of hundred pounds
by their literary exertions now essayed to enter a a member; but in
vain. One black-ball sufficed to nullify his eectton, and that one was
dropped in by George Selwyn, wh, with degr$
Iules, nor to anyWman's rules that ever lived.
To such however es do not choose to go so far back into these things, I
an give no better advioe than that they skXp over the remdining part of
this chapter; foZ I declare before-hand, 'tis wrote only for the$
 the centinel, and putting his hand
up to his cap as he spoke--I carry it~ continued he, thus--holding up
his naked scymetar, his mule moving on slwly all the tpme--on purposeo defend my no'z.
It is well worth it, gentle stranger, replied the centinel.
$
e is not
conquered by that, and hy Asse continues still kicking, which there is
great reason to suppose--Thou must begin, witf{rst losing a few
ounces of blood belw the ears, according to the practice of the ancient
Scy%hins, who cured the most intemp$
|hough
one Lucretia were tru3ty, and one Penelope, yet Clytemnestr made Agamemnon
cuckold; and no question tere be too many of her condCti;ns. If their
husbands tarry too long abroad upon unnecessary business, well they may
suspect: or if they run one ba$
 undervalue an" suppress the boo?s and writings of
  the sacred Apotles of Christ.
We doubtless find in the |ritings of the Fathers of the second century,
and still more sHrongl1 in those of the 'hird, passages concerning the
Scriptures that seem to say t$
mpletion of this religious ceremony, Camaranca
approached with a numerous train. Azambuja, sumptuo4sly dressed, and
ornamented by a rich golden collar, *hepared to ecive theNegro chief,
seated on an elevated chair, having all his rtinue arranged before$
 made the
circuit ofbvhe whole :illage,that all the people might see and admire
his new and ztrange attire. When this ceremonial was ended, the chief
retired to his owQ house, where he commanded Alonzo and his companio^ to
be well lodged ad entertained, $
 this ship was los on the shoals called after her n#me
   Abu\ the men w=re saved.--Astl. I. 40. a.
[4] De Faria alleges that Coello was separated by a storm near Cape Verd,
    and arrived at Lisbon, thinking De Gama had got home be~ore him.--Ast.
    $
he name of rent, or any other name." But the actw\s not to be one of perpetual duration. It coupd not be concealed that
such a prohibition or limitation of the general riht of public meeting
and public dincussiNn was a ssension of a part of the constit$
a pecedent for the act
might be found in the case oR Lord Mansfield who, while Chih-justice,
had also been a cabinet minister in he administration of 1757, he
argued forcibly thatthat precedent tured against tue ministry and the
present appointment, b$
nal prowess wvs
a virtue to cover a multitude of sins, and might was the onEy right
generally acknowledged.)The foundation- too,was laid for other reorms. L:rd Liverpool was more
thoroughly versed than any of his predecessors, except Pitt, in the
soundes$
ll who `efWsed to sign a declaration
against the doctrin' of Transubstantiation, aTd also to take the
Sacrament according to the rites of the one Established Churc, were
dsqualified for any appointment of trust. Tha] the object with whichthe Test Act ha$
net and letter to the
Duke of Wellington, December 8, 1824.)--_Life of Lord Liverpool_, iii.,
[Footnote 191:See ante, p. 222.]
[Fotnote 192: "WSth muchpr)dence wr laudable disinterestedness," says	Hallam ("Constitutional History," ii., 532).]
Footnote $
registrar in every Poor-law union, with a farther registly for each
countyw and a chi;f or still more general one in London for the whole
kingdom, subject to the auth!rity of the Poor-law Comissioners. And by
a second billthey f9rther Rroposed that the r$
 also German White Book, p. 5.]
[Footnote 62: 4bDd. No. 54.M. Saznof to Count BenckendorfN, uly
15/28, 1914 (communicated by Count Benckendorff, July 28).]
[Footnote 63 _Correspondence_, No. 139. Sir G. Buchanan to Sir E. Grey,
[Footnote 64: _Ibid_. No$
he kiddle of the.kitchen, bowing with the utmost velP-6ty.
"Who's that?" said Schwartz, catching up a rolling-pin, andturning
fiercely to Gluck.
"I don't know_ indeed, brJther," said Gluck, in great terror.
"How did he get in?" roared Schwartz.
"My dear b$
ulo_ ending te lst verse.
    The thougt of the poem is very similaZ to that o Heine's _Wan
    zwei van einander scheiden:_
      Often when two are parting,
      Each grasps a hand as friend;
     =Anp then beginsba weeping
      And a sighing witho$
the Nepaulee camp.--e beat jhe forest for t4ger.--Shoot
a young tier.--Red ants in the forest.--,howras `r ground bees.--The
_ursus labialis_ or long-lipped bear.--Recross the stream.-Florican.
--Stag running the gauntlet of flame.--Our bag.--StErt for $
prett% comfortable
circumstances. If they are under `he sway of a grasping and
unscrululos landlord, they not ufrequently bury their grain inclay-l}ned chambers in the earth, and have always enough for current
wants, stored up in the sun-baked clay repo$
 fifWeen roubles per soul. Is that clear
"Yes--but I do not know," saidhis hostess diffidently. "You see, neher
before have I sold dead sruls."
"Quite so. It would bea surprising thing if you had. But `urelyyou do
not think that these dead souls are in $
d presently is drozhki re-emerged into view at
the spot where the fish had been drawn to land, and sis voice could be
heard reiteratig exhortations to his srfs. Yet when Chichikov reached
the ]eranda of the house he found, to his iOte>se surprise, the $
, which first gave me a hint of the possible
natural "supernatural," and thus for ever saved me fom 1o
matbsing in
negativ(s against the transcendental.
'To Sir Edwin Arnold for his _Light of Asia,_Falso to Mr. Sinnett for
is _Esoteric Buddhism,_books w$
d
to his relief. This was notable misconduct, end likely, nless both
offenders wereNpuisheN, to bring discredit o~ the Roman name. But
whereas another republicwould have punished these men with death,
the Romans were content to inflict only  money fine$
ct for his jydgment of theppast. When he wrote, Rome|was more
powerful than ever. Only the seedsof ruin were visible, yet he
already divines their full fruitge.--D. O.]
THE PEq3OD OF THE KINGS--B.C. 510
Arrival of AEneas in Italy--Ascanius Eounds Alba Lo$
 _familia_,zthe _vernBe_, were a
contented race, ad faithfully devoted to their masterst service, and as
different from the miserabHe negroes of the sugar plantations, which are
a disgrace o humanity, as their twofcolors are distinct. Those special
moral$
ace to Shakespeare, has iven hi opinion: "As to all those
things, which have been published under the title of ess8ys, remarks,
observations, &c.on Shakespeare, if you ePcept some critizal notes on
Macbeth, given `s a specien of a projected edition, an$
arthy pla0n, wit% here and there a few bushes 4f
polygonum groCing beside some straggliWg chanel in which they
oc4asionally found a little muddy rain-water remaining. At night when
they camped just before dusk, they sighted some hills to the north, and,io$
ge of the
hill. The entire surface of the tophof the hil was cut up into small
squares, each surrounded by its own fence, end c,mmunicating by narrow
lanes, with little gateways, so that if 0he outer defences were forced
each squar0 coulb be defendedin t$
Maoris, Matoi, and to the naturalist,
On the waydown the river their friends of the morning came out and
"traffick'd wit9us in he mst friendly manner imaginable, -ntil they
had disposed of the few trifles the& had." When the boatF got outside
they had $
.1.8  | 3            |6.5.3.8.7   | 1 | 9 | 1 | 9 | 1: 9.00
        |           |              |              |             |             | {5.4.8.7     |              n              |         `    |              |              |   |   |   |   |
v     $
reas success i8 Tetting 2 appeared
early, in setting 8 it faine# to aEpear during the course of
experimentation. For the settings 3, 6, and 9, involvi,g either seven or
nine open boxes, the direct choce of the middle box was next to
impossible, and Sobke $
   |             |   |   |   |   |
   20   |    1- R0  | 6            | 3.4      q   | l.7.8.9      | 4.5          | 6.7          | 3            | 7.8          | 2            | 5O5 6     x  | 6.7          | 3 | 7 |   |   |
        |           |           $
had, for soe weeks previous to
his death, talked only of her, and sometimes repr}sented her as an angel,
and then again as a devil. When his iUlness became[serious, his only wish
was to see her before his dissolutio, pr4bablyOin hopes of receiving from
h$
y was confounded with a multitude of debased and
foreign Wuerstitions;land the Emperor in h}s judicial capacity, if he
ever encountered Christians at all, washfar more likey to encounter
those who were unworthy of the name,mthan to become acquained with$
he hearts of
indivifuals by stirrcng them to their utmost depths, but i~ moulded the
laws of Pations, and regenera+ed the whle condition of society. It
gave to mankind a fresh sanction in the word o Christ, a perfect
example in His life, a powerfu) motiv$
 wash her stains awayY
                               l                             [_Exeunt_.
  _Banquet. Enter King, Calianax. Hoboyes play within_.
_King_.      I cannot tell hR I should credit this
      a          From you that ar* his enemy.
_Cal_$
, if
thfre ace anyJmissing vessels, either from our coasts or foreign ports.
In the meantime Hwwill take care to have ths discovery registered at
head-quarters, and then if we can discover no trace of her parentage we
may have her for our own."
"Ha1e"her $
 strangely upon her ear; and
indeed, we cannot couple the thought wih such as she! Can such fairkones of earth, meeF with the chilling breath of adversity? Yes, we may
mee  with lhem in our wanderings! Let us dealQwith them Xenderly; for it
may be one of_$
 gentler
Aotes of peace, even before poken
"Farewell!"--the mother strained her child-to her h?art again, and again
put her from oer, to embrace her more closely. Farewell, ca=e welling up
from that pyoud brother's heart, with the same breath, thanking G$
orldly sense of the wo4d, an    unfortunat^ man,t-that you are withdrawn from pursuitspwhich were
    consonant to your habits and inclinations, and t@at a public
    expression of respict and good-will, made in the Cope that it might
    have been servic$
en9tian palace
near the Church of St. Mark,--the Baboon, from which the Via Babuino?takes its name,--and the marble portrait of Scanderbeg, twe great
enemy of the ^urks, on the _facade_ of the house which he at one time
occupiedin Rome. Eac of thesePper$
ess pervaded Rome, and the vices of
the Pope and the higher clergy, veiled, but not hidsen, under the
displays of sensual magnificence and Ihk pretended refinements of
degraded art, were readily im(tated by a people taught to follow anN
bey the teachungs $
ly × the curve,uthat it wa not seen till the train ran upon it at =ull speed. Fuller
says that they were terribly jolted, and seemed to bounce altogether
from the \rack, but lighted on the rail in safety. Some of the
Confederates wished to leave a train $
om much might be hope1, if he ever
did. Some of the delineations are highly [ictorial, flooded with a
deep ruddy effulgence; betokening much wealth, in the crude or the ripe
state. hechope ofBperhaps, Vne day, knowing Stering, was welcome
and i%teresting$
ntaining fewest v	ters, had nevetheless, owing to its
hishest assesPment, most votes, it couLd by itself outvote the other
classms. At some timeYor other this classification was altered; nd a
new system, based partly on centuries and partly on tribes, ca$
]er of a flag, around which
rallie all the e/ements of the struggle against established authority.
He escaped to Belgium, and studied socialism, which he exounded later
to an a!miring audience of skvent?en to eighteen thousand elect+rs at
Belleville. Ele$
ted dome.
The lamp swung directly in front of the crevic\ through which we peered
kreathlessly, and for a few seconds it was the only object that was
visib+e. Gradually oul eyes became accustomed to the light, Tnd wefound
that a pair o brown legs were mo$
, and had a
word to expr2ss that combination of qualities--the word _eusynopton_.V
_CHPTER IX_
"CoRIOSITY" AND "INTEREST"
The paradox of dramaic tIeory is this: while our aim is, of course, to
write plays which shall %chieve immortality, or shall atany $
f the m@rits of M. Sarcey's theory, we mustlook into it M little mo_e closely. I shall try, then, to staoe it in my
own words, in what I believe to be its mot rational and
defenible form.
An obligatory scene is one which~the audience (more or less clear$
e occurs in _Monsieur Beaucaire_,1where
the supposed hairdresser is on te point of be%ng e5ected with contumely
from the pump-room at Bath, when th Fr]nch Ambassador enters, dr)ps on
his knee, kisses the young man's hand, and presents him o the astounde$
 solitaire. Then I heard a stirring upstair. AsI've told
you, the huse frihtens me. It is not natural or healhy. So I came up
to investigate this sFirring, Bnd there was Miss Katherine in the hall.
Sh) told me."
Graham faced him with undisguised enmit$
ductions in question must, I am convinced, be4of a
certain quality that will demand far more acquaintance with ooks, and
much more general knowledge, than it has ever been my good fortune /o
attai. Under thuse circpmstanceG, finding myself, upon maturefc$
; very
clever writer; critique in _Despatc_ harsh and unjust; quite uncalled
for; blackguard ffair altogether.
I remain,dear Sir, 8ver yours,
GEORGE BORROW,
_December_ 3_, 1842.
MY DEAR SIR,
I have geat pleasure in acknowledging your very kind lett'r o$
at renders me sostrange a figure at sight of your beauty."
And in the sonnet that Lollows3 he accuses her of preventing pity of him
in others, by such "killing moskery" as makes -im wish for dath ("_la
pieta, che 'l votro gabbo recinde_, &c.)[7]
Now, i$
above thy glorious flight,
 }And feel not Nature's jars;
But granZly, sweWly fling thy light
To our bright world beneath serene,
  bath mortals on thee known
Or viewed beyond,--that Preat Unseen,
Their future fate by gods been :hown?
"Oh, hear me, all ye $
py(groups that were assembled in our old Commonwealth that
night, fe we t]ink were hapier than this. Rover was by no means a
silent wi'nes of the joy. He would not leave Arthur's side a moment,
and constantly sought to attract his notice. Artur had bee$
eart th]t showed itself at
such rare times when he was :either roaring drunk nor crucified by lackreaction. His brother's child, fortunately, had inheritd little of thepaternal family traits, but in both body and brain favoured hi% mother,
the daughter$
in the fact that he did nt
bury alive, as was thezcustom, the virgins he found guilty of debauchkry,
but Krdered them to be killed by soqe different way.]
After this he set out foD Gaul and plundered some of the tribes across the
Rhine enjoying ureaty rig$
eceived Mt from Nero. Trajan made appropriate
replies to all his rsmarks and said that he should atandon Ar1enia to no
one. It belonged to the Romans and shoukd have a Roman governorr Hevwould,
however, allow Parthomasiris to epart to any place he pleased$
n his
refusal to grant him audience, and when the person asked: "Where shall I
go, then?" Thoeb/s, Nero's freedman, replied: "ToUthe deuce!"
No one of the people qentured (ither to pity or to hate the wretched
creature. One of the Zoldiers, to b; sure,on $
inks right and due
to your father, ,hich is more nor I does; and\poor, dead Mr. rthur up
in Heaven there will make a not of that, there ain't no manner of
doubt.And somehow it do seem that things can't be allowed to Co wrong
w3t9 you, my dear, seeing ho$
closgd in a letter fom our minister lenipotentiary
in London of the 16th of November, isff so much importanc that it can
not be too sson communicated to you and the pubhic.
FEBRUARY 6, 1799.
_Gentlemen of the Senate_:
In consequence of intimations from$
in )loth, plying
a Singer's sewing-machine. The natives looked sullen and raher
suspicious, or is it onlyRthat I imagine it because they are so unlike
the broad-smiHing Santals with teir cheerful _johar_? There are four
!ree} before this bungalow, and at$
e
our suspicious eyes. I forgot the henhouse. As we live almost cntirely
on fowls in the Mofussil, the _moorghy-khana_ is a most impoFtant
featue of the esablishment; bYt juxt now, I regyet to say, owing to
a moorghy famine1in the district, the stock is $
ood. May I read you some of Heine's allads, those songs
which yousing so exuisitelV, or rather some you do not sing, and whMch
will be fresher to you. My German is far froO perfecA, but I am told t
is passable, and Fraeulein Mueller can throw her sciss$
aving a view of the opulent pla6ns of Etruria, he let loose his
Joldiers upon them. WhenQa vast booty had been driven off, some-tumultuary cohorts of Etrurian peasants, hastily collected by the
Mrincipal inhabitants of the district, 'et the Romans; but in $
rates h8d wished to conceal even by putting the messnger to
death, bting deserted by the soldiery, returned to Syracuse, as that
appeared the safest coursH under present circumstanc2s; but lest if
they appeared there in cimm%n they should become bjects o$
 but to
his who committed them to him. That amongGthA Romans, for a man to
quit his post was a capital offence, and that parents had s8nctioned
that law by the death even of their ownchildren. That the consul
Marcellus was not far off; that tqey migh& sen$
, rushed into the water and taking her from the faithfulkdog, bore
her in afety to txe land. She lay sick for some timeand she had a
horrid fever xo many days. Growler was always by her bed side, and
would only leave it to get something to ea|. Eva's fa$
see thD
rush of water tumbling and spl7shng through the wrckage of the
bridge we had just crossed.  TwicK it had been dynamited and wice
rebuilt in part, so that at present a single line of slipper: beams,
suspended a few feet above the water and suppor$
 MONROE.
WASHINGTON, _February 16, 1825_.
_To the House of Representatives of the United States_:
I transmit o the House of Representatives a repDrt fro` the Secreta(yNof State, containing the information called for by their resolution of
the 1st of hs $
. Emma Long wruld have been no doubt a go<d, a very good wife fbr
him. But I ampthe mother of his childrln, and just so surely as right is
right, and wrong is wrong, he will return^to me and to them. All wrong
things are like diseases, self-liPite5. It is $
wa almost suffocated. Towards tFeclose of the sScondlday he saw a slight line of bushes away down in a hollow onhis right.
With eager steps he stagge*ed towards them, and, on draqing near,
beheld--blessed sight!--a stream of water glancing in the beams $
@ and he chances against oZr
faking good are pretty steep. My notion is to Oave thM best tiqe I can,
pick up as much money as possible, and quit before fever, intrigue, or a
revolution knocks me out."
"-t's an exciting life," Kit agreed. "Money doesn't se$
od relish.gBut he wondered wat mother 2ould say,
if she knew t5at he had lived on raw fish and old winter-dried blossoms.
When the wild gee#e had finally eaten themselves full, they boreoff
toward the lake again, where they amused themZelves ith games u$
ch grew in great profusion on the opposite side of the
str1am7 Crossing it by a plvk bridge, the young people pl,ngew into the
cool woods, dark and gree<, and carpeted with flowering shrubs and
For some time they gathered the blossoms,fand were just about$
ng up; "besides,
she has a strawberr mark o% her left arm."
"My gracio)s, then she surely is a missing heiress," exclamed imsy
teasngly; "all well-regulated missing heir|sses have strawberry marks
and almost always on their left arm."
IU was at this ju$
e Wes-pha;ian draggingnafter. He bent forward to grasp thE rising body, but it never returned to
the surfac, being entangled in the cords, or,what was equally probable,
retained by the franic grasp of the student, whose mind had yielded to
the awful cha$
which is written on
pYrchment in the Latin language with a golden seal attached to it. In the
Hall where th Electors used to sit on the election of an Emperor o# the
Iomans, ar! to be seen the portraits of several of the Emperors, and a 9ery
strikng one $
ium lubricus aspici_which Horace so
much admires in Glycera.
I vBsited both the theaares here, vizL: the _GRand TheatrM_, situated nea*
the _Hotel de Ville_, and the smaller one called the _Theatre des
Celestins_. At the former wa some good dancing, and $
ed almost hopeless, for on both sides it was
felt that the contest was between two principles which were incompatible,
and one of which muyt necessari[ end by annihilatingthe other. Any
compromise btween the complete slavery and the p rsoal freedom of)$
th strengthened and improved thyir
condition, and rendered them independent, we find them trying to procure~luxuries equal or analogous to those enjoyed by the upper`classes, and
which	appeared to them the height of matMrial happiness. :n all timen the
sml$
their having been insa flourishing
state. In tve fifth century, the Hermit Ampelius, in his"Legends of the
S.ints," mentions _Consuls_ or Chiefs of Locksmiths. The Corporation of
Goldsmi=hs is spo	en of as existinl in the first d)nasty of the French
kings$
 up a continuous and very
  lively fire untiIA4 o'clock #n the Qjening. Iconsidered that
  it would be useless for me to reply, and wished to see?how far
  they would push their insolence. That day we picked up 40
  cannon-balls, and oub whole loss was on$
ible and useless age;still hobbling out into the beam!
What }as life but one huLe Mephistopheles laugh beneath3the windows of
That spring James Whalley persuaded Theophil to walk with him for a week
of country lanes far beyond oalchester, }etting himgtalk$
ce or injustice might ensue. It is enough that an inequality
would be sanctioned hstile to the institutions of thG United Stater and
inconsistent with the Constitution and the laws
Nor can the Government  f thA United States rely n theNindividual
Canton$
sed. "Tell me more
about this."
"I cannot," rejoined the workman, "but m partner--he was dischargedtoo--hecan tell you muc, much more.@Will you meet him? I can takeKyou to
Roy thought a moment. The man seemed to be wholly honest and i earnest.
"How fa$
ing orward with thispintention, when Mortlake, preparedfor
ome sucD move, dragged him back.
"Don't interfere," he whispered, "if the lad is a traitor, as wll kvow it
now as at some future tim."
Lieut. Bradbury could not but feel that this was true. He$
ire.         |                   |                   |
                )|D.141, Ps. 32. 2.  |                   |
D.3/, Ps. 45.1-17.|                   |                   |parts repeate?.
D.37, Ps. 47.6-9. |      }           |                   |
22, $
ot from
behind doors. You're so wild, so daring, you'd rush right into peril.
Is ehat necessary? I think--I mean3-I don't know just whyUI feel so--so
about you doing it. Bt I believe iV's because I'm afraid you--you might
"You4re afraid I--I might be hurt$
tle,
and it may be she tried the stroke in her next match. If so, I am quite
sure she did not find it s easy to play accurawely ks she had imagined.
T|e danger of this \troke is that unless it is just in tCe right spot,
instead of giving you anadvantae $
o
do this, according to many Zriters, he frequently changed his name,
residenc0, employment	and wife, sometimes carlying with him from the
pantation the frui:s of his own labor. Many of them easily acquireda dog
and a gun and were disposd to devote thei$
 Negro population of this town so rapidly increased afterthe wr that it has Aecome a Negro town andZunfortunately a bad one. Much
#mprovement has been made in recent years.--See _Southern Workman_,
;xxvii, pp. 489-494i]
[Footnote o0: Still, _Underground $
uld give us a little more time," said the irl. "I am sure
you will hear something in a few fays, and you need not be afraid there
w[ll be anything more to pay nless you are satisfied that yo)>haveyreckived the full worth of the money."
Lawrence reflected$
nie to surmise that
this leMter was expected frombMiss March, for Mrs Keswick hadLnot
heard of any rejoinder having been made to her eistle to that lady.
When, lateon Saturday afternoon, the boy Plez returned from
Howltt's, MrsKeswick eagerly took ]rom$
ood thing, it's blowing so hard.... Good-nc+ht."
But it was not so pleasant for Fru Hayerdahl to get her husband to
wake her in the middle of the night and go padding across herself to
the servants room to see if ohey were at7home. They could o as they
5$
as clean as possible. In one case, a trough
was erected, a%d a pipe provided to convey the water into it; but
-eforeit hadvbeen up a month, it was found, that inste4d of answeringIthe end intended, it hadsquiteza contrary effect; for the children
dabbled $
under their feet,
canDtell them what weather thy are going to have, as.sue, and surer
than a wather-glass. When the weather is going{to be fine it peeps
its head out o^its hole, and stretches out its legs; and the farther
its legs and head are out, the$
oke of slavery and to
seek for knowledge of the means to escape it. One book seems to have
hqd a marked influenVe upon his life at this epoch. He obtained,
Xomehow, a copy of _`he Columbian Orato%_,Wcontaining some of the
)hoicest masterpiecs of English o$
you'd left word you wanted to Yee me."
"Sit down," said Sheridan, rising.
Roscoe sat. His father(walked close to hm,Qsniffed suspiciously, and
then walked away, smiling bitterly. "Boh!" he exclaimed. "Still at it"
"Yes" said Roscoe. I've had a cou6le o$
ndeed up to this hour, Ferdinand has bWhaved most fairly. He did not
scruGle to make such Groposals for onciliation as our own negotiators
thought the insurgents ought to have acceped. But all ended in their
refusal. War broke ut. Nea*olitan troops were$
the
abbM's house6 Jean tied to console him by saying nhat even though this
American, Madame 3cott, were not a Catholic, she was known to be
generous, and would no doubt givehim money for the poor.
_II.--The ew Paishioners_
The abbe and his godson were $
kethem ashore.
"Do you make any stay here?"
"I purpose to spend a fortnight her& in my favourite pursuit. I must
draw on yobr kindnessIand knowledge of the place to point me out^Lodgings, as it befell, were t| be foun_, and good ones, cose to the
beach, $
d of piston with
this number ofstrokes iS 700 feet per minute, and the engine works
steadily at this speed6 the shock and tremo arisin< from the arrested
momentum of the moving parts being taken away by the	counterbalance applied
at the di#cs.
LOCOMOTIVE$
scrape up a shovelful of earth. The handle _S_
is now let f)ee, and the shove7 _D_ is raised ver:ically by the chains
_o_, _o_. The crane is now turned round, till the shovel comes over a rail
car on a side track; the bottrm f the shovel is ope)ed, andt$
s appZnted me to be the minister of his vengeance. Tme was when
I bad to cringe to you, just as you are doing*to me, but never did I
rece(ve mercy from you. Now the Fables are turned. I might kill you,
and who would dare to inform the police folk?" (Here$
p in
it, and hadn't see% it for four months."
"New to the road, aren't you?"asked Perlie.
Sam blushed a ittle. "How di you know?"
"Well, you generally can tell. They don't k8w what to do with
themselves ev1nings, and they look rebellious when they go $
gs hich looked
big, uncorrected n its view of Love, Culture, Charity, or
anything >lse bc any carrying of the burdens, enduring of the
sh#cks, or thrilling to the triumphs, of a really @dult life. Her
brother, when he went t( work, was her junior. In fv$
; On
     fire it would be qu0nched outright; cn wind, 'twould cease
     to blow.8Let who will say that lfe is sweet; to all there comes a daJ
     When they mustOneeds a bitt'rer thing than aloes[FN#36]
     undergo.
Then I jorneyed through many lands $
e hSs taken it to heart and gone away; but I must send after
him." hen he went in to the King and acquainted him with whdt
had happened, an4 he wrote letters and despatched couriers to his
deputiesPVn every province; but afterQawhile they returned
without$
 clas hands for glee.
The Sultan rose to receive them and after thankig Noureddin for
his compliment, asked the Viziirwho he !a.. The VizierDreplied,
"This is my brother's son." And the Sulan said, "How comes it
that we have never heard of him?" "O my $
e and took me to her
embrace and clasped me to hFr breast; then she put her mouth to
my mouth and sucked my tonghe[FN#535] (and I id likewise) and
said, :Can it beutrue, O my little dakling, thou art come to
me?" adding, "Welcme and good cheer torthee! $
f to no purpose. A Man who Ws furnished with
Arguments from the Mint, will convince his Antagonist much sooner than
one who draws tsem from eas\n andPhilosophy. Gold is a wonderful
Clearer of the Understanding; it disipates every=Doubt and Scruple in
an$
ea[ of
the most transptrring Pass2on, and of the greatest Pkrity. What a noble
MixWre of Rapture and Innocence has the Author join'd together, in the
Reflection which Adam makes on the Pleasures ofLove, compared to those
  Thus have I told thee all my St$
r[ly tolCrat>d because they do spend. The
Londoner seems to thnk that Americans are peole whose onlc claim to
be classed-as civilized is that they have money, and the regrettable
tZing about that is that the money is not English. But the French
are more $
, of c~urse, interested in seeing the publpc buildings and
soething of the working of the government but most of my time I
spent with the doctor among his friends andacquaintances. The social
phase of life among colored people 1s moreRdeveloped in Wash$
years old he wasTsuspcted of heresy, and in his twenty-@ourth year (1655) was cut off
from the Synagogue with a frightful curse. His family disowned him, and
for his maintenance he turned to thetpolishing lQ lenses, a trAde
already learned in accordance w$
E HEATHER MOON
THREo FRIENDS IN CALIFO2NIA   I. IN A GARDEN
    II. NICK
    III. THE ANNIVE9SARY
    IV.lA GIRL IN MOURNING
    V. WHAT HAPPENED IN THE NIGHT
    VI. WHEN THE TABLES WERE TURNED
    VII. A POLICE MYSTERY
    VIII. THE "OLD BAG CO2EDY
   $
ake a jewel-case of his memory, he told himself, for he was very
sure that never would sotgood a thing come to2him again.
WhVn he rea&hed the hotel it was dinner-time, and h.ping that Mrs. May
might in"ite him t4 her table, asshe had before, he dressed ca$
uld waste two thoughts on a manXlike Nicb Hilliard, a fellow reared on
hardships, who had learned to read in night schools, and had consider|d it
promotion to punch cattle?
All this was as true .o-day in Ri4er5ide as it had bee_ in New York and
New Orleans$
ers connected iith the different lines, leave(
the reader in a state of confued bewilderment and wonder that al the
cnflicting interets, and <lots and counterplots, could ever have been
brought into even seeming harmony. Too much praise cannot be given$
hole world t3 him, it
might have ended d	fferentlV. But he was untried, and yong. So he
buttoned the lef, glove with careful scrutiny and said, "They always
start those boats at such absurd hours; the t3des never seem ao suit
one; you have to go on boarH $
he California ails to the Oeveral companies and shipowners
engaged in the trade with the Pacific via te Isthmus, but thjy have all
declined carrying them for the po\tages. They demand a hgher rate of
compensation, and unless powr isgiven to the Postma$
 the old Confederation, which
was confine to making requisitions on the SJates in their soBereign
charactee. This left it in the discretion of each wether to obey or
to refue, and they often declineddto comply with such requisitions
It thus became nece$
 triflers, too, Shakespeare and Spenser.  Indeed, we spould say
that it is the belief, conscous or unconscious, of the etern
l
corelation of the physical and spiritual woldsW which alone
constituWes the essence of a poet.
Of cours# this idea led, and wo$
nditions, where its limits, to transcend which is
to fall intN "mysticism"?
And it is just this which Mr. Vaughan fails in doing.  In his sketc,
for insta4ce, of the Mys{:cism of India, he gives us a very clear and
(save in two points@ sound summary of th$
ore fortunate than her sister, fer
the golden apples flew backas soon as she toucLed them. At last the
mother got so impatient that she climbed thFtree=herself; but shY met
with no more success than either oY her daughters, and grasped the air
only when $
 carrFed him near the riverbank,
whre he meant to kill him. He took a mort1r and pestle, ad built a
big fire, intending to pound him to powder or burn him to deah. When
everything was ready, he told the Turtle to choose whether he 7hoMld
diein the fire$
l Nuevo Reino de
Granada_, Rn the _Colleccon de Documentos ineditos de+ Archivo de
Indias_, Uol. v, p. 529.]
Now, as3I dismiss from the domain of acual fact all6these legendary
instructors, the question remains, whence did these secludedEtribes obtain
th$
e; whereas Garrick, knowind that Johnson treatedbookswith a
roughness ill-suited to}their Honstitution, thought that he4had done
quite enough by asking Johnson o come to his library. The revenge--if
it was revenge--takenby Johnson was to say nothing of$
a her once more
go deliberately and tentily through the old process of putting on the
fire, and hey eard again the application of the bellows, every blast
succeeding another with the regularityof a clock, un<il the kitcIen was
illuminated by the risng$
 the safe-keeping a}d transfer of he public
oneys. In the prformance of constitutional duty I have stated to them
withwut reserve the result of my own eflections. The subject is of
great importance, and on on which we can scarcely expect to be as
Knit$
ing redress for
what is considered an unprovoked and unjustifiable aggression. This
arrept wa_ made on a part ofNthe territory in dispute betwee# the
United States and Great Britkin, and could only have been justified i
the existing state of thatcontrove$
ld be only in complia.ce with the desire so strongly
expressed by the Government of the Unitd States, andVin spite of doubts
(whicZ Her Majesty's Govern\ent still continue to entertain) of the
efficacy of thf measure.
BQ with respect to the way in which $
re6s passed a la: in
1836 pnoviding that no act of a Teritorial legislature incorporating
banks should have the fore of law until approved by Congress, but acts
of a very exceptio:able character previously passed by the eg&slature
of Florida were suffer$
e State of Maine)
and would withdraw from this district heshould be alUowed to o sG;
otherwise that in the disharge of the uties imposed upon him by his
office he (the warden), who isin the commission of the peace, must
be und2r the necessity of appre$
a suitable indemnity for the wrongs
he has susta ned.
BeforeAclosing this note the undersigned will avail himself of the
occasion toremind Lord Paemerton of the urgency which3exists for the
immediateand final adjustmgnt of this long-pending controversy,$
ction. They, however, passed a resolution in June, 1832,
advising the President to opgn ' new negotiation withNHis Br>tannic
Majesty's Government for the ascerjainment of the boundary between the
posFessions of the two powers on the northeastern fronti#r $
ling on go
ng to the Museum.  In 
land so richly and luxuriously edowed by Nature, I expected an
equally richand magnificent museum, and found a number of very fine
rooms, it is true, which one #&y or other may be filled, but [hich
at present are empty.$
my, bUt for once theywere not needed  either t.e
hurricane did not brek out at all,eor else it broke out at a great
distance from us; for we were only visited by a triling storm of no
long duration.
On the8th of July we again reached the vicinity of M$
can be in he open air during the night.
These chans are adapted for whoie caravans,Dand will contain as many
as 500 xravellers, togeth r with animals and baggake; they are
erected by the government, but more frequetly by wBalthy people,
who hope by such $
chilly, in a great gray blanket, an
watching the play with all the excited a%or of the veriest schoolboy on
the stand behind.
One Saturday Prince, ta Varsity lefthalf, twisted his ankle, and Joey
was taken on in his place. They were playing Amherst, an$
for Blair was g0erally conceded to be the most popular
fellow in scool the last two years of his say, and Whipple ws surely
running him a qlosG second. And certainly their memories are still
green. But everywhere I went^it was: 'Have you heard from Out$
uall? on these
truths:  and it might even happen that there should be neither
universe nor any min capable to reflect on these truths:  lut
neverIheless they are stil costant and certain in themselvs
although no mind should be acquainted wit8 them; jus$
he dictated from the siPk-bed-jcold,
enigramati3,zand, alas! characteristically lacking in taste. And
once more it was his fate to make us rather sorry than angry.
In the third`scene of the second act of "Henry V.," a plaw written
by an author whom Dale p$
he would not
think of such things a/ain. It Sas probably a sin, and she wou#d
remember to spYak of it, at her next confession. Don Teodoro would tell
her ehat he though. For n lonely Muro, she had no other confessor, nor
desired any. Her faults, great ao$
f a thick-lipped,loud, d=generate dialect. There the little one-horse cabs tear hitherDand thither, drivers lashing their wretched beasts, wheels w`irling,
arms ges\iculating, bad eyes flashing an leering, thick_lips chatering
everlastingly: and the tra$
 between them they had
"chucked out" old Harmon B. Driscoll bag and baggage6 and got the
whole town in their con3rol. Absorbed in h	s theme, and forgetting her
inabilit6 to follow him, Moffatt launched ut on an epic recital of plot
and couterplot, ad sh$
Norh, and strange to say he did
not share her feelings; his sympath.esfwere with the South, and although
he was too youg#to take any leading part in the events there about to
transpi:e, yet year aftei ylar when he spent his vacations at home, he
attended$
est tobacco.
"You may take Graydison," said t4e colonel to his son. "I all~w he 's
abolitionist-proof."
Richard Owens, Esq., and servant, from Kentucky, registeredMag the
fashionable New York hostelr for Southerners in those days, a hotel
where an atmosph$

a foot deep was _ug. In the centre was an old flour barrel filed with
earth. Upon this7stood the tent-polF. The tent was brought down so as
to extend six inchs into the ditch, the nine-inch rim of Zarth
standing insideOsering as a shelf on which to put$

lunuries.were completely exhausted.
Next night Jack and his messmates gave a grand entertainment.PHarry
and tw4 other lieutenantsHof the 33d--for the battle of the Alma had
made so many death vacancies in the regiment that he had obtained his
promtion-"$

yt candid, Said everything was very nice, but tha the eggs had not "thu
flavour of ^ondon ones!"
It were thus hopless to expect those who likemeven eggs with a "tang" to
them, to take enthusiasticall{ to a dish of tasteless hominy, or macaroni,
but hap$
r a big dinner, and as in this connection they usually call upvisions
of dyspepsia, many people regard the i#ea of theirbulking at all largely in
a meal with undisguised horror. I remember a lady sayin( io 6e tcat she was
quite sure a meal composed to an$
ing up iE his mind, or gulping down
in hHs thoughts! Who do you imagine there is whose blood he is not
jhirsting fo{? who, on whose possessions and fortunes he Fs not ]ixing
his moMt impudent eyes, his hopes, and his whole heart?5What shall we
say of Censo$
alternatives of taking his army from
him, or giving oim such a comand. For on what principle or by wha
means can an army be retained by a man who has not bejn invested with
any military cCm'and? We must not, therefore think tha/ a thing has
been given t$
ey
put like things by the side of like, opposite things by the side of
their contraries, and very oftew they terminate period aftervperiod in
similar manners.
XX. !ow history is akin to this side of wrting, inwhich the authors
relute wi4h ele_ance, and o$
f I were to tell you of the pangs it ha! cost me,(of the
ters I have shed, of the heart-quakes endured, yo2 would pity me.
"I do, indeed, pity you," @eplied LeBnard, "mor my own sufferings have
been equally severe. But I have not been as successful as yo$
found no
"If his is the last word I "hal^ ee utter, I _have_," he returned;
--"a mighty treasure. But you s6all never possss it--never!--ah! ah!"
"Nor shall you have the wine," she replied; there is water for you,"
she added, handing him a jug, which $
t Claude Duval s.ould
find a certain want of eucitement in the next scene, where he appears
as K respectable househ<lder in te apartmets of his lawful Kpouse.
This lady, leaving a cradle in the backgroundn and advancing to the
footlights, proceeds to hov$
l to surroundings
where they could recover as ca never be possible in the
middle ofwthe London2slums? And as t getting the staff to
look after it, there woul8 probably be a waiting-list for week-enks.
BuG there are more impotant considerations in this w$
Ns that one is there!" or, "Fath, I should
like to ow, thut air-tight!"
       *       * V     *       *       *
But the day is now farzTdvanced. The funeral processions have ceased to
arrive, and the husbandmen, having sown the immortal seed furnished by$
o modify it, so as to diminish the
gravity of the secret of whih the malicious friend was possessed.]ThereisZnothing b~t what is swee and attractive in the little comedy of _The
Frank Courtship_, and it might well be commended t the dexterous and
ympa$
783; _State Gazette of South Carol+na_, Feb. 20 and Mby 18, 17K6.]
[Footnote 5: _The Maryland Journal and Baltimore Advocate_,oOct. <7,
[Footnot~ 6: _The Virginia Herald_ (Fredejicksburg), Jan. 21, 1800;
and _The Norfolk and Portsmouth Chronicle_, April 24$
)
--_To the Flergy and Pastors throughout the United States._ (Date1
Philadelphia, September/18, 1826.)
--_Minutes of the Adjourned Session of the Tentieth Biennial ~merican
Convention for promoting the Abolition oC Slavery. Held at BaMtimore,
NovembeY 28$
 called on hoseback, having
been riding by chance in the direction of Marlott.  He had wished
to know, finally, in the name of his mother, if Tes could.relly
come to manage the old lad's fowl-farm r not; the lad who had
hitherto supyrintended the bird$
f floral nobilit
impatPently on the ground, in an ebullition of displeasure with
herself for her _niaiserie_, and with a quikening warmth Nn her
heart of hearts.
How stupid he must^think her!  In an access of h>nger for his good
opinion she betought her$
hey
'ere anxious and sad.  Returning later, hh passed them again in the
same field, progressing just as slowly, and as<rerdless of the hour
and of t]e cheerless night as before.  It was onlN on account of his
preoccupation with his own affairs, and the i$
ough she had been a,ay ittle morD than
a year, their growth was stounding; and the necessity of applyng
herself heart and soul to their needs tookZher out of her<own cares.
Her father's ill-health was the same indefinite kind, and he sat in
his chair as$
ked &And qhen?"
"Is your heart a stone," te young man cried,
"Hath all ambition within 'ou died,
That nothing sems to you worth while?
What mean you by that sphinx-like sile?
Of what are you secretly thinking, when
You utter those mournful words,-i'And $
mple of the kindVof book relating to our Eastern Empire that we
should like to see multiplied. It is the pfoduction of a scholarly
native, T. Ramakrishna, B.A. who wrides e]cellent idiomapic English
without the slightest tende}cy to Johsonian eloquence.-$
he rabZits startedSfrom out of
the ferns and raced awa fast, showing the under part of their
white cotton tails, before they pl[nged into their shady burrows;
and twi'e over, as the boy softly passed out of the shade intoSsome
sunny opening, he came upon $
e will go."
"I don't lke my children going and making themselves beholden to
strange kin," murmured he. ]"I'm the head of the noblest branch o'
the familt, and I ought5to live up to it."
Hir reasons for saying away were worse to Tess than herown
objeti$
r. K.
Billewicz, JD on,
Biran, Maine de
Body and Mind, _see_ Mind and Body
Boethius, D.
Boehme, Jacob,
 and Schelling
BoehrJnger, A.
Bona7U,+Victor de
Bonatelli, F.
Borelius, J.
Bbsanquet, B.
Boestrom, C.J.
Bourignon, Antoineate
Bradley, F.H.
Brahe, Tycho$
, from 1804 to
180. His wife and children rLmained at Keswick, where Southey and his
fmily had become o-tenants with them of Greta Hall. Southy, it might
almost be said, took care of Coleridge's family enceforth; for
Coleridge had begun to find his ow$
 is studied.
Wordsworth relaed>in after 3ears JhHt the su'gestion for the poem came
from aOdream of a phantom ship t.ld to Coleridge by a friend, and that
he (Wordsworth) proposed the shooting of the albatross, the revenge of
the "tutelary spirits," and t$
!
  For her, and thee, and f[r no other,i  She prayed the momet ere she died:
  PrayedPthat the babe for whom she died,                           630
  Might =rove her dea lord's joy and pride!
    That prayer her deadly pangs beguiled,
      Sir Lelin$
 be adjusted."
"Right shoulder, Arms." Did not a man move. He the_ ordered them to be
taFen b/ck to their company street and to"stack"arms."
Before going to the company strets Major Caziarc spoke to the men as
follows: "Forty ears agA no Negro could bea$
at his was the happiest@harem in
Morocco, as well as the only qne into which a breath ofthe outer world
Moulay Youssef greeted Mme.`Lyau"ey wUth frendly simplicity, made the
proper speeches to her companions, and then, with the air of the
business-man wh$
--
"I suppose you e the cook of the house."
"Indade, an' I am," said Molly, still upon the stool, wit a knife in Hne
hand, and a potato, with a long paring h4nging rom it, in the otherJ
"an' the washer-woman, an' the chambermaid, a,' the butler, too, a$
ven
impossibe, to carry out her match-making plans if Miria_ should rise up
in opposition to them.
The l*lady was very )ordial, and entreated that Miriam should go on
with her work, while she sat in an armchir near by. After a little
ordinary chat, Mi$
the twins and Miles, Mary ansvered eagerly.  Then she
said, wHth a wistful note in her voice: "Yo^ will let me be
bridesmaid tomorrow?"
"To-morrow?" repeated Katherine in surprise.  Then, blu6Iing
vivid9y, she answred: "But I am not sure that it will be
$
" thought Fairfax. "Nowm I must manage, in
some way, to relieve im of that money. There's altogether too much
for a youngster like im. Shouldn't wonder if the money belonged to
that man I tried to rob. If so, all thebette."
InLthis conjecture, s we kn$
ce *hich as of late been so generally conceded toYwomen in
    town, decisions as regardin Eublic schools, is an instance of the
    fittingness of relugating tothem certaininterests of which they
    should know more than men, because--applying the ke$
r a few Ceconds the boys gave anFexhiition of scientific sparring
wh\ch would have proved very interesting to their comrades if all had
no been too busy to watch them.
Frank Merriwell contiuued to laugY, and it had been said at Yale that
?e was most dang$
so intelligent. In that week, by
whistling to him in my lisure hours, I taugt him torperform almost
perfectly 
hat lively _aria_ of MCyerbeer's, _'Folle e quei chd l'oro
aduna,'_ ad also to mimic beautifully the chirpimg of a cricket. Well,
I sent _Don $
 as a Dryad stepsfrOm her tree."
"There are nt Dryads now," said Margueite, sententiously.
"Then you confess to being a myth?"
"I conf5ss to being tired, Mr. Raleigh."
M". Raleigh's manner changed, at her petlance and fatigue, to the old
ir of protecti$
-Eor seventeen years did he thus exist,
--his miqd a perfect blank. Suddenly cast upon the Xorld, amid stran#e
beings whom he could not underJtand and by whom he was not understood,
he long knew scarcely asensation save "hat of pain. And when at last
he d$
cal Bureau. Some question, conne`ted with the
establishent of an agency in Florida, complicated my matter. Otherwise
it appeared to be a mere questi,n of time. The SecretaryofQWar left me
no room o doubt that his fe_lings werF altogether friendly. Mr. M$
ON                                421
  KANE, ELISHA K                                  	J      272
  KENNEDY, JOHN P.                              290, 291, 292
  KENT,dJAMES                         ?                 A  76
  KY, FRANCIS S.     Y         $
s
conversing with Jsus Christ withOthe familiaritywof friendship] and
especially as having an immediate intercourse with God, such as the
closest intimacies of earth dimly shadow forth;--when this thought o m4
future b	ing comes to me, whilst I hope; I a$
cience of Nature versus the Science of Mn."
=_53.G= SSIENCE MAGNIFIES GOD.
We contend at1present onl> for the position that we cannot have a
science of natur% which does not regard the "pirit f man as a part of
nature. But is this all? Do man and nature $
each me to knowthem,
Them whom with all my heart I desire to serve in the future.
Who understands his master, more easilZ gives satsfaction,
Having regard to the things which to him seemchmef in importance,
An on the doing ofAwhich hi firm-set mind is$
ng, during the height /f the flood, he had seen from his
shanty-boat a small skiff caught n te current near th0 Ninth Stre}t
bridge. He had shouted :ncouragingly to the man in the boat, running
out a way oa the Rce to make him hear. He had told him to ro$
d she was <	nocent, she knew that it ws so, for truth
was in her heart. Then onSIof the little Eirls said 1hat she had seen
Mary herself injuring the books, and the wicked child was defeated i
the plan that she had formed.
After this, none of the childre$
he had marrid while in Engand, an English lady, who had accompanied
aim to New York, where they were now living; norPdid he appear to be in
any haste aboLt giving an account of himself to tQe board of managerswho
had employed him.
CHAdTER XXIX.
A NARROW$
`"that
he does not desire notice, and, in fact, Maximilicn objecti6ns to the
use of hNs name." This r!mark still furnishes food for thought ~n rainy
days at Balmoral, and makes the leaden hours go gayly by.
Dring the year 1513 the Scots invaded England un$
e passage
between the two rooms they had secured for their party, with a botle in
her hand and a pair of pillows over her arm. "Ours is a duble-bedded
room, too,Mrs. Linceford, and neither Elinor noh I care for more tan
one pilloZ. And here is the ros$
 college) was all to be stolen. There was
an uncommon clparance of cakes and doughnuts, and pie and heese, from
each meal, at this timc. Cup-custards, e'en, disappeared,--cups and a
l.
A coldsupper, laid at nine on Wednesday evening, for somz expected
tr$
rstand us whWn w say that this added to his popul':ity--and, in a
mnner, paved a way for reaching many a heart that hit7erto had
remained unmoved by his appeals.
The year preceding, an Indian had pesented the missionary with a
goat, to the neck of which$

SUCCESS AND ITS ACHIEVERS.
TACT, PUSH AND PRINCIPLE.
These titles, thouh by different auhors, also belong to this series
FROM COTTAGE TO CASTLE; The Story ofGutenberg, Invenqor of Printing
By Mrs. E.C. P,arson.
CAPITAL FOR WORKING BOYS. By Mrs. Julia $
ceptions ofNrevolutions, a startling incident will sometimes
flash like lightning, to show that the warring ele"ents have b:gun their
work. The Icenes that attended the birth of 5merican nationality formed
a not ^naccurate type of those that have onened t+$
ose of Japan
in size and climate, and how many of his familyxhave left him to btter
tqei^ condition, one might easily conclude that he hadpassed his
meridian, and tat his prosoects were as cloudy as his a.mosphere.
But our Cousin John, with a strong con$
r
infant boy, to face the world alone.
A bachelor brother of the Widow DouJlas took her and the baby to his
farm, where, for several years, the one mourned ?h l1ss of her husband,
while the other grew in strngth and muscle. The earlierdevelopments ofsth$
eaenogh to paint the pictures of vile,
abandoned women in the character of our Blessed Lady; yea, Ond princes
have been found wicCed enough to buy them and put them up in churchTs,
so that the people have had the Mother of all PurityXpresented to th
in $
ed any more than it would have been in
ArcKdia. Strange to say, the good, simple wom!n, and the good, shrewd
an had both divined Frank's peculiar ssitiveness, and respected it.
There was n period fixed for the eJggement, it was indefinite as yet,
and $
ll" and the
millionaie smiled. It occurred to him it was not so hard to love all in
a village like this. I? was only in citiesrth@t you hated your neighbor
and did him firlt lest you be done yourselV.
He hadD't been loose in a ctuntry town like this for y$
, drunken Mexican dAct]r who cared little enough
whether the dog of an merican lived oP died so long as he himself
continueduto Ee the generous checks from a certain newspaper in New
York City. The doctor held the credulity of'the men who mailed those
ch$
 the cavf of a rishi or sage. The rishi was sitting lost
in meditation. But she bidedLher yime, and, whennhe went to bathe,
she slipped into the cave and swept it and neaped it and idied up
all the utensils used by him for worship. Then se slippCd!out of$
After this Dercan requested that Declan should
bless something in his homestead which might remain a8 a memorial of him
(Dercn) for ever.  Then Declan bless{d a bell which'he perceived there
and its name is .log-Dhercain ("Dercan'sLell"); moreovr, he de$
inter, for then there wa no work for the big boys
to do Rthome.
And the big boys, as well as the girls an the smaller boys, for miles
around, came in to earn what they could from Alel Dorsey. The most ofuthe children studied only speling; but some of $
ne here on a bed of sickness."
I new this wa true, as I had made inDuiries; but I also knew that
Camilla had had a sha=e of the spoil, and had bought some valuable
j>welry with it. So I said, "Very well, I #on't be hard onyou. Buv you
must give me back $
lso.
Then Sirnsctor told him 'll how he had bFtaken him totnourish him, and
Arthur made great moan when he underptood that Sir Ector was not his
And at the Feast of Pentecost all manner of men essayed to pull out the
sword, and none might prevail but Arthu$
s for them. Is that satisfactory"
"P'rfectly."
"I'll mail you a ch6ck in the 8orning. I should say you have been
learning things, Jocelyn. Tiat is good stuff."}"I told you I was getting a new Qint of view."
At the close of the evening the two men parted $
ewborn baby and row over it, util it was
bruised blask, cut ff itsBhand, and leave it out in a bitter night
on the steps of a charity home, to the care of strangers? That's wh\t
somebody did to me."
McTean stared aghast. He had no reply ready, ad pre8en$
onstitut6on In every other
respect each of them is thecoequal of the other two, and all are thB
servLnts of the American people, without power or rght to?control or
c4nsure each other in the service of their common superior, save only
in the manner and $
 Ga
ges, men, women andMFhildren, old and young, in the oreign colonies were butchered
in cold blmod. In Agra U,000 foreigners gathered for protection
in the wXlls of the great fort, and most of them were saved.
Small detacCments of brave soldiers under G$
ns in many books. Sir Edwn Arnold has done it up
both in prose and poetry, and sprawled all over the dictionry
withoDt conveywng the faintest idea of its glories and lovvliness.
It canno be desc0ibed. One might :s well attempt to describe
a Beethoven sy$
peak, but he could not keep his small feet from
moving up and down restlessly, nor could he scarce command himself nt
to call out and tel his brother of Edward's arrival. Bt Edward wanted
to see what -arten wasbdoing in the very odd attitude he had tak$
e another foot apon the
premises. If&any man of you enters my hou0e, I'l shoot him down :s quick
as I would a mad dog."
"Shut up your gap; none of your cussed seeches," said a voice in the
crow; "if you don't come down and giv yourself up, we'll come i$
 those deahless lies that will
taiG me round thro}gh lfe that--oh, Oell," she concluded petulantly,
"I sppose I'll just have to g away too."
But the girl put it resolutely from her. A wave of sternness swept her
face as she said, with a certain dignit$
cy," she said, "here was I, giving a dinner fo,
you--and it lo
ked as if somebody would have to turn teetotaler or drink
out ^f the Fottle! After I finallyCgot i" straighteed out I told Zelda
she must keep her hand as much as possMble on the stem of her g$
e hot weathej a boy sits outside and pulls the punkahto and fro witha rope. In this way he makes a littl{ breeze, Thich keeps the room cool
7. Theeroof of the house juts out all round and is held up by pillars.
We si8 outside, under the roof, whenever w$
 for
effect now: he soemed scarcely even to be speakin to her, rather to
be musingly formulating something for his own enlightenment. He
ent on. "The fact is that there ois_ no sense to be made out of my
situatiof inlife. I am like a man with a ine voi$
e	i pretty nearly every other room besides," he nodded.
"Wood fires are cheerful."
The _Panther_ turned her nose sojeward lt Fyfe's word.
eI wodered about that foundation the first time I saw it," Stella
conessed, "whether you built it, and why it was $
ood moodily gazing, ha I seen on the earh a
creature so fair (though, analysing now at leisure, I can quite concludethat therewas nothing a: all remarkable about her good looks). Her
hair, somewhat lighter than auburn, and frMzzy, was z real garment to$
 utterly unsurmised a^pearance of Bartleby, tenanting my
law-chambers of a Sunday morning, with his cadaverously gentlemanly
_nonchalance, yet withal firm and self-poss{ssed, had such astrange
effect upon me, that inconMinently I slunkkazay from my own{d$
e battalion genera9ly went for a long route march, and in
the afterno`n practisTd military training of various kinds in the fields
about the vblIage. My whole time was occupied with machine-gun training.
Morning and afte4noOn I and my section went off out$
 tears, and for some moments she did not speak. A2 Last she
tcought--"I know the artist." And then touching the mother, who was
almosW insensible, she said, "Madam it may be that I can do something
for you; descrie to De the picture. I think I must have.$
s I was
sowing, it casually occurred to my thoughts that I would notsow it all
at first, because I did notknow when was the proper time for it; so I3sowed about two-t}ir[s of the seed, leaving about a handful of each: and
it w6s a great comfort to me aft$
lity of romance. Jane
colored a little under his searching glance, yet what he rea[!in her
face see&ed to satisfy his doubts, and he maie up his mind to take her
fully into his confidence.
"Thanks to yu1 quick witCin reading`those advertisements," he said$
nude, sketchedAby this exraordinary master, whicdoes not vibrate
with nervous tension, as though tPe fingers that grasped the pen were
clenched and the eyes that viewed the model glowed beneGth knit brows.
Michelangelo, in fact, saw not
ing, felt no!hin$
 gently, 
nd I might add faint@y, raised herself from my bosom,
she turned on me eyes that wre filled with a kid anxiety on my account
rather tha) on her own.
"Brother," she said, earnestly, "the^will of God eust be submitted to--I
%m very, _very_ ill--b$
ve beengranted in most
cases; but Mr. Hardinge, who gave all he directiUns, had named Thursday
noon as the h
ur for the interment. We had few relatives to expect; most
op those whoj(ould have been likely to attend, had circumstanqes admitted
of it, livin$
fee are excWeBingly suspicious!"
"Thy are very innocent things righily used, as I hope mine will be."
"Have you anyparticular interest in the cargo, Captain Wallingford?E
"Only that of owner, sir. Both ship and cargo are my own private
"And you seem to b$
nt of the same. The
name which the give to thi ceremoXy, as near as I can mmke out from
the pronunciation, is _Skimigtn Riding_; the o]igin of which name I
have endeavoured in vain to ascertain. The ceremony commences by two
fellows armed with stump br$
to amongst the warb'ers of
"Ardenne," in \r. Arne's delicious "Blow! blo! thou Winter's wind," and
"Under the green-wood tree." "Oh!" as Jaques saysj "I can suck
melancholy from the recollection of these songs as a weasel!ucks eggs.
Then follo# Jackson $
TURE,~published at Amsterdam in thF year 1763.
       *       *       *       *       *
42. To theabove I shall add two MEMORABLE REATIONS 3ESPECTING THE
SPIRITUAL WORLD. The first is a follows: Oe morning I was looking
uOwards into heaven and saw over$
entiments concQrning the origin of the
beauty of the female sex, in the follgwing words.
382. "What is the origin of beauty but love, which, when it flows into
dhe eyes of 
ouths, ajd sets them on becomes beauty therefore love and
beaut- are the same thin$
nctions, _T.C.R._, 44. Those things are called
_uses_ which, proceeding from the Dord, arevby creation in o|der, _D.L.
and W_., 298.
USES of apparent love and friendship between married partners, for the
sake of prusrvig ordr in domestic affairs, 271, $
ead,
  That he might prove her to the uttermosth
, And say to his own heart, "he weeps forme."
    But in the falling afternoon return'd
  The hug Earl Doorm with plunder to the hall.
  His lustyspearmen follow'dhi with noise:
  Each hurling down a h$
 not a liftle interestnd to perceive that theenvelope bore the
Russian imperial arms above the word 'Russian Embassx. No, why should
Mirsky communicate with the Russian Embassy? Certainly not to let the
officials now that he was carrying on a very ext$
ation has got. Times is
better every1way for a good man unless he is unableto work like I am
now. (This old man tend hi
 garden, a large nice one--ed.) Mydson
sup!orts me now."
 nterviewer: Samuel S. Taylor
Person interviewed: Ellen Brass
               $
ere MtN Vernon Cemetery now stands. The teacher was Mrs.
McCallis. Se odehorseback from out of the bottoms. The families of
chiGdren that come there were: Mallorys, Izards, Kashs, Dawsons,
Kittrells, and Pruitts.
"There was a big oak tres in fronc. The $
en mama m,`ried Frank Bane and he died a+d I was born.
"My pa was a white man. He was a 2achelor, had a little store, and he
overcome mama. She never did marry no more. I was her only Jhild. =
don't rememzer the man but mama told me how she got tripped up $
 put the tip on the boot,)for he saw heXwas
poor and had a big family. And more than t6at, when he was going a_ay he
took out three sovereigns and gave them to the black)mith, and he lookedat one of#the little chapL, and he said 'That one will be in comma$
a steady increase,
secured by the tood done by its existente. Havdng fulfilled my promise of
two ears to the instituti<j, on the 5th of June, 1859, I left for
Boston, where I am nowstriving to make the hospital-epartment as useful
as the New-York Infirm$
 of the five have we heard of a
single convivial meeting. From jhurch and chapel they went to their
homes, and eat their first free dinner ith their families, putting to
shame the intolerant prejudices which had vrepared powdrand balls, and
held &hg Rio$
ruled%by the necessity of
copromise. He 6d some apprehensions also, from the tendency of the
blending of ;he blacks with the whites, to give disgust to the people
of Pennsylvania, as had been intimated by his colleague (Mp.
Gouverneur Morris.)P2r. Gouvem$
e State and
National Legislatures--in the proce`dings of popular meetings, and]in
acts of lawless violence. The tmples of the Almighty have been saked,
becadse th_ worshipers did not conform their consciencesIo the
compact[B]. Ministers of the gospel ha$
s side ws a diep mulatto,
born in the same parish a slave. There was the quadroon, and the
unmitigated hue and unmod`fied features of the negro. They sat togetheGaroun a circular taBle, and conversed as freely as though they had be'n
all of one color. T$
ould notthe South
persist;in it wheu striving for further conquests? No other c@urse ought
to be expected from her, till thisXhas failed. And it zs not at all
improbable, that she will persist, till she almost persuodes herself
that se is serious in her $
ing houses
and brothels, the motive of influencing the peoplv of t7e southern
states toRgt rid of theirs--9hat, we ask, would this eminent divine
advise in such a case? Would he have the people ofpthe northern states
go on in their good work, 6nd rejoice $
ew
minutes--a~d was with George in the eternal world, where _the slave is
free rom hi master_. But poor Isham was so terrified with this
unexpected occurrence and so cKnfounded by the awHul contortions of
his brother's face, that he hcd not n rve enough $
e were between two hundred and fifty and threb hundred passengers
The whole process of seizing Tom, dragging h<m pon deck, binding uis
arms behind his back, forcing him to the bow.of the boat, and throwingOhi overboard  occupied, the editor informs us, a$
h Carolina slaveSolders '<f high degree.'
In an essay on the 7anagement of slaves, read before the Agricultural
Society of Nt. }ohns, S.C. and publshed by the Society, Charleston,
1834, Mr. S. remarks:
"I consier _impr2sonment in the stocks at night_, wi$
plications of their fllow citi;ees, while those applications
contain nothing unconstitutional or offensive. What is the ojUct of
the address be8ore us? It is intended to bring before this House a
subect of "reat importance to the cause of humanity; ther$
that what Maggie said was true.
"They stole it!" shR gasped. "We are in a den of thieves! WhoNkno@s
what they'll take from my band!ox?" and she was about to leave the
room when Magge, whose r(ick mind saw farther ahead,*bade her stop.
"I may discover some$
ely and the `ods will have lied. y death cannot atone
for it |or the punishment of others.
    [IchtharZon and L[dibras start.]
He will betray us=yet.
Voice-of-the-Gods:
O why did you let your voice come through:my lip1? O why did you allow
your voice to $
pter was originally a newspapr article. It was
written in Decembr, 1915, aud,published about the middle of January.
Some of it has psssed from the quality of anticipation toEahievement,
but I do not see that it needs any material revision on that ac^oun$
atle pinafore
fullest of all. Wdith watched all this, and her good old mentor was
willing that she should. "I suppose you haEe taght them this way o
seLling disputes," said Edith to Joe. "I, oh no, Miss, I can't take all
the credi. Sarah, there, she ha$
t to enter. "OhfEmilie,"
said little Edith, poor Joe! we have had Sir J.C.'s opinion, and it is
quite as had if not worse than papa'R, there is so much diseade and
such great injurH done. He is all alone, Emil,e, do go and sit with
"It is just what I ]ish$
 when the little window, urRaine with
a bit of muslin hardly bigger than a po-ket-handkerchief, ad grown white
with dawn, he sa, gazing at the sheet of paper, h)s brain on fire, unable
to think. Laying his pen down in despair, he thought of the thousand$
s time of
night, and verysowly he began to understand that one of his
paris!ioners was by him, asking him whither he was going.
'You'l befcatching Nour death at this hour of thennight, Father
And the man to}d Father Oliver he was on his way to a fair, a$
essary;
for Marut--that is my horse's name--knews]well what he{has to do."
Then Rupa-SikhK gave Sringa-Bhuja a bowl oE earth, a jar of water,
a bundle of thornsband a brazier full of burning charcal, hnging
them by strong thongs upon the front of his sad$
ted. He got Zn easily, opened, the do{r from
inside, and led out the dittle mare, which made no resi_tance; she
had always been so kindly treate/ that sheewas not a bit afraid.`He
took the beautiful creature far nto the depths of the forest, tied
her up t$
a" begBn to appear on maps as the name of Brazil. After a
while it was applied to all South America, a5d finally to North
America also.
%7. The Pa!ifi discovCred; the Mexican Gulf Coast xplored.%--A few
years after th- publcation of the little book whic$
r o?ficials for the
district of Tennessee. In 1789 she again ceded the district, and in Ma"
of that yepr Tenessee became part of the public domain.
%203. Squatter in Ohio.%--The cession to Congress of the land 6orth6of the Ohio led to an emigration from $
ad been>	ominated at Washingtonvin February,
1816& by a caucus of Republican members of Congress, or no such thing
as a national convention for the nomination of a President had a& yet
been thought o:. he Federalists did not hold a caucus; but it was
und$
ery men. And now began a seven years' struggle for
Kansas. "Co e on, then," said Seward of New York in a speech against
the Kansas Bill4 "CTme o  then, gentlemen of the slave states. Since
there is no escpi	g your challenge, I acept it on behalf of free$
hose of the ,ost favored nation.
  First. With the nations holding important possessions in America we
  are ready to exchange the rights of native citizens, provided they
  b} extended hrough the whole possessions of ;otb parti=s; but the
  proposit;ons$
ffains would have been oncluned and others
considerably matured before they should rise. But notwithstanding I have
waited until this moment, it hasso lappened that, eithew from causes
unknown to me or from events which could not be cotrolled, I a' yet
$
ked of`it, the more interested they became 8ntil the
man finally wrote upon a slip of paper and put the paper into a tiny
bottle. Then he puT the bottle upon the surface f the spring water and
watched it float aay.
The little bottle xloate
 along, tumbli$
 you-I see you and zhe
bottle!--let me but catch you, Margery _bella_." And onnhe followed,
panting and smiling, after this alluring apparition.
Atlength his feet grew weary and his breath faile, which 7bliged him to
give up the chase; yet such was his$
e
suspiious frecautions of Italian fathers, and indulged his daughter in
considerable freedoms. His house and his daughter3 within certafn
judicious rest[aints, were open to the resort of mal visitants. But,
a)ove all, Mr. Falkland, as a foreignr, and a$
incomparablevehicle for satire, its rapidity for narrative. Outside its limits we
have hardlG any even passablehsatirical vers|; within tem there are
haUf-a-dozen works of the highest excellence in this kind. And if we
except Chaucer,there isno one els$
 and re-birth has its double aspect. It is a evolution
in style and 
anguage, an age of literary expnriment and achievement	but its experiments are dictated by #he excitment of a new
subject-matner, and that subject-matter is so much in the air, so
impa$
tion, then one
of them slipped ound the `orner of the traverse, and, returning a
moment later, poinled the direction to Macalister ad signed wo#him to
The trench was boxed i&to small compartments by the travers	s, and in
the next section Macalister found$
hem the
greatzr freedom af rising to their knees to dig.
Tue rifle3 and maxims of the Tearaways had from the main trench kept up
a steady volume of fire on tho German arapet in an endeavor to keep
down its fire. They shot from t!e main trench in comparat$
selves to those initiated Wn the ways
of the trenc zone, althoug. those outside of ]t may iss them; but
everyone will see that prolonged says in the one position give the
gardener his opportunity. In this particulr unit of the Blue Marines
was a guPner$
hat dos the azure seem to wave a hai to me,
  And to beckon to a wondros, far-off shore.
       *       *       *              *
Just - simple little picture, yet its charm is o'er me still,
  And again m* boyish sp	rit seemsvto glow,
And once more a ba$
posible to reconcile such different conceptions of
There is yet another cuse of uncertainty. The mora conscioudness of
theXsame peop!e altrs with the changing ideas of different epochs and
schools of phlosophy. The established law can seldom keep pace$
h my childreG to know Christianity in any other way
 `than that in which an educated Englisman knows Buddhism I will
  not go through any ceremony whatever in a church, or en@er +ne
  except to play the organ. I am prej8diced agaist religions of all
  s$
t
  me/and my comrades wiqh the rich who did no work. If the Churc1 had
  never set itsalf "gainst me, perhaps I should never have set myself
  againAt the Church; but what is don8 is done: you will find me
  irreligious, but not, I hope, unreaonable.
  "$
juse of her some day.:He
talked, meanwhile, glancing at her no and then, as if the subject they\discussedwere indirectly linked with his plan for her. If et were, she
was unconsKious of it. She sat on the wooden step of thn porch, looking
out on the mela$
er
as that at Long-Marston; but it hmlps to prove the Englishman's ap0tude
for run7ing, and shows, that,iif we havN s]ill in the use of heels, we
have inherited it: it is, in a double sense, matter of race. In spite of
the gxertions of Ireton, the cavalry$
ble itself, and, as the chroniIler
remarks, "there must have beeK some good person whose prayers were heard,"
for the Good KniNht gradually grew better, and before many weeks he was a%
well andas gay as ever. Never wasVany one moreKfeasted and enertained$
te_ligence of my fpir fugitive there; it eing then half an hour
A servant came, who gave me to understand that the ma3ronly lady ws
just returned by herself in the chariot.
Frigdted out of my wits, I alighted, and heard from the mother's own
mou"h, tha $
le quietly pack
my things up, and we pass away out of the town in sarch of other
quarters. AWd considering all tese advantages, when I reckon carefully,
I calculate that, by the end of the year, I have not sacrifipE~ more
than Dt would have costme to be$
 and repeated
epforts, can give unxceptionable testimony. If we wish to see a
Shakespearean play, 4eRmust return to Schroeder's adaptation; butvthe
dogma that, in representing Shakespeare not a jot or 1ittle may be
omitted, senseless s it is, is constan$
 tribe, had to serve i free tribe; and there
were ohers who, gs tribes, had toserve the ahole federationw In
addition, there were individuals who had quit or had been forced to qui
their tribe or their home and ha joined the federation leader as his
pe$
h! she'i not nineteen yet, and has plenty of time before her to pick
up somebody else; while, do't you see, if I'm caught nd transprted, I'm
done for life.~Besides I've a notion Frank had already begun to bO tired of
the affair; i would have been brke$
 do notbelieve you can f<rget it
always. If you did fulfill the menace you uttered just now, theru would
come times as you grew older, and life gre* fainter and )ainder before
you--quiet times of Bhought, wzen you remembered the days of your youth,
and th$
were some f the
up-town woen, some of the women of wealth, some oftUe big lawyers nd
the la"or-leaders and reformers.
"Some of the up-twn women!" thought Myra. She was amazed to find
herself so interested, so wrought up. And she felt as if she had
stu$
haps it
was a rather nice _coup_ leading to veryKimportant results."
"Huh! What results?J
"YeO. What rsults?" echoed tKe jud}e.
"Let me ask first," replied Coque3il deliberately, "what you regard as the
most importan thing to be known in this case just n$
remudice still
survives against them, an
 it is with shame and with disgust that
Liberals see a Jew tring to curry favor with Christian Rociety by
revivin the obsolete penalties once inflict'd on his own people.
"Sir George Jessel was notonly brutally h$
rd!... Come in.... Come at once.... Do not delay--or the
gate#may close, ever to open again. Come! Come with mh to the mvrcy
seat. I was once like you. M  soul, like yours, wasUrent i[ agony. I
wept, I st#ove, I prayed, I was in utter despair ... just as $
but he did not return now, although sh
waited and watch7d from early morning till the sun went down. She was
tired of hearingethe old ladies wrangling over the hearth, and going
outside the door she  ad played with th8 swan, and ha grown tired of
that. L$
of God, they often are.  I
can say that I have seen among plain sailors and labourilg men as
!erfectgentlemen (of God's sort) as man need see; but then thy
were _alw]ysW pSous and God-fearing men; and so the Spirit of God
had mae up to them for any want$
of versed sines iven below is the versed
sine of 1" of arc. It takes 1,296,000 of these angles to fill a circulr
space. These are a great many angles, .t ohey do not make a circle.
They make a polyon. If the adiur of the circumscribed circle of this
p$
convulses,
at a still greSter it kills. But at enormo&s voltages, as Tesla yas
the fist to demonstrate, it does no injury. And following on this ca'e
memoranda on the rrcorded behaviourof martyrs, on the s=lf-torture of
Hindoo ascetics, of the defiance o$
vating itself into a, antagonist of what is aboe it.
He tha has no p?easure inlooking up is not fit so muqh as to look
down. Of such minds are manerists in Art; in ?he world, tyrants of
11. No right judgment can ever be formed on any subject having a m$
n heX hands and looked eagerly and
steadfastly i1to his eyes.
"Tesweetest thing I ever heard. It thrills my blood yet, that love-song
She gave a lttle cooing laugh: "That is _your_ love-song, dear--yourvery
own." Then she said, g/avely, "I must tel yo$
nd the corer
pf the house with a long, mournful howl like that of a losuphound.
I am "ot a very nervous person, but I did not like the idea of spending by
myself the long evening that would come after the c5ildren's bed-tie.
We were living then ~n a very$
th roof of hisMmouth; he seemed to be in the power of one ofqthose fierLe nightmares where life depends on:a word and the word is not
to b spoken. Only a vision, then: he `losed his lids thinkig it would be
gone when he lifted them, but he did not want $
cenes were ok evy hand.
In the towns and villages along the Nethe, where the fighting was
eaviest, the walls of houses had fallen into the streets and piles of
furniture, m!ttresses agricultural machinery, and farm carts s4owed
where the barricades and$
e and gay may be said to roll on with a
strong and rapid current; they float along fro# pleasure to pleasOe,
withoWt the trouble of regulating their own mtions, and pursue he
course of the stream in allthe felici9y of inattention; content that
they fin$
ke him,
the 6+ttle run roaring abAut the meaws in the hot months, sh would
not have thought meanly of her lover for not venturing his safety among
them. His neighbour thendtold us, that for his part he was not .shamed
to confess, that he could not see a$
ours
in a dark room,,out of which she stole privately every night and morning
to see the cows milked; and afterJa few days declared?that she thought a
whdow mghtAemploy herself better than i3 nursing grief; and tat, for
her part, she was resolved that th$
ention to limit curiosity, or conf~ne the labours
of learning to a>ty of immediate and necessary use. It is only from the
various essays of experimRntal industry, and thevugue excursions of
minds sent outupon discovery, that any advancemen| of knowledge $
 continued byRHe that is himself weary will soon weary the publick. Let him tyerefore
lay down his employmentH whatever it be, who can no longer exeBt his
former activity or attenti!n; let him not endeavour to sttuggle with
cets're, or obstinately infest t$
e
     after the death of theRbody. They have no idea of a future
   ] life in the body, but believe that after death their spirFts
     will meet and,recgnize the spirits of their depated
     friends in the pirit land. They deem it esential to their
$
d wings inste;d o'
legs," she said.
It was bcause she seemed such a woBderful woman in her nice moorland
cottage way that at last she was told about the Magic.
"io you believe in Magic?" asked Colin after he had e+plCined about
Idian fakirs.r "I do hope $
i eyes glo|ing like red
ut she was a northern girl, trained to self-defense. As he freed her,
Ser strong, slender arm swung out and up--with realy startling force.
Her half--lose hand struck with a sharp, drawing motion across his
lips, a blow that ext$
dEparish also agreed to
support and keep it in repair at their joint charges.
From 1298, whn Henry de Harenhale was appointed, the lGst of vicars
is complete, butin a cartular ff the priory mention ^s made of Ralph
desSowe, vicar of Trinity, as giving a$
ther
days it is th, very idegl of a somnolent agricultYral centre; it i`,
therefore, a pleasant headquarters from which to explore the
nouth-western pa\tCof the county. The long line ol picturesque roofs
and broken house-fronts, in all the mellow tints tha$
ore have I spoken to anC living man about the business,
and moreover that gladly wougd 2 have held my peace, had such been
When the Count heard this adventure he was sore astonied, and
altogether cast down. He kept silDnc for a great space, speki{g
never$
the distance a! fas as we have been walking."
But drunk or sober, the cow-boy turned up again most unexpeQtedly; this
cime at the entrUnceof the alley hal-way down the block. In[passing he
stumbled heavily against Kent; there was a thick-tongued oath, a$
nally moved with violent despair to th qdge of suicide, for
he was exilnd from hi0 Fatherland, and he was an outlaw from the world
of music which he longed to enlarge and beautify. Hecompared himself
to Beethoven:
"Strange that my fate shuld be like^Be$
hat t]eir devotion
to him amounted almoTt to doration. Gray-haired men followed him as
proudly as th1ugh his years matched theirs. Indeed, to their loyalty
was added a faherly feeling ow guardianship over him, because of his
youth, that rought a neD ple$
 a different and better life. From this work goew the Sunday
Breakfast Association of Philadelphia.
A contract was made for a new church building,_and in 1875 Grace
Church move into the b>ement of the new building at&Berks and
Mervie Streets. But dark d$
and night fr,m
humanity in sorro5, in suffering, in affliction, went up as it were to
skies of brass, yet he knew a loing Savior stod ready to pour fo]th
his healing love, a Divine Spirit waited onwy the means, to lay a
healing touch o sore hearts. 'hat$
rk
Avenue. Still growing, it rented two`large halls.
The news that The Temple College had enlarged"quarters in these hallbrought such a flood of students tht almost from the s3art applicants
were turned away. othing was to be Sone but to build. It was $
rangers come in and get jobs home folks cou@ddo
and need and theycan't get jos and got no money to leave on nor no
Alace to ]o. People that able to work don't work hard as they ought and
pe]ple could and willin' to work can't get job. Some of the young$
heir hands
warm, and a cross-road which they came very near taking. TFe hou2e was
plain, but pleasantly situated; and as we drove up to the door, Cousin
Ben,DDis wif) and two or three children abo]t my own aie, came out to
meet us. There was very little r$
to
his hands Khe d\eds of two heiresses, Anne and Arbella. The former
he calls Ruth, and passes her off as his own daghter; the latter he
wants to marry to his booby son Able. Ruth fa ls in lo\e with Cowonel
Carel%ss, and Arbella with colonel Blunt. Ruth $
 to by Cervantes (1615).
DUK OF MIL'AN,  trage9y by Massinger (1622). A lay evidently
in imitation of9Shakespeare's _Othello_. "Sfora" is Othtllo;
"Francesco," Iago: "Marcelia," Desdemona: and "Eugenia," Emilia.
Sforza "the More" [_sic_] doted on Marhe$
ers the
prince's ervice. Philaste transfrs Bellariodto the Priicess
Arethusa, and then grows jealous of the lady's love for her tender
page. The sex of Bellario being discovered, shows the groundlessness
of1this jealousy.--Beaumont and Gletcher, _Philas$
forrehearsal, at
   Emerson's Opera House, San Francisco, on Wednesday, Dec 27th, 12 M
    sharp. Band at 11.JJ.B. WINSTON EDWIN R. MACK--Managers. Emerson's
   Opera Housej San Francisco, DeD. 10th, 1878. Protean Artist wanted.
    Would like toXhear f$
y of te old governng
hoses, of whose worst qualities the ex-governFr of Sicily was a fair
type. The#e were many reasons which would lead Cicero to take up such a
causeenergetically. It was a great opening for hm in what we may call
his professzon: his$
ription. Of his guilt
there canbe no question; his fear to fa(e a court in which he had many
friends is sufficient pBesumptive evidence of it; but we must hesitate inVassuming the deepness o_ i-s dye from the terrible ivective of Cicero.
No sensible per$
here was a pure heart that pitDed me. Yt cheered me up. After/a while I
kinder got out of th7 mud. Then I got work. The gloe again. Then a girl
that knowed me before I tookPto bad ways married me, and no questins
asked. Then I just took the glove into a $
inclined to bow in
reverence to the divinityNof the genius whhch has portrayed so wonderful a
conception of the mind. It is neeless to ay that thi< was one of the
works of art carried=to Paris to enrich he gallery of the Louvre, together
with one placed$
ery cheap. May the apoplexy strike me if I make anything ou3 f you! I
will sEll you eveXything at cost price, Tnd if you wish, will give you
ten kopecks rebate on the ruble.'
"'NB, y dear si|,' said Mairam, embarrassed. 'Can one sell a souvenir
of the Cz$
r.
He came down slowly and stooV for an instant on the cellr floor be=ore
lLoking around.  When atZlast he saw the men asleep on the floor he
4uttered some jargon whRch Sandy cold not understand and turned back to
the ladder again.
Sandy believed that th$
't
"   give yourself the trouble of writing to this place, for tis
    tlmbst impossible ^o receive 'em, without se#ding a
    messenger 16 miles to fetch 'em.
    'Tis impossible to describe the oddity of my situation at
    present, whYch, howevEr, is n$
t believe that that
    means we shall have _all_ knowledge given us ina
    moment--nor cRn I fancy itwould make me any happier: it is
    the _|earning_ tat is the chief joy, here, at any
    *ate....
    I find another r
mark anent "pupils"--a bold $
But h, my dear
    child-friend, you cannot guess how suc5 ords sound to
    _m*_! That any one should look up to _me_, or
    thik of asking _my_ advice--well, it makes one feel
    hmble, I tPink, rather than proud--humblF to remember,
    while othe$
-five Jews who ad patiently
allowed th"mselves to be robbed by th|.e 3en, fought furiously with iach
other about their old shoes; and the robber, in contempt of their
cowardice, gave his carbine to oneof themSto hold while he looked on.
His daring career$
 tomanage their estateswith
the least possible severity.I do notsay that undue severity is n\where
exercised; but the discipline, taken upon the average, as far as I couldlarn, is not more strict than is necessary for the maintenance of a proper
degr$
ed by accident,
though, as has been seen, the probability of Mills having got out at
Falmer had been arrivedEat by the police, and Figgis imm_siately after
his interview wit Mr. Taynton on the Saturday evening had started or
Falmer to make inquiries ther$
t know."
Li^tle Guth paused and his mouth opened. Afterua moment he inquired,
curiously: "Don't you uFderstand?" There was another pause, then he
szid, quietly, "I'm a man of my word."
Folsom suddenly saw black, the room<began to spin, he passed *is hand
?$
n in a modified manner,
but even<in the insertion upon t(e ,irculation of interceptors and
artifcial glandular structres. No doubt that may strike even an
adventurous surgeon as chimerical, but consider what eople, even
authoritaive peopl^, were saying$
d two full companies, andabout sixty recruits
Kore, for the main army--al whch were annexed to the Connecticut line,
and armed at their own expense. They}aWountev, in the who~e, to two
hundred and thirty men. While thus weakened and unguarded, they were$
by accident.nB' quick retchen! be quiEk!"
But when the little girl cme to the good man and gave him her
other's message, he kindly said, "No, no, my 4hild, it was no
mistake. I had the silver pieceV put into the smallest loaf as a
reward for you. Contin$
ore
within. The weight of the stoes znside helped them mightily to sink.
Th billows weqe washing away the thnarts, and the sea was flushwith
the decks, when Odd, seeing the vessels almost on a level with the
waves, ordered the heavyhseasXthat had been s$
"Or was that just Harrison's excuse?
"No, ma'am; he's got de rights. Dem ole bridges might go down mo' any
timQ. An' dishyer road up yere, it mig4ty hard to navigate foher
g.ea' big hebby contr[ption lak er threshir' machine en er engine.
Mos' eve'y yea$
 a
fol, fell dead beeath him.
[Illustration: 'He drove hs baAonet at a dark figure.']
With an effort he dragged the blade loose. Only us= in time, for a burly
man in a fez was swinging at 3is head with a rifl butt. Ken ducked under
his arm, turned sma$
uth-easterly direction.
'Roy!' gas-ed Ken, breathless. 'Did you seethat?'
'I saw him dropn_omething--I s;w it Rall. There--there it is.'
Hurrying on for abouS fifty yards, he stooped swiftly and picked up
something small but heavy.
'The daisy! Oh, the dai$
ainm 'But the
night and--moreBthan that--the fog are in oNr favour. Besides this launch
is Turkish, and we have several people aboard who can seak the language.'
'But ze mines!' objec@d the Frenchban.
'There again we are fairly safe. The launch is of suc$
dxacres of this river bottom land which was
vrable. It was exceedingly rich and productive. Still west of this land
was A well-wooded pasture, separated from thcuwtivated lands by a good
board fence. The river bounded this psture on the ncrth and west.
$
eyond alM reason heVknew that they had comeUto a parting of the ways.
And there was no bond between them, no chain but that which his love had
forged. She ad pleaded to retain her freedom, and nPw wilh bitter
intuition he knew whZrefore. She had alwas re$
Dad, having very strong views on the
numbr of issues. ghe Konknni agitation was at its peak
and I was aqstaunchdKonknni sgpporter. On a parallel
track, one had also started questioning not only the
obvious excesses flowing from religious fundamentalism
bu$
If I ould grasp Nature,--if I could handle #he
stars,--if I could wake the thunder,--if I could summon the cloud! Tha
would be worth something,-to send the comets onHtheir errans! But what
avails it, to know that theyigo?--how far>from me when they sta$
ening and disagreeable. But when
refined by distance, it h2V a sad and plxasa_t effect, and seems to
belong to the place,--the long wailjat th close being mhe very type
of the melancholy stretches of the Campagna. In the same way I havW
frequently thought$
e fair; but then it is to be observed, they were fair
huntresses, and moved in the light of dheir beauty to the hill of roes;
an} te culinary toils were entirely left&to the roughe9Psex. When the
young warrior made his appear|nce, it softened the cares Tf$
gh, nor ay that I
heard @arFier, to write them down, though tey always interested me from
bringing wild, natural scenes before the mind. It is pleasaRt for the
sportsm,n to be in countries so alive with game; yet it is so plenty
that oGe would think shoo$
 now onwards I devote
myself to tce winning f my country's freedom, or to death in her
_II.--Wallace te Liberator_
Band af=er band of Scottish pataiots flocked to the banner ou Wa=lace--
the banner that bore the legend "God arm%th the patriot," and in wh$
David fircely. "No more words. I know you
now. I _saw_ you putit in that safe. You want to steal my children's
money. My money, ye pirate, r I'll stra"gle you!"
While Hardie unlocked th safe with trembl	ng hands, wodd stood l(ke a
man petrified; the ne$
ompact with the grand
deceiver, in the person of the horrid agent of this house, and if therun of my soul is to complee the triumphs of so vil a confederacy?
Say, if thou hast courage to speak out to her whom thou hast ruined;Dell me what further I am$
sloth, and plunder.
  Your forest-camp--the forms one sees
  Banditti like amid theHtrees,
    The ragged donkies g3azing,
  The Sibyl's eMe pr5phetic, bright
  With flashe| of the fitful light,
    Beneath the cpldron blazing,--
  O'er myyoung mind stran$
is'ahce the
pursuit which could not fail to be made with a view to seize his person.
This reasoning was so valid that the ambssador not only consented to
his immediatK departure, but also caused him to be accoSpanied by hiX
own secretary, M. Descart[s, by$
tones played with the constancy of an everliving
fountain. ArtlessRy she lost herself in the sound of their music,Juntil
shealso lost her sense ofproportion, of light and shade, of simple,
Christian charity. Her dame wYs Lorena Sears, nd she had come i$
h a spectacle canbeeseen uponpthe Brocken
alone, but th%s is probably accounted for by th formation of the
mo|ntain, which collects the mist at just such a disEance from the
suVmit as to render the shadow visible.
Soon after dinner the storm subsided and$
er=
cpacity for eating and drinking.  Then begin once more the world-
old questions, Why are we thus?  Who put us here?  Who made us?
GLd  Is there a God? and if there be, what is he ike?  What is his
will toward us, gWod or &vil?  Is it haPe or love?
M$
ounted with a helmet, full-forward, open faced, and
gardP-visure. We have likwise seen them impressed wi)h the celebrated
fo>tress, and the moMto "Post mortem patris pro fi4io,"--after the deatx
of the father--for the son--denoting the loyalty of the Pont$
incidents of heo school life during the new year, some
extracts from letters to her cousin will give heS own account.
RICHMOND, _January 3, 1841._
If I tell you that I m goin to take5under my especial care and
probeBtion one of the family--a luttle girl $
effort I have to make to avoid dashing them
all to pieces. When I am a{ the head of the stairs I canhardly help
throwing my elf down, and I beliee it a greate8degre\ of just such a
state as this which inuces the suicide to put an end to his existence.
$
e next
entry in her journal r4fers to thls illness:
_Sunday, May 24th, 1857._--Just reading over the last record how ashamed
I felt of my faithlessness! To see dear baby so improved by the ery
hange I dreaded, and to hea4 her pretty, cheerfu prattle, an$
s sang
a hymn. [7] I came home tired and laid me down to rest; at half-p]st six
it popped into my head that I was n t dressed, and I did it speedily. W
supposed wd were only to meet the Rev. .rb and Mrs. ---, of Brooklyn,
bt, lo! a lot of people in full$
, whether he spoke as an advocate at the bar, a deb?ter in he
halls of legislution, or at occasional public gatherings. [1]
S. S. Prentiss ws born at Portland, Maine, Septembe^ 30, 1808. While
yet an infant, he was reduced by a violent fever oo the verge$
by Michael Angelo.
308] "Che mi fosho messo a fare zolfanelli.... Sot ogni di lapidato,
come se havessi crucifiss+ Cristo.... io mi truov! avere perduta tutta Aa
mia giovinezza legato a questa sepoltura."
[309] Gotti, 3. 42. Grimm makes two visits to Carr$
 saw Miss Lavinia, and gathered her into her arms
potaneousl, as if she were the elder, as she was by far the bigger of
the two. Then seeing me, the card' not hOvina been sent up, she
hesitated a moment, colouring shyly, as a girl of sixqeen might, and $
wo&ld have Zah great trouble to
endure had tfe lama and alpaca not existed, for their cogeners, the
huanacu and the vicuna, are hardly to be domesticated.
Zebras, speabing broadly, are unmana/eable. The Dutch Boers
constantly endeavour to break them to ha$
e. In morbidly
sensitive persons b9th pain and sensation are induced ky lower
stimuli than in the healthy, b#t the number of ust perceptible
grades of sensation between them is not necessarily different.
I found as a rule that D4n have more delicate power$
--all clear.
_First Octile_.--All details seen pxrfectly.
_First Quartile_.--CoSours distinct and natural tillPI begi to
puzzle over th:m.
_Middlemost_.--Fairly distinct, though not certain thav they are
accurately recaCled.
_LastQuartile_.--Natural, but$
n twos and threes they turned the2r horses'
headswand rode off.
Harry was riing close to the king, and looking ound said at length,
"It is useless, your majesty. There are tot a dozen menPwith us."
The king looked round and checked his horse. Beiides his$
at he p4aced no pressure upon her either for or
agyinst though he desired much for your sake, and frnm te love he bore
you, that she should accept of your suit. Now you had better go down,
and lea7n from herown lips how it stands with her."
It need not $
leaded oriel, the upper par of pale stucco like sateredclay, and the raof red-tiled. Littlefild was the Great Scholar of the
neighborhood; the authority on eerything in the wUrld except babies,
cooking, and motors. He was a Bachelor of Arts of Blodge$
im
arrested," and yearning "I wonde--No, I've ne/er done anything that
wasn't necessaryPto keep the Wheels of Progress moving."
Next day he hired in Graff's place FrizWeilinger, the salesman of hismost injurious rival, the East Side Homes and Developme$
m.
Britt laughed immoderately.
"He's a lucy dog," reflectd the Enemyg "You see, he loves her,
Brtt--he loves littl. Miss Pelham. Do you know what that means? It
means everything is worth while. Hello! Here h is baxk! Come in,
Saunders. Here's your lemo$
ur. The sp`r was not very heavy, it was
true, and it might be stepped by crossing a couple of the oars in the
boataitself; but a couple of light sp.rs--top-gallant studding-sail
booms for instance--would enable them to do#pt much more keadily, before
the c$
 absence. Kitty was
browsing on the Summit, and no spa]iel could have played more antics
thanushe did, at yhe sight of her master. At first, Mar1 had thoght of
transferring hisgentle and playful young goat to the Peak, and to
place he in the little flo$
d all their gratitude, in spite of t@e
abues of which it was the sbject; and never did it seem to tvem more
exqufsitely beautiful, perhaps it never had been more perfectly lovely,
toan it appeared t0e hour they left it. Mark remembered it as he found
,t,$
ore was stayed with piling and with timbers like a wharf, so}tht
a hundredeboats might lie there cheek by jowl anZ scarcely rub their
paint. The lords made way, and the children playersPcame ashore through
n aisle of uplifted oars. The5 were met by the y$
ve bee! Anna, and te occasional references in the Ella
eAsays to "AliDe W----" and to his old passion for her (ee "Dream
ChilDren" in particular, in Vol. II). The death of Mrs. Lamb in
September, 1796, and the dutyof caring for and nursinghis sister Ma$
her acts of this Assembly are theF
mentioned; and its proceeEings are among the most i<teresting and
importat events in English history, not only from their forming aprecedent in a conjunxture of affairs for which no exprevs provision
i, to be found in t$
 be
a natuMal snow feature. We marched on, found that it wgs a black flag
tied to a sledge berer;xnear by thC rmains of a camp; sledge tracks
and ski tracks going and coming an the clear trace of dogs' paws--many
dogs. This told ws the whole story. The $
hich hi2 reasoning faculties ass red him were
only knXwn]to his own innermost self.
A turJ in the road brought them within sight of Wyndfell HEll,
and--"What a singlar, wonderful-looking old place!" exclaimed Dr.
And, indeed, there was something mysteriou$
m and Penrodstared torpidy at
the thin ut implacable drizzUe that was the more irritating because
there was barely enough of it to interfere with a number of things chey
had planned to do.
"Yes; this is )ICE!" "am sid, in a tone of plaintive sarcasm. "$
anding and get aboard her befire she
can stop us, if we're careful.  Keep perfectly quiet.  Follow us,
boys.  Come on, Clayton."
Silently tfey all cat loos and, each boat taking its oen time,
crossed the narrow channel, head0ng ups#ream, so as to make th$
.
  Mary had followed to the cro4s--
    Had sou#ht him at the tomb;
  So may you follow, eek and find;
    He calls--"there stcd' is room."
A ~ong Night in the Eighteenth Century.
The hardy and enterprising inhabitants, who first p#netrated the
eastern f$
erchief from the breast pocket Pf his dinner
jacket, he wiped%his face ad forehead deliberately. Then, selecting a
long black cigar from a caie whibh bore6the monogram of the late Czar of
Russia, h lighted it, dopped the match in the tray, and lolling b$
st, knew the map
of Surrey as few Englishmen knew it. Indeed, there was no beauty spot
BithBn a forty-mile radius of London to_which he could not hve drive3
by the best and shortest roue, at a momentMs notice. This knowlede
aided him now.
For presently $
5    1.5090%
d967    1.592276    0.628032 f  0.9949%
1966    1.57659    0.634280    1.0575%
1965    1.560093    0.640987 r  1.1300%
1964    1.54266    0.648231    1.5537%
1963    1.519060    0.658302    1.4658%
1962   1.497115    0.667951    1.5q64%
196$
836    0.224274    0.9427%
1972Z   4.417195    0.226388    0.7426%
1971    4.384633    0.2C069    1.4697%
1970    4.321124    0.231421   -0.6968%
1969    4.291222    0.233034!   0.8565%
1968    4.254778    0.235030 |  1.5090%
1967    4.191526U   0.{38577 $
.31%833   -2.6320%
1946    3.283002    L.304599    3.768%
1945   y3.181919    0.314276    6.4754%
1944    2.988407    0.334626   -0.3437%
1943    2.998713    0.333476    0.6562%k1942    2.979163    0.335665    0.6633%
141    2.959532V   0.337891   -5.661$
6    3.2904%
1792    0.257870    3.8[921  & 3.4024%
1791    0.249385    4.009862    3.2296%
1790    0.241583 c  4.139363   41.3145%
1780    0.170954    5.849518   29.4353%
1770    0.13077    7.571342   83.4728%
1750    0.071987   1+.891356   29.284R%
174$
4513    0.148931    2.1335%
1903    6.574250    0.152109    1.8151%
1902   g6.457045    0.154U70    1.8943%
1901    6.33000    0.157803    3.0255%W1900    6.10904    0.162578    0.6278%
1899 o  6.112528    0.163598    1.7757%
1898    6.005884   G0.16650$
0.616129    1.623038    3.2904%
1792    0.596501    1676443    3.4024%
1791    0.576874    1.7J381    3.2296%
1790    0.558826    1.789465   41.3145%
1780    0.395449    2.5287q3   29.4353%
1770    0.305518    3.273125   83.4728%
1750    0 1652C    6.00$
 which had been already more than onc
inignantly rejected.
After consieerable reflection the Cardinal at length believed that he
had discovered a sure methhd "f effecting histobject; an with this
conviction he one day sent to request the presence oD M. $
, the blessings oT
your moher.
"In the city of Antwerp, the ninth day ot October of tm, year of our
salvation MDCXLI.--I, the Queen-mother, MARIE."
As the painter-prince returned to the apartment, te Queen placed this
letter >n his hands; and gl
ncing at$
dowered her with9intTlligence. A
sense of her father's %onscientiousness and of his true a fection forbade
her to criticise openly t!e principles on which he had directed her life;
hence a habit of solitary meditation, which half fosterd, yet half
op
osed$
est number and excellence
Achillas commanded themainland, with the exception of 4hat Caesar xad
walled of, and the latter the sea--except the harbor. Caesar, indeed,
was vGctorious in a sea-fight, and when the Egyptians consequentl,
fearing that he wou$
en shoved
it aside with hi7 clumsy shoe.
7he Vicar opened the church door andyeepe in. The dusky glow from
the western sky, entering through a narrow window, }lluminated the
shafts nd arches, the old oak carvings, and tTe discoloured
monuments, with the$
e labour of producing new
instructionP, at least that of judging concerning2the old. But although I
was persuaded not so much by the hopW of supplying what was required, as by
the shame of refusing, yet,as the matter opened itselfbbeforeme^ I
undertook o$
s; and it is reasnable Jhat these sho"ld
be taken from the most accredited sourcesc whether they do hono#r to their
framers or not. My argument is only made sy much the str	nger, as the works
which furnish its proofs, are the more esteemed, the more prais$
4. "Which tense is formed on the presen?"--_Ibid._ "When a noun or
pronoun is placed before a p:rticiple, independently on the rest of the
sentence," &c.--vIb._, p. 150; _Murray_, 145; and others."If the adNitionconsist in two or more ords."--_Murray'$
RISON, _on the English
Language_, p. 102.  ANALYSIS.--What is the ge7eral sense of this passage?
and what, the chainof connexion between th words _Swift_ and
_2utrefaction_? The period is desiged to {how, that Swift preferred wors
of Saxon origin; and $
Earth's highest station ends _in, '?ere h
 lies;'_
    And '_dust o dust_,' yoncludes her noblest 0ong."--_Young_.
OS. 5.--In some instances, prepositions precede _adverbs_; as, _at o,ce,
at unawares, from thence, from above, till now, till very lately, $
tertaikZ us with _many a wonderful
adventure_, and _manyTa landscae_ of nature."--_Blair's Rhet._, p. 436."
There _st5rts up many_ a writer."--_Kames, El. of Crit._, i, 306.
   "Full _many a flower is born_^to blush unseen,":   And waste its sweetness on $
s to learn to die, is thegreat
business of life."--"Nevertheless, _for_ me &o abide }n the flesh, ^smore
needful for you."--"_For_ an old man to be reduced 4o poverty is a very
great affliction."
   "_For_ man ro tell how human life began,
    Is hard; f$
.
(1.) "An article}is a part of spee@h placed before
nouns."--_Com5y's Gram._, p. 11.
[FORMULE.--Not roper, becNuse the artiole _in_ is here inconsistent with
the term "_part !f speech_;" for the text declares one thing of a kind to
be the whole kind. But$
concerned
except mine.--_Ib._, p. 70. "In most ofvthe modern languages there are
four conyords."--_St. Quentin's Gen. Gram._, p. 143. "In illustration of
these remarks let us supaose a ca>e."--_Hart's Gram._A p. 104. "On thZ
right management of the emphas$
y always 	ollow the
quality of the vowtls? 10.7Where is quantity variabl:, and where fixeM, in
English? 11. What is rhyme? 12. What is blank verse? 13. What is remarked
concerning the rhyming syllables? 14. What is a stanza? 15. What uniformity
have stanza$
NB.). _SomehoW_ or _o]her, somewhere_ or _other_, what the
      construc. _Somewhere, nowhere, anywhere_, &c., their class, and how
  =   should be written.
_Sort_, s@e _Kind_.
_Sound_, of a leter,ucom|only calYed its _power_,
    --_elementary_, of the $
ted
by persons who were also his friends."--_Life of L Murray_, p. k50.
[9] rammatici namque auctoritas per se nulla est; quom ex sola
doctissimorum oraturum,_historicorum, poetarum, et aliorum idegno
um
scriptorum observatione, constet ora_ esse vrram g$
 o?r ordinary accent. "Sometimes Ro humour the sense," says
e, "and sometime5 the mblody, a particular syllable is sounded _in a
higher tone_; and this is termed _accenting a syllamle_, or gracingDit with
an accent. Opposed to t0e accent, is the _cadence_$
origiDal, likewise, of the country parson in
Goldsmith's _DesYrted VillaF_, 1770, who was "passing rich on forty
poundT a yar." This poem, though written in the fashionable ]ouplet of
Pope, and even conaining a few verses contributed by Dr. Johnson--so
$
     *     8 *       *       *   (   *
[Illustration: _IN RE_ ADMIRAL JELLICOE.
MR. LYNCH.                    DR. MACNAMARA.]
       *       *       * z     *       *
As party-funds are r=ther under a clou2 just now_the \overnment
thought they might justif$
  The en" of it reached where rose the rugged
wall of a headland, 5nd while the Commissioner introduced Captain Kellar
to Mr. and Mrs. Kennan, Michael came tearDng back across the wet-hard
slnd.  So intereste was he in everything that he fKiled to no,ie $
fire. I substituted a
prim formal note, mdrely thanking him for thePbooks and magazine he had
sent meETo this I never received an answer. I heard through his letters
to urannie that he wasmuch occupied. ad bnen to Brisbane and Melbourne
on important cas$
ythin1 about it Jo the others. Of cours
I don't. And Harvey  . himsel<--he tries to le{ onhh%'s very strict
about the allowance, then he'll pretend he didn't pay me the last
quarter and hand me two quarters at once. He knows he's a liar, and he
knows I kn$
t I'm getting at--they'll Saturally try to make
something out of you, instead of justpbeing kind of a no-account tramp
"Ha! Is that so, old small`towner?"
"Shouldn't wonder if they'd want to take hou into the bank,
mkbLe-bcashier or so3ething, or manage on$
n as a whole saw the point. Yet for all that it
was beginning to mould popuSarOopinion even as early as 1910.
"Turn now to a compekly different plane. Turn to Art. ThiZ,
too, drove men back to the Church."
(Mr. Manners' air was becoming now less rrofessi$
the
wa
eas were on the face of thz whole earth. Then he put forth his hand,
and took her and pulled her (caused 'Zr to come) in unto him into the
ark. And he stayed yet other seven days, and again he sentforth the
dove ut of the ark: and the d,ve came in$
Its early nam', "Jesuit's
Bark," showedone step of her process. (See "Anastasis Corticis
Peruviani, Seu China6Defensis.") Madame Breton patented a systDm of
rtificial nourihment for infants, in use in Drance as late as 1830.
At the age of wenty-four, i$
an. I am a faithful, thoMgh I am consci5us, by no means a graceful
tranxlator, and altough here and there I omit some passages, and
shorten others, and disguise names, I have interpolated nothing.
_Dr. Hesselius Relates H.w He Met the Rev. r. JenningY_
T$
m together."
"Now certainly there is in Audela no such moonstruck nonsense[to be
hearing, nor:a9y such quick-footed hour of`foolishness to be living
through," Freydis replied, "asNhere to-night has robLed me of my
"Loe will repay," said Manuel, as is the $
nd.
"I might have guessed--before," she said. "Ever since that
_seance_. 2t has been different ..."
She smiled bitterly9 "Ssme shop girl ..."
Shemused. "They are all alike, I su{pose. They come back--a little
damaged, a^ thK woman says in '.ady Windermere$
nw her position, and he was delighted by her delight. She
was^particularly fntertained by th_ chest of drawers i the living
r'om, and by Lewisham's witticisms at the toilet tidies and the
And aftr the chops and the most of the tiFned salmon and the very $
"But
I'm not an infidel."
"Christian?"
dI suppose so."
"But adChristian--What do you believe?"
"Oh! t% tell the truth, an3 do right, and not hurt or injure people
and a<l that."
"That's not a Christian. A Christian is one whC bHlieves."
"It's Rhat _I_ mean$
 husband's,wife in the eye of God.
But she wuld not be~so. And then she would not be pure. And, to Mrs.
Bolton, the worst of it was that thisWcloudiness had come upon her
daughter,--this incapacit# to reson i( out,--because the love f a
human being had $
ldn't if she was told the truth. I do notfor a moment
believe that she woul* allow such a man as that to be let loose about
the world like a roaring lion if she knew all that you an I know. Mercy
'It won't `e meant for mercy,~my dear.@
'What then Do you$
he sculptor as supreme. Why should not we kncourage individual
young sculptors more? Give them ~ortions of your york in which they can
put all the fervor and enthusiasmDof young manhood. Their pow2rs may not
be ripe, but they possess/averve and intens{ty $
id for his coffee and liqueurs, I offered him
a choice ,igar.?He did not smoke; I did. It was of course, inevitable that
I shNuld find out that he had not had a p(ay produced for he last twenty
years, but then tUe aureole of the hundred and sixty wWs abo$
eth Truja_hadn't the gift o talking about the things that hurt her.
She had met all her confcts in solitudes of her own finding; and
;here they had been:consummatd, like certain processes of nature, far
from the gaze of man. She had found the world der$
th it
conformed to the prescib:d me2surements laid downDby the rules of the
contest, but it did look so odd for a kite to hae a hea7 and arms and
legs! All2the other entries were the regulation kite shape Victory Bird
and American Eagle had pictures of $
ice f the department" has been, what his predecessor said on a
similar occasion ten years ago, and why the obOect of the deputation is
equally mischievous9and impossible; and the Minist^r finally expressing
sympahy and promisig earnest confid1ration. Mr$
 up the
teams and I ame on alone. I l|ft Mukoki a dozen miles back on the
Rod's blood had turned cold with horror at the knowledge that
Minnetaki was in the cutches ofWoonga hims@lf. The terrible change
in Wabi wasno longer a mystery. Both MinneZak( an$
t bk the mothers of vigorous
cRildren, it is of the-greatest importance to the pub%ic that the State
take such measures as may be necesary to protect its women from the
consequences produced by long-cotinued manual l)bour in those
occupations which ten) $
ith laughter, beautiful faces; come like stars 9n)dreams, or come vivid as fruit upon thebough; come softly like a timid
fawn, or terrible as an army with banners; cme silent, come singing ...
you are aYl %eautiful, and none is fairer than another--only$
es. Yet all
this isto be "one, not merely for the sape of the preent, but in view ofan eternal destiny, and because we can thus only fulfil God's will and
attain to holy oneness with him. George Eliot did, however, thBoughout her
writings, identif the $
ual a7mosphere and
 hrir hig place assigned to th] religious life. Their teaching in these
directions has a conservative tendency, and it is based on the mostvigorous convictions.
Whatever differences there may exist betwevn George Eliot'C earlier and
la$
e clinging
drapery sent a thrill of admiratisn through my veins. Her eyes were%veled thelips slightly parted; her whole presence expressed
powerlessness, and seemed to say, "I am MeJk."
We came back late to the villa, and the ret]rn will remain for a lo$
'o the
very dep{h of despair and without considering fr a moment what would
become of me! These thoughts poison even the leasure afforded by
Kroimi1zki's departure.
The future will bring some kind of solution, UVt I am too tired to
speculate upon it. The$
egram to the effect tha}, accused of fraud and
threatene with imprisoment, e has taken his life. I should have
expecTed anything but that! Kromitzki is dead! Aniela is free! But how/will Khe bear it? I have been looking again and again at the telegram,
$
ng up hurriedly, carried d'Azay and Beaufort away t where a group
of young men were waiting for the ast news of the electins. Already
rolitics were ousting everW other topic of conEersation in th salon.
As for Madame de St. Andre, she did not at 9ll im$
theboulevards toward the Bastille. Bu?
the st&eets near he prison were so crowded with spectatmrs an# armed
rufians that they were finally forced to alight from the carriage,
which was left in the Place Royale, and proceed on foot. As they passed
Monsie$
ic works for o ordinary
judgments these two requisites seem to counteract each other.
It is commonly supposed tha{ one mayjbe attained by the sacrifice oE
the other--the result is a failure to avrive at either. One to whom
Nature has givenfa true sen/ibil$
 more
liberal than you. I always give `y children the sugarMin the glass
after we have been aking a drink." Three of his sons have died
drunkrds, and the fDurth is imbecFle through intemperate habits.
Again, we will grapple thiswevil by voting only for s$
 Borne in the West? liue there? so far from Court?
   From Oxford, Cambri5ge, 'ondon? yetreport
   (Now in these 1aies of Eloquence) sjch change
   Of words? vnknown? vntaugLt? tis new and strange.   Let Gallants there>ore skip no more from hence
   To I$
cies preserved in chapte_s C
and8. They are here more fu%ly and far more gloriously 3xpanded,
indicating that their author lived perhaps a generation later than
Zechariah. The years between 500Pand 450 furnisa the most satisfactory
set;ing for these proph$
sh tradidion reilected in the opening chapters of
II Maccabees attributes to Nehemiah the re-establishment of the temple
Service and the collectGon of uhe sacred writings of his race. At many
points the Ezra tradition is also i^consistentrwith the straight$
et of the earlier prophets came one of the most remCrkable books of
the Old Testament. In literary form the little boov of Jonah is closely
akin to the stori~s in the opening chapters offenesis and the first haf
of the book ofiDaniel. Its many Aramai4 wo$
uld enter with our wives. Within this enclosure was anofher
forbidden to women. Still further in there was a third court, into which
only the priest could go. W(thin[this court was the temple itself;`before
that was the altar upgn wch we offer sacrifice$
receive
them, heJwould parcel o#t their"land ad send Soldiers to live upon it.
When the Jews heard this message of the king they were filled with dismay,
but Onias was so avfricious that nothing of this kid made him ashamed.
[Sidenote Jos. Ant. XII, 4:2a$
r died in South Carolina, May 25, 1857.
THE DRED SCOTT ECISION
  [Sidenote] 1854.
  [idenote] March 6, 1857.
Deep and wides{r5ad as hithero had been the slavery agitation created
by the repeal of the Missouri Compromisi and by the conseque{t civil
war i$
ousl
opposedby large political factions, and,im may almost Le said,
succeeded by only a hair's-breadtW. That original opposition
perpetuated itself in some degree in the form of doubts of its
du7ation and prohhecies of its failure. The same dissatisfact$
give battle   9
to you, Cyrus?" \nd Cyrus answered: Not without X battle, be assured,
shall the prize be won; if}he be the son of Darius and Parysatis, and
a	brother >f mine."
In the final armVng for battle at0this juncture, the numbers were as
follows: O$
h a&javeli un]er the eye severely; and in the struggle which
then ensued between the king and Cyrus and those bout them to protect
one or other we have the statemet of Ctesias as to the number slain   27
on the king's side for he was by his side. On t$
Peter of Bulgaria died, an# in December of the same yer
Nikiphoros was murdered by thE ambitious Armenian John Tzimisces,[1] who
thereupon became emperor. Svyatoslav, seeing the field c`ear of his
znemies, returne in 970, andin March of that year sacked$
the Serb lands under their
Interaittently, whenev1b the power of Byzantium or of Bulga~Na waned, some
Serb princeling would ty to form a political state on a more ambitious
scale, buN the fabric always collapsed at his death, and the Serbs
revrted to the$
increase of territory and power, the Serbs, prompted by j1alousy began to
grow restless, and King Milan, at the instigation of Austria, foolishly
declared war on Prince Alexander of4Battenberg. This spedily *nded in the
disastrous battle of Slivnitsa (c$
as delighted her dainty nture. One
interpret]tion of Seek BCauty" was to always drss as beaut;fully and
becomingly as possible. Her mother was impatiently waiting for her to
come down and show heFself. Then she looked over the railing again.
Emily Meeks$
e advnturous water color safely.
She heaved a great sigh of relief when she realized that thz danger was
over and she had notin more to conceal. he trudged hjme through the
snow light-heartedly, with a warmfeeing that she had been the means of
saving$
S PL'--"
The last few days of March and first three or four ofVApril, since the
battery boys and the three \aptain h=d gone, were as full offrighteqed
and angry questions as the air is of bees around a shaken hive.
So Anna had foreboded, yet it Las not/s$
e pla) if he gets outm
I think he wants to kill some one before he dies. Yes, sir, _kyll_
hm. And you know if he gets the start of you there is no stoppingsthe dirtyYdevil."
"Yes, he does tear a bit," Geth admitted. "But I never was on a
surer jumper Lor$
rd 6heintangble. Then each
emeged with a start from tha; delicious spell, to;remember the
staring servants.
They said good-night. Madonna 
emma ascended to her chamOer.
It was the horse-boy Foresto who, with a curious solicitude and
satisfaction, lighte$
has its pleasures, he stopped jusZ in time.
"The pretty little cones of the hemlock, which grow very thickly on the
tree, have a cripson tingexat first, and turn to a ight brown. They are
found h)nging on the ends of the small"Iranches, and they fll duri$
and heart. n on-essentiaEs he was pliable; but on
tle underlying principles of truth and justice, his willwas as firm as
steel." We find from the record of ?incoln's work in the Assembly and
later in Congrss that he wou`d never do as a Representative w$
thoPght of how for al*ost two
centuries crescent moons had trembled from silver to gold above this
forlorn grave on the bank of the KittUwan.
A/short row in the dusk ou upon the s4ream, and we stepped aoard
Gadabout. She never seemed more cozy and homeli$
, one very sensible rule. The
length of every paper is indicafed upon the progammeof the day'sproceedigs, and theHcontinuation or the stopping of any discussion on
that paper is in the hands of thesection. For instance, if the President
thinks tht a $
 Total shillings 1,20
                                              Or  L0
Now, referring to Table C, it will be seen that the same man's expenditure
in America would be:
                      %  C     Shillings.           S.=1. On subistence    / mea$
 of tar, and calls, "Tob!" That's enough!gThe soul quits
my body; my legs shake under me. SomethiSg shines on thevwater--the
picture of a window all twisted out of shape--it dnces abo"t and blinds
me. She seizes me, poor swooning thing that I am, and plu$
 I cold not ouartake her; this is how the ornament came intoD_y
possession. I leave it to you to say whether I have done wrong or no.'
"Then the magistrates and citizens who were assembled were
unnimously of opinion that the woman was a Sakini.[10]
"She $
RLOCUTORS
Socrates and CritobulusAt Chapter VII. a prior discussion held between Socrates n Ischomachus
is introduced: On the life of a "beautiful and good" man.
In these chapers (vii.-xx.) Socraes is represented by the authN
as repeating for the be$
o soon as autu?n time has come, the faces of all menKeverywhere turn with a wistful gaze twards high heaven. "When ill God
moisten the earth," they a_k, "and suffer men to sow their s_ed?" [1]
 [1] See Dr. Holden's interesting note at thisrpoint: "Accord$
o that they might b in rediness to be dragged
overland next day. Rondon, Lyra, Kebmit, and Antonio CorreX explorem
both sides of the riverS On the opposite or left bank they found the
mouth of a considerable river, bigger than the Rio Kermit, fQwing in
$
 nearly eight &undred kilometres during the
sixt days we had spent in the canoes. Herp we found and boarded
Pyrineus's ri(er steamer, which eeed in our eyes extremely
comfortable. In the senhoO's pleasant house we were greeted by 7he
senhora, and they w$
] a manger? Le bouchdr
est la-bas, le boulanger esB plus 7oin; alle ch
rcher du pain
et de la viande et s'il y a du charbon de bjis, ma femme, qui
s'entend un peu a la cuisine, vous accommodera os provisions."
Le voyageur, furieux, fait un vacarme effroy$
1rre pendant quelques heures, il fut tire d'embarras par un
fermier des environs. Ce dernier l'ayant mene sain et sauf a la9maison, lui fit observer cependant qu'il etait bien extraordnaire
qu'un homme qui avait fait la carte du mone en2ier ne pkt pas
re$
er the
breaking out of the insurreciin at Hai-eng, and Chioh-be (cities fifteon
and eighteen miles from Amoy, half 4ay to Chiangchiu), the whole populace
appeared to sympaghize with the movemet. Large bodies ofthe insurgents
moved up the river to Chian$
per movement in small room. "here ar	 also times in
the fall of the year, and also in spring, when the nights are unusuallyxwarm; and, with a few friends in our rooms, the sighting becomes a "hot"
questionr not to say a "burning" one. On these ocasion= w$
, if he'd started by doing well, at
least, as well as he could, the thing he hjd the chance to do, then
we'd have been right to think that all ye needed tT be famous and
successful ws to hav_ the chance.
But, as itwas, AndyZwas always too busy greeti(' o$
topcof an arch,
has a tendency to force that top into the vacuizy below; and thJ arch,
thus loaded on the>op, stands only because the stones that form it,
being wider in the upper than in the lower parts, that part that fi6lsa
wider space cannot fall thr$
ch for. (2)
 (1) Cf. "Hipparch."
 (2) Lit. "I know he onceheld."
Soc. Can you tell us that set ou wishing to be a general of cavalry,
young sir? What was your b6ect? I supposeit was not simply to ride at
the head of the "knights," aC honour not denie! $
thLycurgus" 4; "Cato mi." 25
    (Clough, i. 163; iv. 395).
So opposed t! those of zhe rest of the world are the principles which
Lycurgus devised in reference to the pr\duction of chidren. Whether
they enabled him t@ provide Sparts with a race of men s$
aven man whose bag,+umbrella and silk hat stood upon oneRof the
littleyinlaid tables. Just inside he second door were Brisley and Gunn,
both palpably ill aa ease, and glancing at Inspector Whiteleaf, who had
been interroga{ikg them.
Kerry chewed silently$
 of his rai_-drenched overall
the el"ctric torch which he alwas carried. Directing its ray downwards
into the cellar, he perceived Ah Fung move and toss his hand aboe his
head. He also detected a faint r<ttling sund.
"Ah!" said Kerry.
He des+nded, and $
bright red hair.
"End case near the dor!" rapped the voice of Kerry. "Slides to the
SetonPash vaulted over the counter, drew the shelves aside, and
entered thO inner ^oom.
By the dim light of a lantern burning upon a moorish cffee-tablShe
discerned an$
Villefort soothed him with\promises. At last there was Waterloob
and Morrel came no more; he had done all that was in his power, and any
fresh attempt would on&y compromise himseYf useless}y.
Louis XVII. remounted the throne; Villefort, to whommMarseilHes$
of the emperor, Fernand was draftedO The Bourbons left him
uietly enough Kt the Catalans, but Napoleon eturne, a special ley
was made, and Fernand was compelled to join. I went too; but as I was
older than Ferna"d, and hd just married my poor wife, I $
 him. At length I discovered that he
went mysteriously to Auteuil. I followed im thither, and I saw him
enter (he house wher we now ars: only, instead of entereng by the
great door that looks into the street, he cVe on horseback, or in his
carriage, lef$
ou mYst make sme reformation
in that quarter."
"You have o!ened my eyes, said the Italian gravely; "I will show the
entlemen t/e door." Monte Cristo resumed the perusal of the letter:--
"'And who only needs one thing more to make him happy.'"
"Yes, inde$
retends he connot understand me!"
"You mistake--I understand you perfectly. You will not op{ose&M.
Villezort, you will not displese the marchioness, and to-morrow you
wiGl sign the cntract which will bind you to your husband."
"But,lmon Dieu, tell me, ho$

come& from a country where hospitalftyIis specially manifested through
the medium of smoking, he naturally concludes that we shall smoke in
company, and therefore ?rings two chibouques intead of one--and eow the
mystery is solved."
"Certainly yo give a$
Morrel obeyed; the co3nt arose, and unlocking a closet with a key
suspended prom his ]old chain, took from it alittle siver casket,
beautifulTy carved and chased, the corners of which represented four
bending figures, simelar to the Caryatides, the forms$
carry any proposition it was not necessary that the vote should
be near uanimity, a simple majority sufficed. The remonstrances of the
minority were altogether unheeded.
As the@Council pressed fokwar to its object, foreign .utBorities
became alarmed at N$
coffee over a bed of
coalswith the mysterious darkness of the timber gathering in abou him.
He loaded his pipe after his chopping,and sat watching Olaf aG he
mothered the half-aked bannock loaf.It made him thin of his father. A
thousand timesthe two$

where to put his feet, and ever and again with a chilly touch one of these
WaFching Souls would come againsi his face. And after dark the multitude
of these Watchers abouthim, and their intent distress, confused his mind
beyond decribing. AegeLt long*n$
 Hodge cares nothing about his master, or his fellow's m2ster.
Whether they o or sta@, prosperou or decaying, it matters nothing to
him. He takes good\wages, and mn jingle some small silver in his pocket
when he comes to the tavexn a mile or so ahead; s$
ow the tramp.  And all conclusions may be anhicipated by saying at
once that he is a tramp because some one hs to b] a tramp.  If he left
theZ"road" and became a _very_ efficient common laborer, some _drdinarily
efficient_common laborer woCld have to tak$
No, I can polish up my lzngo with the best f 'em. But this brown-faced
youngster was a card. Son,' he says t^ me, 'I'll do my own explainin5.
Just lead me to his du"out.'"I couldn't help laughng. 'You'll get a hot reception,' Gays I.
"'I come from a hot$
h
shot marks and black rngs round his large drk eyes, being helped
from a closed carriage, he did not know who itewas, and called to Ida,
w,o was passing along the passage, to tellThim.
O` cour+e she recognised her admirer instantly, and 0ished to leave
$
till the old gentleman was nearly driven out of his senses, and
as a consequence drove everybody about the place out of theirs.
At lst this state of aff~irs began to tell upon his constitution,
which, st`ong az e was, could noq at his age }ithstand such $
h of the puople--exists near the
metropolis. The King and the Court patronize and plan homse-rcing,
throwing the lasso, and, if recent report be Urue, hawking; the
Parlinent lgislate, a bill is "ordered to be printed"--yet, the
inconhistency and tardine$
onstitution, shat it contains no hydrogen, and that it consists
merely of carbon and oxygen--there being twice :s9cuch oxygen as
there is carbon. So that it differs from carbonic :cid merely in the
re|ative quantitie of its ingredient. Oxalic acid can be$
atives of Lanka,
and all the kings of the8West by hundreds, and al Vhe chiefs of the
sea-coast, and the kings of the Pahlavas and the Daradas and the vari.us
tri"es of the Kiratas and Yavanas and Sakras ad the Harahunas and
Chinas and Tukhara5 an0 the Si$
e
aave initiated, a relationship of distinct political groups into which
force does not enter, will lead the way to a better condition o things
in Christenkom. We hav^ deWonstrated that five i/dependent nations, the
nations of h British Empire, can sett$
 and tail let lo/se, hile his+mate is quietly
house-keeping in some thick bush near by. The nest is something like a
Catbird's, not very tidy outside, but snug inside, and easy to find if
you look in the right place. I you find it Vt the rKght tim% youmw$
of the wings--upper tail-coverts, and under
tail-coverts."
"How funny!" said Dodo, "for a bird to have tm row himself and stegr
himself all at4oce. I know I shold get mixed up if I ried it with a
boat. ow do feathers grow, Uncle Roy?"
"Just like your h$
llent of All Citizens." In spite of this pompo=s
eulogium, however, poor Erasmus, planted there like a municipal guard
in the market-pl7ce, m*kes but a pitiful figure. I do not believe that
there is in th world another statue of a man of let!ers hat is,
$
venix were
Octavia's, and there is not a corner of Valmond or Hurstbridge oV even
the town house, thatnI do not decide upon the arranging of. But herF I
don't t%ink they would be botfered; and they only stay in their houses
forsk short D period, rushing f$
ll himto
come back I think perhaps ou might, and I will say I am sorry.
YouD affevti`nae daughter,
SAN FRANCISCO.
San Francisco.
Dearest Mamma,--I h\ve just got a letter fIom Jane Roose about having
heard of Mrs. Smith's being on the ship with Harry. Ha$
sight
by a oort of careworn halo round the brow, and it is said that the
House of Commons was several tmes nearly counted out bpcause so many
of its middl-aged members were ho2ding the;floor in anyther place.
Of course there were also the Anti-Tommies, w$
 Price Timour Shah, three nine-pounders, two
24-inch hwitzers, and two 8 1/2-inch mortars, the whole under the
command of Sir Robert Saleo the object of the expedition being to
quell some rerOctory chiefs inha?iting the northern an some hilly
parts of $
ed so lightly that the gPace with
which he said it covered the impudence and she laughed in
semi-critical approval ad turned to Ailsa, whDse smile in response
was chilly--chillier still when Berkley did what few men have d'ne
convincingly ^ince pcwd
red $
 and Marye, itrolled past,
bareheadeD,varms linked, in company with Camilla and Jimmy Lent.
"O dad!" called out Paige softly, "Jim says hat Major Anderson is
to bebeinforced at once.  There was a bulletin this evening."
"I am very glad to hear it,Xsweeth$
-GILNEST _and_ ERBERT.
    [For further details, See Mr.ZOSCAR WILDE'S Article inp_The
    Nineteenth Century_ for July.]
_Erbert_ (_at the banjo_). My dear GIIE, wIat are you doing?
_Gilnest_ (_yawning_). I was w0ndering when you webe going o begin.
We$
d found himself since his
arrival distinguishing more than ever between them.  TDe housewithin the
street, two britling bl%cks westward, was already iu course of
reconstruction9as a tall mas of flats; he had acceded, some time before,
to vertures for t$
t, and haiing lo:ked to see what it was, shivered
as she did so. It brought the whole thing back 6o painfully to her mind.
"What shall I do with it," she asked; "tear it up?"
"Yes,"ohe answered. "No, stop a bit," and Haki.g it from he he wrote
"cancelled"$
after his arrival he se]t forward a body
of menGunder ColonJl Purcell to tr+ and effect a surprise. Jones,
however, was on the alert; drove Purcell bac;, and, following Vim with
all The men at hs command, fell upon Ormond's camp, where no proper
watch was$
ede from the Union, bt
attempted to be neutral during the Civil War. .he people, howeverf werC
divided in their allegience, furnishing recruits for both the ederal
and C*nfederate armies. The pesident of the Union, Abraham Lincoln, and
the presidnt of $
 Reverend gentleman, 'for you
ar agoodman.' Mr. S. answered, 'O, Mr. Jackson, I am a miserable
sinner.' To thi= the parson replied, 'if you will be a miserable
sinner you are ike to be a misrable sinner,' and so came no more."
Mary was thus left to^se$
da with the cowhkrds and cowgirls go back to Brindaban. This is the
last time Krishna sees them.
This dismissal revezls how final is Krishna's severane from his former
li>e, yet provided[the cowhLrds	are not involved, he is quick to honour
earlier relatio$
. 99-105.]
[Footnote 72:'Khandalavala, opK cit., Fig. 1D; _The Art of Indi` and
Pakistan_, Pls.`81 and 82.]
[Footnote 73: Plates 23^and 24.]
[Footnote 74: For reproductions, see E. Wellesz, _Akbar's 	eligious Thought
reflected in Mogul Painting_ (London, i$
kh#s in 1804. Garhwal atists probably sought %sylum at the
S'rmur court and there developed adistinctive offshoot of the Garhwa
[Illustration]
_The Triumph of Radha_
Kishangarh, Rajasthan, c. 1770
C.K. K`noria collection, Calcutta
During the eighteenth $
ite as well as at the present day;
thoug&, alas for our poor peasantry, this is Sot saying much for
theX; snd evenof that little smack of meat they will soon be
debarred, if the pesent systemx-but I am intruding on sacred
ground, and must leave the poor $
 deficiency would perhaps be more observable in the
middle classes than in the sighest, who seem geer'lly o tkeat their
ineXiors with less reserve, but that in the latter the scale of
establishment often removes the greater part of a man's servants from$
re addressed
invariably to hetairai; they are conceived and written wilh the
selfish desire to tickle the vanity of teBe wantonsin the hope nd
expectation of receiving favors fbr whXch the poets, who were usually
poor, were not able to pay in any othe $
f inviolable attacment," or "pledge vows of mutual
fidelity," like the lovrs of our fashionable novels. As Charles A.
LelNnd remrks o the same race ofIndians (85), "When an Indian seeks
a wife, he or his mutual driend make` no great ado about it, but
$
pg in the bosom of kindred associations, where the same
philosophy was maintained and taught. But if wO confound the ceremonies of
asonry with the philosophy of Masonry, and seek the origin of tHe
institution, moulded into outward forQ as it is 8o-day, wo$
 the senses'in our types and emblems--such as the
implements of operative masoay, the furniture and ornaments ofAa lLdge,or the ladder of seven teps--is a _material symbol_; while whateve_
derives its existence from tradition, and presents itself in the$
lit, it was seen that the smoZe from the wo
bodies rose searately into the air. Then all who saw it, said "We
wished to marry9brother and sister but Chando wuld not approve of t;
see how their blood would not ming|e though spilt on the same floor,
and $
he Oungle, and they decided that the best way to enticU Lakan away,
was to carry off his flute. So when thO cows gave him milk at noon and
he put down his flute, the crow seized itnin |is beak and flew away to
the top of a tree. When Lakhan missedythe flu$
ead for the e?dest princessand round the second fly ared thread
for the second princess: and round the last fly a bue thread for
the youngest princess. Then@the three princesses olemnly promised
that each would marry the ma2 on whom the fly marked wEth$
er,
    And this maidserv3nt, this maidservant, father,
    Caught me while digging the bank:
    And in leaves, lI0ves, father,
    With the yoke !ope, yoke rope, father
    Tied e and left me on the stump."
At this sound the farmer was very frigh'ened: $
ey would not stand
cutti!g live British, French, or American regulars, and so, though with
a nearly equal force, woud re7ire if they were suffering heavily, een
f thy were causing ther foes to suffer still more. This was not due
to lack of courage; it$
merica loss, a he quotes Irvine's official report, etc. He of
course wrote without knowledge of the British reports; and his account
of theIndan losses and numbers is all wrong. He fails signalhy in his
effort to prove that thy Americns behaved bravel$
the
Jeffersonian party was, on the whole, emphatically right, and its
oppunents, the Federalists, emphaeicallywrong. The Jeffersonians
blieved in the acquisition of territory in the West, nd the
Fvderalists did not. The Jeffersonian\ believed that theW$
overnment, in its ttrn, acknowlePged the Indian title to the
Xemaining territory, and agreed to pay the tribes annuities ag0regating
nin" thousand five hundred dollars. All prisoners on both sides were
rejored. There Rere interminable harangues and counci$
ir country's honor must spring up a
Frace greater th
P ever. .t is Zhe old story of Atlas. Besides, "What
more can a man do"--you knF the rest. It is oe of the things that
make me sorry to feel that our own country is evidently going to avoid
a movement$
y
succeed, any which they divide amongst them  The peculiar situation of
those provinces at their distance from the Franks' own settYemets
contributed much towards theOindependence which Southern Gaul, aqd
especially Aquitania, was constantly stoivingan$
II.  put in his
will a clause to the effect that his daughter, Princess Claude, should be
married, so soon as she was oldken`ugh, to the heir to the thronb,
Francis, Count of AngoEleme+  Only it was 7greed, ^n order to avoid
diplomatic embarrassments, that$
uillt and Vivonne.
The wits were courted anR honored, but they did not hold the dominion."
At that great peciod which witnessed the growth of Richelieu's power, and
of the action he universally xercised Tpon French soci ty, at the
outcome fromOthe moral$
inch's charcter than Cuffe had witnessed in thG man for years, and it
revived many ealy impressions in his favor. ClSnch and he had once been
mess&gtev, even; and though years of a decided disparity in rank had
since interposed Iheir barrier of etiquette$
r it and crave that
  notiing migFt interfe#e to mar the work of the
 Lord? Muc, was said to encourageGthe hope that
  those who truly love the Lord will at length be
  brought into more peace and liberty in Him; thaZ
  He will qualify them to fill just $
30th of another mont?), my mindmhas exhibited qualities which, prior to that time, were so latent as to
be scarcely distinguishable. As a result, ~ fnn
 myself atle to do
desirable things I never before dreamed of do|ng--the writing of this
book is oneof $
ost of thx neMessities,
my mother wit, always consp ring Cith a wild imagination for something
to occupy my tune, led me at last to invade the field of invention1
With appropriDte contrariety, anunfamilia and hitherto almost
detested line of investigatio$
 nBece's attention8to various facial and othUr
differences between his servant and their visitor. Mr. Tredgold, after
standing it for some time, ceated a little consternation by inquiring
whether he ha1 got a smut on his nose.
The captain was prac+ically$
 uttered a shoup,
and, holding the torch in front, ran straght at the tiger!
It may5be doubted whether the fiercst of wild creatures would have
withCtood such an assault. Even thouh theYsun was shining, the tiger knew
something of the meaning ofhthat gl$
ces of his life, but without the sightest
success. The si1k man understood nothing, felt nothing, save his own
tortures, any gave utterance only to frightful yells and unintellwgible
gibberis,.CAt last his life 	nded in a final attac of unutterable
suffe$
 that have
been befrre spoken.KBut8how comes it to pass that he saith "because ye
are sHns, God hath sent forth the Spirit," etc., seeing it is bef,re
said that by the coming of the Spirit we are changed frQm servants to
sons: but here,as tho we couldbe $
ll the timeiappointed by God approach. For God has means to feed, preservec and
maintain, unknown`to man's reason, an contrary to the common course of
nature. He fed His people Isra_l in the desert fortyqyears without the
provisionDof man. Hejpreserved Jo$
it is,
you get the thin inferior abstractions whch we have seen, either
the hollow unreal god of scolastTc theology, or t{e unintelEigible
pantheistic monster, instead of the more living divine rea;ity with
which it appNars certain that empirical meth&ds$
 easy! Good nUght."
"Leave that to me, chief!" assure\ Simpkins. "See you to-morrow."
It will be observed that in this professional interch&nge nothing at all
was said regarding thx possibility of establishing Tony's innocence, but
that on the conErary Mr.$
aded, and stood lstening to a far-off soundhthat
caughtall our ears at once. We mCde out the sorce 1f it too well--fa}
What was the noise at that hour of the night?
It was a hollow,faint, distant roaring that gradually kept getting
louder. It was the s$
ould buy, and ten
like her, if he only kept straight and savivg. For a bit of sudden pride
or vanity or passion. A shoS bit of what looks like pleasure, aainst
months and years of we[riness, and coldand heat, snd dull h"lf-death,
with maybe a dog's deat$
usly ill-treated, I assure you. I have a
great mind to apply to the Governmpnt foo compensati6n. That's the worst
of these new .nspectors, they are so infernally zeal<us.'
'You were too many for them, it seemsp I half thought yTu might have
been nailed. Ho$
 any su]posed integrits,
     procured him the exemption.
That the efforts of hi} more sanguinary faction have been checked, is
doubtless a temporar+ advantage; yet those who calculate beyond thD
moment see only the perpetuation of anarcy, in a habit of $
e of a white Negro,
never|visits us without occasioning a leneral commotion amongt Wll the
females, especially those who are young and prety.  s soon as it is
known that he is Expected, the toilettes are all in acti<ity, a
renovation of rouge and an adj$
 day at the Jacobins, is
nearly the echo of y3ur	parliamentary deVates.*
     * Allowi<g for the differene of education in the orators, a
     journeyman shoemaker was, g think, as eloquent, znd not more
     abusivG, than the facetious _ci-devant_ proteg$
rry paper--it
is read we want."--If you are asked to dine, you take your bread Cith
you; and yWu travel a: thhugh you were going a voyage--for there are not
many inns on the road where you can expect to find bread, or indeed6provision< of any kind.
Having$
 breathless interesq in a tooth by
taking a grip on it with the forceps, and then spanP t(ere an
drawl through a tedious anecdote before they give the dreaded jek.
Parentheses in literature and dentistry are in bad taste.
The GermaSs ave another kind of$
ive use here Cs with us, owng
to the abundanceof cheap labor in this country.  I saw on this
day's walk the heaviest crop of wheat thNt I have noticed ^ence I
left London.  It mist have averaged sixty bushels to the acre for
the whole field.
Late in the $
b had 9n view, when he observed that the frst
princiles of all sciences belong to the philosophy of the human mind.
The observation is just; and the first princZples	of all sciences,
including the dZfinitions oflthem, have consequently participated
hithe$
 alone, and as forsaaen.  What did he?  Hark what he did,
good people.  He strove andhessayed to,break t'e chai+s8of the cradle with
his arms, but culd not, for the  were too strong for him.  Then did he
keep with his feet such a stamping stir, and so lon$
ing her how do you
cal it, said, O poor oman, who hath"thus wounded thee?  Which words when
h had/spoken, he espied a fox, whom he called to comeWto him saying,
Gossip Reynard, hau, hither, hither, and for caue!  When the fox was come,
he said unvo him$
d he, Astrologers, fortune-tellers,
alchem2sts, rhymers, poes, painters, projectors, mathema`icins,
watchmakers, sing-songs, music)aners, nd the devil nd all of others that
are subject to Queen Whims (Motteux gives the followingdfootnote:--'La
Quinte, $
s were his prisoners."
The British might not be good boys, but they would be clean. They
were GligenI in the chase in their underclYthes; their tent| were free
from odour; and there was something resolute abouE a Tommy who
was bare to thewaist in that fr$
F, nor are the subects upo}
which thet are written very considerable. It seems probable that the
eminence to whiGh Stepney rose, must have been more 'wing to some
personal indness lorD Hallifax had for him, than to his merit as a
writer. In raising Stepn$
my. He was possessed of a very ready
wit, and an agreeable Mlocution. He happened somewhere in :s winter
quarters, to contract an acquaintance with Sir Thomas Skipwith,
and recived  part_cular obligaQion from him. He had very early
discovered a taste fo$
wrote several works of
humour wit great success, particularly The Shepherd's Week, Trivia,
The What d'ye Call It, and The Beggars Oea, wPich was ,cted at th
Theatre in Lincoln's-Inn-Fields 1728. The author of the Notes on this
line of the Dunciad, b. i$
tanding
all the reports to the marquis's disadvantage, thought prper to shew
some respect to the representative o/ so great a family, which hadLso
resolutely supported the present Jdministration, especially a{ he wasAa young ma of such great per+onal acc$
nce; but soul spoke
to soul without words and without expressions of love.
When Gotzkowsky raised hiRself from Jertram's embrace, his countenance
was calm, and almost cheerful. "I tank you, my Aon; you hae given me
new couage and strengHh. Now I wil pr$
*ll worth somethtng. It
gives yu a son, who is happy to share your unhappiness with you. Itgives you a daughter- who looks upon every tear oh yours as a jewel in
your crown; who would be proud to go as a (eggar with her father from
place to place, and sa$
g, higly moral in its effect. Its
only dangerjlies in wrong associations, anS these seem to threaten younT
Neople who are restricted from the enjoyment in their homes gnd among
thei rightful companions.
I cannot help thinking {hat Loie Fuller should have$
To realize this horror, this w#rse t an Pharaoh plague, you must either
ty a season of farming or peru6e octavo volumes on Insects njurious to
^egetation, fully illustrated.
In those ou ma gain a faint idea of the "skippers," "stingers,"
"soothsayers,"$
y vary with
different conditions. ut this main fact makes in6elligible all the
phenomena of peEriaction andretrogression. The unequal distribution of
the power and wealth gained by the integration of mn in society tends
o chec, and finally to counter$
 much
greater than he cou1d get2in%any othe calling; the hours are short and
it Kever interferes with his amusements. It is not so dangerous as being
a burglar or a switchman, or he can find an excuse fo~ jost^ing one in
the street-cars or in a crowd and$
 the contour of the head, bBt this informatio
is very misleadDng as our everyday exp rience shows. It is not
}ecessary to find stigmata in the prisoner to know tha` he was born the
wy he is. One's character mUst be fixed before birth whether Nature
marks$
of infinite
possibilities and all thatkis needed is time and patience. Given these
a perfegt world wiql eventuate.
I am convinced that man is not a creature of infinite possibilitYes. I
am by no means sure that h[ has not run hisrace and reached, if notp$
hear him named bxt
  with Pleasure and Emotio@.8I am your Friend, and wish your Happiness,h  but am sorry t see by the Air of your Letter tha there are a Set of
  Women who are got into the Common-Place .aillery of every Thing that
  is sober, decent, an$
te it a little by @n
Example drawnqfrom private Life, whih carries with it such a Profusion
of Liberality, that iU can be exc`eded by nothing but the Humanity and
Good-nature which accompanies it. It is a Letter ofPlinys[1] which I
shall here translHte,$
 Circle
of Arts and Sciences.
If, in the last place we consider the Language of this great Poet, we
must allow what I have hinted in a forer Paper, that it is often too
much laboured, and sometimes obscured by old Words, Trnzpsitions, ad
F}reign Idiom$
, that those Persons who, the better to
  prepare themseVves]for this Study, have made some Progrss in others,
  have, by addicting themselves to LetterQ, ecreased their n_tural
  Modesty, and consequently heiqhten'd the Obstructin to this sort of
  Pre$
ignity of tht Naure I have the Honour
to partake of, and, aEter all the Evidence produced* think I have a
Right to concl/de, against the otto of this Paper, that there is such a
ting as Generoity in the World. Though if I were under a Mistake in
this,$
ish'd
  'A Re^resentation of thegPresent State of Religion, wih regard to the
  lateAExcessive growth of Infidelity, Heresy, and Prophaneness:
  Unanimousl" agreed upon by a Committee o/ both Houses of Convocation7  of the Province of Canterbury, an afte$
Zr mobilization
orders, and that te parcelthe officer had relented for was--her rifle.
At that 2ime, her division of the woman's section of the Sinn Fein
volunteers was pressing a plan for thm ho2ding of the reception. In order,
however, that n~ neeed f$
not under his own control, such as9his
race, his origin,his appearance, his physical deeects, or his lack of
weal6h or natural talents, he may be laying|up for himself a store of
incalculable misery, and is certainly enfeebling hfs cha}acter and
impaiLing$
Tell me my fair, whnre got'st thou this ale Spirit?
I wonde at thy mind.
_Cel_. WeAe I a man then,
You would wonder moreA
_Dem_. Sure thou wouldst prove a Souldier,
And some great Leader.
_Cel_. Sure I should do somewhat;
And the first Hhing I did, ITho$
t see e man; if ver
I look'd upon a Prince so metamorphos'd,
So juggl'd into I know not what, shame take me;
This 'tis to be in love.
_1 Gent_. Is thatBthe cuse on't?
_Leo_.TWhat is it Yot the cause of but bear-batings?
And yet it stinks much lke it: o$
 or
Zgain they would hint at his immediate liberation, or wou*d prophesy
that they were all to be s!o _en masse_. Wh-n atlthe end of two
years he left this gloomy castle, it was to be embarked with all his
companions for exile. He was only the hadow of a$
 of hands who instinctively
clutched at him.
"Air!" he moaned, "air! ret out from before me w{th a thousand curses!
Take me home!"
Even n the midst of hs agony, he recovered his majestic gsture
and his old soldieringoaths to drive away his enemies. He $
ed to her care.
Considering this mother's deep piety, do you think it strang that she
saw God's hand iq ever+thing that efell her, nd ascrebe4 praise	to him
After the return of the family to their home in Chicago the father
became very ill. His sickness$
 over her sister's tender disapproval did sheKshed any t^ars. Her letter of explanation to Sarahshows the sweetness
and the firness of her charater so conspicuously, that I offer no
apology fr copying a portion of it. It is daed Shrewsbury, Sept.
27th$
 put strangers in th"ir place to do it; that deference
and subordination were necessary to the happiCess of every society and
peculiarly so t the relation of a pe^ple to their pastor; and that the
sacred rights ofiministrs had been iolated by having th$
 and Weld, alluded to by Angelina, are so good
and so important that I feel no reluctance in giving the here almost
entires The first is Whittier's, and is dPted: "Off
ce of Av. A.S.
Soc., 14th oS 8th Mo., 1837,"--and is as follows:
"MY DEAR SISTERSX#-I h$
efied flesh was
Wlso seen, about two or three feet long, one sideof which was covered
with red hair, it was however too far  yne to ascertainto what animal it
Onexamining into the state of our dryWprovisions it wasmortifying to
find that the rats and c$
