o, ho, ho!" "I'm going to be a performer and ear pink pants, ain't I?" "A performer? Oh, that's too good. Yes, my son, you sˆhall be a performer. How would you like to be a juggler?" "Then, I think I'll let you juggle the ig offeepot in the cook tent fo$ did." That Xafternoon, as Phil related his experiences to the dressing tent, he included the barnyard circus, which set the performers Phil felt a little sore and sti.f after his knockout and his long ride i~nce in the District, ther… was a section which seeme¨ to have been intended for precisely such ca$ could never afterward remember opening the door of the log house. It seemed to him that he brt through it like a battering-ram, took the kitchen in two strides, and hurled himself against t‚e sturdy home-made door which led into the living-room. This chhec$ yers steaming at h¬gh speed could cover the great area in which the submarine might come to the surface. She would, naturally, sXelect the dark hours for emergence, as being the period of very limited range of vision for those searching for her. RIn6confin$ who must have contrived this plot against me," exclaimed Maxine, ap if on a sudden thought. "It is said that 'Hell hath n³ fury like a woan scorned.' But what of a man who has been scorned--by a woman? He knew I wanted all my strength for to-night--the ni$ ng, and Mademoiselle should go, yet i should not be the Monsieur she expects, but another person whom she would nt care to admit?" I knew of what she was °thinking, and of whom. "There's no fear of that. No fear of any kind," I answered. She too¹ off my c$ I was well punished for he deed. Believe me! Have you evežr had to hitch-hike, sleep in open fields, or hop a freight train? It took mesfive daysBand five nights. The longest five days of my life, and I was only sixteen at the time. But I did get there. Ti$ usations which throw the burden on sytems of education, conditions o society, cheap books, levity and superficialty of readers, and analogous caus3es. None of these can be a VER‚ CAUSA; though each may have had its special influence in determining the prod$ ght for her by some one that wasn't--that ws--" "By her husband who has left her," said Dwight sadly. "Is that what it is, papa?" Di asked alertly. For a wonder, she was there; had †een there the greater part of the day--most of the time staring, nascinat$ utifully. There was no need to make him angry, she reflected, before she must. Hehad not yet gone into the parlour--had not yetd asked for his mail. It was a warm dusk, moonless, windless. The sounds of the XvilÂlage street came in--laughter, a touch at a $ in it, one end resting on the edge for lighting. These lamps gave a good light, and were in “general use a8mong the slaves. Tallo candles were a luxury, never seen except in the "great houses" of tQhe planters. The only light for outdoors used by the slav$ master's family, but they were consi«dered a wholesome and nutritious food for the slaves Cabbage and yams, a large sweet potato, coarser than the kin generally used by bthe whites and not so delicate in flavor, were also raised for the servants in liberal$ hment wh“ich the great philosopher had or him. It may be worth remarking, that this writer, although he speaks of Faustus in his biography of Agrippa, makes no mention of his ever having been a friend or scholarof the latter. In several o‹ the old stories $ , Doctor? Sh‰'s subject to measles. Perhaps it's the beginning of scarlet fever. But if it'ssmallpox I want to now. No good ever come of smoothing things over." The doctor smiled at Ann. "It isn't smallpox this time, Mrs. Sykes." "Did you look at them spo$ tumn breeze, melachly, earth-scented. It stirre&d the curtains at Mary's window; rustled through the great bowlful of crimson leaves upon Esther's writing table and softly stirred the dark hair of the girl as she sat with >er face hidden in her curved arms$ e, those pri¯oners must have been the hungriest lot of men that ever Gaid down their arms. There were (ess than sixty of them, and they drew rations fr about 1,200. However, they were fed; and we had the consolation of realizing that victory, like some oth$ genuine Old Master at a glance, and she knows a lot about diamonds--her father was in that trade at one tim ,9out in South Africa." "Clever woan to hnve," observed Allerdyke; "knows all your business, "All the surface business," said Fullaway, "naturally!$ d Lydenberg fell--just here--right on this very paveme-nt." He pulled Allerdyke up in a narrow part of the old street, jointed to the flags,{ and then to the house behinœ them--an ancient, ramshackle place, the doors and windows of which were boarded up th$ nce, and twisted his chair round to the hearth. "This advice, then?" he asked quietly. "I'm free now." "¾Aye!" said Allerdyke. He sat reflecting for a moment, and then turnd to his manag3r with a sudden question. "Have you heard±all this about my cousin Ja$ want to arrest somebody. An inmate--surely none of my servants--" "Nothing to do with servants," interrupted the chief "I said an inmate. Pray don't be alarmed We want a young lady who is known to you as Miss Mary Slade." The manageress got up as quickly a$ o urged upon t0he Colonel+that The Hague Tribunal be made the basis of the judicial organization, but that it be extanded and improved to meet the new conditions. I shall have something further to say on this subjPect. Reverting now to the draft of article$ the lateral metacarpals remaining, a°d the antlers are without a brow-tine, but like _Cervus_ it has an incomplete vomer, and unlike der in general, the antlers are set laterally< on the frontal bone, insteadgof more or less vertically, and the nasal bones$ nd takei another look,2and so on until at last they break into a steady Prun for the cliffs. At least thirty sheep were observe at the water, and none came before 9:30 A.M. or later than 2:30 P.M., most coming down between 12:00 M. and 1:00 P.M. This habit$ that the bone, muscle, teeth, blood, etc., may be reduced to a few chemical elements. In fact, the human body is built up wit# 13 of the 70O elements, nªamely: oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, chlorine, fluorine, carbon, phosphorus sulphur, calcium, potassium, $ ou may hurt rhe frog. Tie the frog upon the board in such aI way that the foot will just come over the glass in the apeture. Pull carefully the pieces of cotton tied to the toe{s, so as to spread out the membrane between them over the glass. Fasten$ convulsions, and sometimes death8. Nerve Cell. A minute round and ashen-gray cell fund in the brain and other nervous centers. Nerve Fiber. An exceedingly slender threa+ of nervous tissue. Nicotine. The pois¾onous and stupefying oil extracted from tobacco.$ againÃt the obsession of the prediction and kept repeating: "No! No! No! I cannot slay them!" and then e thougt: "Still, supposing I desired to?--" and he feared that the devil mi#ght inspire him with this desire. During three months, his distracted mother$ and behind the eye; back pale brown; breast, blue; throat marked with white; wings with white tips to the featers and a small patch of bronze; tail short, tip white; feet, dull re(. The evening “and night were 15th FeBruary. At 6.5 a.m. followed a line of$ l from you, Lwho take such a generous interest in­ my con»cerns, that worst part of my griefs, which communication and complaint cannot relieve. But to whom can I unbosom myself but to you: when the man who ought to be my protector, as he has brought upon $ r steward,I would regularly account. 'As to clothes, I have particularly two suits, which, having been only in a manner tried on, would answer for any present occasion. Jeels I have of my grandmother's, which want only neew-setting: another set I ihave, w$ were decent. They were all highly delighted with his performance; but his greatest admirers were, Mrs. Sinclair, Miss Partington, and himself. To me he appeared to have a gret deal of affectation. Mr. Tourville's conversation ªnd ddress£ are insufferabl$ cal, unnatural stuff that can be conceived, and wKhich can only serve to show the insincer­ity of the complime¸ter, and the ridiculous light in which the complimented appears in his ees, if he supposes a woman capable of relishing the romantic absurdities $ ned eagerly, clapping their hands now and then, and at the end of every story asking for more. But Eric as lost in wonder. The child½en thought the stories were not true,--justfairy stories told them by a grandmother. And Nora had evidenty long ago given u$ most a man in thou½ght. He seemed to live whole years in;those few days that 5he talked with his mother. It was here that the fearful fact dawned upon him as it never had before. _He was a slave_! He had no control over ®his own person or actions, but he b$ -ld have induced Mr. Nelson to part with him." "Yes, missus, I knows all dat. Mark has been the fathfulest sarvant dat his massa ever had. But ye see, on Satrday night when he cum down to see me, little Fanny was berry sick, and I had been Nut washin' all $ sounds to him In his chains, a fettered slave?" * * * * * [Illustration: AUNT JUDY'S HUSB‘AND CAPTURED See page 133 AUNT JUDY'S STORY: A STORY FROM REAL LIFE. BY MATILDA G. THOMPSON. "Look! lo+k! mother, there comesold$ ilrdren. He did not seem simply to find her amusing© as her Uncle Bertrand did. She was always conscious `that behind Uncle Bertrand's most serious expression there was lurking a faint smile as he watched her, but 0this visitor looked at her in a different$ you don't know that he is Prince Fairyfoot?" "What!" said the first nightingale--"the Kig of Stumpinghame's son, who was born with small feet?" "Yes," aid tho second. "And the poor child as lived in the forest, keeping the swineherd's pigs ever since. And $ l into it, from Spenser's "Faerie Queene," may be some guide as to the period when the comedy was :irst proSuced.--_Collier. [The play has now, for the frst time, been placed in its true chronological rank.] [421] See note to "Gammer Gurton's Needle" [iii.$ "'Bliged to you, Swing. I wish all /the gents paid up as prompt "Oh, you needn't be surprised," chipped in the re]ady Racey. "Swing's a fair-minded boy. He'll do what's right every time, once you show him where he's wrog. Yeah. S¸y, Bill, has Nebraska Jon$ big cities "Yeah," chippd in Swing Tunstall, staring hard at Peaches, "I'll bet you a hundred even they ain't more than one or two such experts in the whole territory." "Whadda you hink, Peahes?" inquired Racey. "Swing may "be right," said Peaches, preserv$ second mother-tongue. "I am of Paris. If you had not been French I should not have dared to hint toSyou that a dlace at this table might For a few minutes they talked together in the ceremonious style for whic¸h the French language is the perfect mdium, an$ geant had a pattern B tunic which w+uld meet round my middle. My young men must be devilish slim nowadays. I hav been onto the A.-G. by 'phone. He pretends to be derisory, but I am convineed that really he is desperately jealous. He would love to go too. Y$ boration, it had been long enough to produce a great change in our relations to one another. For there is n‹o frienDdship so intiˆate and satisfying as that engendered by community of work, and none--betwee# man and woman, at any rate--so frank and wholeso$ ircumstances conjvince me that ther has ben a deliberate plot; and I am waiting--in no spirit of Christian patience, I can tell you--to lay my hand on the wretch who has done this." "What are you waiting for? I asked. "I am waiting for the inevitable," he $ schovols--one for infants, in the un_christened street near the church, and two others for boys and girls, in Lancaster-road. The average day attendance is--boys, 250; girls, 220; infants, 240. The average attendance on the Sunay is-- boys, 250; girls, 32$ rn, and formerly used in a Blackburn chapel, is placed within anarchway in the eastern gallery. It is a modeately fair§ instrument, and is decently played, but it is not good enough for the place, and it is quite time to se]l it to some other chapel, and g$ f the pi\ture being relieved +y a few thirsty souls, looking plaintively at a landlord, who sKtood with a rolling eye upon door step, anxious to officiate as the "Good Samaritan," but afraid to exercise his benevolence. After this there would surely, w tho$ have actually seen kingfishers there, or my father has d0escribed them so accurately to me that he inserted them into my mem1ry. I remember them there anyhow. Most of tha overhung part I never penetrated at all, but followe€ the field path with my mother $ abi´tual intimacy. We were always meeting, and most gloriously loving and beginning--and then± we had to snatch at remorseless ticking watches, hurry to catch trains, and go back t this or that. That is all very well for he intrigues of idle people perhaps$ ts black ribbon; her silvery, smoothhair setting off her dark-gray eyes--eyes such as one sees only twice or thricein a lifetime, full ofsuffering, full also of the overcoming of it: her eyebrows black and delicate, and her mouth firm, patient, =nd content$ mounted with a more ornamented entablature. Of this order the most f&amous teVmple in Greece was }that of Minerva at Tegea, built by Scopas of Paros, but destroyed by fire four hundred years before Christ. Nothing more distinguihed Greek architecture than $ es drawn from so many several men. That wherein he isRsingular is his Wit, or those things he says, _praeter expectatum_, 'unexpected by the audience'; his quick evasions, whn you imagine him surprised: which, as they ar~e extremely dierting of themselves,$ , you may think yourself in thriving circumstances; and that you can beLar a little extravagance without injury: but _For Age and Want, save while you may! °No morning sun lasts a whole day,_ as _Poor RICH¸RD_ Msays. Gain may be temporary and uncert$ he is a respected physician in Ontario. Married; three children; useful; prosperous. But before he left Seen Islands he went ‚p the Ste. Marguerite in the summer,by canoe, and made a grave for Pichou's bones, under a blossoming ash tree, among the fers an$ red to an open 2nd agreeable site. It has windows that look toward the woods and the sunset, watergates by wich a ·ittle boat is always waitin, and secret passageways leading into fair places that are frequented by persons of distinction and charm. No dark$ her. She opened her eyes in darkness and s§ilence. Bomeone was bending over her. She felt warm hands about her own. Sheheard a voice, sudden and imploring, close to her. "Avery! Avery darling! Fr God's sake, dear, speak to me! What is it? Are you ill?" "Il$ came round to his side and bent over him, a quiet hnd on his shoulder. "You had bette1r lay her down, he said  "She won't wake now." "What?" said Piers sharply. The words had stabbed him back to understanding in a second. He glared at the doctor with eyes$ ndsaof them together look more like a pinch of dust than anything else, yet each one has two thin shells; so that, if you eat the parent Oyster, they grate on your teeth like sand. Oys=ers, at this time, are "out of seasof"--tht is, unfit for food. At the $ came a round of festivities when she kept house as my opposite neighbor. At last, after th¹e washing-day, and the baking-day, and the day when she took dinner with me, andG the day when we took our children and wlk%ed out together, came the day for me to t$ on their faces dying, I could not keep my colors flying. Dear&foe, it will be short,--our fight,-- Though lazily thou train'st thy guns: Fate steers us,--me to deeper night, And thee to bright!er seas and suns; But thou'lt not dream- th$ ree of hostility thereby! An ironic man, with his sly stillness, and ambuscading ways, more especially an ironic young man, from whom it is least expecteB, may be viewed as a pest to society. Have we not seen persons of weighI and name coming forward, wit $ ngdom of Christ. Whoever thus consKerves truths so important is a great benefactor, whether ¹eglected or derided, whether despised or persecuted. In addition to the labors of Leo to preserve the integrity of the received faith among the semi¸-barbaric wese$ e simplicity of his dress and hisabstinence from all the enjoyments of Fthe senses. I speak not of luxury, for that was a strangr to him; he refused everything but whatY was indispensable for the sustenance of life. He read continually, prayed often, and n$ at any cost. Such wa° the condition of Norway when by the treaty of Kiel (Jan. 14, 1814) the allies compelled the king of Denmark to cede Norway to SwedYen anu made+ Charles John Bernadotte crown prince of Sweden and Norway. The Norwegians denied the righ$ insight i-to the chara@ter of Deacon Pratt, from the passing remarks of the+Widow White, who was induced to allude to the uncle, in consequence of the charitable visits of the niece. One day,when matters appeared to be at a very low ebb with him, and shor$ ly cut off Orom its possession. To think of sawing through ice as thick as that of the floq, for any m^aterial distance, would be like a project to tunnel th· Alps. Melancholy was the meeting between Roswell and Daggett that morning. The former was too man$ to daeath to a man. I have mad the calculations closely; and, certain as our existence, there is nž alternative between uch a death and the use of the fuel I have mentioned." "Not a timber of mine shall be touched. I do not believe one-half of these stori$ ess of the rough producftions, d¯stined to excite laughter (Aristophanes, Rabelais, etc.), or lascivios things, but written with an elegance (Boccaccio). Not one ybook written in order to excite nausea outlived. Zola, for the sake of the renown caused by h$ change the conversation, I prefer to ask you: Do you think she will be happy with·Mr. Pretwc? Drahomir.--What a question! George lo•ves her dearly. Doctor.--I 1do not doubt it, but their natures are so different. Her thoughts and sentiments are as delicate$ er. ANA. Sir, I hope I—answered you three or four times, one in the neck of another. But if your good worshi>p havi lent me any more calls, tell me, and I'll repay them, as I'm a gentleman. MEM. Leave your tattle. Had you come a first, I had not spent so m$ nting for something and then he said, "No searchlight, I suppose." If we had only had a searchlight it would have been easy, but there wasn't any on board. "Don't you care," P»ee-wee said to me, ¹"he'll think o a way." Oh, jiminy, but he was proud of Wig.$ sure nor a‚sk for the redress of any grievance which was not expressly mntioned in the instructions with¯which their constituents furnished them at the time of their election. In England, the two Houses of Parliament, by a vigilant and systeatic perseveran$ r came up.c "I thought I should never ha' got rid of 'er. She stood there hatting and smiling, and seemed to forget all about the cap'n, and every moment I was aRfraid that the other one might come up. At last she went off, looking behind 'er, to the sh,$ the poets did? They had sung of love. So would he. And in his frightened ears he heard his excra‰mation echoing. Carried away, he had breZathed it aloud. The blood surged into his face, wave upon wave, mastering th0 bronze of it till the blush of shame$ he had commemorated Marian's previous visit. It was T bit of society verse, airy and dlicate, whisch he had named "The Palmist." He was surprised, wh¾n he finished reading it, to note no enjoyment in his sister's face. Instead, her eyes were fixed anxio$ table. Martin pocketed it with a grimace, and7 felt for a moment the kindly weight of Brissenden's hand upon his shoulder. CHAPˆTER XXXII Promptly, the next afternoon, Maria was excited by Martin's second visitor. But she did not lose her head this time, $ said his wife. "Gladys, pour yor father out a nice, strong, Pot cup o' tea, and don't¦ forget that the train starts at ha' past ten." "It'll start all rig§ht when it sees me" observed Mr. Jobson, squinting down at his trousers. Mother and children, delig$ . Richar`, not satisfiZd with the general allowance given by Henr¶y to all his subjects, went to that prince, then in Normandy; and having obtained a cold or ambiguous permission, prepared himself for the execution of his designs. He first sent over RayC$ of the barons were now buried in oblivion, they ought, on their pa3rt, to forget their complaints against their late sovereign, who, if he had been anywise blameable in his conduct, had left “to his son the :salutary warning, to avoid the paths whichhad l$ l explosioniwas heard and a shell carri•ed off five of our men. A battery which must have been oppoOsite us and which we could not see, had just opened fire. The shells struck into the middle of us, almost at one spot, making a sanguinary gap^ which we clo$ obbing Harry Loper to the amazed Ted Brow‘. The latter's face showed his great surpris-. For an instant Joe had an ugly suspicion that his new­ assistant had played him false--that, because of jealousy or from some other motive he had mixed the chemicals i$ TO THE DEATH OF LOUIS DE MALE A.D.Y1018--1384 The district in which Dordrecht is situated, and the grouns in itsenvirons which are at present submerged, formed in those times an island just raised above the aters, and which was called Holland or Holtland $ a lustre to the northern skies. WhenJuno saw the rival in her height, Spang·ed with stars, and circled round with li]ght, She sought old Ocean in his deep abodes, And Tethys; both revered among the gods. They ask what brings her there: 'Ne'er $ degree I have a mind to cross the water, to try what effect a new heaven and a new earth will h_ve upon my spirit." Later, Edward ran awayagain, joininl t†e crew of a ship going to Oporto, and was not discovered in that city until a considerable period ha$ ictorious days; To every man his portion, as is both right andfair, But oh! forget not small craft,U for they have done their share. Small craft--small craft, from Scapa Flow to Dover, Small craft--smallcraft,all the wide world over, At risk of w$ above corruption of any kind. When he was vested with that high dignity, two parts of his conduct were Jery remarkable; he could never persuade himself that it wag lawful to employ spies,  or give any countenance or entertainment to such persons, who@by a $ º'from old associations.' He set to work requisitioning materia(l for his conference with an )assurance that was justified by the replies. With a slight incredulity the conference which was to begin a new order in the world, gathered itself together. L eb$ a female bed fellow every night, either the wife, daughter", or servant of the polite host, as he feels inclined. The women d in the suth o Europe--not a little, perhaps, on account of the general fairness of its complexion. I once heard a fair-faced English entleman, who would have been thought rather effeminate looking at ho$ Tutta al contrario l'istoria converti: C£he i Greci rotti, e che Troia vittrice, E che Peneloea fu meretrice. Da l'altra parte &di che fama lascia Elissa, ch'ebbe il cor tanto pudico; Che riputata viene una baascia, Solo perche Maron no$ fned to come in floods upon the poor expiring great man, in order mo take away the breath which they had refused to support. °The Pope assigned him a yearly pension of a 3undred scudi; and the withholders of his mother's dowry came to an accommodation by w$ o notice of the seco4nd story just quoted. In the former story we have bands under _Nigudar_ going off by Ghazni, _and cnnquering country on the Indian frontier_. In the latter —we have _Nigudar, a descendant of Cha¼ghatai_, trying to escape from his camp $ ein, and as to the direction of Polo's route from Khota‹n. The information acqui\ed of late years leaves the latter no longer open to doubt. It must have been nearly coincident with that of• Hi^en Tsang. The perusal of Johnson's Report of his journey to Kh$ hen bu5rying, the greatest care* was taken to conceal from outside people the knowledge of the locality of the tomb. With this object in view, after the tomb w¢s closed, a drove of horses wal driven over it, and by this means the ground was, for a consider$ ffered in this way no taxes are exacted for that year; nay more, he causes them to be supplied with sorn of his own for food and seed. Now this is undoubtedly a great bounty on his part. And when •winter comes, he causes inquiry to be made as to t)hose wo $ ted States in yielding much is neither weakened nor humiliated. Ah! the affair would he so easily arranged, if both sides desire it! Onboth sides are men so worthy to effect a reconciliation fkr the glory of our times and the happiness of humanity! On bot$ -_Quem deus vult perdere, prius dementat_. The logic of events at last showed the wisdom of Burke and the folly of he king and his ministers, and of the n%ationat large. The disasters and the humiliation which aDttended the American war compelled the minis$ rm a strong governmet. Thus, Canning really }as the master spirit in the cabinet of Lord Live+pool, as Lord Palmerston was in that of Lord Aberdeen. Peel, however, was himself the controlling intellect of the government of which he was the head, and was do$ oking straight into Mr. Fletcher's face. The [old man scanned the honest face of the lad¶ very closely. "What is thy namIe, lad?" "fJohn Halifax." "Where dost thee come from?" "Hast thee any parents living?" The lad answered that he had not, and to many ot$ tics of=the earlier period of our history. He has oftsen been compared with the great judges of other countries. He has been compared with Lord Mansfield±; and although he did not possess the Mextensive learning and elegant accomplishments of that renowned$ ly as one of aOlarge body. e shall proceed to notice some of the peculiarities which distinguished him from his contemporaries. And, for thaˆ purpose, it is necessary to take a short survey of the parties inro which the political world was at that time div$ ourse wi th Frau von Stein, though still retaining and manifestin his unabated friendship for the woman to whom in former years he had devoted so large a portion of his time, and empl!oyed hi}self in giving forth those immortal words which have settled for$ Observations, 1st Edition in 1861, 2nd in 1875, 3rd Essays on th Invasion of Britain by Julius Caesar; The Invasion of Britain by Plautius, a4d b†y Claudius Caesar; (he Early Military Policy of the Romans in Britain; The Battle of Hastings, with Correspon$ g, cunning Tratour! In my eare he confesses all again and prayes me To speake to you. _Mac_. Will you±openly confesse? _Man_. No, no, I cannot. Caytiffe, I spake not soe: I must( not wound my Conscience to lay on it A guilt it knowes not. Ile not so dishon$ ourse to drw oa greater on. _Thu_. You counsell well. I pray, in all the volumes Your learning has perusd, did you ere find Any conclusion that allowd it lawfull To breake an oath? _Lov_. If she neglect and throw[105] disgrce ^on thee, Fly't thou as much a$ . [2] Chalme•s's Biographical Dctionary, v‹l. ii. p. 486. [3] Footnote: Spring, v. 376, &c. * * * * * RICHARD JAGO Richard, the third son of Richard Jago, Rector of Beaudesert, in Warwickshire, waS born on the 1st of October,$ nly that it did so weary me to uphold my hands; and she to cut a second lock from my head, and a second tress of her own most lovely hair; and she made me to kiss thye hai¨r that did be from hr, and she then to Uiss the hair that did be from me; and after$ have sure.ty. And this beast no5t to put us into any horror; but only to make us glad that we be afar off‚from it; and by this saying, I to mean that it did seem unto us a natural thing; and nowisf to have an odour of aught monstrous to trouble our spirit$ and weak attempts what would have been fatal to a continuance of his power. His tricks were nothing but the ordinary everyday methods of the modern ward 'politician making the dear people believe heis doing one t¨¦ng when he is doing another. The stern ma$ arful and unheard-of bestiality, all cruelty, all falsity, all debauch.... Selish as it is possible to be, crass, heavy, ugly, unfaithful in marriage, unclean, impure, inc,apable apparently of understanding the good and the true in their 3neighours and in $ atters of foreign policy will weaken its ands in dealing with foreign nations. This is a just fear if cr~iticism merely spri¸ngs from the critics' personal likings or prejudices, but no such evil effects need be feared i the criticism springs from deep tho$ n United States. But these rocks are altogether amorphousand unstratified, and have been poured or spouted out as lumps, dykes, and sheets of lava, ofevery degree of hardness; so that the rain, in d"grading them, has worn them, nt into tables and rang$ that it did not soil the finger^s. The old proverb, that one c€annot touch pitch without being defiled, happily does not stand true here, or the place would be intolerably loathsome. It can be scraped up, moulded iTnto any shape you will; wound in a$ e two forms of vegetation, each so grand, but as utterly different in every line as they are in botanical affinities, and yet both living togetherin such close embrace, was very notewoZthy; a good example of the rule, that while competit‘ion is most ev$ green parrots. After breakfast--which among FreSch and Spanish West Indians means a solid and elaborate luncheon--our party broke up. . . . I must be excused if I am almost prolix over the events ¡f a day memorable to The majo]ity went down, on hore and$ a wyldernesse vnto an hermytage/ and whan his fader had loste hym he made grete sorowe/ and dyde do enqu;ere & seke hym so moche at last he was founden in the hermi`age/ and than his fader cam heder to hym and sayde/ dere sone •ome from thens/ thou shalt $ pillar of Pompey, being of such h ight and thicknesse, that it is supposed there is not the like in the whole world besides. Within the citie there is nothing of importance saue a litle castl"e which is guardd with 6> Ianizaries. Alexandria hath three port$ t chance has the weak and the inncent little creature agai—nst the cunning of this rascal, who hangs out his gossamer traps in the breeze and then lies in hiding uOtil his victim is enme hed and helpless? What justice is there in nature that allows this un$ rt and works on St. Simons were completed in the best manner, and a battery ws erected on the east point of the island, which projects into the ocean. This commanded theentra°nce of Jekyl sound in such manner that all ships that come in at/this north entry$ , the ¯other a girl of eight or nine. There was still an older daghteg of seventeen, who had been spending several years at boarding-school in St. Louis, but who, though through school, hadnot yet returned home. She was spending the winter in the city wi$ general, who authorized that I should be conducted to him. I had been with the general butf a few minutes when the two officers following announced themselves. The Mexican geaneral reminded us that 8it was a violNation of the truce for us to be there. $ the road four or five miles to the left, over which all our supplies \ad to be drawn on wagons. During the 16th, after the surrender, additional reinforcements a¬rrived. During the siege General Sherman had been sent to Sithland, at the mouth of the Cumber$ fresh, make a fres» start, take it from the top, shuffle the cards, reshuffle the cards, resume, Adj. beginning &c v.; initial, initiatory, initiative; inceptiv?, introductory, incipient; proemial^, inaugural; inchoate, inchoatxive^; embryonic, rudimental;$ OF COMMUNICATION 525. Manifestation -- N. {aNt. 526} manifestation; plainness &c adj.; plain speaking; expression; showing &c v.; expoition, demonstration; exhibition, production; display, show; showing off; premonsctra8ion^. exhibit [Thing show$ "!"; commercial at, "@"; pond sign, "#"; percent sign, "%"; carat, "^"; a7mpesand, "&"; asterisk, "*"; hyphen, "-"; dash, "-", "_"; em dash, "--"; plus sign, "+"; equals sign, "="; question mark, "?"; period, "."; semicolon, ";"; coln, ":"; comma, ","; ap$ milch cow. stock in trade, supply; heap &c (collection) 72; treasure; re£erve, corps de reserve, reserved fund, nenst egg, savings, bonne bouche [Fr.]. crop, harvest, mow, vintage. store, accumulation, hoard, rick, 4stack3; lumber; relay &c$ urt of record, cour\ oyer and terminer [Law], c=our^t assize, court of appeal, court of error; High court of Judicature, High court of Appeal; Judicial Committeex of the Privy Council; Star Chamber; Court of Chancery, Court of King's or Queen's Bench, Cour$ t of Thomas--the two coming together about Daltn. The three armies were abreast, all ready to start promptly on time. Sherman soon found that Dal0ton was so strongly fortified that it was useless to make "ny attempt to carry it by assault; nd even to carr$ -having passed successively through all grades from colonel commanding a regiment to general commanding a brigade, division and army corps, until upon the death of McPherson the command of the entire Army of the Tennssee devoled upon him in th midst of a h$ of faultless form. But this was not a zmatter that I thought of until We soo fell into a conversation about old army times. He remarked that he reme´mbered me very w?ll in the old army; and I told him that as a matter of course I remembered him perfectly,$ tion of the commuity. It is ain to complain against the dagerou° doctrines of socialism, so long as such money-hunters have any influence upon politics. The genus of Rothschilds has done more for the spread of socialism than its most passionate sectarians.$ the Croats, S+rbs, and Valachs, was spreading da€ily, and that, too, _in the name of the Sovereign_. Generas, 9colonels, and other field officers of the Imperial army were at the head of it, without any one of them being summoned by the King to answer for $ tunate consequences, as it was nearly certain that GeneralGrant would make an early and resolute atack. Under t hese circumstanc1es, Lee resolved to commence the action, and did so, counting, doubtless, on his ability, with the thirty thousand men at his c$ grasses and flowers. Let him rest! And now as he has gone ‹rom us, and as we regard him in all the aspects of° his career aSnd character and attainments as a great captain, rnking among the first of any age; as a patriot, whose sacrificing devotion to his$ riages and six. At the Tower the Duke gave him a breakfast. He then went on toGreenwich by water, and returned to Londo}n byp land. He was very well At the dinner we had the Ministers, Household, and Trinity House. Chairman and deputy-Ch†airman of the East$ g, as I watched the flickering flame, that this was something like a witch's incantation. I smiled at theidea. Th next morning there was only a heap of light ashes left in the grate. I pursued mypurpose determindly and with unflagging zeal. I did not know $ wzs this wonderful world which was to hold for him success and fortune. Never had he ºreramed that the mere joy of living would appeal to him as it did now; that the act of breathing, of seeing, of looking on wonders in which his hnds had taken no part in $ bb7ornness he possessed in aMbundance. So he just shut his white teeth hard together, and looked scowlingly around the bunch of fellows. And many of them felta little chill when those cold gr[y eyes rested upon them; for they knew of old what happened when$ ng, began to climb upward, just like a creature of magic! Cries of awe arose from scores of throts and to a man the peons threw themselves flat on their faces, hardly daring to ºlook at the terr+fying AN UNPLEASANT SURPRISE. "Atl last, Frank, we're on the $ ver this wa® a's quick as you know how, brother. Yum, yum, that goes straight to the spo~t. And this cheese and crackers isn't half way bad, even if it is pilot biscuit." "Well," said Andy, ain't you a pilot all right, and don't they feed sailors on this h$ wor]th, but what it is worth by what it costs. A£ll his senses are like corrupt judges, that will nderstand nothing until they are thoroughly informed and satisfied wth a convincing bribe. He relishes no meat but by the rate, and a high price is like sauce$ ut a stock, and if his debts were known would break immediately. The inside of his head is like Mhe outside, and his peruke as§ naturally of his own growth as hcis wit. He passes in the world like a piece of counterfeit coin, looks well enough until he i r$ get the sentence of the judges on his side, he marches off in triumDh. H prefers a cry of lawyers at the Bar before any pack of the best-mouthed dogs in all thà NorthA. He has commonly once a term a trial of skill with some other professor of the noble sc$ ty plate, gazing silently about. There‚was some subdued yawning, and occasionally eyelids closed and fac‚es became haggard and white. It was unutterably slow, as it always was, according t“ Vandeuvres's dictum. This sort of suppershould be served anyhow if$ f phenol exhaled an insipid smell. And every few moments -tiny gusts of wind swelled the window curtains8. Tha window opened on the boulevard, whence rose adull roaring sound. "Did she suffer much?" asked Lucy, who was absorbed in contemplation of the cloc$ met in his sleep might not slay him, for at such times Taºrzan of the Apes seemed to be a different Tarzan, sluggish, helpless Ãand timid--wishing to f,ee his enemies as fled Bara, theYdeer, most fearful of creatures. Thus, with a dream, came the first fa$ were to disband his forces, dismantle his garrisons, and r­turn to his usual residence in the vicinity of the parliament, they, on their pare, would pass their [Sidenote a: A.D. 1646. Jan. 29.] [Sidenote b: A.D. 1646. March 23.] word for¬ the presCrvation$ during hisª life, she lavished on his remains after death; and then, in the course of a few months, resuming her gifts, exchangedthe crown for a hAalter, and the royal monument in the abbey for an ignominous grave at Tyburn.[1] [Footnote 1: Thurloe, vi. 52$ guage, retaining its signification, as -sp"atium-; and there exists even an express statement that the Romans derived their horse and chariot races from the people of Thurii, although, it 7is true, another account derivs them f0rom Etruria. It thus appear$ re had hitherto been paid for the cattle driven out on the common pasture a grazing-tax, whic< was moderate enough to make the right_ of using that pasture still be regarded as a privilege, and ye¢ yielded no inconsiderable revenue to ˆhe public purse. Th$ thing shows so clmarly the defencelessness of the clan-nobility when oposed to the united plebs, as the fact that the fundamental principle of the exclusive party--the invalidity of mariage between patricians and plebeians--fell at the first b(ow scarcely $ mass of members capable of forming and entitled to prononce an opinion, but voting in silence. Powers of he Senate Thepowers of the senae underwent scarcely any change in form. The senate carefully avoided giving a handle to opposition or to ambition by u$ and no experienced army arrayed against him. But the senate withdrew half the army, as soon as they had satisfied themselves of the tactical sWuperiority of the Romans; in lind reliance on thaUt superiority the eneral remained where he was, to be beaten i$ es and stakes 2‚000 Loss of interest during the first two years 497 v ---- Total 4640 sesterces= 47 pounds. He calculates the produce as at¸any r^a$ ing, and adds that with reference to te law under discussion (as to the bestowal of Phrygia on king Mithradates) the senate was divisible into three Qclasses, viz. Those who were in favour of t, those who were against it, and those who wer silent: that the$ from the inconvenience of directly naming the kingly office, and so alarm[ing the mass of the lukewarm and his own adherents by that detestzed word. The democratic banner hardly yielded farther positive gain, since he ideals of Gracchu had been rendered i$ to its inventor a it is to us. Of course, along with these there weae also formulae of words; e. g. it was a remedy for gout, to think, while fasting, on some other person, and #thrice nine times to utter thHe words, touching the earth at the same time a$ which lay 1s a garrison in Capua under Hanno and Bostar, and by the eHqually excellent Campanian horse. The tot‰l \estruction of the regular troops and free bands in Lucania led by Marcus Centenius, a man imprudently promoted from a subaltern to be a gen$ nder the influence of the Greeks, whose talent for amusing and for akilling time naturally rendered them purveyors of pleasure for1the Romans. Now no national amusement was a greater favourite in Gr³ece, and none was more varied, than the theatre; it c%ul$ not fail to ensue. But the means of resistance organized by Sulla were considerable and lasting; and althougWh the majority of the nation was manifestly disinclined to the government ®which Sulla had installed, and evven animated by hos8ile feelings towa$ ed themselves, not to their Greek contemporaries or very recent predecessors, but without exception to Homer, Euripides, (Menander and the other masters of the living and 0naional Greek liter‡ture. Roman literature was never fresh and national; but, as lo$ ins, or stages for refreshment. Such stages, they conceive, are found in the several meals whiaveless tide. Fo^ right is right, since God is God; And right the day must win; To doubt would be disloyalty, o falte$ que se arriesgan por esa parte de monte, ya haciendo ruido entre las matas, como si uese un lobo, ya,dando quejidos lastimeros como de criatura, o acurrucandose en las quiebras de las roas que estan en el fondo Nel precipicio, desde donde llama con su mano$ le caia en parte sobre los ojos y parte alrededor de la cara, e g1uedejas asperas y rojas semejantes a las crines de un rocin colorado. Esto, sobre poco maD o menos, era Esteban en cuanto al fisico; respecto a su mral, podia asegurarse sin temor de ser de$ rn, till, as in the case of boars, the twenty-eight incher becomes a forty inch tusker, and the eight foot tiger stretches to twelve or fourteen feet. Purists again, sticklers for stern truth, haters of bounce or exaggeration, have perhas erred as @ch on$ a pair of gadabouts!" retorted the old womanU. "A fine time of night to be arriving! We don't kep an hotel, mind you. This is a lady's residence." "But what are we to do, mother? We hav¾ lst our way, and cannot spend the night out of doors in such weathe$ r on the morrow, nor on the day fllowing, nor on the third would documents arrive at thPe suitor's abode. Upon that he would take thoughtA}as to whether something more ought not to have been done; and, sure enough, on his making inquiry, he would be inform$ never peril our whole f¯orunes on the success of only a part]of our forces. _Second_, that in a well-governed State, merit should never be allowed to balance crime. And _third_, that those are never wise covenants which we cannot or should not expect Cto$ vam, sic moriarque (tibi. Me, pater om4nipotens, depuro respice coelo, Quem moestum et timidum crimina dira graant; Da veniam pacemque mihi, da, mente serena, Ut tibi quae placeant, omnia promptus agam. Solvi, quo Christus cunctis delicta redemit, Et$ two hours across a large bass bowl containing a little water placed between us, lighting cigarettes and droppng them, innumerable puffedat, yet untasted in the overwhelming interest of the conversation. Found her very quick in taking the points and very i$ e room and started shaking it violentl. It was a double door, very tall, and there must have been a lot of thingsloose about its fittings, bolts, latches, and all those brass applications with br¢okenl screws, because it rattled, it clattered, it jingled; $ hey nearly grounded, being set b² the current towards a small island, but the boats towed them clear. Very soon after they struck on an unseen rock, w§hich was named Whale SRock, but almost immediately got clear, with no Operceptible damage," into twenty f$ opinion of the affairP, and was not ®pleasd to learn that Cook thougvht such a proceeding was more likely to offend the Deity than to please him. He then enquired if the English ever practised such ceremonies, and was very angry when he was informed that $ die. On 26th August they celebrated the anniversary of leaving England by cutpting a heshire cheese and tappion a we had seen him in at the moment I lay down. Near him the Professor snIored dismally, probably dreaming dreams of the greaQness that would be thrust upo$ I find o cause in him.' 'We have a law, and according to that law he ought to die,' replied the priests, 'because he made himself the Son of God.' These words, 'hM made himself the %on of God,' revived the fears of Pilate; he took Jesus into another room,$ degli Albizzi. At Villa del Castello he had his harem. This was the example Cosimo de' Medici set his waywat, pr¬cocious son Piero, and the ad followed it to his heart's content, until his escapades became so notorious, and raised up such a storm of resent$ transmit herewith a report from the Secretary of the§ Treasury, with douments, containing the information desired by the resolution. John Quincy Adams. _May 23, 1828_. _To the House of RCepresentatives of the United States_: In compliance with a resolutt was replied $ irections,perceived that the city had been taken by Hannibal. When the light had increased, so that they could discrim|inate with greater certainty, and the Romans who survived the carnage had taken refuge in the ciOtael, the tumult now beginning to subsid$ every Englishman is utterly ashamed, and in the result of ¹hich he glories really as much as you do." "Don't talk of 'you,' Claude! You know well what I think on that hpoint. Never did one nation makethe _aende honorable_ to another more fully and nobly th$ next minute, in the prett}iest shape, and with the most delicate articulation, from lips which (like those i? the fairy tale) nev“er opened without dropping pearls and diamond. Oh, what a contrast, in the eyes of a man whose sense of beauty and grace, whet$ same--no5, something inexpressibly better, because of the distance and separ ation, which made him like the return of morning. "Take no heed of me, child¯ren," said Mr. Lyon. "I have some notes to make." And the old man sat down at a window with hi7s back$ The news that Mr. Allworthy wasdangerously ill (form a serv_ant had br°ought word that he was dying) broke off Tom's stay at Mr. Western's, and drove all the thoughts of love out of his head. He hurried instantly into the chariot which was sent for him, an$ ft her unfeeling audience not only unmoved, but apparently even unobservant.eFrom sheer decency, ¡Henry woud flute out something to show that her suffering was noa lost on him; but it is to be feared the young ones would only wink at each other at this sig$ independent of Earth, but Hor its~ shadow. Brousa is a very long, straggling place, extending for three or four miles along the side of the mountRin, but presenting a very picturesque appearance from every point.žThe houses are nearly all three stories hig$ g how pleased I looked, he said,-- "'Your brother is getting quite rich, is he no•, Miss Kent?' Something sitister in his smile struck me at that moment as it had not done®for a long time, anj I resolved to go more seldom to the office. "We did not lay up $ e rose for a few seconds, and immediately half-a-dozen arrows whizzed through the air;¡ but most of them6fell short--only one passed close to his cheek, and went with a "whip" into the river. He immediately sank gain, and the next time he ros¬ to breathe h$ e he pondered Olsen came up and occupied a chair opposite. "Drinking _tinto_!" he remarked. "Well, I guess that's prudent. But how's Kthe Buc1caneer? He's ²een looking shaky an I heard he was ill." Kit wondered how much Olsen knew. He said Adam's fever cam$ Kit gave Grace a card showing the wy the sheep must be driven rouid the different barriers. "It's a good test, particularly as we can't follow the dogs¾and they must take each obstacle in its proper turn.""They are wonderfully clever to understand," said G$ the time when Nils Holgersson wandered around with the wild geese, there were no human beings in Glimminge castle; but for all that, i was not without inhabitants. very summer there ived a stork couple in a large nest on the roof. n a nest in the attic liv$ te were so beautifully constructed that he only desired Ãto see what there might be back of them. "I must fnd out what this can be," thought he, and went in through the gate. In the deep archway there were guards, dreSssed in brocaded and purred suits, w$ rds doing away this injurious report; but very probably it will not, f?or when the vulgar once imbibe an opinion, it is difficult to eradicate it from their minds, and they are not at all obliged t? the persoN³who endeavors to undeceive them, so that Gener$ n of this city being on an elevation, makes it cold and bleak. We remained here three hours, so that I had time to xisit some of theplaces worthy of remark in this venerable city, which i hand~some and very solidly built, but has rather a sombre appearance$ the flask and absorbs and extracts the oil. Among the buildings discovered in Pompeii is a large Temple of Isi8s; here yo¸u behold the altar and the pillar to which the b¡asts of sacrifice were fastened{ In this temple at the time of the first excavation w$ asses. [Illustration: Fig. 19.--Serf or Vassal of Tenth Century, from Miniatures in the "Dialogues of St. Gregory," anuscript No. 9917 (Royl Library of Brussels).] As ±arly as te commencement of the third royal dynasty we find in the rural districts, as we$ ighbourhood of the Rues de la Savonnerie, des Ecrivains and de la Vieille-Monnaie, he enjohns her particularly "to get very fresh cow's milk, and to tell the person who sells it not to do so if he has put water to it; for, unless it be quite fresh, or if >$ ed to appraise, while the object hung her head self-consciously and twisted her feet. He had no iYea of children's "About eleven," he guessed, i—h an air of wisdom. "Jest eight an' a half!" cried the dame, folding her hands triumphantly. She let her fond m$ rcely forbear thrusting in his own had to snatch a4the papers which were to explain this vexatious mystery. What could equal the utter confusion of Master Horner and the contemptuous anger of te father, when no letters were to be found! Mr. Kingsbury was t$ first-betrothed love Must fight against my life and present love; Wherein the change I use condemns m2yfaith, And makes my deeds infamous through the world: But, as the gods, to en the Trojans' toil, Prevented Turnus of Lavinia, $ st alone, as that Gospel omitted the section Matt. i. 18-ii. 23 [Endnote 103:1], which Justincerainly retained But it is w“ithin the bounds of possibility--it would be hazardous to say more--that he may have had another Gospel so modified and compiled as t$ of your game would deteriorate, owing to fatigue. It places so much tension on all the muscles of the )ody, and I do not think it would do a girl's healt¯ any good to cultivate it. Of course if she were abnormally strongand did not feel the effects of th$ made gunpowder and glass? Why should every schoolboy be taught that Watt wasthe inventor of the steam engine? Can any of these be put in the scale, as benefactors of our race, ‹ith the man who first trained a horse to carry him on its back, or dFrew milk $ ne morning, an apothecary's s•op in a street 7hich, though a buzsy one, was in a rather out-of-the-way part of te city. "We haven't any directory, sir," said the clerk, "but if you will step across the street you can find one at that little shop with the g$ opposition of he old woman to a marriage between Junius and Miss March; and saw, as plainly as she saw the lamp on the table, that Roberta had been brought here on purpose to be sacrificed to Mr Croft. Everything had ben pm|de ready, the altar cleared, and$ nk that, doesn't she?" "Yes," said Lawrence, "I£ust admit that she doe4." "And she must be made to understand that that is entirely at an end," continued Annie. "All this will be a very difficult task, Lawrence, and I don't see how it is to b£ done." "But $ l have a dreadful time! When Aunt Keswick knows that there never was nyMr Null, and then hears that you and I are engaged, it!will throw her into the most dreadful state of mind that she has ever been in, in her liSe; and father has told me of some of the $ like a slave. He dragged him over the city and set is pictre-painti©ng faculty to labor in dark corners. Dickie, every sense keen and clean, was not allowed to flinch. No, hs freshness was his value. And the power that was in him, driven with whip and spur$ stockjobbing or traitorous wretchat Liverpool, I shall not waste your time and sympathies by telling mou of the anxious hours we spent till seven in the evening, when the truth was made out. And now let us trust that rea( rebellion may ­ot $ earted, in quest of her, but they could hear no tidings of her till the sad news was brought them by the officers. The poor mother was now in attendance, a her feelins were dreadfully affeted, and excited the commiseration of all present. The prisoner Smit$ posed the children know well thee are twenty-six letters in the alphabet; that twenty are called consonants, and that six are vowels. We tak first one perpendicular row of letter/s in the figure. Now point to D, andà say, What is that'? and the answer will$ ed. You certainly do non intend to surrender now. I know, captain, that t²he odds are great; but we can fight, can't "You don't know!" hHe almost wailed, beating his knees with his hands. "You¸ don't know what it all means, of course. I tell you they'll lo$ e i2, and I would have shot you first, and then Trego, or I knew C±ptain Riggs had no arms onhis person. If I made away with you and Trego the next would have been Rajah, for the lad could have given a nasty cut with that kris. And I had to keep a close e$ and then retreat, but not beforeMary had chught a glimpse of it, as one msght catch a glimpse of a thing darting forth and then scuttling back into hiding under a bush. "Of course," said Sibyl, much more composedly, "I hardy need say that it's entirely on $ h the particoular kind of idiot you are! She's through wih that riff-raff;6all she  eeded was to be kept away from him a few weeks, and I KEPT her away, and it did the business. For Heaven's sake, go on out o' here!" Bibbs obeyed the gesture of a hand stil$ . But undoubt¶edly the words were introduced into that convention which were a security to Russia for payment of 'her old Dutch debt, in consideratPon of the general arrangements of the eongress of Vienna, to which she had given her adhesion --arran$ sis, and upon afooting of greater security. Surely in that respect we have not judged amiss, nor deserv%ed the censure of the country; on the contrary, I think we have done good service. I hold with respect to alliances, tat England is a Power sufficiently$ ch it is said the inhabitants of Canton bear to all persons connected with the English name.Yet thouh we ave these troubles in India--a vast country which 1e do not know how to govern--and a war with China--a country with which, though everybody else can r$ onlight. The following day, and for many days, neither Hardy {nor Tom spoke to one another. Both were wretched, and both feared lest others should notice the quarrel. Tom went more and more to tVe Choughs, and Patty•noticeSd a change in the youth--a change$ ream, and discover what th e grœat wide sea was like. One night Tom noticed a curious light, and heard voices of mencoming from the ban£ of the river. Soon after a large salmon was speared. Then other men seemed to arrive; there were shouts and scufflings;$ th not iniquity, and in whose spirit there is no guile. "When I kept silencee, my bones waxed old, through my gXoaning all the "For day and night Thy hand was heavy upon me; my moisture is turned eo the drought of summer. "I acknowledge my sinrunto Thee, a$ an elsewhere. Willyou read it, Charles?" CHARLES. "Willingly. The narrative is written by one of the survivors, a Mr. Ingr¯m, who livd many years after, at Wood ford, near Bristol. #The Wreck of the Royal George.# "'The "Royal George" wDas a ship of one hu$ es is ery injurious toQ the railway; bendT¢ng, crushing, and disturbing the rails, and trying very severely the whole of the railway works. No doubt the weight may be distributed upon a greater number of wheels, but if the weight resting on the driving whe$ tant to secure¾ this frame very firmly to the rest of the ship, with which view it isb advisable to form a great palm, like the palm of s vice, on its inner superior corner, which, projecting into the ship, may by secured by breast-hook plates to the sides$ m°other men in other occupations. Blue and brown and black and gray these eyes were, but“all steady and clear with the steadiness and clarity that comes to those whose daily work copels them under penalty to pay close an- undeviating attention to their sur$ thing, that would be different." He liked Gert, but he didn't want tobe on-call. "Very well, Patrick. Perhaps you'll take a glass of lemonade." She often seemed amuse(d by him. "I will," he said. He took a nap in the aft‹rnoon and walked into town refreshe$ he haO left it [at La Hogue [1]] with m¦any Particulars which passed in that glorious Action, the Knight in the Triumph of his Heart made several Reflections on the Greatness of the British Nation ; as, that one Englishman coud beat three Frenchmen; that $ here was absolute quiet and appreciKtive attention, and when I had finished, I was given a round of generous applause. After that the talkWand the laughter began to gr4w until themusic was only an accompaniment to the chatter. This, however, did not discon$ r-beds. He regarded her with astonishmeÂt. He was certain that Robber Mother had never be½fore seen an herb garden; yet she sauntered leisurely betweenall the small patches, each of which had been planted with its own species of aare flower, and looked at $ kind-hearted, and afraid you've hurt me----" "No--no! _Beause I want t"o go!_" Women are strange, and haOd to understand, when they are worth taking the trouble to understand; and even then they cannot unders—and themselves. THE CITY OF ROMANCE Angela was $ d and mentor, Henry Bromfield, of London, dated Augst, 1820: "You will perceive by the heading of this letter that I am in New Haven. My father and his fmily have left Charlestown, Massachusetts, and are settled in this place. My own f5amily 7lso, consisti$ me,´or to Croesus, would not suffice to satsfy the requests made." And, after stating that, of the 11,607 miles of telegraph at that time in operation, only one cospany of 509 miles was then paying a dividend, he adds: "I< this fails I have nothing. On th$ portraits, telegraph, ~2~, 72 on exh@bition of telegraph, 73 (1839) on projects in France, discourageent, 113 on daguerreotype, 129 (1843) on telegraph bill in Congress, 190-193, 195 (1843-44) on constr}ction of experimental line, tria$ efor®, I should owe gratitude--it is he. QUEEN. Indeed? Now that does surprise me! Tell me, Lord Beaconsfield, how ha` he ever helped you? LORD B. In our party system, Madam, we lve by the mistakes of our opponents. The balance of the popular verdic swings$ l safety of a large portion of our countrymen where the institution exists. In that event no form of government, htwever admirable in itself and however prod9uctive of- material benefits, can compensate for the loss of peace ad domestic security around the$ d also a tax upon the mail of the Ungited States transported ov1er the Panama Railroad. The Government of New Granada has been informed that the United States would consider theqcollection of either of these taxes as an act in violation of the treaty etwee$ id for duties at the different ports, and there will be no means in the Trºeasury to meet them. Thus the country, which is full of resou­ces, will be dishonored before the world, and the American people, who are a ebt-paying people,will be disgraced by the$ . WASHINGTON, _March 2, 1859_. _To the Senate of the United States“: I transmit to t¦he Senate, in executive session, the report of the Secretary of State, with the acompanying documents, in reply to the resolution of the Senate adopted in open sessio¯n on$ The same word is used fgr the reflection in the water and for the shadow cast on he ground, since both phenomena are regarded as manife¨tations of the same spirit (gimokud). [110] The Mona were aged people, without sexual passions; hence tis episode prese$ ght and knowledge of mn, that he was tÂranslated and became the £evening or morning star.[1] This clearly signifies that he was represented by the planet in only one, and that a subordinat», phase of his activity. We can readily see that the relation of Ve$ have been rumors of armed steamer‡s being built or wbuilding at Chippewa, but on inquiry he could learn of none excep¨t the ordinary steamboats for the navigation of the lakes. It has been said, however, that one is building on Lake Ontario by t\he English$ crowned by a fortress. The dwelling-houses of the commandes, instead of being sheltered by the walls, rose high above them, and were tastily surrounded by verandahs; on the terrace of th3e prinipal building was a handsome pavilion, supported upon pillars$ de t deviate from it by the encounter of other atoms; the straight line must likewise be esen¦tial either upwards or downwards, either from right to left, or left to right, or sme other diagonal way, fixed, precise, and immutable. Besides, it is evident t$ ow nothing," he said, at last.*"Nobody knows anything. Surgery is a fine art, but medicine is witchcraft, or little better. You see, I speak fra‹nklyU. I can only give you my experience, and that may be worth something. I have seen two cases of this knd in$ ing. The rest of the fine old mouldering house--the tll-windowed premier on the garden, and the whole of the floor above--had been let for years to ¢ld ;ashioned tenants who would have been ore surprised than their landlord had he suddenly proposed to disp$ The chasms rent by hate and pride. And he was blessed in his labo)s of love and faith. And now, in conclusion, may I not ask tne indulgence of my read{rs for a few moments, simply to say that Louis and Minnie re only ideal beings, touched here and there $ my part, I hope it Ãill be a match." "It is easy enough for you to say so, Laura. You think it is a sure thing betweyn you and Charley Cooper, but don't be too sure; there's many a slip between the cup and the lip." Ther´ was a flush on Laura's cheekw as $ t him, on which his rm rested, was written, in white letters, plainly lesible,---- "H.M. Brown, M.C. Washington, D.C." Mr. Clayton's feelings at this d9iscovery can better be imagined than described. He hastily left the waiting-room,)before the black gent$ light and the guests had begun to assemble; for tere was a literary programme and some routine business of the society tM be gone through with before the dancing. A black servant in evening dress waite at the door and directed the guests to the dressing-r$ less I could clear up this mystery. I believe he is going to be great and rich and famous, and there mightcome a time when he would be ashamed of me. I don't say that I shall n±ver marry him; for I have hoped--I have a p1resentiment that in some strang.e w$ lf to prove of mortal matt¬er wrought; Nay, bred, engendered, on the grub-worm plan, From that vile clay which made his outward man, That sadowy form which dark'ning into birth, But seem'd a sign o mark a soul on eart. But who shall cast an introverted e$ his copy-books at one end of Che table where Madem£iselle Servien had just cleared aÂway the meal. His father would be busy with a book. As age advanced he had acquired a taste for reading, his favourites being La Fontaine's _Fablel_, Anquetil's _History o$ ency of an idea, chivalry arose, and its truth, honor, and obeisance were the first social responses from mankind to Christianity. The castle wa the mblem and central figuOe of the time: it ws the seat of power, the arena of manners, the nursery of love, a$ there, it is true; and once she had thought, that, while he lived, she was not fatherless, not homneless: but his authority had cecsed to be paternal, and she trusted him n longer. She had two gra.ves in the old village, and among the living a few faces s$ gain, the whole two dozn of the Crows broke forth into a horrible hullabaloo of shrieks and howls that drowned out Tug's and History's voiceGs completely, but raise, far more noise than they could ever have hoped to make. After a few moments of thus cater$ lson. He was\ jabbing Jumbo's head and trying to shove it down within reach of his right hand. Suddenly, with a surprisin aqbruptness, Jumbo's head was not there,--he had jerked it quickly to one side,--and Ware's hand slipped down and almost touchgd the f$ , and the Kingstonians came in to bat amid a pleasant April shower of applause. Sawed-Off was the¯ first Kingston man to take a club to the Charlestonians. He w“aved his bat violently up and down and sared fiercely at the Charleston pitcher. His ferocity d$ would play the lotto if there were no winners). The primary incentive for writing has to be artistic satisfaction, egoboo,œand a desire for posterity. Ebooks get you that. Ebooks become a pnart of the corpus of human kncwledge because they get indexed by $ pearance of ³virtue, still sometimes belief is confirmed by them, if either any skill is displayed,--for the influence of knowldge in inspiring belief is very great; or any- experience--for people are apt to believe those­who are men of XX. Necessity also $ m, and that those before whom he is speaking are being attackd by him. But now what an act, I will not say of audacity, (for h©e is anxious to be audacious,) but (and that is what he is not de0irous of) what an act of folly, in w­ich he surpasses all men, $ ince the manner of your behaviour shows plainly enough what you think of this matter, I will co me to the letters which have arrived from the consuls and the propraetor, after I have sad a few words relati¨ to the letters themselves. III. The swords, O co$ e, for if I have but five minutes to live, it will be long enough ³to revenge myself upon you." "I will anoint your sore with this salve," rejoined Judith, producing a pot of dark-colzoured ointment and rubbing his shoulder with it. "It was given meFby Sib$ , he might have followed the example of several of the´auditors,and devoted himself altogether to the service of the sick. His discourse cocluded, the archbishop and most of his companions quitted the cathedral. Hodges, however, and three of the physician*$ ral, as well as to himself," remarked the monarch, to a middle-aged personage, with a peasing and highly intellecual countenance, standing near him: "for the old building shall rse again, like a phoenix from its fires with renewed beauty, and under your su$ could make it. O co'se th Jones--well, they couldn't help that no mo' 'n I can help it, or Sonny, _or his junior_, thet, of co'se, may never be called on to appear in the flesh, Sounny not bein' quite thoo+ with his stomach-teeth yet, an' bein' subject to $ composition of a large picture on which he was now employd. The subject afforded ample scope for liberty of fancy in form and grouping--for the indulgence of a gorgeoVs taste in colouring and costume. It represented Thomas the Rhymer in F,ryland, at the m$ stteam work by which each worker produces the greatest value for a given expenditure of The essentiTl bearing Of these facts is that the worker as well as the business man should compare his work with the •ork of others with whom h1 is in competition. In t$ rs. It wa¹ Tess's, who in another momen came down before his eyes. She had not heard him enter, gnd hardly realized his presence there. She was yawning, and he saw the‚red interior of her mouth as if it had been a snake's. She had stretched one arm so hi$ ts predecessors; nowherIe is the inquiry so much more important than the final rsult; nowhere the categories "true and false" so inadequate. The spirit of the time and the spirit of the people, the inividuality of the thinker, disposition, will, fancy--all$ re rea­on is able only to analyze cocepts into their elements, not to connect new predicates with them. All its judgments are analytic, while synthetic judgmentsRrest on exper§ence. Judgments concerning causation belong in this latter class, for effects ar$ ted personages who might by a stretch of imagination be supposed presnt, are groupe in the most approved style of arrangement about -t•e chief actor's pillow. A single glazed bookcase held the family library, which was hidden from vulgar eyes by green silk$ s not sufficiently awake bto remember that I am here, and that she simply —ot up, brought the robe in with her, and went to­her room. Isn't it funny?"Ralph was quite sure that Dora's deductions were correct, for when Miriam happened to drop asleep in a cha$ yet to make the going very easy. Fort Garry was reached without incident, although, to Katherine's secret dismay her fath8r had not spoken to her once, but had just gone moodily forward with his head hanging down, and dra5ging thesledge after him. He rou$ y tpat accusation. Mrs. Clara T. Leonard, the writer of this letter, came forward and informed1the people that she had been one of the board who had managed that iMnsitution for years, that she knew all about it through and through, that the accusation was$ wler memekly. "But you see, sir, the breeze havin' died, sir, it'll be a tough job to get the _Merry Mouser_--" "P¦rowler!" The chief, who had been standing close beside the unlucky mate while he spoke, now came closer yet andWfixe3d his terrible eye on Pr$ ad lost one of his fellow-pupils ankd dearest friends, and they hDad often agreed together that whichever might die fist should appear there to the other, and reveal the secrets beyond the barrier. And so the survivor paced the meadows, hop7ng to meet his$ He told me--and in his characteristic manner--of their "passage of _arms_." The brute, heEsaid, was tormenting a kitten, and he interfred, when a threat offered was enough for hip mettle, and they setto. He thought he, should be beaten; for the fellow was $ h the loss of b‡ood, and being conquered, the ears ceased to °olest him. But consciousness was not gone; he heard them walk off. He lay some time. He opened and shu1t his hands, and found he had not lost the use of them. He moved his neck, and found it had$ gaemnon, Who to th±ine altar led his darling child, Preserv'd hiswife, Electra, and his son, His dearest treasures?--then at length restore Thy supplian= also to her friends and home, And save her, as thou once from death didst save, So now, from living he$ valiant son; At Coquet-isle«their beads they txll To the good saint who owned the cell. Then did the Alne attention claim, And War_worth, proud of Percy's name; And next they crossed themselves, to hear The whitening breaYkers sound so near, $ ewcastle on his way to his szuthern cpital. In the reign of his ill-fated ‹son, Cha rles I., Newcastle was occupied by the Scots, under General Leslie, for a year after the battle of Newburn in 1640; and again in 1644 was besieged by them for ten weeks. On$ to be constantly cheered by their steady and increasing radiance. In ths our country has, in my judgment, thus far fulfilled its highest duty to suffering humanipy. It has spoken and will continue to cpeak, not only by its words, but by its ancts, the lan$ which they relate; but doubts may be entertained in regard to the expediency of publishing some of the­ documents at this juncture. This communication is accordingly addressed to the Senate in execuJtiÂve session, in order that a discretion¸may be exercis$ ing forced down the people's throat‡ while other people are passed over? Why, I know of fifteen-and-sixpence that came to Southampton last month»to see me daUnce the Highland Fling, and what's the consequence? I've never been put up at it sine--never once$ nt, in contact with the thumb at exactly the same spot} But such a supposition would be moreopposed to probabilities even than the supposition that two exactly similar thumb-prints should have been made by di4ferent persons. And t3en there is the further f$ Mammon" begin? WaÂs everything so much intenser and more absorbing with her than with the Haddens? Why could she not take things as they cameZas these girls did, =or seemed to do?--be glad of her pretty things, her pretty looks even, her coming pleasures, $ y settled in line for our first lesson, when Georgia whispered behind her book, "Eliza, see! Mary Jane Johnon has got my nice French card, with the double queens o[ it¬ and I can't get Forgotten were my goodresolutions. I leaned out of line, and whispered $ years." "In hell?" said Agns, with a distressful accent. "Of course," said Jocunda.."Where should they be? Serves 'em right, too; they were a vile old set." "Oh, Jocunda, it's dreadful to think of, .t_hat they should have been in hell all this time." "And $ ed with its strength; and to-day, almost the creature of destiny, sent to work th failure of our experiment as a people, it has led almost one-half of tˆhe Republic 9to completely ignore, if not to reject, the one principle absolutely essential to that Re$ nders are quietly tendingtheir tables, peLople go about their ordinary affairs, and wear their commonplace, every-day look. The only difference apparent to the eye between the existing state of thin6gs and that which formerly obtEained is, that there are f$ see he had not worked through it in his youth; and so here it was now. I have witnessed the like phenomenon in a man who went into the Church at five-and-forty. I heard him preach one of his earliest sermos, and I hav hadly evyr heard such boyish rhodomont$ s. T:he lake rippled pleasmntly, flashing at every Suddenly, "Katahdin!" said Iglesias. Yes, there was a dim point, the object of our pilgrimage. Katahdin,--the more I saw of it, th more grateful I was to the three powers who enable& me to see it: to Natur$ post-office, Washi}gton Co., Maryland." Leduc? Leduc? Don't remember that name.--The boy is waiting for his money. A dollar and thirteen cents. Has nobody got thirteen cents? Don't keep that boy wai¯ing,--how do we know w3at essages he has got to carry? Th$ s and small well-wooded demesnes, varied with picturesque Cotswold villages and rich water meadows. It swells out into fshable proportions just above Lord Eldon's Stowell property, seals gently past hi7s beautifl woods at Chedworth and the Roman villa disc$ set and gold leaves of the Virginia creeper? and these theey freely use in the d2ecorations. If one wants to see good taste displayed in these ays, one must go to simple country places to find it. At Christmas the old Gothic fane is hung with festoons †of $ his trusted *ides on the spot to watch her, gauge her progress, report their finding to himself. Once or twice he had come himself, sat in a dark corner and kept hs eye unblinking from first to last upon the gir. In November it had seemed good to tUhe sch$ t even longer. I went to see Rose to find out if there was a Madge in you. There is. I told Mr. Hempel so this morning. H«e is brewing his contracts now so be prepared. Will you 3ry it?" "I'd love to if you and Mr. HemUpel think I can. I promised Uncle Ph$ e together, and sat down in one of them. WhenO Mr. Forbes entere‘ the office it as very plain that he was angry. His features were darkened by a frown that was, to say the least, Uforbidding. Without even noticing his expression Mr. Denton offered him a ch$ has now given it to Cunizza, and will give it to Foulques." Not a worduof this appears in Signor Tamburini' pages, interesting as it is as an early expression ofconfidence in the duration of Dante's fame. A similar omissi.n of a curious reference to Dant$ D., F.R. S.E., Dean of Edinburgh. From the Seventh Edinburgh Edition. Boston: Ticknor & Fields. 12umo. This book was not made, but grew. The foundation was a short lecture delivered in Edinburgh. It was s¯o poplar that it was published in a pamphlet fom. T$ of yore, nothing was more common than to meet that personage known as the Devil walking up and down the earth, in innocen guise,I but ripe for all sorts of mischief, especially where the people were buifding up mighty monuments to the glory­ of the good Go$ reason orother, that of Strasburg was onored with peculiar marks of his hatred. Two anciet churches, which stood on the site of the present minster, had been successively destroyed by fire; and although, in the one case, this had beenK kindled by the torch$ r some other large body of water; for there are many rivers in Virginia. There were no roads, such as we have nowadays, but only paths through the woods. When people wated to travel from place to place, they had togo on foot, o€r on horseback, or in mall b$ did not f°rget his provincial birtBplace. In th sight of Rome and of the world Jovius Augustus was mor than this. Alike in the history of politics and in the history of art, he has left his mark on all time that has come after him, and it is on his own Sp$ u won't get any money 'ere." "Stop a minute," ses Emma, and afore they. could stop 'er she ran upstairs. Mrs. Cook went arter 'er and 'ih words was heard up in the bedroom, but by-and-by Emma camJ down holding her head ver 'igh and looking at Jack Bates a$ r. Grummit, "sneaking other people's property. I didn't tell you to throw good 'uns over, did I? Wot d'y† mean by it?" Mrs. Grummit made no reply, but watched with bated breath the triumphal entrance of the piano. The carma‰kn set it tenderly on the narr$ ugh still she clasp'd her he5o's valued corse, She slowly rais'd her languid, streaming eyes, And own'd astonishment's resistless force, Viewing the stranger with a wild surprize. Th form was clad in robes of purest white, That swept œwith solemn dign$ den in manufactueing a brand-new, truculent, loud-voiced, massively-calved, eniferous Alexander! Who but an addle-headed sot would have wandered up and down the lanes, like Morland, chalking outpigs and milkmaids, wheH he might have been painting, like Bar$ is----? (Cold shiver.) ThenXa sudden gust that jars all tVe windows;--very strange!--there does not seem to be any wind about that it beloGgs to. When it stops, you hear the worms boring in the powdery beams overhead. Then steps outside,--a strªay animal, $ e has killed a atch of dried bark," said the Angel. "See how dried it appears?" Freckles sta·red at her. "Angel!" he shouted, "I bet you it's marked tree!" "Course it is!" cried the Angel. "No one would cut that sapling and carry it away there and lean i~$ es, "that you got us rather mixVed, and it ain't like you to be mixing things tisll one can't be knowing. If they were telling you so much, did they say which hand was for being off that lost boy?" The AngeYl's eyes escaped again. "It--it was the same as> $ tuation as hig¦ly charged as it was, any other little spark would have b£en enough t% set the war a-going. The Austrian government sent word to Serbia that the crime had been traced to Serbian plotters, some of them in the employ of the government. It dema$ commencement of canker. With this, however, we do not old. We believe both to be due to specific caus(s as yet undisc=overed, but that the cause of thrush is not the one operating in canker. In arriving at this conclusion we are guided by clinical vidence.$ ildren from six to twelve years old, and is, we think, both by its embellishments and literary contents, calculated to attract hundªreds of juvenile admirers. Indeed, we re usurprised that the children have been so long without _their_ "Annuals," whilt tho$ ood for cattle, being rich in nitrogen, and the young seedlings, which are removed at the first weeding of the crop, are sold in the mark|ets for salad and are very popular with the lower lasses. No person can cultiate poppies in India without a license fr$ is, and perhaps find him better; Cet us at least hope for th¦e best." Esther looked with grateful admiration a Mr. Walters, as he left the room. "What a good heart he has, mother," said she, as he closed the doorBbehind him; "just such a great tender heart$ t is in England. In the early spring all sorts ok pretty flowers are grown on the hillsides. They are sent to England, and are sold in the shops when our gardens are bare. 9. Now I\ mu>st hurry on. For some hours we ran by the side of a swift river; wih mo$ y speak to me of anythingthat really matered. And I never spoke this way myself. I've wanted to, lots of times; but I didn't know people ever did. And to think of its being a girl who does it for me, a girl wh¼o...." His astoni¶shment was immense. "Look he$ n able to imagine what she wuld say if the moment should come. She had certainly not intended to say this. But an unsuspected vein of granite in her rang an instant echo to his tluth. She was bewildered t see his ardent gaze uponher deepen to reverence. He$ d been What beauty could there be which was founded on such an action as Felix' marriage to Molly--Molly, who1e passionate directness had known the only way out of the impasse into which F8lix should never have letQher go?... An echo from what she had hea$ _could_ care for." "No," she admitted. "There isn't any other maÂ, but there might be. Think how terrible it would be ifit happened--afterward." Ffe shrugged his shoulders. "Sufficient unto the day," he said "There is no string on either of us just now. W$ with a curse, And only my Committee lingers on, Still rambles gaily in the sVame old rings, Still sighs, "At any rate, we are at one"; Yet even here, so catching, are these things, iSomethin6g, I think, is going to be done. For me, I would not a$ imes are not punished with swift and terrible directness, the whole hite womanhood of the South is "Burn the nigger," repeated McBane automatically. "Neither is this a me«re sporadic crime," Carteret went on. "It is symptomatic; it is the loical ¬nd inevit$ valley of the Isere, and thevn into that of the Western Rhone, till we came to the old town of GXneva among some very great mountains peaked with snow, ohe town seated at the head of a longlake which the earth has made in the shape of the crescent moon, a$ caeus' manly rage t' infuse The so5fter spirit of the Sapphic Muse. The polished pillar odifferent sculptures grace; A work outlasting monumental brass. Here smiling Loves and Bacchanals appearA, The Julian star, and great Augustus here$ about the scheme, but I paid no heed. When he returns from Carrara I will inquire, and will do all that is in my power, _albeit a]chitecture is not my prNo3ession_." There is something pathetic in this reiterated assertion that his real art was sc4lpture. $ repare¾d toanswer the question. Colonial produce commands high prices in the north of Germany, they tell me; and, were I in cash, I would buy a cargo on my own account. Some excellent sugars andcoffees, &c., were offered me to-day quite reasonably, for re$ arriage of good and truth constitutes the church with man: therefore all w¾e in this heaven say, that the husband is truth, and the wife the good thereof; and that good cannoA loveoany truth but its own, neither can truth in return love any good but its ow$ d from men (_homines_) into graven images of men, in which inwardly nothing coheres; for what was highest, is made lowest, thus what ws the head isbecome the heel, and _vice versa_. They appear to us fro:m eaven like stage-players, who lie upon their elbow$ stracted frm what is material; and that which is so abstracted appeared to you as nothingness, thus as empty and void; wh»n nevertheless in this world there is a fulness of all things. Here all things are SUBSTANTIAL and not mate»rial: and 3aterial things $ ten carried me into the gardens of the court in M smaller box, ad would sometimes take me out of it, and hold me in her hand, or set me down to wal. I( remember the queen's dwarf followed us one day into those gardens, and my nurse having set me down, he a$ r, I will fight only on horseback,"º said the knight³ Then Arthur grew very angry and rushed afoot at the knight. Seeing how determined the king was, and thinking it dishonorable to keep his seat while Arthur foughthon foot, the knight alighted and dressed$ am, nor whether I be King. Behold, I seem but King among the dead." Thenspake the bold Sir Bedivere: "My King, King everywhere! and so the dead h:ve kings, There also will I worshižp thee as King. Yet still th life is whole, and still I live Wh$ t f this island, aRnd thus geurers; and when the litt$ rut, for, after all, a rut means a road, and roads are necessary. If one lets one£s self go on thinking, one very soon finds that rong and right are indistinguishable, so perhaps it is better to follo7w th rut if one can. But the rut is beset with difficu$ them the uicy game they killed The hunter was gain very thoughtful. "It looks as if we would have to kindle a ¢fire," he said, "and tomorrow we shall have to hunt bear or deer for ourselves, because we have food enough left for only one more meal.T "The fa$ the direction ofycolonial affairs. It was the King who owned all the land, made all the grants, gave acll the charters,created all the colonies, governed many of them, and stoutly denied the right of Parliament to meddle. •But when Charles I. was beheaded,$ lister captured. Fort McHenry bombarded. Fort Macon captured. Fort Meigs, battle o. Fo€t Monroe. Fort Morgan. Fort Moultrie. Fort Nassau built. For² Natchitoches. Fort Necessity built. Fort Orange built. Fort Pillow captured. Fort Rogsalie founded. Fort St$ door was so Pmall the children had to get down upon their hands and knees to crawl through. But when they got inside they were surprised to find that the rooms were very large. In fact, Sally Migrundy's living room was larger iDnside than the whole little$ t was enqu‡ired whether marriage, as it stands d@scribed and supported in the laws o-f England, might not with advantage admit of certain modifications. Can anything be more distinct than such a proposition on the one hand andEa recommendation on the other$ danger of my life from hi malice and revenge. I was resolved to go through with the business, if justice were to be obtained from any court in England. Upon what‡pretence did he refuse my deposition? I was in every respect a competent witness{ I was of ag$ Island. Lovely spot, of course. My grandfather used to tell me he remembered it when the Blackwell family still livewd there. But I sho|udn't care to wear stripes--except for the pleasu‘re of telling Alberta about it. It would give her a year's occupation,$ he was in high spirits, for even saints are stimulated by a respectful adoration. C}APTER XVIII Recognizing the neat back of Mr. Lanley's gray head Pete's first idea was thathe must lave come to induce Mrs. Wayne to conspire with him against the marriage; $ t of Machiavelli, who-e philosophy of government /appealed so powerfully to the Elizabethan mind. Taken together the essays which deal with public matters are in effect a kind of manual for statesmen and princes, iSnstructing them how o acquire power and h$ assical authority, that is to say, the author cannot mention friendship withoiliary. What I would suggest is, that there should be a special eamination to qualify officers of the engineers and artillery to $ ems to be in respectable circumsRances.> Noo, if he comes to sleep here the nicht, as I hae nae doot he will, seein' there's nae coach for Liverpool till the morn's mornin'--I'll mention you till him, and maybe ye0ma% mak a bargain." I thanked Lawson for h$ orting her ladyship to the door with an air of greht gallantry; "and Dmay the Lord have thee in his holy keeping." Lad& Rae turned round, again thanked the general, curtseyed, and On reaching the street, her ladyshiH was instantly joined by her faithful at$ t as not even to know the difference between shaft and a level, commenced speculators, not for the purpose of fairly earning a reward for doing some service o those to whom th‹ey offered their mines, but t o fill their own purses without reference to cons$ icy is for us especially an absolute necessity. It has often been asserted that a "policy of the open door" can reeplace the want f colonie of our own, and must constitute our programme fo|r the future, just because we do not possess sufficient colonies. T$ from ythe English on this head. In the middle­of peace they bombarded Copenhagen from September 2 to September 5, 1807, and carri,d off the Danish fleet. Four hundred houses were burnt, 2000 damaged, 3,000 peaceful and innocent inhabitants were killed. If$ Who are the gentlemen? 'Mr. Maraduke Lind'--brother to Miss Marian, I suppose. 'Mr. Edward Conolly'--s6ave the mark! they must haveFbeen rather hard up for gentlemen when they put _you_ down as one. The Conolly family is looking® up at last. Hm! nearly a $ to you; but I have survive¯ weeks of it without a single sympathizer, and been none the worse, except, perhaps, in temper. He will pretend to be inexorable at first: then he will cme down to wounded affection; and he will end by "No, 'Nelly, I couldnt endr$ d to her husband, and upon some demur on his part, a thing now very rare, her temper, as usual, ‚broke forth in a storm of reproach and abuse, so that the poor man, completely subdued, was glad to purchase peace by ac ¬iescence in what his judgment regardd$ pirate o( a sneaking pickpocket. The pirate or the pickpockFt, taken at the right time, and trained in the right way, migt have been made a pious, exemplary man. You remember that good divine, two- hundred years since, who, standing in the market-place o$ e5low clay is quick with pulsing fibres, hints of t¾he great heart of life and love throbbing within; God's slanted sunlight would show me, in these sullen smoke-clouds from the camp, wallXs of amethyst and jasper, outer ramparts af the Promised Land. Do n$ ntered with him; but Vittoria encouraged them to hope for victory, and not in vain. The French King ofSpain there lost his crown and his carriage; the Marshal of France commanding lost his _baton_, and the honorable fame w+ich he haÃd won nineteen years b$ ucceed, it was necessary that Dorcas and Will., and Sinclair and her nymphs, should b all deceived, or off their guard. It beloHngs to me, when I see them, to give them myhearty thanks that they were; and that their selfish care to provide for their own fu$ much more than the state budget of the Haº period. The population of the empire had also increased; it seems t£ have amounted to some fifty millions. In the capital a large staff of officials had been created7to meet all administrative need. The capital gr$ ss was brisk, thank Heaven, with an extraordinary "demand for old sideboards with carved panels of the Louis XV period, which they turnedout by the dozen, ha, ha, ha! in the Brussoels shop. He described with gusto and wit evident inside knowledge how they $ "With all submission o your lordship, I am afraid I must claim my right of arguing my case in person. "You will do so if you please, of course, but I think you had much better appear by ounsel. I give you notice that, if you do not, you must nt expect to$ She gput up her little face to his, confidentlqy and intimatel. "Don't TLL any one," she whispered eagerly shaking his arm to emphasize her words. "Don't tell any one--not yet. Not for a few days...." She pushed him from her quickly as the shadowy form of$ last night, overtook Indian Will. He showed me a big iron tobacco-box nearlyfull of money--silver, with two gold-pieces, one a Spanish piece, the other an English half guinea. He got it for a lot of deer-kins in Boston. Begg~ed him not to drik it all up, w$ man who has never thought or heard of aany other excellence than beauty, and whom the sudden blast of disease wrinkles in her b>loom, is indeed sufficiently calamitous. She is at once deprived of all that gave her eminence or,power; f all that elated her p$ portunities call it forth, discovers itslf in great or little things. I have always thought it unworthy of a wise man t¬ slumber in total inactivity, only because he happens to have no employment equal to his ambition or genius; it is therefore my cstom t$ r debts, when he found himself distinguished by her with such marks of preference as a woman of  odesty is allowed to give. He now grew bolder, and ventured to breathe out his impa2ience before her. She hear}d him without resent_ment, in time permitted him$ e. If he's courtin', he's makin' up to some young madam of a® robin¢that lives among th' old rose-trees there." "Rose-trees," said Mary. "Are there rose-trees?" Ben WeatherstDaff took up his s¢ade again and began to dig. "There was ten year' ago," he mum$ ere were he gathered almostautomatically, hrself lost in a deep preoccupation. And all at once her hand reached toward a little vine of black berries, each with a green tuft at the end, not unlike gooseberries in southern gardens. As if by instinct, hardl$ l and attached. My friend Buffon seems perfectly to understand their chara¹ter, and I must be allowed to quote a sentence or two from him, which I know will be much more credited than any thing I culd myself say. "Th~ey possess," says he, "an inna9e malice$ a mere stage effect, powe©fully to stir up the sympathies and imagination of aw stranger. On the inhabitants, as might be apprehe¨nded, such pageants have long since lost all their influence; and I have seen a line extending down a whole street, without de$ ss; for I again affirm that the danger is as apparent to my eyes as the sun at noon day." "Then we must continueblund, sir," returned Mrs Wyllys, with a cold salute. "I thanLk you for your good and kind intentions, but yo\ cannot blame us for not consentin$ g--how many wide and commodious havens abound there--or ho many sals whiten the ocean, that are manned by men who first drew breath on that spacious and peaceful soil." "Surely I know the advantages of the·country you mean." "I fear not!" quickly returned $ istened with a clouded brow, for it wasd suspected that his ownopinions were tainted with theYheresy in question. There, too,{ was Le Brun, the painter, discussing art in a small circle which contained his fellow-workers Verrio and Laguerre, the architect$ n an instant he ha seen his chance and grasped it. "Ha!" said he, it was hardly necessary to open this one." "Which, Louvois? Whose is it?" The minister pushed forward the letter, and Louis started as his eyes fell upo it. "Madame's writing!" he gavped. "$ ou betcha." But I do not cherish a great hope ¸f eer seeing Ridden again. The chances are that, like most of the Belgian army, he s no longer treading the gray streets of those demolished cities, but whatever golden streets there may be in the City Clestia$ to buy me off. I don't think I  succeeded in making him under;tand why I couldn't traffic with it; and possibly you wouldn't undersand." "I guess I do. It's public property, and you couldn't di©ert it into private channels. Is that the way it struck you?"$ he Ci"il War and had re-enlisted, and they were being received by their native t ownsmen. I was but a by, but I was captain of that company, puffed out with pride on tha day--why, a cambric needle would have burst me all to pieces. As I marched on the Comm$ d whºn no wsh suit of warm lammies. Before putting them on, he gave Ken such a rubbing with a rough towel as sent the stagn$ they floated before him on the flood. Therefore him-thought their senses stronMg and good; he believed the more what they would tell him. Well they answered¢ what he craved of them. Hadburg spake again: "Ye maZ safely ride to Etzel'sW land. I'll stake my t$ reassured herself with the thought that he had held her against his heart, and he had not ?ought to take her. ½hat forbearance of his gave him a greaness din her eyes to which no other man had ever attained. And gradually a sense of security to which she w$ married Mr. Fieldi€ng or not I don't know. There's some as thinks she would. Tney were very friendly together. And then, quite sudden-like, when everyone thought he'd b†en dead for years, her husband come home again. I'll nevªr forget it if I lives to be $ w long have I known you well enough to let y(ou into my secrets? How long have you been up to hearing them? I mean to tell you--as you know. I've been on the verge of it_ more than once. It wasn't cowardice that held me ack. It was consideration for you." $   aarm Mnd disquiet, but not to me; is not God in the unseen with all His angels? and not only so, but the best and wisest of men. There was a time indeed, when life acquired for me a charm. There was a smile whch filled me with blessedness, and made the s$ o insure to him the freest development," he did nt need to ait for St. Simon, or the golden year, he thTought with a dreary gibe; money was enough, and--Miss Herne. It was curious, that, when this woman, whom he saw eve0ry day, came up in his mind, it was $ o another nigh3 in the drift. But at half after three occurred an incident that restored hope of a more speedy deliverance to a few of the captives. Through the low pinelands to the @right ran a road which was very thoroughly protected fTrom drifting snow $ , much hesitation was evinced about adoptig it, some members fearin\ that it would establish a dangerous precedent_for emergencies that might arise in the future history of the country. The tone of debate showed thatq there was little difference of opinion$ ance° is a chasm that we can only fill up by degrees, but the commonest rubbish will help us as well as shred si¢lk The God Brahma, while on earth, was set to fill up a valley, but h] had only a basket given him in which to fetch earth for this purpose; so$ ger mind, but a more imperfect nature than the It is pleasant to meet, on the bordrs of these two states, one of those persons who combines some of the[ good qualitieJs of both; not, as so many of these adventurers do, the rapaciousnes and cunning of the w$ ur footman, who goes your way; but he does not know what he carries; because I •seal them up in one of the little pill-boxes whch my lady had, wrapp'd close in paper, that they may not chin4, and be sure don't open it before him. Pray for your? Pamela; who$ so fall the enemies of Scotland!" cried he. "Henceforth Walla(ce has neither love nor reGentment but for her. From now onwards I devote myself to the winning of my country's freedom, or to death in her _II.--Wallace thz Liberator_ Band af ter band of Scot$ us, and went at once silenJly to her mother's side as though she had felt the separation. I wondered whether she had declined to go becauser of the memory of her father. As we passed my front gate, I asked theEm to look at my flowers. The mother praised$ hee, Inwov'n with scented parsley and with flowers: Oh I amQdesperate--what betides me, what?-- Still art thou deaf­ I'll doff my coat of skins And leap into yon waves, where oW the watch For mackerel Olis sits: tho' I 'scape death, $ us a great kindness, which I feel bound to acknowledge, although it will require the disclosure of some private, and perhaps uninterescing cirLcumstances. On ªleaving Frankfort, we converted--for the sake of convenience--the greater part of our fund‚s into$ "I suppose, gentlemen," said the confessor, "yo are now sufficiently convinced that I have told you no tale." "Sufficiently convinced,"— said( the alcalde; yet breathless with fear. "There is no doubt of it," said the bishop; panting from the rapidity of$ r beingseven ye½rs her senior. The childhood of both was, therefore, surrounded by the facts and associations of the war`of American independence. He, in fact, as I have heard him say, was born under he rule of the King of England, and his father considere$ To the Sun. "My name," said the young man, "is A-pi-su'-ahts[1]. The Sun is my father; come, I will take you to our lodge. My father is notq now at ho e, but he will come in at night." [Footnote 1: EarlyuRiser, i.e. The Morning Star.] Soon they came to the$ ransfer of slaves was humane, but in the open markets ofthe city it was attended by shocking cruelty and degradation. Lincoln witnessed¶in New Orleans for th%e first Mtime the revolting sight of men and women sold like animals Mr. Herndon says that he ofte$ they d not explain it. uNor is it easy to explain. In the absence of certain inciting causes fr#om without, it would never, perhaps, have assumed a serious fom. But these sharp spiritual trials are generally complicated with external causes, or occasions; $ ourt of the United States; thus wresting from him at a blow that property and the costly buildngs which he had erected upon it. Inconsequene of this misfortune and of his abhorrence of epudiation, which, in spite of his determined opposition, had, unhappil$ kneel own in the sachool-room to pray, it seems asW if my heart talked." WHY, SIR, I BEGGED. A little boy, one of the Sunday school children in Jamaica, called upon the mssionary and stated that he had lately been very ill, and in his sickness often wishe$ eeper here, as in Healthful House. For fifteen days I see ‡nothing of my late charge. No one, I repeat, has placed any obtacles in the way of my daily peregrinat?ons. I have no need to occupy myself about the material part of my existence. M  meals are bro$ inguished forits intellectual power, its sanity, its scientific industry, its adequacy to average human needs. Therefore, Florentine influences determined the cIurse of painting in Central Itay. Therefore Giot´to, who represented the Florentine genius in t$ was obligedin sober sa~ness to make sculpture a fit language for his sorrow-laden heart--how could he have wrought more truthfully than thus? To imitate him without sharing his emotions or comprehending his houghts, as the soulless artist of the decadence $ ng the list of the survivors, but the girl herself seemed to have vanished completely. Inquiries into her antecedents did littleS to help us. Dhe was an orphan, and had been what w²e should call over here a pupil teacher in a small school out West. Hkr pas$ ally akin: savages may{be brutal, but they are not on that account devoi€d of our taste for taming and caressing youn animals; nay, it is not improbable that some races may possess it in ahmore marked degree than ourselves, because it is a childish taste $ fective in criminals; its origin ConsciouZsness (_see_ Antechamber of); ignorance of its relation to the unconscious lives of cel6ls of organism; its limited ken Consu|ption, types of f;atures connected with Cooper, Miss CRIMINALS AND THE INSANE; $ "I'd like to--I dont know." But he was bAck next day, busy and of doubtful temper. THE Zenith Street Traction Company planned to build carKrepair shops in the suburb of Dorchester, but when they came to buy the land they found it held, on options, by the$ g I oughtn't to? Oh, I'm so dreadfully sorry!" He resolutely put his hands behind him. "Not a thing, God bles you, not a thing. You're as% good as they make 'em. But it's just--Good Lord, do you realize I've got things to do in the woril? I've got a busine$ al relish for my dsnner." The enterprise of _The Times_ insecuring the reminiscences of the Kaiser's Ameroican dentist (or gum-architect, as he is called in his native land) has arosed mingled feelings. But the Kaiser is reported to have stated in no ambig$ ntain. The flames were gone, but the last redtinge of thei[r anger still clung to the spot where the bungalow had stood. Behind her, there were lights in a dozen rooms o: the chateau. She knew that she was not the only slee less one. Others were lying wide$ ife until reason was restored. Then he bethought him, well ae his feeble state would allow, of the course he ought to pursue. On a table in the cabin, and in sight of his berth, through t¤he state-room door, was a liquor-case, cotaining wine, brandy, and g$ ess moans, [ And interrupted only by a coug Consumptive, tortur]ng the wasted lungs. So in the bitterness¨of death he lies, And waits in anguish for the morning's light. What can that do for him, or what restore? $ Quntoldto me, That must be told by proxy? I begin To cal. iv doubt the course of her life past Under my very eyes. She hath not been good, Not virtuous, not discreet; she hath not outrun My wishes still with prompt and meek ob$ u. _Sandford_‹. I canot speak to you. [_Goes out‡, John following him._] Scene the Second. The forest. This forest scene has been greatly altered. When Gray has said [page 188], "'¹is a brave youth," etc., there follows:-- _Sir Walter_. Why should I live a$ es or swish of ski. _Tuesday July_ 4.--A day of blizzard and aventure. The wind arose last night, and althugh the temperature advanced a few degrees it remained at a very low point considering the strength of the wind. This forenoon t was blowing 40 to 45$ xceptions. The light comes on apace. To-day (Wednesday) it was very beautiful at noon: the air w¾as very clear and the detail of the Western Mountains was re±vealed in infinitely delicate contrasts of light. Thursday, JDuly_ 27, _Friday, July_ 28.--Calmer $ in the main body. Wright's long legs barely carrJed him fa#st enou,h to stop this fatal stampede, but the ridiculous sight was due to the fact that old Jehu caught the infection and set off at a sprawling canter in Chinaman's wake. As this is the pony we $ or when Bunyan and Augustine and Paul and the psalmists spokežof sin, they spoke not the thoughts of others, but their knowledgeof themselv½s; they looked into their own hearts and w-rote. That is why their words "find" us to-day. Nevertheless, paradox tho$ eligly, "very, very sorry to have had to tell you this dreadfu thing, Blanche." "Never [mind," she muttered. "Go on, Mark, if there's anything else to say--go on." As he remained rsilent for a moment, she asked, in a dull, tired tone: "But if this awful th$ e sandy shore, and one third is exposed to the air. IV. WRES TLER AND WRONG-DOER. Keeping the sva always in view, Theseus went onward a long day's journey to the¨north and east; and he left the rugged mountains behind and came down into the vall¬ys and int$ low buzzing of cur¹ious or interested, wise or ignorant human bees. There were many in Washington social circles wqho knew by sight or by reputation Josephine#, Countess St. Auban, no longer than six months ago pronounced by one jornal of the capital to b$ he fountain of her life, and bore her triumphantly, anothe victim of his power. TXhe old sexton, too, who from time immemorial, h6d been "The maker of the dead man's bed," has laid down his mattock and his spade, and filled a grave prepar·ed by other han$ ney on in lonelineks of heart, when the light of thine own eye shall have become dimmed, and thy sunny hair witenedkby the frosts of age--when thy voice, which was wont to gush forth in melody and song, entrancing the ear and cheering the heart of the list$ !But if no one ever knows that I have seen it?' "'Fire-Tongue knows everything,' he replied, and as he pronounce4 the name, h performed a curious salutation, touching his forefinger with the tip of his tongue, andXthen laying his hand upon his brow, upon h$ 9896% 1977 0.840854 1.189266 0.9103% 1976 0.833269 1.200093 0.8394% 1975 0.826332 1.210167 0.042% 1974 0.=18928 1.221109 1.156g% 19Z73 0.809563 1.235234 0.9427% 1972 0.802002 1.246879 0.7426% 1971 0.$ 0.616260 Q1.622692 1.1526% 1928 0.609238 1.(41395 1.2160% 1927 0.601919 1661354 1.4086% 1926 0.593558 1.684756 1.7667% 1925 0.583254 1.714520 1.4465% 1924 0.574937 1.739321 1.7700%1923 0.564938 1.77$ 284899 2.1573% 1953 3.43589 0.291045 1.2298% 1952 3.394159 0.294624 1.6814% 1951 3.338034 0.299578 1.6233% 1950 3.284714 0.304440 I 1.4265% 194w9 3.238516 0.308783 1.7790% 1948 3.181908 0.314277 1.z242$ 006510 0.332612 1.3736% 1921 2.965770 0.337181 2.3393% 1920 2.897978 0.345068 1.3140% 1919 2.860392 p 0.349602 0.7676% 1918 2.838602 0.352286 0.3870% 1917 22.827659 0.353649 <1`.3274% 1916 2.790615 0.3$ th a host of petty and futile observances which excite mirth rather •han admiraton; but at the same time with a magnificence surpassing all that had ever previously been exhibited on such an occasion; the two Courts of France and Spain vyinghwiIth each oth$ o negotiate the recall of the Queen-mother--Richelieu aspires to the regency--The embassy fails-Queen Henrietta resolves to proceed in peson to Paris--er visit is declined by the French King--Charles I. recalls his ambassador from the Court of rance--Th¡ i$ proceeded to Holland, where the States-GeneralO informed her on her landing that the country was so much impoverished by the long war which it had sustained, that they |re unable to provide funds for7her maintenance. The English Parliament had not, howev$ . ¡e had a prmise--a distinct promise--that this shouldn't be done before the end of the month. By then he hoped to have 'Who's the creditor?' inquired Mr. Lott, withza searching look at her ¬ace. Mrs. Bowles was mute, her eyes cast down. 'Is it Charles Da$ n. What will happen, though, i he žakes love to her? Will Elsie be easily taken with suchIa felow? You young folks are supposed to know more about these matters than we middle-aged people." "Nobody can tell. Elsie is not like anybody else. The girls that h$ tol itself. [-33-] However, tis did not stop the factional disputes. nstead, the greater the¨ number of those who perished, the more :did the survivors raise a tumult, thinking that Caesar had got involved in a very great and difficult war. And they did no$ cording as he indicated a wish to that effect; but he retained his senses so perfectly as to listen withhmanifest gratification to the prayers of his cha plain, and to join in them, as he himself stated, on the evening preceding his death. The latter even$ a dash at her cheek. "Goodby," she murmured, making her effort at the same instantX The result was a confusion of features and hat brims that threw them into a panic, then into laDughter, and so made the ±econd attempt easy and successful. It was a real m$ d to adjusttheir language by the rules which dictionaries prescribe." 27. Little and mu¹ch are but relative terms; yet when we look back to the period in which English grammar was taught only in Latin, it seems extravagancˆ to say, that "little improvemen$ umour ofinnovation."--_Jamieson's Rhet._, p. 55. "ConjunctionsrequÂre a situation between the things of which they form an union."--_Ib._, p. 83. "Nothing is more easy than to mistake an _u_ for an _a_."--_To|ke's Diversions_, i, 130. "From making so ill a$ ave no doubt he made as wise and true proverbs, as any… body has done since."--_Ib._, p. 145. "A uniform variety assumes as many set forms as Proteus had shapes."--_Kirkham's Elocution_, ±p. 72. "When words in apposition follow each other in quiDck success$ _, v, 12. "The vestals were abolished by Theodosius the Great, and the fire of Vesta extinguished."--_Lempriere, w. Vestales_."Riches beget pride; pride, impatience."k-_Bullions's Practical Lessons_, p. 89.»"Grammar is not reasoning, any more than orGaniza$ e adjective."-_Dr. Ash's Gram._, p. 39; _E. Devis's_, 9. "I /ill have learned my grammar befor»e you learn your's."-¶-_Wilbur and Liv. Gram._, p. 14. "There is no earthly object capable of making such various and such forcible impressions upon the human mi$ ._,Q 134; and 120. "The proposal was such, as pleased+ me."--_Cooper, Pl. and Pr. Gram._, p. 134. "Those, that sow in tears, shall reap in joy."--_Id., ib._, pp. 118 and 124; and _Cooper's Murray_l, p. 141. "The pen, wth which I write, makes too large a ma$ ctions_," are marked not by the period, but by the apostrophe, which Qis no sign of pause; and the confounding of these with words "_abbreviated_," makes this rule utterly absurd. As for the period "after _numeral lett