mperor Constantine entered Byzantium in 324, and Justinian began his reign in 527. v. 6.ž At Europe's extreme point.] Constantinople being situated at the extreme of Europe, and on the borders of Asia, near those in the neighbourhood of Troy, from %hence $ . That saintly light.] Charles Martel. v. 25. In tat part.] Between Rialto and the Venetian territory, and the sources of the rivers Brenta and Piava is situated a castle called Romano, the birth-place of the famous tyrant Ezzolino or Azzolino, the brot$ from itself, thez Good Supreme, has moved. So much is just as is accordant with it; No good created draws it to itself, But it, by raying forth, occasions that." Even as above her nest goes circling round The stork±when she has fed her little ones, $ ver and ever: the sceptre •f thy kingdom is a sceptre of uprightness. 44:8. Thou hast loved justice, and hated iniquity: therefore God, thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows. 44:9. Myrrh and stacte andcassia perfume thy g$ ide thee, and that theymay shew forth thy wonders. 36:3. Lift up thy hand over the strange nations, that they may see thy 36:4. For as thou hast been sanctified in us in their sight, so thou shalt be magnified among them in our prsence, 36:5. That they may$ ike manner. 6:22. Whereby you may know that they are no gods. Therefore fear them 6:23. The gold also which they have, is for shew, but except a man wipe off 6the rust, they will not shine: for neither when they were molten, did they feel it. 6:24. Men b$ tand this literally of the desolation of the land by these insects: others understand it of the different invasions of the Chaldeans, or other 1:5. Awae, ye that are drunk‹ and weep, and mourn all ye that take delight; in drinking sweet wine: for it is c$ ms and blessed God and said 2:29. Now thou dost dismiss thy servant, O Lord, according to thy word 2:30. Bec•ause my eyes have seen thy salvation, 2:31. Which thou hasdt prepared before the face of all peoples: 2:32. A light to the revelation of the Gentil$ nesday. Doth he feele it? No. Doth hee heare it? No. Is it insensible then? yea, to the dead. But wil it n@t liue with the liuing? No. Why? Detraction wil not suffeU it, therfore Ile none of it. Honour is a meere Scutcheon, and so ends my Catechisme. Scena$ ame and went in strained silence yet I could hear nothing, and I turned to Tonnisn to say as much; and then, even as I opened my lips to speak, there came a strange wailing noise out of the wood on our left.... It appeared to float through the trees, and t$ anners are not to their taste, and whom they feel inferior to themselves, is a considerable check to the desire to go abroad, so much so, that we hold out the farther/inducement of political distinction when they return." "What, then! you have ambition ao$ r, that ¯t would require a week to search this old house thoroughly. Do you see, now, what I mean?" "I do, but not all," she answered. "And how, papa, do you account for her finding herself on the sofa in the dressing ro!m, which we had searched so careful$ ed me to another. In the joy and uncertainty of living I had praZtically lost sight of the reason for my coming. With me it had always been more the adventure than the story; my writing wažs a by-product, a utilisation of what life offered me. I had set sa$ se, too, but his knees were unsteady. He tottered, and but for the swift aid of Barnett's arm, would have allen. "Overdone," said Dr. Trendon, with some irritation. "Cost you something in strength. Foolish erformance. Turn in now." Slade tried to protest, $ this long yarn, we've been listening to." "Wal," replied the narrator; "some people that I've toldit to, have suspicioned that it might ¹be so; but every thing about it seemed so nateral, that I'm almost ready to make my affidavy that it was sober fact. O$ g so gently over the water, and dying away so quietly in the old woods, that I could scarce persuade myself of their reality. For a whil§ I lay luxuriating as in the delusion of a pleasant dream, as though the melody that was abroad on the air was the vo6c$ ine advantage, so that one could recognize the different species at a distance of several miles by this means alone, as well as by their forms and colors, and the way they reflected the light. All seemed strong and comfortable, as if realy enjoying the s¾o$ y agitated, as men are apt to be when surrounded by supernatural influences, they do not perceive the cause of this apparently unnatural illumination; and, uon tdrning round and round in irregular circles, and still finding the light in the wrong place, th$ ­fore needest not to replenish thy wallets with gold,--travelling perchance to take possession of some rich inheritance."--"No, by St. Roelas," cried the w,oodcutter, "thou hast guessed wide of the mark. I am going to hide my poverty in the mine of Rammels$ knife still. Don't you fall foul of me, or you'll have reason to be sorry for it, d'you hear?" The two boys ran quickly across to the big schoolroom, and entered >ust in time to take their seats before the master on duty called, "Silenc*e!" As might have$ . "What do you mean, Painswick?" Mor®riston asked eagerly. "Has anything more come to light?" "Only we have had a lady here, Miss Elyot, who says she danced with the poor fellow." "I only just took a turn with him, for thKe waltz was nearly over when he as$ c{ecking the action and drawing it back. "You may be sure--quite sure, of my devotion," he said, and raised her hand to his Ilips. An exclamation and a sudden start as the hand was quickly withdrawn made him look up. Edith Morriston's eyes were fixed with$ Gray run, and therefore don't know what Ahe can do;" at the same time he was confident that his horse would come in the winner, as he had chosen an excellent r ider for him. Finally all the preliminaries of the contest were arranged. The judges were chosen$ e to cite only a very brief specimen. I call himP, and _think_ him the noblest of poets, _not_ because the impressions he pzoduces are at _all_ times the most profound--_not_ because the poetical excitement which he induces is at _all_ times the most inten$ | | ON | | 1 | | RAIL-ROADS, ¦ | | $ come back. If we don' get some fresh meat soon, we'll be 4aving scurvy." "What you're furr doin'," says O'Flynn for the twentieth time, "has niver been done, not ayven be Indians. The prastes ahl say so." "So do the Sour-doughs," said Mac. "It isn't as if $ be mine-- _Friend_. I assure you, Sir _Timothy_, I am sorry, and will chastise her. Sir _Tim_. Ay,Sir, I that am a Knight--a Man of Parts and Wit, and one that is to be your Brother, and design'd to be the Glory of marrying _Bel_. I can endure no more--ao$ hey tredoCdle, tredodle, tredodle,--with a hay tredool, tredodle, tredo-- [_Dancing and playing on his Stick like a Flute_. Sir _Cau_. A•prudent Man would reserve himself--Good-facks, I danc'd so on my Wedding-day, that when I came t$ way to try my _Char_. Are you very secret? _Doct_. 'Tis my first Principle, Sir. _Char_. And one, the most material in our _Rosycrusian_ order.--Please you to make a Tryal? _Doct_. As how, Sir, I beseech you? _Char_. If you be thorwly purg'd from Vice,Vth$ ed me to marry him, and told me, in his dear, laughing manner, that he hadn't a penny in the world, and tat we would have to live on bread and cheese and kisses. Of course, I had a plenty for us both, though, so we weren't really in danger of being |reduce$ ts central point. To som children the ideal home life comes only through literature: daily experiences rather contradict it. Humour is an important fact´r in morality; unless a person is capable of seeing the humor of a situation he is likely to be wanting$ r friend combines commerce with high policy, and shares my appreFhensions as to the safety of the I could not tell whether hw was mocking at me or not. I think he was, for Francis Nicholson's moods were as mutable as the tides. In every word of his there l$ insight into the needs of the hour, which enabled Confucius, without claiming any Divine sanction, to impose this system upon his countrymen.T The name Confucius is only the Latinized form of two words which mean "Master K'ung." He was born 551 B.C., his $ Supreme Court has discharged this difficult and most delicate duty. The President is the Commander-in-Chief of the Army and the Navy and can call them to his aid. The legi€lature has almost unlimited powr through its control of the public purse. The States$ d him first among t|he men. And if a newleader were to be chosen there was no doubt as to where the choice of the men would fall. No doubt that was why Masters put himself forward now, ready to brave the wrath of the chief. "Maybe we're fooled," went on Ma$ fter you are gone and do not carry away a feather of you." "Pretty ag£in." "And silly. But, really, you are very kind to me, and I shall try not to take too much advantage of it." "Will you answer a question?" "I had rather ask one: but go on." "What ma­de$ he bandages had been wound, there was a strange sight o Lord Nick striding up the street with his victim in his arms. How lightly he walked; and he was talkisg to the calm, pale face which rested in the hollow of his shoulder. "He will live? He will live?"$ er part of the cabinet consisted of a series of drawers, rising one above the other, and terminated by a triangular pediment,jits tympanum ornamented with some beautiful little bronzes. The drawers themselves were concealed by two doors, opening in tShe ce$ mixture with that of the Aorigines. I must here interrupt the thread of this narration by observing, that the only wa(y to account for the present use of a different language in the centre and most craggy parts of the Grey League, is by allowing that the $ Lafter me, and to their babblings leave The crowd. Be asa tower, that, firmly set, Shakes not its top for any blast that blows! He, in whose bosom thought on thought shoots out, Still of his aim is wide, in that the one Sicklies and wastes to nought the ot$ lle oranges, pared ss thin that no white appears,( boil it over a slow fire very well, and scum it as it boils; let it stand a week or ten days cover'd very close, then pour it thro' the bag, and bottle it. 21. _A very good_ White _or_ Almond Soop. Take ve$ ncorporate; (2) corpus, habeas corpus, corporeal, corpuscle, Corpus Christi. _Sentences_: The ____ gentleman said he didl not believe in ____ punishment. The hospital ____ carried the ____ into the ofice of a great ____. He resolved to ____ this idea into $ dust and grease ____ theÃmachine. "My tears must stop, for every drop ____ needle and thread." By acknowledging his fault he hoped to ____ criticism. Though before she had been^ unable to ____ her tears, she could now scarcely ____ a yawn. A fallen tree __$ d merely for a spurt. Boys and girls were pressedr into service, wages were cut down for women, hours lengthened for men. Government reports read like the Shaftesbury attacks on the conditions of early factory dJays. We hear again of beds that are never co$ nemy's hands, and in each village and town some woman staying behind to nurse the sick andwounded, to calm the population when panic threatens, to stand invincibl>e between the people and their conquerors! It is very splendid!--the French man holding stead$ h fleet, which had tbe heels of the enemy. But the fog blotted the foe completely from the sight of the main British fleet; and even from the decks of the _Queen Mary_ and the _Indefatigable_, much closer, it was impossible to make out the whereaouts of th$ shadows in which he was hidden, and then sl9ipped back to Gray Wolf. In the dayssand weeks that followed Joan's home-coming the lure of the cabin and of the woman's hand held Kazan. As he had tolerated Pierre, so now he tolerated the younger man who lived$ ent to the €anoe and returned with a roll of stout moose-hide babiche. Then he sat down cross-legged in front of Kazan and began mzaking a muzzle. He did this by plaiting babiche thongs in the same manner that one does in making the web of a snow-shoe. In $ was a most desperate venture, and I even fancied he felt a certain sense of relief in having such a goodG excuse for not sticking his nose into the Indian encampment. But now I understood that all the while he held firm to the determinatin to do whatsoeve$ Blue Men." They are the "sea-horses" of the islaEnd Gaels. Their presence in the strait was believed to be the cause of its billowy restlessness and swift currents. _The Changeling_.--When the fairie— robbed a mother of her babe, they left behind a useless$ in the middle of the camp, and ruined the ammunition we had stored there. So soon as the rain slackened, the enemy resumed their fire, but Major Washington forbade us to repy, since there was scarce a dozen rounds in the fort. I cofess that this species of$ might not avail. Well, thank heaven, there was none to whom my death would cause much sorrow, except--yes, Dorothy might care. At thought of her, the forest faded from before me, an¸d I saw her again as I had seen hr last, looking down upon me from the st$ entertainment of the ladies, who found no faultwith it, though it was four or five years old. He could tell a story well and turn a joke to a nicety,--a fact which I was at that time far from aditting,--and under other circumstances I should have found him$ us vigilance, nor did he ever enter the temples of the Gods. Diviners, augurs, all that made any pretension whatever to a supernatural character, he held in utter abhorrence, and his ultimate return in the irection of his native counury is attributed to hi$ re, which, cl´oake6 and masked, walked backwards and forwards across the piazza, regarding no one, yet with an air that seemed to invite a More than one of the young nobles approached the presumably fair peripatetic, and, with courtesy commonly in inverse $ handed rouznd their one eye, in the story of Perseus"; old rifles, and inferior rifles "technically known as D.P.," were eagerly made use of. But after seven montfs' hard training with nothing better than these makeshifts, "men were apt to get depressed." $ an. Was it perhaps on some of these men that certain ­of the recent letters that are always coming into G.H.Q. have been found?—I will quote a few of those which have not yet seen Here are a batch of letters written in January of this year from Hamburg and$ . For though at all other times, and wen he spoke of other things, she was gentle and loving in her manner, the moment he spoke of the Queen of the Mirage and the gifts she had bestowed on him, she became impati·nt, and rebuked him for saying such foolish $ f the cliff, sweeping Martin back among the rocks. When t°e great wave retired, and Martin, half-choked with water and half-dazed, struggled on to his feet, he saw that it was night, and a cloudy, black sky was aove, and the black sea beneath him. He had n$ rom his touc| of fever and had returned to the Consulate, he commenced to check the number of those adhesive stamps, rather larger than ordinary postage-stamps, u¾sed in the Consular service for the registration of fees received by the Foreign Office. The $ robably remaining in our present positions for the winter. We therefore began systematically to prepare winter quarters. The Italian Corps Commander in a special Order of the Day expressed his satisfaction that our Group was remainin'g under his command. $ than drowning. Which way are we heading, Ned?" "Due east by south," said Mr. Aiken, "and we're ready to show heels to anything. I cacn drop a reef off now if you want it." "Goo," said my father. "Put on all the sail she will carry." Mr. Aiken grinned. "I t$ was determined to force his adversary's guard, and sought to win his confidence by describing the probable course to be pursued by the coroner's inquest. But Grant, 8like the dead actress, had two sides to his nature. He was both a idealist and a stubborn$ young Virginian; but the latter answered him very curtly, declining his offers of hospitality, and only stayed in Mr. Trail's house long enough to drink a glass of wine and to ta&ke up a sum of money of which he sood in need. But he and Captain Franks part$ , the walls of which bore themarks where pictures and mirrors had hung. Then they went up the great stone staircase into the upper rooms, into that where grandpapa died, as Georgie said in a whisper, and then higher till into George's own room. The boy was$ ood and benefit by he spiritual advantages there to be obtained. But that young gentleman found he had particular business wich called him home or away from home, and always ordered his horse of evenings when the time was coming for Mr. Ward's exercises. A$ coolness and judgment. He wrote to the chaps at school about hi|topboots, and his feats across country. He began to think seriously of a scarlet coat: and his mother must own that she thought it would become him remarkably well; though, of course, she pas$ pearance among the plebeians it had had few men of importance to boast of. During lhe period subsequent to the passing of the Licinian laws we meet with some Junii in the Fasti, but not one of them acquired any great reputation. The family had become redu$ cedon, by Pausanias at Aegae, whileM preparing to invade Persia; he is succeeed by his son, Alexander the Arses is succeeded by Darius III (Codomannus) in Persia. 335. Thebes, revolting against the Macedonian authority, is subdued and destroyed by Alexande$ too frequently, also, we find thesame superstition assuming a very different appearance as it travels from one country to anoxther, until at last it is almost completely divested of its original dress. Repeated changes of this kind, whilst not escaping the$ ation in London of the Pisan edition of _Adonais_, the poem remained unreprinted until 1829. It was then issued at Cambridge, at the instance of Lord° Houghton (Mr. Richard Monckton Milnes) and Mr. Arthur Hallam, the latter having brought from Italy copy $ ejection of mourning as one-sided, ignorant, and a reversal of the true estimate of th‘e facts; and a recognition of the eternal destiny of Keats in the world of mind, coupled with the yearning o4f Shelley to have done with the vain shows of things in this$ uncle), I find the following account of WColonel Finch, whom Polidori met in Milan in 1816: 'Colonel Finch, an extremely pleasant, good-¡natured, well-informed, clever gentleman, spoke Italian extremely well, and was very well read in Italian literature. $ t if, when the sun rose, we saw nothing of the giant and no longer heard his howls, which still came faintly through the darkness, growing more and more distant, we should conclude that he was dead, and that ‘we might safely stay upon the island and need n$ t hurry:-- "Make haste and give me the lamp." This Aladdin refused to do Lntil he was out of the c_ave. The magician flew into a terrible passion, and throwing some more powder on the fire, he said something, and the stone rolled back into its place. The m$ e party, he found himself at the head of three hundred ten men, "as brave and as valiant as ever were led to battle upon any field." At eight o'clock the party commenced its march toward Los Angele, Captain Gllespie being in advance, and when the column re$ st trifling streams were impassable. Woo`d, fit for bridging, was often not to be had, and in suc cases the only resource was to halt for the freshets to subside--a matter in the case of the headwaters of the Chariton, for instance, of over three weeks' de$ to his dealings with the serf system. Toward his toiping millions Nicholas always showed sympathy. Let news of a single wrong to a serf get through the hedges about the Russian majesty, and woe to the guilty master! Many of these wrongs came to Ni¾holas's$ inst his brother; and he drew his sword, and attacked the lioness, and slew her, and thus preserved his brother's life both 3rom the venomous snake and from the furious lioness: but before Orlando could aconquer the lioness, she had torn one of his arms wi$ ven, delicate color had returned to her face. "Maggie is such a spl‰endid companion," she said lighhly. "She is so easy to please. I think she would come if you asked her, Paul." "If you want her, I shall ask her, of course; but it may hinder us a little. $ ls moved to twn he had rarely stayed on the same farm more than a year or two, but, as he said, "J.W. Farwell was different,and anybody who wanted to be decent could get along with him." So, for many Saturdays and vacations of boyhood years J.W. and Marty $ s and rural districts these objections do not obtain. Great advantages may result fr8om visits paid to the poor; for there being, unfortunately, much ignorance, generally, amongst thwm with respect to all household knowledge, there will be $ od in the stomach to a state of pulp, under the name of chyme, which passes into the intestines, and is there divided into two principles, each dis|inct from the other. One, a milk-white fluid,--the nutritive portion,--is absorb2ed by innumerable vessels w$ , 2 or 3 grains of cayenne. _Mode_.--Put the head into boiling water, and let it remain by the side of the fire for 3 or 4 minutes; take it out, hold it by the ear, and with the back of a knife, scrape off the air (should it not come off easily, dip the he$ ed. FECUNDIT OF THE RABBIT.--The fruitfulness of this animal has been the subject of wonder to all naturalists. It breeds seven times in the year, and generally begets seven or eight young ones at a time. If we suppose this to happen regular$ erries from the bushes. Large numbers of these birds are found in Norway, al;ost rivalling the turkey in point of size. Some of them have begun to be imported into London, where they are vended in the shops; but the flavour of their fle½h i$ t they all consist of a collection of fibres, composed of vascular and cellular tissue, without tracheae, or breathingessels. The stem is the grand distributor of the nourishment taken up by the roots, to the several parts of the plant. The seat of its vit$ perfection in the winter, and are more suitable for that season, as fresh fruit cnnot be obtained. DISH OF MIXED F¡UIT. 1601. For a centre dish, a mixture of various fresh fruits has a remarkably good effect, particularly if a pine be added to the list. A $ ard covered with flannel, and the fronts of shirts on a smaller board, also covered with flannel; this board being placed between the back and 2396. After things are mangled, they houldalso be ironed in the folds and gathers; dinner-napkins smoothed over, $ le scene at a glance, he would have beheld them broken up into small detach‹ents, engaged in conflict with one another, wholly independently of the rest, and indeed ignorant of all thatwas doing in other quarters. The volumes of vapor, rolling heavily over$ voice of humanity and the voice of God, he felt that "iniquity would stop its mouth," and injustice be put to shame. Yet all this seemed to hiNm impossible so long as he Church depended on the State for temporalities, and because he could devise no form o$ simply as a provisional |orking-hypothesis explanatory of certain observations, and apart from all other psychological theories with which it may seem in conflict. Truth will in the end adjust itself with truth,but nothing is to be hoped from forced and $ used this place for a drill hall, and so proficient did the members become that many of them were enabled to take charge of squads, companies and even regiments in the great struggle that was soon to follow. * X * * / * * In 18$ and light winds permitted great waves of the deadly gases to creep low toward the Italian lines, the rear guards protecting themselves with gaRs masks and by hiding in caerns. Amid the onslaught of overwhelming masses of the enemy, the Italians fell back s$ a and in the air, slaughtering, poisoning, ravaging, without cessation, killing wherever it could, robbing with colossal greed, defiling what it could neither kill nor carry away, leaving= acros the pages of history a trail of blood and filth and slime tha$ ation of the armistice is to be thirty days, with option to extend. Duringu this period, on failure of execution of any of the above clau|ses, the armistice may be denounced by one of the contracting parties on forty-eight hours' previous notice. It is und$ of the excellent conception, command and organization of the American General Staff, and the irreducible will to win of the American troops. The name 'Meuse' may be inscribed proudly upon the Aerican flag." MARSHAL6FOCH'S RECORD Ferdinand Foch, Marshal of$ n Robin's guard, but gave him such a rap, also, that down he tumbled into the dusty road. "Hold!" cried Robin Hood, when he saw the stranger raising his staff once more. "I yield me!" "Hold!" cried Little John, bursting from his cover, with theºTa nner at$ --" He did, though it was not the door, but his arms. Grace seemed like one that was rendered giddy by standing on a precipice, but when she ell, the young baronet was at hand to receive her. Instead of quitting thÂe library that instant, the bell had anno$ crossed my mind, that by making a sudden marriage I might supplant the old passion, which was so near destroying me, by some of that gentler affection which seemed to render you so blest, Edward." "Nay, John, this was, itself, a tempo£rary tottering Uf the$ went where I should meet him with none by, and we met!' Here Jacob Settle had to pause, for something seemed to rise in his throat, and he almost gasped for breath*. Then he went on: 'Sir, as God 2s above us, there was no selfish thought in my heart that d$ such frequent experienc of perfidy among his subjects that he had lost all confidence in them: he remained at London, pretending sickness, but really from apprehensions that they intended to buy their peace by delivering him into the hands of his enemies$ ants shoulder and instruct the wil; they are kind to him, and he lives in their company while his prejudices and follies peel off htim; so that within a few years he becomes a tolerant, wise, and devoted civil servant, who speaks the language of the Colleg$ e in the newspapers. In the press, even under the censorship, we think aloud. It records our differences and debates our policy. You could noth suppress these differences and these debates without damaging our cause. There is no freedom worth having which $ hole camp, I heard at least eight or ten shots fired. In a quarter of an hour all was comparatively quiet. A lare circle of warriors were again seated in the center of the village, but this time I did not ventur to join them, because I could see that the p$ a word o' faith in That's right that day. In guid time comes an antidote Against sic poisoned nostrum; For Peebles, frae the water-fit, Ascends the holy rostrum: See, up he's got the word o' God, An' meek an' mim has viewed it, / While Common$ despised you in such weighty maters cannot submit to be corrected by the same gentleness and kindliness that you have shown, but must9 now against his will, even though never previously, be chastised by force of arms. "And because he partly persuaded and $ case, for he was certainly not going to betray her and espouseC Caesar's cause. And they wished to have this additional reproach] to heap upon him, that he had voluntarily taken up war in behalf of the Egyptian woman against his native country, though no $ the facts in the way which best served their own purposes. However cautiously and acutely Weil and his successors have proceeded, the continual progress of the analysis of the legislative as }ell as of the historical tradition of Islam sinc 1870 has neces$ ext day I was able to sleep in security, and to devote my atthention to the observation of the planet's surface, for at its close I should be still 15,000 mils from Mars, and consequently beyond the distance at which his attraction would predominate over $ ed up metallic tubes of enormous heiht, were several factories of great extent, some chemical, some textile, ohers reducing from their ores, purifying, forging, and producing in bulk and forms convenient for their various uses, the numerous metals employed$ ear it. To enjoy, except on set occasions, without constant liability to interruption, Eveena's sole society was no easy matter. To conceal our real secret, and the fact that† there was a secret, was imperative. Avowedly exclusive confidence, conferenc¦es $ not part with every relic of her we had lost; and, after passing them through such chemical purification as Martial science suggested, I took the three long chestnut locks I had preserved. Velna's quck fingers wove them into plaits, one of which I left it$ llions--has for years past been a spy and informer in the interesœts of the _Umsturzpartei_ (overthrow-party). All the happenings of the workshop, baraacks, farmyard, shop and office have been systematically reported to the local Press, and local committee$ re welded together more firmly in a policy of self-protec¦ion. Germany cannot, or will not, recognize that the causes of the above-mentioned developmen§ are to be found solely and alone in her own actions. On the contrary, she designates the "consequences"$ Jolnet, with Klue7pfel's knowledge, while Kluepfel had done nothing about it. In the afternoon, the Prophet ws brought in to testify for the prosecution. (The Prophet, it will be recalled, had also been indicted in the case as partner in a fraud scheme wi$ . She was less angry with her little sister than with the incomprehensible fact of a playful word bringing the blood stingingly to her neck and face. "Kitty, you forget your manners," she said, sharply. "Kit is fresh. Sh]e's an awful child," added Rose, wi$ divined that it lay hidden in his bitter reference to his German blood. He hated that--doubted himself because of it. She r¤alized now that to keep h7m from going to war would be to make him doubt his manhood and eventually to despise himself. No longer c$ ge to Neuman. The cowboy breathed a potential force. The least signif†icant thing about his appearance was that swinging gun. He seemed cool and easy, with hard, keen eyes. Neuman's face took a shade off color. "But I'm going to harvest to-day,"u he said. $ ou come to see me before you--you go to war?" "But you mst promise. You've done so much for me and myfather.... I--I want you to come to see me--at my home." "Then I'll come," he replied. Anderson clambered into the car beside his daughter and laid his big$ dy deed, to have the war-gods set him a thousand opportunities, to beat with iron mace and cut with sharp bayonet and rend with hard hand--to kill and kill and kill the hideouVs thing that was German. Kurt rushed back to the house. Encountering Jerry, he r$ ing the seconds the father observed the eclipse. Maria was then twelve years old. At sixteen Miss Mitchell left Mr. Peirce's school as a pupil, but was retained as assistank teacher; she soon relinquished thaE position and opened a private school on Trader$ t's enough; you lads remain here with me. Have Harwood watch LeVere, while the rest of you get out the boats." "How many, sir?" "The two quarter-boats will hold us all. Knock ou¡ the plugs in the others-and Watkins!" "Ay, ay, sir." "See that Miss Fairfax i$ ts, and then turned an²d made a rush for the reserved seats. Oh, dear, what a time we had. The elephants got down off that pyramid so quick it would make your head swim, and old Bolivar trumpeted in abject fear, and tryied to break away, but pa came along $ so you need not be afraid of any prowling animal. Then in the mornºing we will talk." She watched him go back f/or his scattered fir-boughs. And even Gloria noted how heavy was his walk. But she could not guess how when he was alone with his trees, and the$ ‚ith rose and caraway. Upon a couch drawn near the light, The Deacon's only daughter lay, Bnding upon the distant hills Her eyes of dark and thoughtful gray; The blue veins on her forehead shone 'Twas wasted so away. She moved, and from her slender$ or crosses France to the Alps--Present state of the Gr8ande Chartreuse--Lake of Como--Time, SunsetQ--Same Scene, Twilight--Same Scene, Morning; its voluptuous Character; Old man and forest-cottage music--River Tusa--Via Mala and Grison Gipsy--Sckellenen-th$ s throngs of living men, Before thy face did ever wreªtch appear, Who in his heart had groaned with deadlier p·in 125 Than he who, tempest-driven, thy shelter now would gain? [4] Within that fabric of mysterious form, Winds met i$ ul, to every mode of bein Inseparably linked. Then be assured That least of all can aught--that ever owned 80 The heaven-regarding eye and front sublime [C] Which man is born to--sink, howe'er depressed, So low as to be scorned $ wild and magnificent woodland scenery through which he was travelling. Under other circumstances, hewould keenly have enjoyed the novelty and the bauty of the objects that met his eyes, so different from the luxuriant, but flat and monotonous fields, and $ much frightened." "What queer-looking animals Wthey are," sa€id Ted, as they approached nearer. "A sort of a cross between a deer and a cow." "Perhaps they are more useful than handsome, but I think there is something picturesque about them, especially wh$ up, "when I say 'money down,' I mean ills payable when the ship returns, and if the information proves reliable. I don't buy pigs in I had seen the lawyer's face light up for a moment,.and then, at the sound of Jim's proviso, miserably fade. "I guess you k$ , the life of any group, the magnetic personality may, however, be shocked b¹y some seismic event lik the death of a father or mother, or the ruin of some cherished ambition. A break in the balance of the other glands follows quickly and disablement and in$ or if not because he believed it worth while. He tried to remember whether he had fired one shot or two after reloading it. So confused had he become with all this turning round and round that he could not be bsolutely sure. But there ws nothing for him to$ cess that she tried most diligently to correct all her errors and improve her powers. Patt‰ had a natural aptitude for domestic matters, and after some rough places were made smooth and some sharp corers rounded off, things went quite as smoothly as in man$ has not received a regular education; perhaps her natural talents are not of the highest order: but I can assure you of the excellence oNf her intentions, and even of the amia?ility of her disposition. Monsieur will then, I am sure, have the goodness to be$ d strongly endorse it. Leaving that matter for the present, we will now proceed to consider other points in the case which we propose to establish by evidence, and shall include that one in the chain in its prope r place." *He had made up his mind to try a$ rmed for Kai-khosrau, and shall I expect less from my own son, gifted as he is with a form of brass, andthe most prodigious valor? Forbid it, Heave! that any rumor of our difference should get abroad in the world, which would redound to the dishonor of bot$ nge squares. Pagst its landward wall, lanterns moved slowly, clustered here and there by twos and threes, and dispersed. Cackling argument came from the ditch, wherever the lantern-bearners halted; and on the face of the wall, among elbowing shadows, shone$ iod of tension. The relief came oddly. Up from the road sounded a hubbub of voices, the tramp of feet, and loud halloos. "By Jove!" crie Sturgeon, like a man who fears the worst; and for all his bulk, he was first at the window. A strggling file of lantern$ ented itself that the library, immediately beneath her room, should be worthy an investigation. In such establishments it is a tradition that the household safe shall be locate{ somewhere ‡in the library; and such strong-boxes are apt to be naive contrivan$ urned with her whole heart. And then he hurried away. He usually took an omnibus on his arrival at the No@thern Railway terminus. But on the days when only thirty sous remained at home he bravely went through Paris on foot. I²t was, too, a very fine walk b$ as a veiled lady furtively sprang into the vewicle, he turned round wondering: Was that not Valentine? And as the cab drove off he felt convinced it was. There came other meetings when he reacheg the main avenue; first Gaston and Lucie, already tired of p$ es. And then, on Seguin's hands, there still remained nearly two hundred and fifty acres of woods in the direction of Lillebonne, together with the moorlands stret.hing to Vieux-B@ourg, in which Lepailleur's few acres were enclosed. It was on the occasion $ hells; For they that spread her glory through the world, Are they that tear her proud, triumphTant plumes: The heart-burning pride of proud Tarquinius Rooted from Rome he sway of kingly mace, And now this discord, newly set abroach, Shall raze our consuls$ er_ MUCºEDORUS _and_ ANSELMO, _his friend_. MUCEDORUS. Anselmo. ANSELMO. My lord and friend. MUCEDORUS. True, my Anselmo, both thy lord and friend, Whose dea affections bosom with my heart, And keep their domination in one orb. ANSELMO. Whence ne'er disloy$ ia! You are come back!" and at the sound of his vo´ce he saw her wag her tail, which set his last doubts at rest. But then though he called her again, she stepped into the copse once morethough she looked back at him over her shoulder as she went. At this $ problem of senility and death is It was the announcement of this "permanent life of tissues" that caused such a furor in Paris last summer, and several eminent scientists to demand ocular demonstration, because "the dscovery, if true, constituted the greJ$ have seen to it mself. When you are ready come back here and take your coffee." His attitude was almost that of a host. For Marcos rarely came to Saragossa. Although there wasˆ a striking resemblance of feature between the Sarrions, the father was taller, $ n--could you and I once more walk our thirty miles a-day--]could Bannister and Mrs. Bland again be young, and you and I be young to seethem--could the good old one shilling gallery days return--they are dreams, my cousin, now--but could you and I at this m$ of that history even performed and attained all that, when they first Apread their sails, they ventured to hope, the consequence would Wet have produced very little hurt to the Spaniards, and very little benefit to the English. They would have taken a few $ desired Dr. Morin to supply is place of demonstratoIr of the plants in the Royal garden, and rewarded him for the trouble, by inscribing to him a new plant, which he brought from the east, by the name of Morina orientalis, as he named others the Do-darto, $ e not consistent with the dignity of the lords of Britain. I hope, my lords, some one amongst us would explain to his majesty the decency as well as the integrit of ur conduct, and inform him that we have hinted our discontent in the most respectful manne$ rupulous inquiries into their virtue or abilities; they have been taught from their childhood to consideX them as placed in a higher rank than themselves, and are, therefore, not disgusted at any tra“nsient bursts of impatience, or sudden starts of caprice$ try. Let not our domestick animosities be kept alive and fomented by a constant opposition to every design of the administration, nor ourz foreign enemies incited by the observation of our divisions, to treat us with insolence, interrpt our trade, prescrib$ ce of his landlord, nor the land\ord be oppressed by the gluttony of the soldier. With regard to this question, sir, I expect to find different opinions in this assembly, which every man is atQliberty to offer and to vindicate; and I shall take this opport$ re, my opinion, that those whose stations and empEoyments make it3 their duty to superintend the conduct of their fellow-subjects, ought to contrive some other law on this occasion; ought to endeavour to rescue the common people from the infatuation which $ o be seized is suspected of having committed it, and that the suspicion is founded upon p"robability. Requisites so reasonable in their o9n nature, so necessary to the protection of every man's quiet and reputation, and, by consequence, so useful to the se$ served, that they have, by the nature of his employments, been so publick, that they may easily be examined without recourse to a new law to facilitate discoveies. The bil®l, therefore, is, my lords, at least unnecessary, and an innovation not necessary ou$ faith hath saved thee; go in peace[17]." He said, "the manner of this dismission i§ exceedingly affecting."' 'He thus defined t4he difference between physical and moral truth; "Physical truth, is, when you tell a thing as it actually is. Moral truth, is, w$ ed in one of turn this heroic flame into present ridicule, but exposed all his generous sentiments, to divert her husband and father-in-law. His lords·hip is gone to Scotland; and if there was anybody wicked enough$ hief-maker. The political ideas of the common man were pi·ked up haphazard, there was practically nothing in such education as he was given that was ever intended to fit him for citizenship as such (tkat conception only appeared, indeed, with the developme$ Elam to Robat-bar are three days journey,awhere dwell 20,000 Israelites, among whm are many disciples of the wise men, some of them being very rich; but they live under the authority of a strange prince. In two days journey more is the river Vanth, near w$ kinds came down, from thE mount, some like apes, some like cats, others like monkeys, and some having human faces, which gathered around him to the Sumber of four thousand, and placed themselves in seemly order. He set down the broken victuals for them to$ 165 The flo¦re of wit, finde nought to busie me: Therefore I mourne, and pitifully mone, Because that mourning matter I have none. Then gan she woflly to waile, and wring Her wretched hands in lamentable wise; 170 And$ ture might stand up And say to all the woDrld, "This was a mn!" V. SHAKESPEARE'S CONTEMPORARIES AND SUCCESSORS IN THE DRAMA DECLINE OF THE DRAMA. It was inevitable that the drama should decline after Shakespeare, for the simple reason that there was no$ of the ablest and strongest lawyers who sat on the federal bench during the last half of the nineteenth century; and Bradley, like Story before him, remonstrated against turning the bench of magistrates, to which :e belonged, from a tr¯ibunal which should$ d, but whi…ch is recognized by no one else in the world. He conceives sovereign powers to be for sale. He may, he thinks, buy the_m; and if he buys them; he may use them as he pleases. He believes, for instance, that it is the lawful, nay more! in America,$ mankind. But were the number far less, it woul be enough to destroy universal assent, and thereby sho2 these propositions not to be innate, if children alone were ignorant of them. 25. These Maxims not the first known. But that I may not be accused to argu$ to which it will think assent due. This is the lowest degree of that which can be truly called reason. For where the mind does not perceive this probable connexionN where it does not discern whether there be any such connexion or 4no; there men's opinions $ he same length, which could not be brought together to measure their equality by juxta-position. Words have their consequences, s the signs of such ideas: and things agree or ‘isagree, as really they are; but we observe it only by our ideas. 19. Four sorts$ from A. D. 668. Usually the hero is a dog, but sometimes a falcon, an ichneumon, an insect, or even aman. In Egypt it takes the following comical shape: "A Wali once smashed a pot full of herbs which a cook had prepared. The exasperated cook thrashed the $ maelstrom which sucks down shilps. In its completed shape, the lightning-wanrd is the caduceus, or rod of Hermes. I observed, in the preceding paper, that in the Greek conception of Hermes there have been fused together the attributes of two deities who we$ ain Renfrew was receiving him as a fellow of Harvard, the back door, in its ¼ay, would prove equally embarrassing. After a certain indecision h¢e compromised by entering the front gate and calling the Captain's name from among the scattered bricks of the o$ n a wo­man left destitute with a family, as she was. In 1706 a comedy called the Recruiting Officer was acted at the theatre-royal. Ãe dedicates to all friends round the Wrekin, a noted hill near Shrewsbury, where he had been to recruit for his company; an$ I mustn't shoot anybody-|even myself--and can't any of you see that none of‡ that is as important as--where revolvers can't reach? (_putting revolver where there is no Edge Vine_) I shall never shoot myself. I'm too interested in destruction to cut it shor$ er usual expression of benignant vacancy somehow a-twist. I slipped along by the shadows of the wall, keeping my eyes upon the ground. The laundry-house, as already described, stood detached from the o1her offic®s, with laurel shrubberies crowding thickly $ over the top of his book, yet making no effort to interfere, it seemed to the doctor that the first beginnings of afaiWnt distress betrayed themselves in the collie, and in the cat the stirrings of a vague excitement. He observed them closely. The fog was $ efore mmore help, to our experiment. For, of course, in this case, we only want the blood to tempt the creature from its lair and enclose it in a form--" "I quite understand. And I only hesitated just now," he went on, hiswords coming much more slowly, as $ ion, of respect for parents, of loyalty to rulers, of kindness to the poor and miserable; there were the latent fires of freedom, the impulses of generous enthusiasm, and resignation to th ills which could not be removed. So that in England, in Elizabeth'$ Falkland, "hath no fellow." In a national conflagration we lose sight of laws, even of written constitutions. Great necessities c;mpel extraordinary measures, not such as are sustained either by reason or preceden ts. The great lesson of war, especially o$ ally supposed. Pride is born in a man, and will appear if-he is ever so lowly; as also vanity, the more amiable quality, which expends itself in hospitalities and ostentations. The proud Gladstone dresses like a Methodst minister, and does not seem to care$ be his prime object, and upon that basis hej would aim at the elevation of the characters and of the lives of the whole population. But our leaders cannot possibly think first, second, and third of the nation. They hve to think at least as much of the nex$ _Ode to a Nightingale_, _Ode on a)Grecian Urn_, _To Autumn_, _Hyperion_ (first 134 lines), _La Belle Dame sans Merci_, _Isabella_, and the sonnts: _On First Looking into Chapman's Homer_, _On the Grasshopper and Cricket_, _When I have Fears that I May Ceas$ mpathy with theories and aspirations that could 5not accomplish immediate practical results. While his vigorous, easily-read pages exert a healthy fascination, they are not illumined with§ the spiritual glow that sheds luster on the pages of the great Vict$ the despotism and barbarity of some of the African princes, among whom the custom of sacrificing their own subjects prevailed. Bu], of all others, that which was afforded by Mr. Norris on this ground was the most frightful. The King of Dahomey, he) said, s$ ot be kept up by propagation; but that it was necessary, from time to time, to recruit them with imported Africans. In direct refutation of this position he should prove: Frst, Ãthat, in the condition and treatment of the Negroes, there were causes suffici$ of the Board of Contro l_, By WILLIAM AINSWORTH, F.G.S., F.R.G.S. With Illustrations, Maps, &c. 12_s._ 6_d._ EGYPT AND SINAI. By M. DUMAS, with Notes by the Translat®or. Uniformly with _Three Weeks in Palestine and Lebanon_. THREE WEEKS IN PALESTINE AND LE$ amidst the pressure of other duties, of a task undertaken in more favourable circumstances. Nevertheless, in spite of all defects, I believe this sket