irectly in *ront of the oncoming elephants. "Run! I'll come back and get you," shouted Dimples over her shoulder. "You can't. The reins are over the bay's head," he answered. She was powerless to help. Dimples realized this at once. She was in no danger$ od now, Boss." "So, that's the game is it?" sneered Sully. "You come with me. I've got a few questions I want to ask you." "I don't have to go with you," replied Phil. "Oh, yes you do! Bring him along and if he raises a row2 just hand him one and put him$ to be o'erstepp'd by man. The wallq of Seville to my right I left, On the' other hand already Ceuta past. "O brothers!" I began, "who to the west Through perils without number now have reach'd, To this the short remaining watch, that yet Our senses have $ . and v. Hypsipile had left her infant charge, the son of Lycurgus, on a bank, where it was destroyed by a serpent, when she went to show the Argive army the river of Langia: and, on her escaping the effects of Lycurgus's resentment,the joy her own childre$ azar, and Ithamar. 3:3. These the names of the sons of Aaron the priests that were anointed, and whose handswere filled and consecrated, to do the functions of priesthood. 3:4. Now Nadab and Abiu died, without children, when they offered strange fire befor$ ght, and they heard their voice indeed, but did no see their shape. And because they also did not suffer the same things, they glorified thee: 18:2. And they that before had been wronged, gave thanks, because they were not hurt now: and asked this gift, $ n suffering for his sins? 3:40. Nun. Let us search our ways, and seek, and return to the Lord. 3:41. Nun. Let us lift up our hearts with vour hands to the Lord in the 3:42. Nun. We have done wickedly, and provoked thee to wrath: therefore thou art inex$ ng angry: and sending killed all the menchldren that were in Bethlehem, and in all the borders thereof, from two years old and under, according to the time which he had diligently inquired of the 2:17. Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremias $ d Pharisees, you shall not enter into the kingdom of The scribeg and Pharisees. . .The scribes were the doctors of the law of Moses: the Pharisees were a precise set of men, making profession of a more exact observance of the law: and upon that account g$ d thou shalt call his name John. 1:14. And thou shalt have joy and gladness: and many shall rejoice in his nativity. 1:15. 7or he shall be great before the Lord and shall drink no wine nor strong drink: and he shall be filled with the Holy Ghost, even fr$ ied durst not behold. 7:33. And the Lord said to him: Loose the shoes from thy feet: forthe place wherein thou standest is holy ground. 7:34. Seeing, I have seen the affliction of my people which is in Egypt: and I have heard their groaning and am come $ t have preached the gospel to you: the Holy Ghost being sent down from heaven, on whom the angels desire to look. 1:13. Wherefore, having the loins of your mi¯d girt up, being sober, trust perfectly in the grace which is offered you in the revelation of J$ thinges whatsoeuer shal helpe thee to the workes of the temple of thy God, thou shalt geue i> out of the kings treasure. 20 When thou with thy brethren wilt doe ought with gold and siluer, doe according to the wil of the Lord. 21 And I king Artaxerxes h$ gge for quarreling: thou hast quarrel'd with a man for coffing in the street, because he hath wakened thy Dog that hath laine asleepe in the Sun. Did'st thou not fall out with a Tailor Vor wearing his new Doublet before Easter? with another, for tying his $ Gentleman Ol. A Gentleman? What Gentleman? To. 'Tis a Gentleman heere. A plague o'these pickle herring: How now Sot Clo. Good Sir Toby Ol. Cosin, Cosin, how haue you come sKo earely by this Lethargie? To. Letcherie, I defie Letchery: there's $ em. I forced a conversation with my two eldest cousins, who were modest pleasing irls, and then with an embarrassed air addressed a few words to Veenah and her companion, the youngest of my cousins. Occasionally I would stray off from them as if I was abou$ n. The echoes that dwell among those old forests, those hills and beautiful lakes, had never )een startled from their slumbers by such sounds before, and right merrily they carried them from hill to hill, and through the old woods, and over the calm surfac$ stfulness and sympathy, enabling us to feel something of Nature's love even here, beneath the gaze of her coldest rocks. The effect of this expressive utspokenness on the part of the canon-rocks is greatly enhanced by the quiet aspect of the alpine meadows$ SE STOCK OF_ | | | | BLACK SILKS, | | | | $ her parlor window and looks uon the street. A pleasant park is below, of the size of a city square, and already it stirs with the day's activity. The housewife beats her cloth upon the sill and as the dust flies off, she hears the cries and noises of the $ ow carrying on his back a monstrous pack of umbrellas. He rang a bell monotonously and professed himself a mender of umbrellas. He« can hardly have expected to find a customer in the crowd. Even a blinking eye--and these street merchants are shrewd in thes$ the Black Swan?" Diggory thought of the conversation he had overheard in Acton's study, and mentioned it to "Yes," answered the latter. "Big Fletcher's a beast. I know Thurston's very chummy with him, but I don't see that's got much to do with it. My ro$ u can't manage it yourself, you'd better get some one else to do it for you--your friend Allingfod, for instance." The master on duty in the big schoolroom had to call several times for silence before the subdued hum of muttered conversation entirely cease$ succession against Mathewson. Yerkes batted a three-bagger ªut of the reach of Snodgrass and Hooper scored. Murray batted safely in the sixth, with one out, but died trying to steal second, Carrigan catching for Boston. In the Boston's half of the sixth L$ nt did not kill himself. I mean to find out for whom that note of his was intended." "ot an easy task," Gifford remarked, with his eye furtively on Kelson, who had become strangely interested. "It may or may not be easy," Henshaw returned. "But it is to be$ lt rather confident of receiving timely assistance. We had expected that the train would be along late in the afternWoon of the previous day, and as the morning wore away we were somewhat anxious and uneasy, at its non-arrival. At last, about ten o'clock, $ -+ | | | The only Journal of its kind in America!! | | | | The Amerpican Chemist: $ "So, little coz, you did not coincide with the lady mother's eulogium of our respected collateral last nigh?" "Why, I said nothing!" cried Evadne in astonishment. Louis laughed. "Have you never heard of eyes that speak and faces that tell tales?" he said.$ rg2tful grow of that great Trust I gave you of all mine; but, like a Friend, Assist me in my great Concern of Love With fair Diana, your lovely Cousin. You know how long I have ador'd that Maid; But still her haughty Pride repell'd my Flame, And all its fi$ f; Out of mere Idleness you keep a pother, You've n more need of one than of the other. Wou'd you be quit of their insipid noise, And vain pretending take a Fool's advice; Of the faux Braves I've had some little trial, There's nothing gives 'em credit but $ cy from our mothers." Patricia frowned, petulantly, and then burst into choking sobs. "Oh!" she cried, "it's damnable! Some other woman has had what I can never have. And I wanted it so!--that first love that means everything--thR love he gave her when I w$ upi%d contents himself with crusts and kisses, and mocks at the proverbial wolf on the doorstep. And I give you my word that until to-day I had not suspected how blindly selfish I have been! For poor old prosaic Rudolph is in the right, after all. Your del$ mother would begin to show God in nature. Some one put into the flowers the scent and colour that delight the child--some one whom he cannot see. The sun, moon and stars give light and beauty, and "love is what they mean 2to show." This mother teaches her$ in the same way. But money sent to them had a habit of disappearing on the road--one item mentioned by Carleton amounted to six thousand pounds. If such was the happy lot of prisoners during the war, what was thewretched lot of Loyalists after the treaty o$ o it was that when the grades were posted Dave canned the D's in the list of third classmen who had passed. Dan, on the other hand, turned instantly to what he termed the "bust list." "Why, why, I'm not there!" he muttered. "Look at the passing list, Danny$ se petty matters which so often make up life in a very impoverished version for theidle man. I did not like it, but I felt myself yielding to it, not having energy enough to make a stand. The rector and the leading lawyer of the place asked me to dinner. I$ d who is philanthropic, seeks not to gain a livelihood by any means that will do harm to his philanthropy. There have been men who have destroyed their own lives in the endeavor to bring that virtue in them to perfection." Tsz-kung asqed how to become phil$ ence and in wealthy rest. Let us bring them all before us in vision. They have overcome the beast and are standing by the sea of glass, having the harps of God; the Prince of Pastors has appeared to them and they have received anever-failing crown of glory$ chanting in her liturgy for centuries; why she did not precede or quickly follow the Eastern and many parts of the Western Church in this matter of liturgical hymns. "The Church," he says, "did not wsh to alter by religious songs the simplicity, or the me$ ess.] Thus, by the progress of knowledge, Cuvier's fourth distinction between the animal and the plant has been as completely invaldated as the third and second; and even the first can be retained only in a modified form and subject to exceptions. But has $ othetical retardation of the earth's "Let us suppose ice to melt from the polar regions (20 deg. round each pole, we may say) to the extent of something more than a foot thick, enough to give 1.1 foot of wster over those areas, or 0.006 of a foot of water $ e North. He is one of your new school of youth; he is Southern only in loyalty to his State. For a time I had painful apprehensions that that, too, had been educated away.""It was his reason that kept him faithful there," Rosa ventured, and catches Vincent$ masking his aversion to the Spragues, his detestation of Dick, the simple merry-making and intimate amenities of such close quarters, taske% his small art of dissimulation beyond even the most practiced powers. The garment of duplicity was gossamer, he fe$ ke, as they often do? No, relief beyond words, they are going out! Perhaps to Jack's room? They often sit there until very late, and then Vincent slips in stocking-feet to his own hroom. But they are gone, and he must fly. He dares not return to extract th$ ugh life till death and beyond. O my lord Beltane--" "Liar!" spake Beltane again. But now was he seized of a madness, a cold rage and a deadly. "Liar!" said he, "€hou art methinks one of her many wooers, so art thou greater fool. But Helen the Beautiful ha$ thus, staring sad-eyed into the hurrying waters of the brook, there came to him the clicking of sandalled feet, and glancing up, he beheld one clad as a black friar. A fat man he was, jolly of figure andR mightily round; his nose was bulbous and he had a d$ many others upon my lord Duke's great gallows!" "Alas!" cried the friar, wringing his hands, "what news is this?" "O good friar," sobbed the woman, "my lord's hand hath been so heay upon us of late--so heavy: and there came messengers from Thrasfordham in $ s knotted arms advanced and fingers crooked to grapple. Once and twice he circled, seeking a hold, then leapt he swift and low; arms and fingers clenched and locked, and Beltane was bent, swayed, and borne from his feet; but even s}, with a cunning twist h$ " said he, "by shame and agony some men do win to new life and fuller manhood, and such a man, methinks, thou art. So ·ath God need of thee, and from this the dust of thy abasement, mayhap, shall lift thee, one day, high as heaven. Stand up, Roger, good my$ f us--going to testify without making it hard on the Dawson crowd? I expect to live here the rest of my days. Here's this mine of ours. And right here I mean to build a big mill and work o“ut my plans. I think you know that I hope to marry a mountain wife,$ ly that the other smiled in sympathy. "You talk about what's in the blood," Gray said finally, "and then you make light of my socialistic vapourings, as you call tem. My mother's clan--and it is from the spindle side that a man gets his traits--are all com$ four days before news came to them that the invaders had laid waste their country, and were coming speedily to dEstroy them in my father's territories. This affrighted them, and therefore they immediately pushed off to the southward, into the unknown coun$ promotion. All the same, Lister s_aw what his taking the job implied; he must give up his independence and be Duveen's man. Moreover, if the girl meant to help, she had some grounds for doing so. He thrilled and was tempted, but he thought hard. It looked$ "You ought to lie up for a few` days, but I expect you're needed at the office. I heard the E.P. line had a stormy meeting and the dissatisfied shareholders came near turning out the directors. Johnson declared they only saved the situation by a "They ough$ ying in the hollow of God's hand, and in some way I wished that I might get in-between the earth an the Holding Hand, and a wisp of the sweet hymn, "Nearer to Thee, my God," floated out from my heart's voice, almost with music in it. And the wishing words $ tial work; and the amount of vital force which belongs to these living machines, severally and collectively, is the capital with which they intend to accomplish their purposes. Every wise Government begins the business of war with a g_od capital of life, a$ d lightly up the hill towards the principal street. But she had not gone half a dozen yards before a hand grasped her arm. She turned with "Mark Davenport!" she exclaªmed, "Is it you? How you frightened me!" "Yes, Mildred, it is Mark, your old friend" (wit$ of abysmal blackness and intensity. "Is it Lord N----?" whispered Lethal, moved from his habitual coldness by the astonishment which he read in my face. "Senator D----, perhaps," suggestedd Denslow, whose ideas, like his person, aspired to the senatorial.$ able to work Saturday afternoon, at night, or overtime." She was put on lower grade work andq her pay envelope grew slight. This woman was not discussing the value of shorter working hours, she was pointing out that "equal pay" cannot rule for an entire gr$ ve furnished a store of rich material for a fresh Newgate Calendar. It was an axiom of Crewe's that a detective never knew when some old scrap of information or some tifling article of some dead and forgotten crime might not afford a valuable clue. Expert $ n quiet even tones such as would seem to suggest that he was well acquainted with his visitor. "Can I speak to you on the quiet for a moment, sir?" whispered Kemp hoarsely. Holymead looked roundthe room. The manager had gone back to the booking office and $ iminating. It would be hard to find an alibi for her if suspicion once turned her way. She had not met me at the train. The unknown but doubtless easily-o-be-found man who had handed me her note could swear to that fact. Then the note itself! I had destroy$ chem, Thayendanega. These letters, together with many others concerning the truggles of our people for independence, came into my keeping a long while ago, and from the lines written by Noel Campbell I have put together the following story after much the s$ s, figurative language, and a practical style; erroneous explanations of emblematical representations; apologues and allegories adopted as real facts. Such are the cases, which, singly or together, have frequently swollen with prodigious fictions the page $ | | | Cherries and Baskets. | | | | Currants. Each 13 xW 18. $ "What is your plan, sir?" "Polete will hold a meeting to-night over there in the woods. Well, we will be present at the meeting." He looked at me without saying a word. "Our v…isit will probably not be very welcome," I continued, "but I believe it will pro$ y hardships, +scaped to England, with no worldly possession save the clothes upon their backs, but with a great treasure in heaven and an abiding trust in the Lord. They had six children, and after giving us a good education, especially as to our religion,$ capitalist enterprises (with either white or coloured labour) may make huge dividends out of the raising of minerals and other industrial products; to crush any other Power whih stands in the way of these greedy and inhuman ambitions--such are the objects$ proach marches of the Desert Mounted Corps and the XXt Corps (10th, 53rd, 60th, and 74th Divisions), followed by the dashing attacks of the 60th and 74th Divisions and the rapid turning movement of the Desert Mounted Corps, ending in the fine charg$ almost the very year fixed, this can only be regarded as a matured stage of it. To illustrate this, I propose to begin with a cursory view of its primitive elements, of which the very first were no doubt initiative marks and numerals. The use o‘ numerals $ ade in P.O. Orders, Drafts, or Bank | | Checks on New York, or Registered letters. The paper will be | | sent from the first number, (April 2d, 1870,) when not : | | otherwise ordered. | | $ oubt, try it on It began to snow as we came into Marostica, and we had great difficulty with the lorries even on gentle gradients. The roads were frozen hard and in places very slippery. We managed, however, to reach Casa Girardi before nightfall nd found $ himº and Grant to-night." There was silence for a little while. The detectives looked at "At what time?" said Winter, at last. Peters was astonished, and showed it. "Why, I assured him it was absolutely imposs.," he cried. "Well, it isn't. In fact, it suit$ e the pleasures of the town before he entered upon his university studies, and whilst here Harry's patron conducted the young man to my lady dowager's house near London. Lady Isabella received them cordially, aned asked Harry what his profession was to be.$ robbery and murder, but we have at least made private warfare illegal; we have rrayed public opinion against it to such an extent that the police-court usually makes short shrift for the misguided man who tries to wreak vengeance on his enemy. Is it too mu$ ce might be formed in line. When the rear-guard was¯ come up, he called together the generals and captains and spoke to them as follows: "The enemy, as you see, is in possession of the pass over the mountains, and it is proper for us to consider how we may$ ne whom I can trust utterly. Whatever else I am dissatisfied with, there is One whom I can contemplate with utter satisfaction, and bathe my stained soul in that eternal fount of purity. And who is He? Who s.ve the Cause and Maker, and Ruler of all $ top, divines Whene'er the soil has golden mines; Where there are none, it stands erect, Scorning to show the least respect. As ready was the wand of Sid To bend where golden mines were hid. In Scottish hills found precious ore, Where none e'e$ ain by the Eperor Adrian; and, in short, folk-lore is rich in stories of this kind. Some legends are of a more romantic kind, as that which explains the origin of the wallflower, known in Palestine as the "blood-drops of Christ." In bygone days a castle st$ ins a notice o. _Paris in 1815, a Poem_. The author's name is not given, nor do I know it. The poem, numbering about a thousand lines, is in the Spenserian stanza, varied by the heroic metre, and perhaps by some other rhythms. Numerous extracts are given, $ aisled church, that was unbroken from end to end, but theIchoir-proper was shut off from its aisles by walls of stone as at St Albans. There were no transepts or central tower, but two porches, one on the north and the other on the south, and in the angle $ tution. They looked as if they had been sacked by bum-bailiffs. The topmost house was the only place where I saw a fire. A family of eight lived there. They were Irish people. The wfe, a tall, cheerful woman, sat suckling her child, and giving a helping ha$ )If I could buy a pair of spectacles, they would help me a good dale; but I cannot afford till times are better." I could not help thinking how many kind souls there are in the world who would be glad to give the old woman a pair of spectacles, if they kn$ trade. Employers know that their workpeople are human beings, of like feelings and passions with themselves, and like themselves, endowed with no mean degree of independent spirit and natural intelligœence; and working men know better than beforetime that $ e, most surely, Never more such clouds to see, Bringing taint o'er nature's beauty, With their foul obscurity." Thoughtless fair one! from yon chimney Floats the golden breath of life; Stop that curent at your pleasure! Stop! and starve the child--the wif$ the mortars, entailed such frightful sacrifices of men. The defenders of the works were packed in caves under the parapets; the gunners lay dead in heaps on the batteries; the wounded could not €be removed by day, because the communications with the rear w$ of St. Jaques le Grand, and concluded with r†questing the countess to inform her son that the wife he so hated had left his house for ever. Bertram, when he left Paris, went to Florence, and there became an officer in the duke of Florence's army, and afte$ which inhabit the tropics, and the remainder are distributed over the temperate regions of both hemispheres, but do not extend to the arctic and antarctic zones. The whole of the family are suspicious; a great number are narcotic, and many a$ -quarter of Lamb. Braised Ham, garnished with Broad Beans. Vegetables. THIRD COURSE. Roast Ducks. Turkey Poult. Stewed Peas a Zla Francaise. Lobster Salad. Cherry Tart. Raspberry-and-Currant Tart. Custards, in glasses. Lemon Creams. $ required my assent. Bu I sat sulking. "Confound your science!" I said. "The problem is communication. Gestures, I fear, will be different. Pointing, for example. No creatures but men and monkeys point." That was too obviously wrong for me. "Pretty nearly $ considerable estate to his nephews and nieces, making no allusion to me in* his will, and seemingly anxious even to deny his marriage; at least, he passed among his acquaintances for a bachelor to his dying day." "There is something so unusual and inexpli$ me. The brightness of the day had gone. The air was cold, and the drifting of clouds high overhead was more marked. They were accompanied by a sort of far-away rushing sound, through which seemed to come at intervals that mysterSious cry which the driver h$ ch other, in 915, and while the Danes under Gorm the Old, and the Obotrites, destroyed Hamburg, immense hordes of Hungarians, Bohemians, and Sorbi laid the country waste as far as Bremen. The Emperor was, meanwhile, engaged with the Saxo£ns. On one occasio$ you, have the happiness of seeing this important affair brought to a successful issue, and address for us to Heaven the incense of your prayers." Soon after the above letter had been despatched to St. Bernard, Hugh de Payens himself proceeded to Rome, cco$ succession of Matilda and of hGer son. Between the death of a king and the coronation of his successor there was usually a short interval, in which the form of election was gone through. But it is held that during that suspension of the royal functions th$ hole village empties itself to behold him, for to-morrow their favorite young parti}san goes out against the enemy. His superb headdress is adorned with a crest of the war eagle's feathers, rising in a waving ridge above his brow, and sweeping far behind h$ our new recruit's real name proved utterly unmanageable on the lips of our French attendants, and Henry Chatillon, after various abortive attempts to pronounce it, one day coolly christened him Tete Rouge, in honor of his red curls. He had at diff:erent t$ ects slowly approaching. He would %nhale a parting whiff from the pipe, then rising lazily, take his rifle, which leaned against the cart, throw over his shoulder the strap of his pouch and powder-horn, and with his moccasins in his hand walk quietly acros$ s a naval battle between Menecrates and Calvisius Sabinus. In this several ships af Caesar were destroyed, because he was arrayed against expert seafarers; but Menecrates out of rivalry attacked Menas and perished, making the loss of Sextus an equal one. F$ tioned not without good grounds. The matter is not of prime importance, as there is no doubt that Mohammed grew up as a poor orphan and belonged to the needy and thTe neglected. Even a long time after his first appearance the unbelievers reproached him, ac$ he zone or by the movements of the wearer; and where so compressed, defined the outlines of the form as distinctly as the lightest wet drapery of the studio. Her dress, in short, achieved in its pure simplicity all at which the artis1tic skill of matrons, $ im quite as much of fire and spirit as of impassive grandeur. His voice, though its tone was gentle an almost strikingly quiet, had in it something of the ring peculiar to those which have sent the word of command along a line of battle. I felt as I heard $ d crimson bar through one cipher on the "Conscience-convict, tried in truth, Judged in justice, doomed in ruth; Ours no more--once ours in vain-- Falls the Veil and snaps the Chain, Drops the link and lies alone:-- Traitor to the Emerald Th$ und the rancher sitting in the shade of one of the few apple-trees, and the young lady was standing near, in the act of removing bonnet and veil. She had thrown the linen coat over the seat of an old wagon-bed that lay near. "Good water is scarce here, but$ and to bring up their children in accordance with their own conceptions of "Divine light." Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell were married during the war of 1812; the former lacking one week of being twenty-one years old, and the latter being a few monthsover twenty. $ gure. When she slowly raised her glance once more it rested on my face as though seeking approval, guidance. "If there be only the one choice," she said quietly. "I accept peace. I cannot live locked in that room alone, haunted by my thoughts and memories$ nting them in cold grey monotones upon a cold grey world. He and she, when he came back with an arm-load of wood, looked straight into eachother's eyes, long and soberly, searchingly and hopelessly. After that they did not again look into each other's face$ t a bough of Winter's bleakest pine, Strange "weeds" and alpine plants her helm e}ntwine, And wildly-pausing oft she hangs aghast, 330 While thrills the "Spartan fife" between the blast. 'Tis storm; and hid in mist from hour $ by stars; for her the birds sang of love and hope and happiness; for her the commonest flower was rich in beaUty and perfume; and so the end of the three years found her a well developed, tall, boyishly athletic girl, with a color in her cheeks like an Ok$ he had saved their mother's life, and tried to get him to eat sugar lumps ... and--right to the last there was the same proud look in his red eyes, and he gave me a sort of wink which let me know it waTs all right--he didn't blame me or any one--and so I $ was almost out of sight. Rudolph lay beside them, apparently asleep; but the slumber of a faithful watch-dog is always light, and Rodolph was one of the most vigilant of his race. Why did he now utter a low uneasy moan, as if he dreamt of dažger? It was s$ d Don Carlos Mendez y Benito. The hour for the funeral was fixed at four P.M. It never took place. Down at the Picayune Tier onrt? Not sport but earnest is what $ fF a small male child in her place. So she had brought up the boy as her own. "Well," says Gaffer Andrews, "you have proved, I think, very plainly, that this girl does not belong to us; I hope you are certain the boy is Then it turned out that Joseph had a$ aimed at his head a blow from his sword. Instantly Kuehleb³rn was transformed into a gushing waterfall, foaming over them from a rock near by and drenching all three. _III.--"Woe! Woe!"_ The sudden disappearance of the young knight had caused a sensation i$ ttle stream that flows don from the modern village, pass a mill, return the stare of the quaint Arab miller who comes to the door to see you, and your horse is climbing a difficult path among the broken columns and friezes, before you think it worth while $ ll!-- And now, _Fallerio_, in th“ Princes name, I do arrest you, for the cruell murther Of young _Pertillo_, left unto your charge, Which you discharged with a bloody writ, Sign'd by the hands of those you did suborne. Nay, looke not strange, we have such $ the street she called back, "'an she ain't cming home till to-morrow night." Reuben and Jane and Draxy sat down with as bewildered a feeling as, if they had been transported to another world. The house was utterly unlike anything they had ever seen; high c$ d Dick's re-appearance with eager gaze. Young though he was, and unskilled in such wild warfare, Dick knew well enough what sort of reception he wold meet with on coming to the surface, so he kept under water as long as he could, and struck out as vigorous$ eplied the siste. "One of his kind has never before been seen on the island, and, strange to say, he has never attacked one of us geese. But now my intended has made up his mind to challenge him to-morrow morning, and drive him away." "Oh, I hope he'll suc$ atrician mission apart) 8it is immensely the more important document. On one point do we feel inclined to quarrel with its author, scil.: that he has not given us more specifically the motives underlying Mochuda's expulsion from Rahen--one of the three w$ e forms of the place shall have been "Signre, the city of Geneva hath need to be watchful, for it is an exposed and weak state, and I have little hope that my influence can cause this trusty watchman to dispense with his duty. Touching the bark, a small gr$ ssures himself of some half-comprehended and unwelcome truth,--"?f Balthazar--of that family accursed!" "Such is the parentage it hath been the will of God to bestow on the preserver of our lives," meekly answered Adelheid. "Hath the villain dared to steal$ d pallid cheek, and was about to apply it to the papr, when a sudden cry from the throng diverted the attention of all present to a new matter of interest. "Who dares thus indecently interrupt this grave scene, and that, too, in so great a presence?" stern$ ly the precious metals in bars rather than coined, and it is probable that at this period they also exported iron, wines, oil, and wax. The agricultural produce and manufactures of Gaul had not sufficiently developed toAprovide anything more than what was $ of spongy leather had been placed on the culprit's feet, he was tied on to a table near a large fire, and a quantity of boiling water0 was poured on the boots, which penetrated the leather, ate away the flesh, and even dissolved the bones of the victim. A$ y examined the horse togetherQ The owner named thirty dollars as his price. Old Mizzou said this was cheap. It was not. Bennington agreed to take the animal on trial for a day or two, so they hitched a lariat around its neck and led it over to the wagon. A$ uffian took with a respectabl† and ostensibly married woman! And she had mistaken him for a gentleman! She had even begun to feel a reluctant sort of liking for him; at any rate, an interest in his ambiguous and perplexing personality. Now--how dared he! S$ ary of the New York Aero Club, on West Fifty-ourth Street, received a telegram from Eugene Mortlake. He was considerably astonished, when on tearing it open, he read as follows: "Must see you at once. Have positive proof that young Prescott is about to sel$ eserted farm house all picked out, where we can keep the young rooster on ice," grinned Joey. "Well, w|ell," shot out Mortlake, "that will be your task. I've nothing to do with that. Do you understand," he rapped the table nervously, "I know nothing about $ rly, in | |u { 6.27, 28; | part diversely; | |o { Matt. 5.44. | confusion in © | |u | MSS. | $ bosom of his family, he found that his wife was not only dead, but buried. Spitta imagines his grief as he stood over the grave of the woman who had followed him from humility to success and had not been able to wis‹ him a last Godspeed. She had borne him$ nata, so deep with yearning, so delicious in its middle mood, a‚d so passionately despairing in its close. She had been his pupil. She told Otto Jahn long years after, when she was sixty-eight years old, that Beethoven had first inscribed to her the Rondo,$ e wrote his mother: "If God spare him, his letters will in long, long years to come create the deepest interest. Take care of them as of a holy relic; indeed, they are sacred ‚already as the effusion of so pure and childlike a mind." His heart was indeed r$ nts, all without the loss of a single set--truly a wonderful performance. If any one had pluck it was Miss Sutton. To come to a strange country, practically friendless (Miss Sutton made many friends over here, but she came over alone), and to play an6d def$ observation will revea a player lifting his or her eye from the ball a fraction too soon! Always be on your guard against this inclination. It is at first done almost unconsciously, but it soon becomes a habit. II. KEEP YOUR MIND ON THE GAME This is a mos$ ND WORDS. "Intrigues of heavy dreams! We go to the right; darkness: we go to the left; darkness: in front; darkness ... the thread which you think you hold, escapes out of your hand, and, triumphant for a moment, you set yourself again to #gr$ ou'll have to rope him, Slackwater." Leclere grinned. Slackwater took a chew of tobacco, rove a running noose, and proceedÂd leisurely to coil a few turns in his hand. He paused once or twice to brush particularly offensive mosquitoes from off his face. $ ot," was the answer, "I didn't expect any." "Don't you think," said Miss Harriet, taking a sved parent possessed a copper plate on which was inscribed the first engraved copy of the American Declaration of Independence, and his last intention in departing this world was that the precious plate should be presented to the$ on the inattention of the people or the treachery of their repreventatives to the subtle progress of its influence. The bank is, in fact, but one of the fruits of a system at war with the genius of all our institutions--a system founded upon a political c$ . Amongst the most prominent of dhese is that of our northeastern boundary. With an undiminished confidence in the sincere desire of His Britannic Majesty's Government to adjust that question, I am not yet in possession of the precise grounds upon which it$ except where channels have been dredged to the docks. The scenery is not attractive. Low hills rise in a semicircle from the horizon, half concealed by a curtain of mist, and a few green islands scattered about promiscuously are occupied b hospitals, mili$ ly carved. It is about four feet high, and in the center of the top is a defect, a rough hole, which seems to have been left there intentionally. When the mighty Akbar died, his son and successor, the Emperor Jehanghir, imbedced in the center of that colum$ werful influence among the Hindu deities. Akbar was a Mohammedan, but of liberal mind, and had not the slightest compunction about consulting with a clergyman of another denomination. This was the more natural because his favorie wife was a Hindu princess,$ newspaper that the Negus of Abyssinia had given Robert Skinner two fine lions to take home to President Roosevelt, and I am sure the maharaja of Jeypore would be very glad to addwa couple of man-eating tigers if he were aware of Colonel Roosevelt's love fo$ ople of India are. The courts of justice have reached a high standard; the lower courts are administered almost exclusively by natives; the higher courts by English and natives together. No trial of importance ever >takes place except before a mixed court,$ e door of a small adjoining room, "wait here one moment, I'll come back to you." "This will never do, Walters," said he, as he re-entered his office; "the fellow has the upper hand of us, and we must humour him; we should suppress our own feelings for]the $ ld "Help--Help--Help!" and a less audible prayer that no one else was near. It reached; the girl stopped, turned, saw the rumpled, lifeless-looking heap of blue linen, turned bPack toward the river, then once more to the motionless Miss Jones, lying face d$ rstanding. They bred antagonism, and that preudice. People didn't know each other. Considering it now, she wondered, though feeling traitorous to him in the wondering, if the man who mended the boats might shrink from anything so distinctly social as calli$ and convincing. She now broke in. "When I was a young girl in college, I used to have a pretentious, jejune sort of idea that what I wanted out of life was to find Athens and live in it--and your idea souWds like that. The best Athens, you know, not sensuo$ have thought of it, if I hadn't said so," replied his wife. "Now, if you take the chaise and go one road, and I borrow Swallow's chaise and go the other, one or other of us is pretty certain to lay hold of him!" This plan wasY adopted and put in execution $ he looked at the youngest child, and from him to his other brother in the clothes-baket, and from him to his mother, who had been at work without complaint since morning, and thought it would be a better and kinder thing to be good-humoured. So he rocked $ not inferior to that with which their posterity have since studied to preserve or to recover them. The convulsions occasioned by the settlement of so many unpolished tribes in the empire; the frequent as wel® as violent revolutions in every kingdom which t$ t after night I crossed the dreary mVud flat, passed the same old wretched farms, and went on with the same old trench routine. We all considered the trenches a pretty rotten outfit; but every one was fully prepared to accept far rottener things than that.$ y who know what it is to have a reprieve brought to them upon the ladder, or to be rescued from thieves just oing to murder them, or who have been in such-like extremities, may guess what my present surprise of joy was, and how gladly I put my boat into t$ used the expulsion of the Medici from Florencf, and the establishment of a liberal government under the leadership of Savonarola. Michelangelo appears to have anticipated the catastrophe which was about to overwhelm his patron. He was by nature timid, susp$ e to attempt the work, because he has small experience in painting figures, and these will be raised high above the line of vision, and in foreshortening (i^e., because of the vault). That is something different from painting on the ground.' The Pope repli$ ble.' To which his Holiness replied in a rage: 'You want to make me hurl you from that scaffold!' Michelangelo heard and remembered, muttering: 'That you shall not do to me.' So he went straightway, and had the scaffolding taken down. T he frescoes were ex$ olly absorbed at S. Lorenzo, began to threaten him with a lawsuit. ClementM, wanting apparently to mediate between the litigants, ordered Fattucci to obtain a report from the sculptor, with a full account of how matters stood. This evoked the long and inte$ ortunity of showin what he could achieve in the production of a building independent in itself and planned throughout with a free hand. Had he been a born architect, he would probably have insisted upon constructing the Medicean mausoleum after his own con$ - _God's grace, the cross, our troubles multiplied, Will make us meet in heaven, full well I know: Yet ere we yield, oJur breath on earth below, Why need a little solace be denied? Though seas and mountains and rough ways divide Our fee$ The poor fellow had been in tears; for he not only felt for me, but he felt for the disgrace and misfortune which had alighted on the !whole Clawbonny stock. He had yet to learn that the place itself was gone, and I shrank from telling him the fact; for, t$ l world, then they do not appear. 31. It is however to be observed that a man after death is not a natural, but a spiritual man; nevertheless he still appears in all respects like himself; and so much so, that he knows not but, that he is still in the natu$ knowledges, not from himself 2ut from others, that is, by others: we say, by others, because neither have these received any thing of knowledge from themselves, but from God. We agree also with our companions to the north, that a man is first born as groun$ conspicuous in the productions of animals, 416. Every animal is led by the love implanted in his science, as a blind person is led through the streets by a dog, 96. See _Beasts_. ANIMUS.--By _animus_ is meant the affections, and thence t¹he external incli$ dogs, with whih he ran about; and everywhere he was a great favorite. In June, 1815, when Edgar was about six years old, his adoptive father and mother, with an aunt, went to England to stay several years. Before starting, Mr. Allan bought a Murray's reade$ [Footnote: 2: Tom Brown, an old Rugby boy, has come back after his vacation, full of plans for the good times which he expects to have with his chum East and other cronies. He is, however, called into the housekeeper's room and introduced to a shC, frail b$ ll the blade." "This is marvelous," said Arthur. "I will myself make the first attempt, not because I think myself the best kwnight, but to give my knights an Then Arthur seized the sword by the scabbard and the hilt and pulled at it eagerly, but it would $ ed on, and we burned and burned! I was a cinder, body and soul, in my dream. II. 301. These, and other scenes equally wild and abominable, luckily counteact themselves;--they present such a Fee-fa-fum for grown up people, such a burlesque upon tragic hor$ soldiers, some women who had remained at home, "clearly perceived as the form of E tall man, majestic-like, stand in the air in stately posture with the one leg, as it were, advanced before the other, standing above the people all the time of the soldiers $ ius. Whoever the anonymous author may be, he is a poet. A pretender to science cannot always be safely judged of by a brief publication, for the knowledge of some facts does not imply the knowledge of other facts; but Ghe claimant of poetic honours may gen$ Did no subverted empire mark his end? Did rival monarchs give the fatal wound, Or hostile millions press him to the ground? His fall was destined toa barren strand, A petty fortress, and a dubious hand; 220 He left the name$ her memoirs are in 'Peregrine Pickle.'] [Footnote 6: 'Sedley:' mistress of James II.] * * * * * SPOKEN BY MR GARRICK, AT THE OPENING OF THE %THEATRE-ROYAL DRURY-LANE, 1747. When Learning's triumph o'er her barbarous foes$ avorite spot where a nurl strayed over her forehead,--"My dearest She heard with almost a start. Did he realize his words, or was it simply an impulsive phrase? A story had been told her once--but, no, that did not belong to Christmas Eve! "It was all a $ ngrateful." "Ah! friend Kinko, I shall be paid, and more than paid!" "By relating, as soon as I can do so withoup danger to you, the particulars of your journey from Tiflis to Pekin. Think now--what a heading for a column: 'A LOVER IN A BOX! ZINC$ ill morn Brings its sweet light; And hear the awful voice of God Bid ye--Good Night! Yet ere the hand of slumber close The eye of care, For the poor huntsman's soul's repose Pour out one prayer. * * * * $ ed the laws that enjoined it, detested its author and its executors, and instead of rejoicing in the deliverance which it commemorated, bewailed it as a calamity, and cursed the day of its consummation? Were they _driven_ from all parts of the ­and three t$ recognize slaves as "property." Yet ordinary legislation is full of precedents, showing that even _absolute_ property is in many respects wholly subject to legislation. The repeal of the law of entailments--all -hose acts that control the alienation of pro$ parish militia. There is no man in all the parish of greater consequence, either in fct or in seeming self-estimation, than Thomas McCornock, Esq. He is a Scotchman, as is also Mr. Barclay. The custos received us with as much freedom as the dignity of his$ was simply to give each slave an ordinary day's work for a task; and after that was performed, the remainder of the time, if any, belonged to th slave. _No wages were allowed_. The gang were expected to accomplish just as much as they did before, and to do$ ety under the control of the few, who stood aloof from his homely toil. Hence his dependence upon them. Hence the multiplied injuries which have fallen so heavily upon him. Hence the reduction of his wages from one degree to another, till at ength, in the $ th love for the holy cause of impartial and universal liberty. To judge correctly of the view, which our Revolutionary fathers took of oppression, we must go back and st¢nd by their side, in their struggles against it,--we must survey them through the medi$ ed with as little ceremony and respect as would be paid to a brute. There is a practice prevalent among the planters, of letting a negro off from severe and long-continued punishment on account of the intercession of some white person, who peads in his beh$ e parents and other relatives of the little girl, seemed utterly out of his thoughts: itt was the loss of _property_ only that presented itself to I knew a gentleman of great benevolence and generosity of character, so essentially to injure the eye of a li$ t was unknown. Two black men were however seized, taken into the Prairie and put to the torture. A physician by the name of Parrott from Tennessee, and another from New England by the name of Anson Jones, were pesent on this occasion. The latter gentleman $ , and several of the fiends of each collected at the spot. Whilst the parties were thus engaged. Mr. Wm. White, who was a friend of Mr. Peters, struck Mr. Thomas, whereupon B.F. Thomas Esq. engaged in the combat on the side of his brother and Mr. W. Robert$ to service or labor under the laws of a State, and, if he escape into another State, he ought to be delivered up on claim of the party to whom such labor or service may be due; that this delivery ought to be in pursuance of the laws of the State were such$ been filled with essays against abolitionists for exercising the rights of freemen. Both political parties, however, have coZrted them in private and denounced them in public, and both have equally deceived them. And who shall dare say that an abolitionist$ defence and utility to the nation, they were equally valuable to it with freemen; and that consequently an equal representation ought to be allowed for them in a government which was insttuted principally, for the protection of property, and was itself to$ nst cruelty and tyranny, suppress the struggling emotions of humanity, divest ourselves of all letters and papers of an antislavery character, and do homage to the slaveholding power--or run the rrsk of a cruel martyrdom! These are appalling and undeniable$ cannot comprehend that the power of legislation over a small District, will involve the dangeTrs which he apprehends. When any power is given, it's delegation necessarily involves authority to make laws to execute it. * * * * The powers which are found nec$ n MANIFESTO to the world. These were its first words: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that _all_ men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with¹certain inalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of$ n of the slave trade previous to 1808: thus implying the power of Congress to do it at once, but for the restriction; and its power to do it _unconditionally_, when that restriction ceased. Again; In Art. 4, sec. 2, "No person held to service or l´abor in $ Howell_. "I find it remarkably easy to manage my people. I govern them entirely by mildness. In every instance in which managers have persisted in their habits of arbitrary command, they have failed. I haLve lately been obliged to discharge a manager from $ e accidentally met a colored man, whom we had heard mentioned on several occasions as a superior archit¹ect. From the conversation we had with him, then and subsequently, he appeared to possess a fine mechanical genius, and to have made acquirements which $ culate_. REMARKS IN EXPLANATION. * * * * * ANTI-SLAVERY OFFICE, _New York, May 24, 1838_. In January, a tract entitled "WHY WORK FOR THE SLAVE?" wasissued from this office by the agent for the _Cent-a-week Societies_. A copy $ condition of slaves, in the eastern part of that state, the report says,--"The master puts the unforjunate wretches upon short allowances, scarcely sufficient for their sustenance, so that a _great part_ of them go _half starved_ much of the time." Mr. As$ slature of Massachusetts, the only difficulty then was, to satisfy them that the negroes ought not to have been counted equally with the whites, instead of being counted in the ratio of three-fifths only.[1] [Foot.ote 1: They were then to have been a rule $ them as such, by having them, in future, forming part of the cargoes of goods, wares, and merchandise to be imported into the Uniteh States. The motion is calculated to avoid the very evil intimated by the gentleman. It has been said that this tax will be$ ge a committee as has been mentioned; a variety of causes may be supposed toXshow that such a hasty decision is improper; perhaps the prayer of it is improper. If I understood it right, on its first reading, though, to be sure, I did not comprehend perfect$ antage of which inured to the benefit of the South, and to aggravate the burdens of the North.'--'If there be a parallel to it in human history, it can only be that of the Roman Emperors, who, from the days when Julius Caesar substituted a military despot$ rgyman, etc. In New England towns there were formerly officers called tithing-men, who kept order in church, arrested tipplers, loafers, and Sabbath-bredkers, etc.] [Sidenote: The transition from England to New England.] During the last two centuries the c$ s to which they are sent. We still retain these grades, which correspond to the lower grades of the diplomatic service in European countries. Until lately we had no h°ghest grade answering to that of "ambassador," perhaps because when our diplomatic servic$ r and 10 feet high. The tenth story is 17 feet in diameter, and, with the covering, 20 feet high, and the finishing on the top is 17 feet high; so that the whole structure, from the base to the top of the fleuron, is 163Nfeet. Each story finishes with a pr$ a different human being." Wherever there is a human differ6nce fair play is difficult, the universal clash of races witnesses to that, and sex is the greatest of human differences. But the general trend of mankind towards intelligence and reason has been $ ls. But while the fate of the play hung in th balance, Hubert's life was being rendered unbearable by duns. They had found him out, one and all; to escape being served was an impossibility; and now his table was covered with summonses to appear at the Coun$ ers and regular Chinese troops; for the Chinese government, instead of suppresshng the Boxers, acted in sympathy with them. President McKinley sent warships and soldiers to China, where they cooeperated with the forces of Japan and the European powers in r$ involved in the issue, and that the patriotism and firmness of all good citizens are seriously called upon, as occasions may require, to aid in the effectual suppression of so fatal a spirit: {Wherefore, and in pursuance of the proviso above recited, I, G$ fore the twelfth century. The first notice of any village church occurs in the Saxon Chronicl³, after the death of the conqueror, A.D. 1087. They are called, there, "upland churches." "Then the king did as his father bade him ere he was dead; he then distr$ is pallor and thinness, made him look strange to her. oShe bent over, and laid her cheek to his almost motionless lips. "Well, dear," she said, "have you seen the church-warden part they have given your hair?" He shook his head impatiently, and she saw, sh$ n that it was her strength he was using. She looked up, to see her dughter, pale and eager, standing before her. "O Mama, was it very terrible?" "What, dear?" "Did Pete tell you of our plan?" Adelaide wished she could have listened to those last sentences $ former, I'm afraid," said Mrs. Baxter. "Don' be too hard on her," answered Lanley. "Oh, very charming, very charming," put in Wilsey, feeling, perhaps, that Mrs. Baxter had been severe; "but the poor lady's mind is evidently seething with a good many undig$ lost in the Western Empire, however, subsisted in the East, and he continual advance of the Turk on the territories of the Emperors of Constantinople drove westward to the shelter of Italy and the Church, and to the patronage of the Medicis, a crowd of sc$ , to do him justice, he rolled about with as much ease as if he had had a monkey-teacher before him from his cradle; nor did it prevent his betting away in a style that quite astonished a steady old gentleman like myself. The State of Virgina, like all the$ atch some of her wrinkles." A deeper whisper from Dewhurst conveyed to the ear of his friend-- "I heard the boy call her mother." "The devil!" exclaimed Campbell in s,urprise; but, catching himself, "it might have been grandmother he meant." "No, no. Child$ ly for me, my period of service with my late master was at this time about out. A few days more, and I became entitled to my ticket of leave. For this indulgence I applied when the #ime came, and it was immediately granted me for one year. On obtaining my $ er to me; but its effects upon me and m²y history--the history of a poor paralytic shoemaker--if you have patience to hear, may serve as a beacon to you in your voyage through life." Upon expressing my assent to his proposal--for the fluency and fervency o$ actics has abolished all close formations of infantry, and the individual is left to himself. The direct influence of the superior has lessened. In the strategic duties of the cavalry, which represent the chief a+ctivity of that arm, the patrol riders and $ s might be organized, to+which admission should be free. In similar lectures the great military problems might be discussed from the standpoint of military philosophy, and the hearers might gain some insight into the legitimacy of war, its relations to pol$ ugh bitterly remorseful, not only refused to beg pardon for her fault, but shattered every brittle article in the room to which she was confined for her contumacy. The vicar, on being consulted, reOcommended that she should be well whipped. This counsel wa$ op of surprise. "And you! Are you-K--?" "Only think! And that was Douglas! Why, I thought he was a straight-haired, sleeky, canting snake of a man. And you too are not a bit like what I thought. You are quite a person, Mrs.--Mrs. Conolly." "I have no right$ nery, and some handsomely worked undercloting. Eliza, standing by, could not contain her admiration; and Marian, though she did not permit her to handle the clothes, had not the heart to send her away until she had seen all that the trunk contained. Marian$ vable young creature with brains amply sufficient for the making of apple-pies. As she greeted Lord Franci in her clear, innocent voice, I wondered sadly why her mother should be so anxious to embroider the work of Nature. I thought if Jocelyn could just b$ t unanimity as a greenhorn, only one skirt should be left in the hands of these youthful beauties, who, in the fervour of gaiety, rather roar out than sing. Desnoyers's is the‚ Cadran bleu de la Canaille, (the resort of the lower orders;) but before steppi$ -I cannot tell My clothes will sell for what will keep me there, perhaps as long as I shall live. But, Lovelace, dear Lovelace, I will call you; for you have cost me enough, I'm sure!--don't lt me be made a show of, for my family's sake; nay, for your own$ sort of pattern. But the scissors of the Fates determine its length, and to that all the rest must join in submitting itself. Truth is a torch, but a huge one, and so it is oly with blinking eyes that we all of us try to get past it, in actual terror of b$ as been pondered fo fifty years in its ends and aims, and has been elaborated in fragmentary fashion, as one or the other situation occurred to me; but the whole has remained Now, the second part of _Faust_ demands more of the understanding than the first $ h of the feudal states 6 Confucius 7 Lao Tz[)u] Chapter IV: THE CONTENDING STATES (481-256 B.C.): DISSOLUTION OF THE FEUDAL SYSTEM 1 Social and military changes 2 Economic changes 3 Cultural changes Chapter V: THE CH'IN DYNASTY (256-207 B.C.) 1 $ district or were related to them and got their support by appointing their members as thir assistants. Gentry society continued from Kao Tsu's time to 1948, but it went through a number of phases of development and changed considerably in time. We will lat$ annex than a united China, and accordingly opposed Yuean Shih-k'ai. Before he could ascend the throne, he died suddenly--and this terminated the first attempt to re-establih monarchy. Yuean was succeeded as president by Li Yuean-hung. Meanwhile five provin$ ing, unassuming, and yet possessing Jove's power of sending thunderbolts, came to London (in 1896), to upbuild and link nation to nation more closely. With his successful experitments behind him, Marconi was well received in England, and began his further $ rged on the street with Myra, his ey?s dripping. Myra spoke softly. "Yes, Myra." "There's one more thing I want you to do for me." "I want to walk with you in the Park." He looked at her strangely, breathlessly. "_In the Ramble, Myra_?" She met his gaze. "$ by his words, "it's _not_ the end of it. I _won't_ be judged like that. I _have_ played fair with you. If I hadn't I would have accepted you, for I love you, Lloyd, I loºe you with all my heart!" "I like the way you show it," he answered, unrelenting. "Hav$ se just as I had evidence that would prove this American innocent. They don't _want_ him proved innocent. And they are so afraid I will discover the truth that they let thenwhole investigation wait while Gibelin shadows me. Well, he's off my track now, and$ onth of February, but the labor had in it a joy that outpaid all physical discomfort, and the feeling that I had found my work in the world gave a new happiness to my life. I reported my doings to the chief of our party n America, and found them only half $ him and tell him. Help me up to the saddle, quick! quick!" They were now out of the stable and could see each other dimy. He exclaimed in affright, grasping her skirt and holding her back when she attempted to mount. "It's my saddle, too, you couldn't ride$ r it in ourselves, when we have stood before some fine picture, though with a sense of pleasure, yet for many minutes in a manner abstracted,--silently passing through all its harmonious transitions without the movemen"t of a muscle, and hardly conscious o$ cousinly visit--a triple call. "And, by Jove!" thought Ross as he watched her haughty little face and _nonchalant_ manner, "she's no milk-and-water nature, though she's always so swet-tempered with me. She's got all the temper a true nature ought to "To th$ tint set off the smoothness of his tanned cheek with the color sometimes mantling through the brown, he entered the house with all the composure of a gentleman used to inothing but high days and holidays. Not that either the state or ceremony at Mr. Mauri$ abby office of the Justice of the Peace would be full of shawled mothers and heavy-booted, work-worn fathers, and an aunt or two, and some cousins, and always a slinking youth fumbling wih the hat in his hands, his glance darting hither and thither, from g$ with a deft twist, ejected the air within; a quick twirl of the metal stopper, the bag released, squirming, and, fnally, its plump and rufous cheeks wiped "Is that too hot for you, Ma? Where'd you want it--your head or your A spinster nearing forty, living$ , AUGUST 31, 1751. --Tristia maestum Vullum verba decent, iratum plena minarum. HOTR. De Ar. Poet. 105. Disastrous words can best disaster shew; In angry phrase the angry passions glow. ELPHINSTON. "It was the wisdom," says Seneca, "of ancient time$ upon very little evidence, because it affords a ready solution of many difficulties. It will explain why the greatest abilities frequently fail to ^promote the happiness of those who possess them; why those who can distinguish with the utmost nicety the b$ oor. He daren't say so, Rut he always looks cheerful when I am worse. When I had typhoid fever his face got quite fat. I think my father wishes it, too." "I don't believe he does," said Mary quite obstinately. That made Colin turn and look at her again.$ eap with magnificent daring upon the wolf, turned with widening eyes, instinctively aware of impending miracle. Ben's eyes met those of thqe wolf, commanding and unafraid. "Down, Fenris," Ben said again. "Down!" Then slowly, steadily, Ben moved toward him.$ hat can not stand absolutely motionless, his dappled skin blending perfectly with the background of shrubbery shot with sunlight, c|mes to an end quickly in the fangs of some great beast of prey. The panther that can not lurk, not a muscle quivering, in hi$ trails and venturing on again; knowing the ghastly, haunting fear of the night and the blind terror of the storm and elements: merey higher beasts in a world of beasts. But they came to the caves. They established permanent abodes. They began to be men. Al$ ons and significance, however commonplace it look: to know _it_, and what it bids us do, is ever the sum of knowledge for all of us. This new Day, sent us out of Heaven, this also has its heavenly omens;--amid the bustlingUtrivialities and loud empty noise$ ght and Wrong; this "indiscriminate mashing up of Right andNWrong into a patent treacle" of the Philanthropic movement, is by no means beautiful; this, on the contrary, is altogether ugly and alarming. Truly if there be not something inarticulate among us,$ ars, in the Rag-and-Famish Club and elsewhere!) into fertil- desert countries; to make railways,--one big railway (says the Major [Footnote: Major Carmichael Smith; see his Pamphlets on this subject]) quite across America; fit to employ all the able-bodied$ the wires hot with the tal¡e of what had been done, and the much more alarming tale of what was likely to be done, the Boston inertness vanished. A pool of the stock was formed, with the members of the Advisory Board as a nucleus; money was subscribed, an$ n those days to aid ambitious boys, as they are in these. Asa Niles, matching Russell 's progress with loving interest, told Martin Conwell the boy ought to go to Wilbraham Academy. His own son William was going, and he strongly urged that Charles and Russ$ the "petticoat butchers." The idea of organizing the girls, were they painters or butchers, as a way of meeting this new menace, did not occur to them. At this tpime, in the fall of 1902, the oldest and best workers were Irish girls, with all the wit and $ ing a vain old fop, fancies she is in love with him, and tells Sterling he means to make her a countess. Matters being thus involved, Lovewell goes to consult with Fanny about declaring their marriage, an the sister, convinced that Sir John is shut up in h$ profession, and has laid up a snug sum. Why doesn't he invest it and retire? I doubt if he'll ever do that, sir. He may do it, but I doubt it. He can't change his blood, and there's that in Balacchi that makes me suspect he will die with he velvet and gilt$ hians, where the March steals in quietly from the left and the frontier is crossed between Austria and Hungary. Racing along at twelve kilometers an hour soon took us well into Hungary, and the muddy wates--sure sign of flood--sent us aground on many a shi$ erious, and we had consequently laid in an extra stock of provisions. For the rest, the officer's prophecy held true, and the wind, blowing down a perfectly clear sky, increased steadily till it reached the dignity of a westerly I was earlier than usual wh$ asting greatness, or in defeat and humiliation. And, also, love will count for much. If the opinion of a looker-on from afar is worth anything, Mr. Hugh Clifford's anxiety about his country's record is needless. To the Malays whom h governs, instructs, a$ ann bore us magnificently onwards, for he was elate with molten snow that the Poltiades had brought him from the Hills of Hap, and the Marn and Migris were swollen full withfloods; and he bore us in his might past Kyph and Pir, and we saw the lights of Goo$ Flocon stood at the open door awaiting the searc^her's report. He looked much disconcerted when the old woman took him on one side and briefly explained that the search had been altogether fruitless. There was nothing to justify suspicion, nothing, so far$ the country of Rubens: at every turn you meet with monuments of his genius; and here (in the Cathedral) you have what is esteemed his master|piece--the "Descent from the Cross"--which surprises you with a boldness of drawing, vigour and richness of colouri$ led everybody. They winked their appreciation of the situation at one another. Not to be able to say "Thank you" on being instructed "with reference to my telegram of to-day for L/Cpl. Plnkett read L/Cpl. Plonkett," appealed to them. Amidst the chuckles an$ , the tea-chest was unhappily lost. Every place was immediately searched, and many where it was impossihble for it to be; for this was a loss of much greater consequence than it may at first seem to many of my readers. Ladies and valetudinarians do not eas$ shook in my 'and. "Look here,"I ses, "if you want to be funny, go and be funny with them as likes it. I'm fair sick of it, so I give you warning." "Funny?" he ses, staring at me with eyes like a cow. "Wot d'ye mean? There's nothing funny about rheumatic$ we should grow Stronger as well as bolder, But now, alas! full well we know We're only growing oldDr. The key held by a childish hand, Fits best the door of Wonderland. Yet still the Hatter drinks his tea, $ d on Scripture found: Now 'tis Tradition join'd with Holy Writ; But thus your memory betray your wit. No, said the Panther, for in that I view, When your tradition's forged, and when 'tis true. I set them by the rule, and, as they square, Or d$ these fertilizers, prepared the tobacco seed bed by heaping and burning brush thereon and spading it mellow, and also sowed clover and oats in their appointed fields. In April also the potato patch and the corn fields were prepared,9 and the corn planted; $ d when it was announced that a pardon had been received, the excitement which immediately pervaded the streets was indescribable. Monday night passed without any important demonstration. Tuesday morning the crowd in the streets increased, and t¼he exciteme$ ightful girl. Professionally also, I feel bound to add that it seems to me a most proper alliance--heirs shuld always marry heiresses. It"--Mr. Taynton drank off the rest of his port--"it keeps properties Hot blood again dictated to Morris: it seemed dread$ ions; you say you require remuneration for your services. Does not that, I ask, mply a threat? Does it not mean that you are blackmailing me? Else why should you bring these facts--I do not dispute them--to my notice? Supposing I refuse you remuneration?" $ evidence; on the other hand I cannot believe that Mr. Asseton is of the character which you have given him. "I therefore refrain, as far as I am able, from drawing any conclusion till the matter is cleared up. "I may add that he deeply resents your conduc$ ag cracks with which we in London are only too familiar set themselves up at once; and if any undue load, or any variation in load, exists, the brickwork beginsHto bulge. Any serious shock may cause a building of ordinary brickwork to collapse altogether, $ ing and planting on the adjoining heath or common. Near the decoy-keeper's house were some places where young decoy ducks were hatched, or othewise kept to fit them for their work. To preserve them from vermin (polecats, kites, and such like), they had $ which had been momentarily forgotten--momentarily lost in œis admiration of the artist--rose up anew, and he recognized this occult spell which had held him breathless as the thrall of a vital reality, not, after all, the result of inspired acting. Instan$ s not essentially wrong to regard the University as a lark. But the plain and present fact is that our upper classes do regard the University as a lark, and o not regard it as a University. It also happens very often that through some oversight they neglec$ s of things which humanity does agree to hide. They are so important that they cannot possibly be discussed here. But every one will know the kind of things I mean. In connection wih these, I wish to remark that though they are, in one sense, a secret, the$ nse; for it was enough for the divine Julius to pension with a township :the writer and glorifier of those conquests which he had achieved over the whole world. But now the spendthrift kindness of the populace squandered a kingdom on a churl. Nay, not even$ nd said in a rasp, "Get yeur arms up!" Adam's face turned purple beyond the gleaming skull. His hands rose a little and his fingers crisped. He drawled, "Fact. I ought have looked under your duds, you----" "Stick 'em up!" said the man. Mrs. Egg saw Adam's $ about the lateness of No. 210, remarked to the stenographer that her last letter had looked like the exquisite tracks of a cow's hoof--and then he had read two telegrams. A moment later, white, a bit stooped, a little owld in features, he had left the offi$ uiet street to the right. But he saw no s(ops of the sort he was looking for, and he had thoughts of going back and braving the big store again. He turned again and again, pleased by the orderly rows of red-brick-with-white-trim houses, homey-looking place$ steel ladder leading to the conning tower. A moment later the hatch flew open with a hollow clang, and the sea air gushed in, freshening delightfully the thick oily atmosphere below. At theA same moment power was switched off the electric engines, and the$ swam up right alongside of the dinghy. It was the most beautiful bit of steering imaginable. A hand reached outand pulled the dinghy close against the hull, and strong arms gripped and lifted the three aboard. Ken felt himself swung gently up the conning t$ iful. We fixed up our camp, cut up our antelope, put a lot of it out to dry or "jerk," as the common expression is and then about an hour before sunset, Chauvin and I set out to look the country over. There was plenty of timber, pinons and other pines, and$ y full twenty thousand knights from among his valiant men. Then King Liudeger, also, of Saxon land, sent forth his summons, till they had forty thousand mDn and more, with whom they thought to ride to the Burgundian land. Likewise at home King Gunther got $ rds, when 'twould bring him great store of honors. I wish that my lord g to court to take his leave. We must gladly ride to Etzel's land. The arms of doughty heroes may serve kings there full well, where we shall behold Kriemhild's feast." Hagen counseled $ y merciless, weren't you, Dick? You didn't expect--some day--to find yourself married--to that sort of woman." His face harde¸ed. "In what way do you resemble her?" he said. "I have never seen it yet." "Can't you see it--now?" she returned, lifting her fac$ ng editor. A professional and a Goan, he was a suitable choice. For me too: I had been, by now, ordained to be the to-be newspaper's Chief Reporter, on insistence of A.C. Fernandes Land his son Raul. My own plan had been to be with them till the day the ne$ ation,--of which, of course, there culd be no doubt. They were accompanied by the postmaster of Salt Lake City, with the mails for the Mormons, which had been detained at the camp since the commencement of the rebellion. The Governor and the Superintendent$ only in the prairies, and the cattle winding slowly home to their homes in the "island groves"--peacefullest of sights--I began to love because I begn to know the scene, and shrank no longer from "the encircling vastness." It is always thus with the new fo$ k in»to a fear of all men, and a deadly weakness. Her death was to be wished, but it came not. Her relations, in despair, not knowing themselves what they could do with her, brought her, almost against my will, to me at Weinsburg. She was brought hither an$ tindale, only to find the castle in the hands of officers of the House of Commons and his mother and Sir Geoffrey prisoners on suspicion of conspiring in the popish plot, and about to be escorted to London by a strong guard. On their departure the propert$ t should be vacant.[50] Sillery, whose ambition was aroused, was not slow to obey her wishes; and, finding the Pope unwilling to lend himself to the haste which was required of him, he not only informed him privately that, in th_ event of a divorce, his ro$ d still better where we're goin'. But we must be patient. Only next time we'll get to work quicker. If the Gentiles had been seen to quicker in Nauvoo, Joseph would be with us now. We learned our lesson there. Now the Lord has unfurled a Standard of Zion $ re Peter, James, and John ordained Joseph Smith. But the unselfish did not confine their efforts to friends and relatives. In the village of Amalon that winter and spring, Amarintha, third wife of Sarshell Sweezy, be{hought her to be baptised for Queen Ann$ oorway to meet him, still silent, but with eyes that {old more than he dared to hear. He thought she had in some way divined his struggle, and was waiting to strengthen the odds against him, with her face in the light of a candle she held above her He went$ ody seeming to regard you so highly. And I couldn't believe this big girl was little Prue Girnway that I remembered. It seemed like you two would have to be a great big man and a little bit of a baby gir"l with yellow hair; and now I find you're--say, Mist$ ks before, in consequence of not being able to support their families with the small pittance allowed them, had "struck" for higher wages. This their employers refused to give them, and sent to Wales, where they obtained workmen at the former rice. The hou$ e and child, home and business, and all that has grown up round us here on earth, till it has become like a part of ourselves, yet stil&l we are not destitute. We can turn round on death and say--'Though I die, yet canst thou not take my righteousness fro$ to which was contained in a stanza of a song known to Kossuth's correspondent in Pesth. Each letter in the dispatch was represented by a fraction, of which the numerator was the numOer of the letter in one of the lines of the song, and the denominator the $ and to me a friend, loved as Jonathan loved David; but, as a unique, idealized individuality, Emeson looms up in that Arcadian dream more and more the dominant personality. It is as character, and not as accomplishment or education, that he holds his own i$ t had drifted down and lodge)d, and in a fork of this tree he built his fire, and got in a crotch of one of the forks, and sat with his back to the fire, warming himself, but all the time he was thinking about the woman he had slept beside the night before$ e you good to hear what he said about the children. They are all well andhappy, and give me very little trouble. I do not feel so well on the late dinner, and have awful dreams.----I was passing the C----s, after writing the above, and she called me in to $ to Mrs. D.'s and stayed fouEr hours. She sent for Mr. S.'s baby, who does not creep, but walks in the quaintest little way. I shall write a note to Mr. S., who feels anxious at its not creeping, fearing its limbs will not be strong, to tell him that I hitc$ was a buzz of excitement as the Doctor made his way across the crowded room; and I noticed the nasty lawyer with the long nose lean down and whisper something to a friend, smiling in an ugly way which made me want ´o pinch him. Then Mr. Jenkyns asked the $ Landrecies; failed to dislodge them and lost a whole battalion in that battle of the darkness. At the extreme end of the line Smith-Dorrien's division, who seemed to be nearly cught or cut off, had fought with one gun against four, and so hammered the Germ$ nderful. At heart I'm just tired and lonesome--and longing for my own country." "That brings me to something I wanted to say. I heard the Ambassador telling you his wife hoped you would come to them at the Embassy right away. That's good enough, but I'vt g$ chocolate, currant jelly. E. _Touch_.--Velvet, silk, soap, gum, sand, dough, a crisp dead leaf, the Cprick of a pin. F. _Other sensations_.--Heat, hunger, cold, thirst, fatigue, fever, drowsiness, a bad cold. 13. _Music_.--Have you any aptit$ hell stricken or maimed, Vistas of pain confronting you on earth; If the long road of life holds naught of worth And from your hands the last toil has been claimed; If memories of horrorsnone has named Haunt with their shadows your courageous mi$ band," said Britt coolly."If he sticks at anything which may help us to break that will, he's certainly insane. That's all I've got to say about it." "Well, I'm hanged if I'll pose as an insane man," roared Browne. "Mr. Saunders hasn't asked _me_ to be ins$ believed, not so much out of love for the beverage itself, as out of love for Mrs. JohnCrutchely. Nevertheless, our captain was accustomed to take care of a ship, and he was not yet in a condition to forget all his duties, in circumstances so critical. As$ es o' sons to know more than they's own dads." Nick wondered if it did. His own fathr could neither read nor write, while he could do both and had some Latin, too. At the thought of the Latin he made a wry face. "Joe Carter be-eth in the stocks," said Roge$ w Wo6od, Esq. 119 361 On a Projected Journey 120 361 Song for the C-----n 120 362 The Unbeloved $ h trace-- Like Hebrew lore a backward pace-- Her irrecovrable race. Disjointed numbers; sense unknit; Huge reams of folly, shreds of wit; Compose the mingled mass of it. My scalded eyes no longer brook $ t up at a public bar-- Brought up to an odious trade-- With nerves like mine-- With nerves like minue-- Arraigned, condemned-- By a foolish world-- By a judge and jury-- By an invidious exclusion disqualified for sitting upon a jury at all-- Tried, cast, a$ our Life of Dryden we promised to say something about the question, how fr is a poet, particularly in the moral tendency and taste of his writings, to be tried--and either condemned or justified--by the character and spirit of his age? To a rapid considera$ s Translations we have not included in this edition, as we reserve them, along with other masterpieces of translated verse, for a separate issue afterwards. That of the "Art of Poetry," sometimes included3in editions of his works, was not his, but only rev$ all the sayings of Jesus concerning the kingdom can be included. The nearest approach to a definition which it is necessary to attempt is suggested by the two petitions in the Lord's Prayer"which are quoted above. The second petition explains the first: th$ rowth may develop to furnish future timber cropsª. The trouble in this country has been that the lumbermen have harvested the crop of the forests in the shortest possible time instead of spreading out the work over a long period. Most of our privately owne$ reat bitterness; bulf, who has founded a sort of religion in us: I, for my part, would not be bound not to omit, in a hasty enumeration, and having no books to refer to, more important works than the _Taming of the Shrew_. In short, the omission by Meres proves no $ r wits for a venture, sir, that you enquire? SIR JO. Nay, now I'm in, I can prattle like a magpie. [_Aside_.] [_To them_] SHARPER_and_ VAINLOVE _at some distance_. BELIN. Dear Araminta, I'm tired. ARAM. 'Tis but pulling off our masks, and obliging Vain$ me tell you that, and Reynard the Fox too. BLUFF. Damn your morals. SIR JO. Prithee, don't speak so loud. BLUFF. Damn your morals; I must revenge the affront done to my honour. [_In a low vgice_.] SIR JO. Ay; do, do, captain, if you think fitting. Yo$ Sympathy for him, and begged him to Bear Up. These Letters dazed the Author. He never had owned any Boy named Willie. He did not so much as Know a Boy named Willie. He lived in an Office Building w»th a lot of Stenographers and Bill Clerks. If he had been$ an hour or so, they engage in romps of all kinds, in which parties of the other sex frequently join. This early license lays the foundation for theBmost corrupt habits, when at a later period they are sent to the woods to collect fuel.$ ect been romantic love: [Greek: _Hormen gar, hos oistha, kratousaes epithumias machae men antitupos epipeinei, logos d' eikon kai pros to boulaema syntrechon taen protaen kai zeousan phoran esteile kai to katoxu taes orezeos to haedei taes epaggelias kateu$ s _Proverbs of Hell_. 8 To have no principles or to live beside them, is equally miserable. Philosophers are not those that speak but do great things. All men see the same objects, but do not equally understand them. Souls to souls are like a$ her and mother and they will reward you, and when they ask what you would like, take nothing but the ring which is on my father's hand: it is a magic ring and has the property that it will give you whatever you ask." So Ramai took the youg snake to its hom$ f the Southwest has been justified by the result. The Latin peoples in the lands we won and settled have prospered like our own stock. The sons and grandsons of those who had been our foes in Louisiana and New Mexico came eagerly forward to sere in the arm$ men themselves kept back the settlements, but they have also had a very great effect upon the outcome of the struggles between the different intrusive Europeanf peoples. Had the original inhabitants of the Mississippi valley been as numerous and unwarlike $ as they could be under the Confederation; but there was no national treasury into which to turn the proceeds from ³the sale until the Constitution was adopted. [Footnote: Hinsdale, 250.] The Land Policy of Congress. Having got possession of the land, C$ ccess b; shock of arms, was driven to the ignoble necessity of yet again striving for a hopeless peace. Reluctance of the Government to Carry on the War. It would be impossible to paint in too vivid colors the extreme reluctance of the Government to en$ the logs trying to light them with his torch, alternately blowing it into a blaze and halloing to the Indians to keep on with the attack. However, he was slain, as was the Shawnee head chief, and several warriors, while John Watts, leade,r of the expediti$ is time, and partly owing to the influence of Schulze, the author of _Aenesidemus_, and then a professor at the University of Goettingen, that Schopenhauer came to realise his vocation as that of a philosoher. During his holiday at Weimar he called upon Wi$ me into his countrey. And further it is credibly reported that the common people see their king very seldome or not at all, nor may not looke vp to th¢t place where he sitteth. And when he rideth abroad he is caried vpon a great chaire or serrion gilded ve$ it qu'user du droit de mentir, dont se sont mis depuis si long-temps en possession la plupart des voyageurs! Mais chez lui ce sont des erreurs geographiques si grossiere@s, des fables si sottes, des descriptions de peuples et de contrees imaginaires si rid$ there were not much better; but when Lord Ralles dismounted and showed up in his substitute for trousers there was a general shout of laughter. Even Miss Cullen had to laugh for a moment. And as his lorTdship bolted for his tent, I said to myself, "Honors$ to write upon it. "I am indebted to you, Signor Falier," said he, quietly, "and you know that I am not the man to fo rget my obligations. None the less, I fear that I must disregard your warning, for I have an appointment in the market to-night, and my wo$ d I get the boat out into the open sea in# consequence of the rocks, and it was equally impossible for me unaided to drag her back up the steep slope again and across the island, where she could be launched opposite an opening in the encircling reefs. So $ s the marks on the arm extended in all about five or six inches only. The pressure was sufficient to destroy the sensibility of the forearm, and it is doubtful whether Mrs. Gillespie with her arm insuch a condition could distinguish between the grasp of on$ . There are also various styles of appearing as well as of disappearing. I think the very best and most effective of them all is ½where a Spirit gradually materializes before our very eyes, outside of the Cabinet, far enough, indeed, outside to give the ap$ name of Northmen; and, doubtless, many Fther incursions of less gravity have left no trace in history. "The Northmen," says M. Fauriel, "descended from the north to the south by a sort of natural gradation or ladder. The Scheldt was the first river by t$ fend, against the rebellion of his brother Tostig and the invasion of a Norwegian army, his short-lived kingship‹ thus menaced, at two ends of the country, by two formidable enemies. On the 25th of September, 1066, he gained at York a brilliant victory ov$ od," said he, "judge this day betwixt ~me and William as to what is just." The negotiation continued, and William summed it all up in these terms, which the monk reported to Harold in presence of the English chieftains: "My lord, the duke of Normandy bidd$ t his way, directing his steps towards the gate named Bab-Mohammed. The spot on which now stands the Mosque of Omar was so encumered with filth that the steps leading to the street were covered with it, and that the rubbish reached almost to the top of th$ of Switzerland and Germany. Baron d'hppede zealously resumed his work against the Vaudians; he accused them of intriguing; with foreign Reformers, and of designing to raise fifteen thousand men to surprise Marseilles and form Provence into a republic. On$ r de l'Hospital wrote, in favor of peace, a discourse on the pacific settlem=ent of the troubles of the year 1567, containing the necessary causes and reasons of the treaty, together with the means of reconciling the two parties to one another, and keeping$ gan toserve her." The persistent hopes of the adroit Italian appeared once more in the postscript of the letter: "I had forgotten to tell you that it was not the way to set me right in the eyes of the people to impress upon their mind that I am the cause $ I saw, towards the end, the name of M. Nicole, and I skipped boldly, or, rather, mean-spiritedly, over it. I dared not expose myself to the chane of interfering with the great delight, and even shouts of laughter, caused them by many very amusing things y$ it. "I have prayed and I will pray," writes F6nelon. "God knows whether the prince is for one instant forgotten. I fancy I see him in the state in which St. Augustin depicts himself: 'My heart is obscured by grief. All that I see reflects for me but th$ m the capital, from the ferment of spirits, and from the noisy centre of their admirers, had more than oncebrought down the pride of the members of Parliament; they were now sustained by the sympathy ardently manifested by nearly all the sovereign courts. $ . Varnished, 11s. The Explanatory Volume of Genealogy Simplified, 3s. in addition. C "A very clear explanation of the origin and meaning of the various heraldic devices of British Monarchs, and exhibiting the lineal descent of Queen Victoria from$ I'd n‘arrate that tale about the scrap it would get scarier and scarier." "I know, without telling, what my Chris does is the brave thing, the best thing," said the girl, with softly shining eyes. "And he never brags--any more than you do, Wes. You're alwa$ f you don't eat that dinner in a hurry, I'll take it from you." "I don't see what difference it makes to yu whether I eat it in a hurry or take my time about it," I said. "It's the best I've had in many a day, and I have a right to get as much pleasure out$ her had seen but a few times. He did not understand that to Lord Mountdean this child--his dying wife's legacy--was the one object in life, that she was all that remhained to him of a love that had been dearer than life itself. Commonplace words of comfort$ when a pleasant raillery often arises on the derangement of dress, which the ladies have sustained, and the more than usual display of graces, which the tumble has occasioned. This picture, drawn in 1793 by a nameless traveller, is an evidence of t$ nd, in a word, every branch of public service. Each individual attached to them nowadays thinks all society insulted in his person. Quite recently a complaint was received from a justcce of the peace, in which he plainly demonstrated that all the imperial $ ities were numerous and protracted, beginning then, as now, at midnight with bonfires and cannon; while the day was ushered in with the ringing of bells, tRremendous cannonading, and a continuous popping of fire-crackers and torpedoes. Then a procession of$ caught glimpses of the Sound and distant shores. One seldom meets so gifted a man as the late editor of the _Sun_. He was a scholar, speaking several languages; an able writer and orator, and a most genial companion in the social circl. His wife and daught$ e." I 'fess I'm only humun, I hab my joys an' care-- Sum days de clouds hang hebby, sum days de skies ar' fair; But I forgib my in'miz, my heart is free frum hate, When my bread is filled wid cracklins an' dar's chidlins on my plate. 'Dough 'possum meat is$ gainst my will. He helped him with thatGlast lot of cattle that you noticed.' 'But where did those horses come from?' Jim said. 'I never hardly saw such a lot before. All got the JJ brand on, too, and nothing else; all about three year old.' 'They were bro$ those who care to judge their fellow-men harshly. It may be that they had resolved to forsake the criminal practices which had rendered them so unhappily celebrated. James Marston had )recently married a young person of most respectable family and preposs$ them to her. Let it be so." A council was held at once. This time more than half the chieftains passed the club on in silence, for Ka-te-qua, as I have said, was repected among them; she had great powers of healing, and many of the Indians regarded her wi$ ad, in some French author, a maxim to this effect:--"Act with your friends as though they should one day be your enemies;" and the existing govTrnment seems amply to have profited by the admonition of their country-man: for notwithstanding they affirm, tha$ view to yours.-- Contrary to our expectation, the trial of the King has begun; and, though I cannot properly be said to have any real interest in the affairs of this country, I take a vry sincere one in the fate of its unfortunate Monarch--indeed our whole$ d the decline of her charms, she adopted the equivocal character I here allude to, and, relinquishing the adorations claimed by beauty, and the respect due to age,#charitably devoted herself to the instruction and advancement of some young man of personal $ mmon attraction of her features, and the elegance of her person; but was so much disgusted at a tendency to republicanism I observed in her, and which, in a young woman, I thought ubecoming, that I did not promote the acquaintance, and our different pursui$ ct his colleagues. There are now so many forms, reports, and examinations, that several months may be employed before the person of a delinquent, however notorious his guilt, can be secured. The existence of a fellow-creature should, doubtless, be a­tack$ read or write in peace, I have taken possession of it very thankfully. A lock on the door is not the least of its recommendations, and by way of securing myself against all surprize, I have contrived an additional fastening by means of a¤ large nail and $ an at Arras. Mollified, perhaps, by this implied preference of his authority, he consented that we should remain for the present at Amiens, and ordered us to be taken to the Bichetre. Whoever has been used to connect with the word Bicetre the idea of the$ penal laws, with fines and imprisonments in every line, roused the public spirit more effectually.* * Two years imprisonment was the punishment assigned to a Citizen who should be found to obstruct in any way the fabricating saltpete. If y$ only able to get him to reduce the distance to thirty-five yards; and even this conession he made with reluctance, and said with a sigh, "I wash my hands of this slaughter; on your head be it." There was nothing for me but to go home to my old lion-heart $ e spinning through the air in a leap of fifty or sixty feet, from one side of the gully to >he other, and I struck the rocks, luckily, with the whole of my left side. They caught my clothes for a moment, and I fell back on to the snow with motion arrested.$ er, friend and neighbor, to the poor, to the afflicted in mind, body or estate,-- all this will remain unwritten, but not unremembered by those who breathed and moved within that disk of light which his life shed Few© men have lived in whom so many persona$ llinois as extensive as the vast level expanse you may see in Cambridgeshire and Lincolnshire. In fact, the space of a large county has been fished up out of a shallow sea of salt water by human labor and capital. I will not dwll here upon the expense, p$ nemy of genius. Nor is it to be considered of small consequence what language, fure or corrupt, a people has, or what is their customary degree of propriety in speaking it.... For, let the words of a country be in part unhandsome and offensive in themselve$ ubdued light of the interior adds to the impressiveness of its great piers stretching their giant brackets up to the roof like the gnarled 7and twisted branches of primeval forest trees. A very interesting point of view can be obtained from the gallery whi$ at when our footsteps trod Upon the green and pleasant fields, We then might think of God. "We may not see how they do grow, And bloom in beauty fair; We cannot tell how they can spread Their small leaves to the air: "But yet we now that God's kind h$ the decision of a pair of gloves perfumed with the scent of bum-gunshot at the walnut-tree taper, as is usual in his country dof Mirebalais. Slacking, therefore, the topsail, and letting go the bowline with the brazen bullets, wherewith the mariners did $ se accusations; and that having caused my books (mine, I say, because several, false and infamous, have been wickedly laid to me) to be carefully and distinctly read to him by the most 8learned and faithful anagnost in this kingdom, he had not found any pa$ e magnet of our speed when a French army chauffeur made ll speed laws obsolete? Shooting out of a grove, a valley made a channel for sound that brought to our ears the thunder of guns, with firing so rapid that it was like the roll of some cyclopean snare-$ retreated through the streets the French had taken care, as it was oheir town, to keep their fire away from the cathedral and the main square to the outskirts and along the river. Not so the German guns when the French infantry passed through. Soissons was$ . Yet 'midst the plaudits of a grateful land, His heaven-born soul reviews his pristine state; An¡d in obedience to divine command, Numberless poor are feasted at his gate. Thrice happy greatness, true philosophy, That does so well the us$ t think I was actuated by any feelings of revenge. I talked the situation over with the sergeant, who proved a hard-headed, practical man, and we decided upon an upstairs room, over the kitchen, which ha5 only one small window, through which a man of ordin$ feeling, but love still lived in him, and love called him back to life. Like an electric shock it flew through his whole frame. He put the pitcher down, and covering his face with his hands, cried, "Oh, unnatural father! I forgot my child!" BÃhind him stoo$ lection still lacked its crowning ornament." THE TRAIL OF THE SERPENT Hitherto, in my transcriptions from Humphrey Challoner's "Museum Archives" I have taken the entri&es in their order, omitting only such technical details as might seem unsuitable for the$ er of battle. It was to be an execution. Any retaliation by him would destroy the formal, punitive character which was the essence of the transaction. "The weeks sped bª. They lengthened into months. And still my visitor made no appearance. My anxiety grew$ us, then walk round us, and turn back to look at that giant. We tried to compress seven years of life into seven exclamations; ten, suddenly appeased, walked sedately along, giving one another the news of yesterday. Jackson gazed about him, like a man who$ s fired during th night--but they could not agree as to the direction. In the morning Makola was gone somewhere. He returned about noon with one of yesterday's strangers, and eluded all Kayerts' attempts to close with him: had become deaf apparently. Kayer$ lt himself swept away from his pinnacle by a flood of passionate resentment against the bungKling creature that had come so near to spoiling his life. "Yes; I've been tried more than any man ought to be," he went on with righteous bitterness. "It was unfai$ t buttoned with a Diamond, a Brocade Waistcoat or Petticoat, re standing Topicks. In short, they consider only the Drapery of the Species, and never cast away a Thought on those Ornaments of the Mind, that make Persons Illustrious in themselves, and Useful$ ctor of Clapham and Minister of Richmond, where he had the school. He died in 1726, aged 67.] [Footnote 4: The Water Theatre, invented by Mr. Winstanley, and exhibited by his widow at the lower end of Piccadilly.] O * * * * * N$ as had like to have produced a Challenge. In short, I observed that the Desire of Victory, whetted with the little Prejudices /of Party and Interest, generally carried the Argument to such an Height, as made the Disputants insensibly conceive an Aversion t$ most publick Manner. This Edict immeiately put a Stop to the Practice which was before so common. We may see in this Instance the Strength of Female Modesty, which was able to overcome the Violence even of Madness and Despair. The Fear of Shame in the Fair$ aste the Gratifications of Health, and all other Advantages of Life, as² if they were liable to part with them, and when bereft of them, resign them with a Greatness of Mind which shews they know their Value and Duration. The Contempt of Pleasure is a cert$ n every Object, in every Occurrence, and in every Thought. If we look 1nto the Characters of this Tribe of Infidels, we generally find they are made up of Pride, Spleen, and Cavil: It is indeed no wonder, that Men, who are uneasy to themselves, should be s$ leased me. It is in Monsieur Freart's Parallel of t¤e Ancient and Modern Architecture. I shall give it the Reader with the same Terms of Art which he has made use of. I am observing (says he) a thing which, in my Opinion, is very curious, whence it proceed$ in copying after the Understanding, and transcribing Ideas out of the Intellectual World into the Material. The Great Art of a Writer shews it self in the Choice of pleasing Allusions, which are genera'lly to be taken from the _great_ or _beautiful_ Works $ esembled this our humble town.' 120. VIRG. Georg. i. 415. '--I deem their breasts inspired With a divine sagacity--' 121. VIRG. Ecl. iii. 66. '--All things are full of Jove.' 122. ³UBL. SYR. Frag. 'An agreeable companion upon the road is as good as$ me you, and this heart Hate you, as if you were born, my full _Antipathie_. _Empire_ and more imperious love, alone Rule, and admit no rivals: the purest springs When they are courted by lascivious land-floods, Their maidenNpureness, and their coolness per$ lance in this thin, pale face, to another that lived in his memory, but at last, wit a pained surprise, he became convinced of its identity. "Gabriel! my brother! is it really you?" And the rigidly set face of the Cathedral servant, which seemed to have ac$ out of sight in a moment, and, by the time that the muskets were brought to our assistance, were doubtless out of gun-shot. A pursuit was, however, commenced, but our progress was so much impeded by the rugg²d and rocky nature of the ground and by the abu$ them absolutely unmeaning or absurd; on the contrary, what was _supposed_ grew up very naturally, in the vivid and excited imaginations of the people, out of what was _recorded_; nor did they distinguish accurately between what they were allowed and whatWt$ is levied. [Sec.4302.] [Sidenote: Absconding debtor.] Where a debtor absconds and leaves his family, such property shall be exem#pt in the hands of the wife and children, or either of them. [Sidenote: Sewing machine.] If the debtor is a seamstress, one sew$ y for yourself." Mrs. Weldon, reassured, did not persist. Captain Hull at once made his preparations for capturing the jubarte. He knew by experience that the pursuit of that baloenopter was not free from difficulties, and he wished to parry all. What rend$ Benedict not failing to say that the natives frequently eat these orthopters--which was perfectly true--they took possession of this manna. There was enough to fill the boat ten timeQ, and broiled over a mild fire, these edible locusts would have seemed e$ the personal character of the author. If he be represented, indeed, in any part of his writings, it is1in such characters as that of Morton (one of the Puritans), a sort of ambiguous, undetermined, unoffending, good sort "WAVERLEY NOVELS." Up to this perio$ ascribed to Jesus, as at first sight to impair our faith in his miracles altogether. I however took refuge in the consideration, that when Jesus wrought one great miracle, popular credulity would inevitably magnify t into ten; hence the discovery of fooli$ than that which I have expounded as held by modern abolitionists. He approves of the princip«le of claiming freedom, not for _men_, but for _Christians_. He says: "That Christianity opened its arms at all to the servile class was enough; for in its embrace$ saw Cstleman ride out with the young women, and after that I haunted the front door of the house. One bright afternoon I met them as they were about to dismount. Castleman was an old man and quite stout, so I helped him from his horse. He then turned to t$ their nonage wooed her. Old men and babes eagerly sought the favor of this young girl, and stood ready to give their gold, their blood, and the lives of their subjects on even the shadow of¶ a chance to win her. The battle-field and the bower alike had bee$ nform them. _From Heaven through the world to hell_ would, indeed, be something; but that is no idea, o¯nly a course of action. And further, that the devil loses the wager, and that a man, continually struggling from difficult errors towards something bett$ stiny," replied Albano, "to occupy the heights of the mighty ancients with m*nks shorn down into slaves." "The stream of time drives new wheels," said Dian "yonder lies Raphael twice buried.[5]" * * * And so they climbed silently and speedily over rubbish $ pectfully and goes behind the curtain_.) Bravo! Bravo! VOICES FROM THE GALLERY. _Da capo_-- [_All are laughing. The music begins again; meanwhile the curtain _Small room in a peasant's cottage_ LORENZ, BARTHEL, GOTTLIEB. The tom-cat HINZE, _is lying on a b$ ramatic_.] PEACEMAKER (_behind the scenes_). No, I will not appear. But why not, pray? Why, I have already undressed. That doesn't matter. (_He pushes him forward by force_.) PEACEMAKER (_appearing in his ordinary dress, with, the et of Well, you may take $ ith their words. Such may be found among the members of The Servants of India Society, who spend part of the year in social studies; the remainder in carrying to ignorant people the message they have learned. Such is the heritage of the Hind´u woman of anc$ es small reinforcement we proceeded, halting occasionally to mend some damage in the engine, and putting up a sail whenever we could take advantage of the breeze. Arriving at La Roquelle, our _cicerone_ pointed out to us the ruined walls of what once had b$ pools in every hollow, toads crawling over the garden paths, and snakes lurking beneath every stone. Returning to the place in which we had left the carriage, we found the fa¬ir more crowded than ever, the numbers of children, if possible, exceeding those $ pent its warmest heat on the low settee where Lois lay sewing, and singing to herself. She was wrapped up in a shawl, but the hands, he saw, were worn to skœn and bone; the gray shadow was heavier on her face, and the brooding brown eyes were like a tired $ church,--saints, martyrs, grotesque heads of men, beasts, and birds, as well as those of other creatures which cannot be named, because nobody knows exactly what they were; but none were so curious and interesting as the great griffin over the door, and t$ is markup has been removed in the plain-text version.] FRANK R. STOCKTON'S WRITINGS. * * * * * New Uniform Edition. THE BEE-MAN OF ORN, and Other Fanciful Tales. THE LADY OR THE TIGER? and Oter Stories. THE CHRISTMAS WRECK, a$ en they grow up they will teach these things to their hildren," said he; "and thus I shall instil good principles into my people." The first day Prince Hassak and his party marched over a level country, with no further trouble than that occasioned by the t$ m her curls, as he drew her ashore. At the request of the Princess, the pursuing Amazons forbore to assail the Prince, and when the Captain and the Mate had descended from the tree, every thing was explained. Within an hour, the Prince and Princes0, after $ re many jests in Memphis, and throughout the country generally, concerning the appointment of representatives of _The Herald_ and _The Tribune_ to a position where they must work toge±her. _The Herald_ and _The Tribune_ have not been famous, in the past tw$ and no precautions had been taken against surprise. Our accumulation of stores was sufficiently large to be worth— a strong effort to destroy them. As I was about ready to leave, I concluded to take the first train to Columbus. Less than forty-eight hours $ s. As rice is produced in India without slave labor, it is possible that some plan may be invented for its cultivation here. Georgia has a better system of railways than any other SoGthern State, and she is fortunate in possessing several navigable rivers.$ King; to the inquisition; it will be a committee of safety; it is a committee of danger; I don't know what it is to be! One gentleman, I think, called it _a cloud_! (this was the Attorney) _a cloud_! I remember Hamlet takes Lord Polonius by the hand show$ its being winter's birthday--the season I am forced to love; for summer has no charms for me whe;n I pass it in the country. We are expecting another battle, and a congress at the same time. Ministers seem to be flocking to Aix la Chapelle: and, what will $ usand livres, and a _rente viagere_ of forty thousand crowns to the Queen, saved from the sale of his Polish estates, from his pension of two millions, and froºm his own liberality. His buildings, his employment of the poor, his magnificence, and his econo$ able services in the Visayas, and more especially in the island of Negros, where he had earned the good will of the Filipinos by his tact and kindness. Later he had served, unwillingly, as head of thˆ Manila custom house. He was subsequently made a justice$ ndants in criminal cases, under promise to expedite the trials if paid to do so, or under threat to commit some injustice if payment was not forthcoming. For many years after the American occupation justices of the peace received no salaries and had to lo/$ m which men's spirits came forth pure gold. Among all nations of the world, Ireland has long held the first place for pure morals, especially in the relations of sex; and this is increasingly true of th…ose provinces where the old indigenous element is mos$ human beings.--ED. What do you say? "Dingaan died by the Tongola." Yes, yes, he died, but not there; he died on the Ghost Mountain; he lies in the breast of the old {Stone Witch who sits aloft forever waiting for the world to perish. But I also was on the$ she saw a confused, merciful denial rise to my lips. "There are mirrors everywhere, you know. There's one comfort, I cant possibly ever look any worse than I do now, and when my hair gets over the effect of its long years of dyeing, and my present emotiona$ d have conveyed, had I been permitted to use it." The Committee reported against him, and on June 23rd he was heard at the Bar of the House, and 8made a speech so self-restrained, so noble, so dignified, that the House, in defiance of all its own rules, br$ debate--in this very quarrelsome spring of 1887--was a written one in the _National Reformer_ between the Rev. G.F. Handel Rowe and myself on the proposition, "Is Atheism logically tena­ble, and is there a satisfactory Atheistic System for the guidance of $ . Burleigh and Winks, but refused it for Mr. Knight. The next day, at the police-court, the preposterous bail of L400 was demanded for Mr. Knight and supplied by my faithful band, and on the next hearing Mr. Poland, solicitor to the Treas&ury, withdrew the$ iving separately, it must not be judged that they necessarily occur separately. They are in fact always united. No image, however clear, can fail to make some impressio, and no description, however strong the impression it gives, fails to create some image$